martes, 2 de junio de 2015

Early history of Paper Mate – Part 2: The Deluxe model (mid 1950 – mid 1954)


Deluxe: The first real Paper Mate’s ballpoint pen.

In May, 1950 Frawley moved into a bigger building, boosted his advertising and hired designer Walter B. Spatz in order to create his own ballpoint pen [1]. He wanted a pen that would look like $5.00, write like $5.00 but sell for less than $2.00. A considerable amount of work and money was involved in its development.

As soon as Spatz started his job, Frawley bought his first air time in the form of radio (San Francisco) and TV (Los Angeles) spots.  Sales rose up to $350,000 in 1950.

On August 4, 1950 the Frawley Corporation filed a patent (US 2,624,314, granted on January 6, 1953) for a retractable pen with button-click operation. Emphasis was given to dependability as well as to simplicity and an inexpensive construction. The new design was so versatile that it was suitable not only for a ballpoint pen but also for a mechanical pencil or other scribing tool. It included some interesting features such as, for instance, an extending and retracting mechanism wherein the operating end automatically retracted should it be subjected to shock loads as might occur if the pen is dropped. This mechanism was contained inside a plastic (inner) upper case which, in turn, was enclosed inside an outer metal shell. Another peculiarity was the existence of two springs, one inside the operation device and the other between the reduced end of the refill and the botttom of the lower case. Extension and retraction took place by means of both a lateral latch spring and the specially shaped button. It was the specific design of the lateral latch spring what permitted automatic retraction in case of a fall.


US patent No. 2,624,314
(assignee Frawley Corporation)


Spatz also worked on the external design of the pen (ballpoint or the like). It was characterised by a relatively abrupt taper at the top of the upper case in association with a gradual taper towards the barrel point, as shown in patent US D168,715 (filed on May 5, 1952; granted on January 27, 1953; assignee Frawley Corporation). The first real Paper Mate's ballpoint pen had been born: Called Paper Mate Deluxe, it was introduced in October, 1951 [2].


US patent D168,715
(assignee Frawley Corporation)


A harmonious combination of shape and proportions not seen before made this pen unique as well as really distinctive and attractive [2]. It was manufactured with great care and at not less expense in the selection of materials and in the supervision of quality control. The highly-polished metal cap shell, either gold- or chrome- plated, stood out between a contrastingly plastic barrel and an equally colored plunger. Firmly attached to the cap by means of four lugs, a strong clip exhibited an ornamental motif consisting of two interlaced hearts which soon became widely recognizable all over the world. Below the company's logo it read "PAPER - MATE USA". Barrels (as well as matching plungers) were available up to seven colors including black, red, brown, green and even white. The Deluxe model was a relatively small, lightweight writing instrument, but well balanced and easy as well as convenient to use.



Paper Mate Deluxe
(photograph from my personal archive)




Detail of the pen's top and bottom, as shown in advertisements
(Saturday Evening Post)



Gold- and chrome- plated caps
(photograph from my personal archive)



Cap and button
Notice the extraordinary brilliance of the highly-polished metal shell

Bottom of the upper plastic case
(photographs from my personal archive)



Clip
(photograph from my personal archive)


During the first six weeks from its introduction, it sold at $1.49. After that, the retail price was always maintained at $1.69 while refills cost 49 cents ($1.98 and 69 cents in Canada respectively). From 1953 it was offered with an inconditional guarantee for 20 years.



Albuquerque Tribune
(December 19, 1951)


The Deluxe model turned out to be the right product the public was waiting for. Even competitors acknowledged it as Number One in sales among ballpoints and probably the largest selling pen inside the U.S. Around 7,500,000 units were sold during the first year (roughly 30,000,000 at the end of 1954) [2]. In 1951 Paper Mate's sales skyrocketed up to $2 million.


The first two generations of Paper Mate pens
(photograph from my personal archive)



The Stanford Daily
(March 31, 1952)


Lafayette Ledger
(November 14, 1952)


Winnipeg Free Press
(September 4, 1952)
(Canada)


As soon as 1952 Paper Mate brought out a desk version of the Deluxe model. Retail prices were $2.95 for the pen only, $3.45 for the pen with chain and $4.95 for the complete desk set, which included a small, jet functional four-sided simulated onyx plastic base with a metal swivel penholder.



Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, May 19, 1952


Some time later Spatz redesigned the base as well as the penholder, both elements becoming elegantly streamlined in the way shown in patents US D172,846 (filed on September 3, 1953; granted on August 17, 1954; assignee Frawley Corporation) and D172,847 (filed on January 29, 1954; granted on August 17, 1954; assignee Frawley Corporation).


US patent D172,846
(assignee Frawley Corporation)


US patent D172,847
(assignee Frawley Corporation)



Deluxe desk set
LIFE
(December 6, 1954)


The retail price of the complete desk set remained, however, the same. Sets for use in banks have been referenced [1].

On May 18, 1953 the Paper Mate Manufacturing Company filed a patent (US 2,813,512, granted on November 19, 1957; inventor Clarence O. Schrader) for a method of improving the life of ball-point writing instruments by plating the tip with a metal from the group of nickel, copper, silver, platinum, gold, rhodium, osmium and chromium. Such a process avoided the corrosion, pitting, leakage of link, seizure of the ball, etc. due to galvanic action between the brass of the socket point and the steel ball that resulted in a serious loss of the pen's performance. In addition, the metal layer enhanced the traction between the tip and the writing surface so that the ball did not slide or skip upon a calendered or slightly oily surface, but instead deposited ink as soon as contact and relative motion was stablished. New refills with "exclusive silvered tip" for faster start and smoother writing were introduced by April 1954. Available in fine and regular (medium) points as well as in four ink colours (red, green blue and black), they fitted equally all the Paper Mate's ballpoints in production for several years.


US patent No. 2,813,512
(assignee Paper Mate Manufacturing Company)




The Daily Reporter
(September 2, 1954)


The Daily Illini
(May 17, 1955)


The Deluxe model, re-designed, enjoyed from 1955 a second life under the name Tu-Tone.


Also a question of clever promotion and massive advertising.

Once Frawley had a winner, his next target was the New York market [1], from where he planned to expand to the rest of the U.S. Frawley bought full-page newspaper advertisements and heavy radio and TV spot schedules. He began providing dealers all kinds of point-of-purchase material too. 22 salesmen were hired, who called on 2,400 stores in a six-week period, leaving six free pens with every dealer. Frawley gave away about 10% on his 1952 output but got nearly 100% distribution in that city. At the same time, he brightly spread the rumor that Paper Mate was broke in order to discourage the competition. The truth was very different: Sales continuously increased, reaching $7 million that very year.


Vassar Chronicle, Volume X, No. 2, 4
(October, 1952)


Paper Mate's advertising on a Deluxe pen
Notice the copy point "bankers approve"
(photograph from my personal archive)


The Pittsburgh Press
(February 5, 1953)


So confident was Frawley on his product as well as on the power of advertising that he launched a huge campaign with the aim of getting nationwide recognition of the superior qualities of his pen and ink. Only in 1953 Paper Mate spent around $2 million in the biggest advertising budget of the pen history never seen before. Full-page advertisements, in which well-known celebrities such as Zsa Zsa Gabor, George Burns or Gracie Allen showed themselves as really satisfied customers, appeared in major magazines such as LIFE and The Saturday Evening Post. Frawley's advertising strategy proved to be immensely successful, sales growing steeply to almost $20 million that very year (foreign sales came to roughly $3 million). Paper Mate increased its advertising budget up to $4,500,000 in 1954 in order to include the sponsorship of different popular radio and TV shows (“People Are Funny”, “Cavalcade of Sports” and “The World Series” among others). Eventually, Groucho Marx, Arthur Godfrey, Art Linkletter, Bert Lahr, Gary Moore and Imogene Coca also worked for the company. Of this huge amount of money, around 60% ($2.8 million) went into spots, air time becoming major media in boosting Paper Mate to the top.


LIFE
(May 4, 1953)




Saturday Evening Post
(June 6, 1953)



The Daily Ilini
(May 1, 1953)


LIFE
(September 7, 1953)


Together with the copy point "bankers approve", similar advertising claims such us "principals approve", "mothers approve" and "winner of nation-wide acclaim from ... aviators ..." or "millions of users acclaim Paper-Mate's superiority" were also utilised along time. Just as with the first Paper Mate pen Frawley placed most emphasis on the ink ("new chemical discovery", "formula X-217 bankers approve ink", "won't fade or soak out of paper", "guaranteed not to leak", "can't smear, transfer, stain", "safe for checks and legal work", "it dries in 1/89th of a second", "no ink-stained hands or clothes", "easily washes ...", "70,000 words without refilling", etc.). However, in the case of the Deluxe model the ballpoint itself played a very important rule in advertisement too: "the precision-made pen", "new writing luxury", "the finest of all retractable pens", "smooth click-click push-button action, "guaranteed 20 years mechanicaly", ... The pen is neatly (I'd daresay proudly) shown in advertisements, alone at first, in the foreground, but in the hands of smiling, celebrities later as well as different kinds of professionals. And mates, always happy mates ("famous mates picks Paper-Mate"or "give your mate a Paper-Mate"). The two hearts logo became a synonym for success, the classical American success story.

Undoubtedly, advertising was what made Paper Mate such a renowned brand. But Frawley's advertising strategy had no startling innovation at its core [1]. Instead of making one-shot novelty promotion, i.e. flying with pens around the world in record time or sunk them under water at great depths, he sold his products in a steady advertising pressure as if they were just mere consumer goods such as soap or cigarettes (a change of viewpoint probably needed). In radio and TV repetition played a big part in helping to record the brand's name into people's memory. "Yet the way it’s handled, the repetition doesn’t bother people. … the product name has to be woven … in a smooth way", was absolutely convinced David Kittredge, Eastern advertising manager. Indeed, Paper Mate's approach in radio and TV was so tightly orientated to repetition that, for instance, the advertising jingle used during the period 1951-54 (composed, as a matter of fact, by Song Ads) was never changed. Day after day its single words-and-music message was drummed to listeners and viewers, "Paper-Mate" being mentioned at least 12 times:


Paper-Mate ink is leak-proof,
Use a Paper-Mate pen.
Paper-Mate ink is smear-proof,
Use a Paper-Mate pen.
...


Recording of an advertising jingle for Paper Mate by Song Ads
(image from Sponsor [1])



Commercial
(1954)
(click on the image to watch it)

Commercial
(1954)
(click on the image to watch it)


Paper Mate carefully selected its time buying approach in air. Frawley’s company would rather buy early-morning radio (sports shows and disk jockey programs), but Class A, evening TV. On the other hand, there were no summer hiatus for Paper Mate: "My $2.8 million base is spent evenly the year around", stated Kittredge in 1954. Nevertheless, Paper Mate placed particular emphasis on four special campaigns: Christmas, Valentine's Day, spring (Father's Day and graduation) and back-to-school.


The Deseret News
(August 31, 1954)


By 1954 the company’s advertising expenditure was divided 70-30 between Paper Mate Eastern (every state east and four states west of Mississippi, incorporated in March 7, 1952) and the Paper Mate Company (the Western Division, incorporated in March 13, 1952) respectively. Both partnerships were sales organizations.  The pens themselves were manufactured by another Frawley’s entreprise, the Frawley Manufacturing Corporation, whereas the ink was produced by Frawley Industries. Frawley liked to integrate every part of its campaigns so that Paper Mate's advertising was handled by one company only, Foote, Cone and Belding [3]. In addition, a Philadelphia agencyman helped too with ideas. Frawley soon contracted sponsorship of a net show in order to achieve extensive coverage of the national market [4].



Copy approach: Like boy goes with girl - that's the way Paper-Mate ink goes with paper
Heart shaped trademark and boy-girl duo were constantly used in TV spots
(image from Sponsor [1])


Kittredge asserted that there is no sure way of correlating sales to advertising. However, three different surveys made in 1954 showed that 42% of the people interviewed recalled Paper-Mate's TV pitches over all other advertisements. Even TV comics joked about Paper Mate's "70,000 words without re-filling": "I'm too young to die - I still have 30,000 words left in my Paper Mate" [5].



Paper Mate's plant in Santa Monica during the fifties
(picture from thehealthycitylocal.com)


At that time, sales were running at the extraordinary rate of 67,000 pens a day. National distribution was virtually complete. The company's supply couldn't keep up with demand. Not only had Paper Mate built a second plant in its home town of Culver City, California, but it had just completed another one in Puerto Rico. Life smiled at Frawley!


Paper Mate's business during its first six years of life
(source: Sponsor [1])



Next article: The successful Capri (mid 1954 - mid sixties).



References


[1]  Sponsor, February 22, 1954
       (https://ia902500.us.archive.org/16/items/sponsormagazine-1954-02/Sponsor-1954-02-2.pdf)

[2]  Frawley Corporation vs. Penmaster Company, United States District Court N. D. Illinois, E. D.,
       November 23, 1954 (http://www.leagle.com/decision/1954159131FSupp28_1152).

[3]  For more information, take a look on the Foote, Cone and Belding worldwide history
       (http://www.fundinguniverse.com/company-histories/foote-cone-belding-worldwide-history/).

[4]  Billboard, February 20, 1954.

[5]  Things You Never Knew About Your Fountain Pen, Modern Mechanix, September, 1956




Early history of Paper Mate – Part 1: Paper Mate enters the ballpoint pen business (June, 1949 – mid 1950)

As some of you already know, I am a fountain pen user (since I was a child) and collector. However, I have to admit that I became fascinated by the ballpoint pen history and, in particular, by everything about Paper Mate as soon as I read “The Incredible Ball Point Pen: A Comprehensive History and Price Guide” by Henry Gostony and Stuart Schneider [1]. On the other hand, little has still been written about this writing instrument. That's the reason why my research mainly focuses on ballpoints. There is much to be done there!

It is not going too far, I think, to say that the ballpoint pen is one of the most amazing inventions ever made. And not only because of all the science behind, but also due to its exciting and sometimes turbulent history, specially in the early stages.



Two major breakthroughs of the twentieth century,
the Einstein's mass-energy equivalence equation and the ballpoint pen
(image from sciencelens.co.nz)


Experts agree that Paper Mate came to the rescue of the ballpoint pen just when, a couple of years after its introduction, it was on the point of dying. In my honest opinion its salvation was, regardless the main figures, a question of time. But the fact is that it was Paper Mate's founder, Patrick Frawley, and no one else who, with his extraordinary business acumen and owning the right product, turned the public’s disfavor into satisfaction. Nowadays the ballpoint pen is so much a part of our lives.

My aim is to present a short series of articles about the early history of Paper Mate. They will cover the period from 1949, with Frawley entering the ballpoint pen business, till 1964, when the Profile model, which I consider the boundary between vintage and modern Paper Mate production, was introduced. These articles are being written on the basis of well-known information sources such as the book by Gostony and Schneider, patents, advertising on US national media, etc. Nevertheless, they are not merely a comprehensive mix of those references. On the contrary, I am also using little-known material which was produced at the same time this renowned manufacturer made history. Material I have found after many hours of googling and which in short might be unknown for the general public and even for the Paper Mate collector and researcher.


I hope not to disappoint you!

José Antonio.


PS: I would like to acknowledge Paul Bloch for inspiring me to write these articles. They came to my mind after he asked me for information about the early Paper Mate's production.



Brief historical overview.

Perhaps no one better than Gostony and Schneider to describe (and make us enjoy) the situation of the ballpoint pen just before the birth of Paper Mate:

“By the end of the 1940s, people had stopped buying ball points. After four years, the public lost faith in them because of exaggerated, unrealized claims combined with poor performance. The pens leaked, globbed, smeared, and were largely unreliable and unpleasant to use.”

Ballpoints had developed a dreadful reputation for being annoying, undependable writing instruments. Banking and legal professions advised against their use, for low-rate ink drying favored signatures to be transferred, a forger’s trick. Neither were ballpoints suitable in education. Therefore, in spite of being cheaper than fountain pens, ballpoints didn’t sell at all. Only a few manufacturers of the hundreds that arised during the second half of the fourties survived. The ballpoint pen, which had been the main character of one of America’s biggest sales battle, as Nation’s Business [2] described the first year of its introduction, was about to die.

One victim of that bloody battle was the Todd Pen Company, a small firm located in Southern California. This manufacturer had put into market a retractable ballpoint which somehow resembled the 1946 Blythe’s refillable push-button model, essentially a three-piece device with aluminum top and bottom ends screwed into a thermoplastic barrel produced by The Ball Pen Company (later B. B. Pen Company) leaded by Robert -Bob- Blythe [3]. A "shoulder-clicker” button, a washer clip (imprinted "MADE IN USA" and "TODD") and an inner spring completed this extremelly simple, yet efficient design.



Todd retractable ballpoint
(image from pentooling.com)


The button exhibited a locking cam at its top part. It had to be pushed down first and then tilted aside to a locking position in order to extend the writing point. Retraction was achieved by shifting the button till it was released. A retracting spring, located between the refill end and the lower end of the pen, kept the sliding parts in place tightly.

Apart from their resemblance, there is no clear connection between the Todd and Blythe pens. In fact, both of them shared design basis with at least another contemporary ballpoint, the Ball 'O' Graph.


The Blythe pen
(photograph from my personal archive)




The "shoulder-clicker" button at work
(photograph from my personal archive)




Ball 'O' Graph retractable ballpoint
Notice the button's position when the point is extended (up) and retracted (down)
(image from pentooling.com)



Patrick J. Frawley, Jr. [4][5]

Patrick Joseph Frawley, Jr. (born May 26, 1923, León, Nicaragua - died November 3, 1998, Santa Monica, California) was the son of an American entrepreneur who made a living in Latin America. He was educated in San Francisco but at the age of 18, after being dropped out of college, he returned to Nicaragua and worked with his father. Frawley served with the Royal Canadian Air Force during the Second World War. In 1945 he married a Canadian and settled in San Francisco. There he became engaged in a series of small-time business ventures that eventually landed him in possession of his own companythe Frawley Corporation, in July 3, 1946 [6].



Patrick J. Frawley, Jr.
(image from papermate.com)


Frawley always stood out for his extraordinary business skill. According to the experts, he was, together with Fran Seech, responsible for the revival of the ballpoint pen as founder of Paper Mate.


A new, successful ink.

Ink played an essential role in the ballpoint pen development, which had reached an impasse by the end of the forties. It is clear that an improvement of the existing inks, among other breakthroughs, was absolutely necesary in order to make the ballpoint pen an useful writing instrument.

Fired from a job with a Californian ball-pen company when disaster hit the business, chemist Fran Seech, an Austro-Hungarian refugee, rented a cubbyhole laboratory and continued to improve the ink formula he had been working for [7]. In 1949 he developed a glycol-based quick-penetrating ink which dried instantly. Soon it proved to be a great success.


Frawley enters the ballpoint pen business.

Impressed by Seech’s discovery, Frawley asked his father for a loan of $40,000 [1], secured the rights to the new ink and took over the Todd Pen Company ($18,000) [4][7].


Paper Mate begins selling pens.

In June that year the Frawley Corporation commenced the manufacturing, sale and distribution of ballpoints [6].

At present it is widely accepted that the first Paper Mate pen was inspired by Blythe's one. However, the former was no more than the Todd pen imprinted “PAPER MATE” instead of "TODD" on the clip. The connection between this pen and The Ball Pen Company, if any, had to take place before Frawley’s arrival to the ballpoint pen business.


Paper Mate's first pen
(photograph from my personal archive)


In detail




(photographs from my personal archive)


The Paper Mate, as it was called, was the only ballpoint pen that delivered Seech’s ink. Registered as a trade-mark (United Stated Patent and Trademark Office; application filing date: Jan. 30, 1950; US registration number: 546296), this name became synonymous with dependability and easy writing. Frawley took advantage of it for years to come.

This pen included a refill with a crimp near the bottom which helped to keep the retracting spring in place.


The functioning of the first Paper Mate pen is absolutely similar
to that of both Blythe and Ball 'O' Graph ballpoints
(photographs from my personal archive)


Of course, an essential question arises by itself: Why did Frawley use the Todd’s design, not his own, in order to start with pen business? Probably he needed a suitable, already existing pen for the commercial viability of his adventure to be checked before approaching the time-consuming and expensive development of an entire new design. Indeed, the Todd pen was refillable, retractable (capless) but, most of all, simple, i.e. inexpensive to manufacture. In addition, the Todd pen, in spite of being perhaps everything but eye-catching, was surely an efficient and reliable design. With no doubt it was also a matter of economic survival, a way of recovering the initial investment and make money till the arrival of the right product.

The Paper Mate was made to sell for 97 cents, but it didn’t at all [8]. Frawley first tried the San Francisco area because he knew it best. The most frequent inconvenience he suffered was being thrown out of stores. Some store detectives, in fact, had explicit orders to eject him. Frawley soon concluded that a less precarious way to achieve distribution would be to give the pens away. That proved to be nearly as hard as selling them. Nevertheless, after a lot of effort he could finally get rid of the first 10,000 units and then decided to continue making more.

Not a few pens had been given to bankers. Frawley cleverly understood that it was absolutely necessary to recruit to his cause these professionals, among others, in order to change public's poor perception of the ballpoint pen. Shortly he began to receive letters from some of them. They showed themselves very satisfied with the pen's performance, remarking that the ink dried indeed instantly, what made it with no doubt suitable for banking. Such letters gave Frawley the idea of the copy point “bankers approve” as an excellent way of attracting customers. Since June 1949 it was successfully used for many years [6].



Long Beach Press Telegram, September 12, 1951


Frawley’s next step was to persuade dealers to take a dozen of his pens on consignment. In such a case, he would pay their profits in advance. Moreover, he would give them a generous advertising allowance. Consequently first Paper-Mate's advertising took place on a co-operation basis in local press. Promotion as much as a swell product proved to be essential for the growth of sales.

In an interview Frawley remembered his early attempts at advertising [1]. The Macy's Department Store had finally become one of his first customers. He had convinced Macy's to buy his pen and Macy's insisted on running a large advertisement in the San Francisco Examiner. "The ad cost $5,000, a huge amount in those days", Frawley stated. That advertisement said "Now Macy's brings you Paper Mate". Macy's even guaranteed the pen's performance. Frawley questioned the wisdom of the campaign, but Macy's was adamant. On the day of the sale, pens were piled high on tables and half a dozen of Macy's clerks waited for customers. Twelve hours later, only eighteen had been sold!


Sarasota Herald-Tribune, November 22, 1951


By the end of 1949 Frawley had finally sold $15,000 worth of pens.

Apparently, the Paper Mate kept the same retail price during its marketing period. There was a choice of four barrel colors: red, green, blue and black. Refills cost 49c.


Syracuse Herald Journal, March 9, 1952


Pittsfield Berkshire Evening Eagle, March 20, 1952




The four barrel colours available: Black, red, blue and green
(picture from the book by Gostony and Schneider)



Advertising on a Paper Mate's first pen
(picture from ebay - seller mrpen_ourtownusa)


Some advertisements make reference to a “Standard" model. Rather than an official name, this may have been a way of telling it from the Deluxe model used by some dealers (Standard vs. Deluxe).


Halifax Gazette, August 14, 1952


There also existed an office version (in contrast to the regular one) without either push-button or clip, but a chain attached to the upper end of the pen instead. It was imprinted "PAPER - MATE" on the barrel. The refill was also different from that of the regular version, a little bit longer, with a second crimp near its top (the first one being non-functional). The retracting spring was set in place between the top crimp and the pen top.


Office version of the first Paper Mate pen
(photograph from my personal archive)


Details: upper end and barrel imprint


(photographs from my personal archive)



Comparison between the regular (green) and office (blue) versions








Their different parts are absolutely interchangeable!
(photographs from my personal archive)



Refills of the regular (above) and office (below) versions
The location of the retracting spring is also shown
(photographs from my personal archive)


Personally, I have never seen any reference to the office version in documentation (catalogs, advertisements, etc.). Nevertheless, some advertisements read claims such as "Paper-Mate is used in nearly 1.000 banks ..." or "PAPER-MATE PENS are approved and used every day in more than 4.000 leading banks ..." I wonder whether this pen was part of the Paper Mate's product catalog or it was perhaps given for free to Banks in line with the company's commercial strategy. On the other hand, an article in Billboard, January 16, 1954 describes "venders" (coin operated machines) with Paper Mate ballpoints chained to their sides. Such machines were produced by Vendo, Kansas City, for the Tele-Trip Policy Company, which sold trip accident insurance. Located in airports, they allowed several passengers (as many as chained ballpoints existed) to fill their policy forms at the same time. Before that time, Paper Mate had also brought out sets for use in banks (appart from an "executive's desk pen set") [8]. My question is: Could the office version of the first Paper Mate pen come from one of these venders or sets? Or were these devices equipped with the later Deluxe model? Probably we will never be able to answer this question! But Deluxe pens were too expensive as to use them in public places ($1.69 vs. 97 cents).

Examples of the regular version are not frequently seen. But the office version seems to be much scarcer. As a matter of fact, I have only seen one specimen in all my life as collector: Mine!

It is important to note that Frawley always gave more emphasis to the new ink than to his first pen. Remarks such as “Most amazing new chemical discovery!”, “No more ink stains on hands or clothes … ever again.”, “... it positively cannot smear, blot or transfer.”, “Always a clean point.”, “Your writing dries in 1/89 second.”, “..., safe on checks.”, “Eight miles of permanent writing.” or “Washes right out of clothes.” took up most of the advertising surface. However, the pen features played a secondary role. As a matter of fact, Frawley would later admit that his first pen “didn’t work too well”. It was neither attractive. Seech’s ink was the only advantage over the competition. Frawley needed an eye-catching and precision built ballpoint pen that worked as fine as the best one put into market, even better.



Next article: The Deluxe model (mid 1950 - mid 1954).



References



[1]  The Incredible Ball Point Pen: A Comprehensive History and Price Guide,
       Henry Gostony and Stuart Schneider, Schiffer Pub Ltd, 1998 (ISBN 0764304372).

[2]  Nation's Business, November, 1946.

[3]  Silviu Pincu's "The Blythe connection" post on fountainpenboard.com
       (http://fountainpenboard.com/forum/index.php?/topic/4299-the-blythe-connection/).

[4]  Encyclopaedia Britannica
       (http://global.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/217640/Patrick-Joseph-Frawley-Jr).

[5]  Spartacus Educational (http://spartacus-educational.com/JFKfawleyP.htm).

[6]  Frawley Corporation vs. Penmaster Company, United States District Court N. D. Illinois, E. D.,
       November 23, 1954 (http://www.leagle.com/decision/1954159131FSupp28_1152).

[7]  Things You Never Knew About Your Fountain Pen, Modern Mechanix, September, 1956
       (http://blog.modernmechanix.com/things-you-never-knew-about-your-fountain-pen/).

[8]  Sponsor, February 22, 1954
       (https://ia902500.us.archive.org/16/items/sponsormagazine-1954-02/Sponsor-1954-02-2.pdf).