Auto Blend is a thinly-documented San Antonio coffee line that appears in only two primary sources on this site — the 24 August 1912 and 4 May 1915 San Antonio Express-News “Sugar and Coffee” retailer market columns. Both quote Auto Blend at the wholesale-to-retailer price level alongside Morrison-era house names (Broncho, Border, Wesco, Juanita, El Merito, Metropolis). After May 1915 the brand drops out of the documented record — it is not named in the 28 January 1917 Express Hoffmann-Hayman / Morrison acquisition announcement, not in the December 1914 Morrison page-44 ink-drawing montage, and not in any later H&H roster (Aug 1917 wholesale line, Oct 1917 Liberty Loan cell, 1923 products grid, 1926 Light “Largest Coffee Plant,” 1942 wholesale price sheet).

The current page is a research stub built around the two market-column citations. Auto Blend’s ownership is uncertain: the 1912 column author groups it with “Morrison-era house names,” but that framing is editorial, not a direct attribution. The brand may have been a separately-owned San Antonio line that the Express-News market reporter happened to quote alongside Morrison brands, or it may have been a Morrison line discontinued before the February 1917 Morrison-to-H&H transfer.

Documented appearances

24 August 1912 — Sugar and coffee market column

The 24 August 1912 Express-News sugar-and-coffee market block quotes Auto Blend in the roasted ladder at retailer pricing:

“Roasted: Broncho, 1-lb. cans, 24c; Broncho, 4 lbs. with premium, 85c; Border Brand, 4-lb. pails with premium, $1.10; Border Brand, 3½-lb. net, $1.00; Wesco Brand, 1-lb. cans, 31c; Wesco Brand, 2-lb. cans, 62c; Wesco Brand, 3-lb. cans, 93c; Auto Blend, 3-lb. cans with premium, 80c; Juanita Blend, ground, 10-oz. cans, 8c; Juanita Blend, ground, 1-lb. cans, 20c; El Merito, 1-lb. cans, 28c; Metropolis, 2-lb. cans, 64c.”

Auto Blend is documented at 3-lb. cans with premium for 80¢. The “with premium” language matches Broncho’s “4 lbs. with premium, 85c” and Border’s “4-lb. pails with premium, $1.10” — a Morrison-era retailer-incentive format where the package included a give-away item to bundle with the coffee.

4 May 1915 — Sugar and coffee market column

The 4 May 1915 Express-News continues the same column form. Auto Blend reappears with a notable format change:

Auto blend, 4-pound cans, with premium, 80c; Juanita blend, ground, 10 ounce cans, 8c; Juanita blend, ground, 1-pound cans, 20c; El Merito, 1-pound cans, 25c; Metropolis, 2-pound cans, 34c…”

Between August 1912 and May 1915, Auto Blend’s package moved from a 3-lb. can with premium at 80¢ to a 4-lb. can with premium at 80¢ — same price point, one additional pound of coffee. This is consistent with a deliberate value repositioning: same retail price, more coffee per can. The “with premium” give-away format persisted across both years.

Documented absence after May 1915

Auto Blend is conspicuously absent from every later primary source on this site that covers Morrison or H&H brand inventory:

  • 13 December 1914 Express-News Morrison page-44 montage — visible Morrison packs include Wesco, Broncho, Juanita/Pride of the Ranch, Texco, Harvest Jubilee, Misa Brand, Club Chocolate. No Auto Blend. (This source dates from between the 1912 and 1915 market columns, so the absence in the ink-drawing display is interesting — Auto Blend was either not deemed prominent enough to picture, or it was not yet under Morrison’s wing.)
  • 21 March 1916 Morrison “Special Notice” — corrects Wesco and Misa can pricing. No Auto Blend.
  • 28 January 1917 Hoffmann-Hayman / Morrison acquisition announcement — names Wesco, Misa, Broncho, Texco, Juanita as the Morrison brands H&H committed to continue packing. No Auto Blend.
  • 29 April 1917 “That Morning’s Cup of Coffee” — names H&H, Wesco, Misa, Texco as the four “popular brands.” No Auto Blend.
  • 19 August 1917 Express wholesale roster (307 N. Medina) — Wesco, H. & H., Texco, Double H, Border, Broncho, Juanita, Big Dime, Fancy Peaberry. No Auto Blend.
  • 26 August 1923 San Antonio Light products grid — illustrated H&H packs. No Auto Blend.
  • 28 November 1926 Light “Largest Coffee Plant” — H AND H BLEND, SAM HOUSTON, BRONCHO, BORDER, MENGER PEABERRY, TEXCO. No Auto Blend.
  • 2 March 1942 H&H wholesale package and bulk price sheets — H AND H, SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS GIRL, ANITA, TEXCO, BIG VALUE, M. CHEF; bulk Anita Peaberry Blend, Good Value, O.S.T. Fancy Santos Peaberry. No Auto Blend.

Ownership — open question

The site’s other brand pages (Border, Wesco, Broncho, Juanita, Misa, Texco) state that the 1912 column groups its roasted ladder as “Morrison-era house names.” That framing is the column reporter’s grouping language, not a direct attribution from Morrison’s own copy. The 28 January 1917 acquisition announcement — the definitive primary source for which brands Morrison actually owned at the moment of transfer — names only Wesco, Misa, Broncho, Texco, and Juanita (per the verbatim continued-brands list). Auto Blend is not in that list. Three possible explanations:

  • Auto Blend was a Morrison brand discontinued before the Feb 1917 acquisition — between May 1915 (last documented appearance) and Jan 1917 (acquisition announcement), the line may have been dropped from Morrison’s portfolio. The Jan 1917 announcement uses “including” rather than “exclusively,” so an omission could simply mean the line was retired by transfer date.
  • Auto Blend was a separately-owned San Antonio line that the Express-News market reporter quoted alongside Morrison brands for column convenience. In that case, “Morrison-era house names” is a misread of the column’s framing.
  • Auto Blend was acquired but not packed by H&H — the announcement says H&H “will continue the packing of all the well-known brands” but doesn’t claim to be exhaustive; H&H could have acquired the wordmark and chosen not to advertise or carry it.

Resolving this requires: (a) period Morrison advertising that names Auto Blend directly; (b) Texas Secretary of State trademark filings showing Morrison’s portfolio at registration; or (c) a 1913–1916 distributor circular naming the brand’s owner.

Products

  1. Auto Blend3-pound can with premium, 80¢ retailer price (Aug 1912)
  2. Auto Blend4-pound can with premium, 80¢ retailer price (May 1915)

The “premium” was an unidentified retailer-incentive give-away bundled with the can, in the same format Broncho and Border used in the same columns.

Packaging

No museum object or illustrated pack art is on the site. Unlike Wesco, Broncho, Juanita, Texco, and Misa — all visible in the 13 December 1914 Morrison page-44 ink-drawing montage — Auto Blend is not depicted in any surviving period display. The 1912 and 1915 sugar-and-coffee market columns are typeset price lists with no illustrations.

Advertising

  1. Sugar and coffee — 24 Aug 1912 — Auto Blend in the 3-lb. with premium retailer ladder at 80¢.
  2. Sugar and coffee — 4 May 1915 — Auto Blend in the 4-lb. with premium retailer ladder at 80¢, alongside Broncho, Border, Wesco, Juanita.

Collection posts

Reference photography

No Auto Blend pack is in Our Collection, and no reference photograph exists in Reference. The brand has no visible pack art on the site whatsoever.

Newspaper & period branding

Only the two market-column facsimiles (1912 and 1915) document Auto Blend. Indexes: Newspaper ads · Branding in Newspapers.

  • Border Coffee — co-quoted in both market columns at the with premium pail format; also has an ambiguous Morrison-attribution caveat (not named in the Jan 1917 acquisition announcement).
  • Broncho Coffee — co-quoted in both market columns with 4-lb. with premium packaging; named in the Jan 1917 acquisition announcement.
  • Wesco Coffee · Juanita Coffee — Morrison-era brands also in both market columns.
  • El Merito Coffee — parallel Morrison-era column brand with the same ownership caveat; differs in that El Merito kept the package size flat (1-lb. can) and dropped the price (28¢ → 25¢), where Auto Blend kept the price flat and grew the package (3-lb. → 4-lb.).
  • Metropolis Coffee — parallel Morrison-era column brand with the same ownership caveat; differs from Auto Blend in that Metropolis kept the package size flat (2-lb.) and showed the largest documented price drop in the sample (64¢ → 34¢, ~47%).

Open questions

  • Was Auto Blend a Morrison brand? The 1912 column reporter groups it with “Morrison-era house names,” but the 28 Jan 1917 acquisition announcement does not name Auto Blend in its five-brand continued-packing list. Resolution requires period Morrison advertising or Texas trademark records.
  • Why the 3-lb. → 4-lb. shift between 1912 and 1915? Same 80¢ price point with an extra pound — a deliberate value repositioning, a Cordova-bean-substitution reformulation, or a competitive response to neighbor brands?
  • Discontinuation window. Auto Blend’s last documented citation is May 1915. Was the brand retired by Morrison before the Jan 1917 acquisition, or did it disappear from market columns while continuing in retail under another name?

Wanted

  1. Any Auto Blend can (1912–1916) — would document the trade dress directly.
  2. Period advertising that names Auto Blend with its owner attribution (Morrison, an independent San Antonio roaster, or otherwise) — would resolve the ownership question.
  3. Distributor circulars or trade-press items from 1913–1916 that mention Auto Blend — would close the window between the last documented citation and the Jan 1917 Morrison acquisition.

Contact with leads.