Automatic Age

Issue: 1942 September

Vending Muchine
CANDIES
made specially fo r
Vending Machines
exercise due diligence to provide
full protection of the Exchange
or other Organization to insure
a maximum Profit and a mini­
mum possibility of loss, includ­
ing that of bottle loss for those
Machines dispensing Merchan­
dise in a returnable bottle.
We have plenty of
5. Vending Machines will
not be installed in permanent
or Cantonment type Exchange
Buildings where personal Serv­
ice is available for the sale of the
Product.
SALTED PEANUTS
AND MIXED NUTS
6. The Installation of Amuse­
ment Machines which involve
Gambling is Prohibited.
Also
American Made
Charms
7. The Post Commander or the
Commanding Officer of an ex­
empted Station is charged with
adequate Protection against loss
by pilferage or destruction when
Automatic Vending Machines of
any type are installed. Sanitary
provisions incident to the opera­
tion of Automatic Vending Ma­
chines of any type should be an­
ticipated and solved prior to the
granting of Authority for the
installation of any Machine.
PAN
C onfections
345 W . E R IE S T R E E T
C H IC A G O . IL L .
A D V A N C E
M A C H I N E S
Various types still avail­
able. Place YOUR order
N O W before stock is de­
pleted.
New orders may be ac­
cepted fo r sanitary napkin
and p o s ta g e sta m p m a ­
chines.
through his company in Char­
lotte, N. C., and is being con­
gratulated by Jack Nelson, vice­
president and general sales man­
ager of Rock-Ola. Second, Kiser
starts it off with a carload order
of COMMANDOS to celebrate
the 6th Anniversary of Jack
Nelson with the Rock-Ola Cor­
poration. The occasion took place
on June 8, 1942, in A. R. Kiser’s
office in Charlotte, N. C., and it
was on June 8th, 1936, that Nel­
son started with Rock-Ola.
In the background of the pic­
ture above, left to right, Jack
Deaton of Charlotte, Mrs. A. R.
Kiser, and W. C. Deaton of
Galion, Ohio. Ray Kiser, as he is
known to all his many coin ma­
chine friends, is one of the pi­
oneers in the business. His ex­
perience dates back many years
and he knows every angle of the
business— especially in the pho­
nograph division.
Let our guns do the talking—
serve in silence.
DOUBLE
C O N G R A TU L A TIO N S
To save free speech watch
your speech now — serve in si­
lence.
First, A. R. Kiser will distrib­
ute Rock-Ola music products
Idle chatter can bring total
distruction — serve in silence.
W e repair AD VAN C E M A ­
CHINES and supply re­
placement parts.
A d v a n c e M a c h in e Co.
4641-47 R A V E N S W O O D A V E ..
C H IC A G O . IL L IN O IS
We are supporting the War
Program to the utmost.
4
© International Arcade Museum
AUTOMATIC AGE
September, 1942
http://www.arcade-museum.com/
LOCATION AGREEMENT ANTICIPATED
TAXES; PROTECTS OPERATOR AGAINST
UNPROFITABLE STOPS
Operators give much credit to
Charles Fleischmann of the
Baltimore Salesbook Company,
New York City— being the rec­
ognized authority on operators’
collection books and forms— for
the fact that the firm’s newest
Handyset Location Agreement
anticipated the coming taxes.
Those operators who had signed
their locations to this agreement
found themselves in an enivable
position.
“Our Handyset L o c a t i o n
Agreement not only anticipated
the possibility of increased tax­
ation,” explained Fleischmann,
“but was so arranged by the men
who prepared it that the oper­
ators who signed their locations
to this agreement are now fully
protected on the payment of this
tax with their location owners.
“There is no doubt that the
coming tax situation makes the
Handyset Location Agreement
even more valuable to operators.
The paragraph that saved those
operators who have already
signed their locations and will
save others who promptly get
these signed, is paragraph 6
which reads as follows:
“ ‘In the event that any law
now existing or which may here­
after be passed by any lawful
authority shall require the pay­
ment of any license fees, taxes
or other charges on account of
the use or operation of said
equipment, said charges shall be
paid by the OPERATOR but the
amount thereof shall be borne
equally by the parties hereto and
the OPERATOR shall be en­
titled to deduct the LOCATION
O W N ER’S share of such charges
from any sums thereafter due
the LOCATION OW NER pur­
suant hereto, provided, however,
that in the event any such
change shall make the operation
of such machine unprofitable the
OPERATOR may upon .. . days’
notice to the LOCATION OWN­
ER, terminate this agreement.’
“This paragraph covers the
operator completely. It helps him
to get part of the share of the
new taxes back from the location
owner. It makes it legally defi­
nite to remove his equipment if
the tax is so high that it is un­
profitable to operate that equip­
ment any further.
—and tor real VICTORY
against Cash Box SABOTAGE
install
• The
Famous, Patented
Chicago
A m trc a ’s
Lcidlng
Coin Operated
Devices
“A C E ”
L o c k
Individually Registered Key
Service. A ll locks can be
keyed alike.
Remember — There's
a C H IC A G O
Protection Need
L O C K for Every
Locks . . . for new equipment and replacements . . . Ace Locks,
Single Bitted, Double Bitted Locks . . . Padlocks, too . . . A ll
Chicago Locks insure— "UTM OST Security!"
Ask your Jobber or W rite Us for Free Catalog
CHICAGO LOCK CO.
September, 1942
© International Arcade Museum
AUTOMATIC AGE
Double Bitted
H a lf A c tu a l Size
2 0 2 4 N. R A C I N E A V E .
D ept. 77, C H IC A G O , IL L .
5
http://www.arcade-museum.com/

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