C.O.C.A. Times

Issue: 2003-November - Vol 3 Num 9

MARVINS MARVELOUS
MECHANICAL MUSEUM
~ntique ~lot£i
QUALITY RESTORATIONS
BUY - SELL
SLOT MACHINES
OLD COIN-OP
JOHN & KENNA JOSEFFY
1420 SO. IVY WAY
E-mail:
DENVER, co 80224
johnjoseffy@webtv.net
303-756-5369
VISIT US NEXT TIME YOU ARE
IN THE DETROIT AREA
Illinois Antique Slot Machine Company
surr 1\\At~HINES \VANTEH
,,-••~.:r,
Also old Wurlitzer Juke Boxes,
Nickelodeons, Music Boxes __ ,

Buy & Sell
Finders Fee Paid
'_
FJ!I:.,., ,
Plus any related devices
1~
Frank Zygmunt
630/985-2742
FAX: 985-5151
P.O. Box 542
Westmont, IL 60559
zygm1015@aol.com
I , ,:;,, r,
' ~: ~
1
..
Any Condition
Paying Cash
ARCADE LOADED WITH ANTIQUE
ARCADE MACHINES, VIDEOS, PINBALLS
AND CRAZY, CRAZY ITEMS.
31005 Orchard Lake Road
Farmington Hills, Michigan 48334
248-626-5020
VENDING GLOBES AND PAR1S
New Globes
Acorn 6, 8,9, 11 pound
Advance Small Football
Advance Large Football
Bluebird Large
Climax 10
Columbus #8 with Star
Columbus #8 No Star
Columbus #9 with Star
Columbus #9 No Star
Double Nugget
Grandbois cylinder
Hamilton
Lucky Boy/Bloyd
NW 33 Frosted
Regal cylinder
Regal pear
Silver King
Simpson Large
Victor cylinder
Victor square
$30
$40
$40
$55
$75
$45
$60
$50
$55
$45 ea 2/$85
$35
$65
$40
$45
$35
$40
$40
$50
$35
$35
10% Discount on 12 or more
Mix or Match OK
We also have Original Globes Available
Call us for:
• Globes • Parts • Decals
If you don't see it-ASK
Always Buying and Selling
Contact:
Dan Davids at djdavids@earthlink.net 310/349-2082
Or Phil Cunningham at 818/845-4964
PINSTORY
by Tom and Penny Taylor
It all started because my older brother didn ' t want to
baby-sit me. Growing up in Milwaukee in the early
60's, pinball was second nature. With a bar on every
corner and a bowling alley on every other corner,
life was good. He was 16 and I was 6. The last
thing my brother wanted was little me tagging
along. The solution was simple: we would go to the
neighborhood bowling alley, he would give me a
handful of dimes, ditch me in the game room and
bowl with hi s friends. There I was, perched on a bar
stool with my arms outstretched as far as they would
go to reach the flipper buttons, playing pinball for
hours. It was destiny that my Mom named me
Tommy.
For the next 12 years, my purpose in life was to find
the game room at every lodge, park or campsite
where the family vacationed. It is amazing how
many of those places and games I remember. Then
it was off to college, where my minor was pinball.
It didn't help land my first job, but it sure gave me
a well-rounded education. Shortly after that it was
wedding bells and the thought of never playing pin-
ball again. Fortunately, the resort where we honey-
mooned had a game room, and despite a childhood
of being told that "skill at pinball is a sign of a mis-
spent youth," Penny became hooked on the silver
ball. A brand new Williams Firepower was my
accomplice (one of which now resides in our living
room). At last, there was hope, and three months
later I answered an ad in the paper and became the
proud owner of a non-working Gottlieb Card Trix
machine. Never mind that the $140 I paid for the
11
machine was for groceries, gas and a haircut. I was
willing to go hungry, walk more and look a little
shaggy to finally have a machine.
An artist by nature, my wife meticulously cleaned
everything on the playfield to a brand-new shine.
Meanwhile, I learned to decipher a schematic. It
took us three weeks to get the game to work, but it
was fun and worth the effort. We still have this
game!
In the 20+ years since that first game, we have
owned close to 500 machines and currently have
about 150. Over that time we have also dabbled in a
couple of jukeboxes, slots, trade stimulators and
four kids. We have added a number of arcade games
to the collection, too. We have tried to obtain an
example of every Gottlieb wedgehead produced
between 1960 and 1978, and now hope to find the
time to restore them all. The annual Pinball Expo in
Chicago has been a great source of games and new
friends. We have attended all 19 shows and exhib-
ited since 1992. In 2002 we were able to move into
a new building and finally bring all the games
together in one place (they had been stored at five
different locations---friends' and relatives ' homes,
storage sheds and a rented basement). We will prob-
ably spend the next 10 years restoring them all, but
I can ' t think of a better way to enjoy this great coin-
op hobby. I like to tell people that pinball machines
are like potato chips: you can ' t stop with just one!
We hope yo u enjoy the accompanying pictures. We
can be reached at thomastaylor@ameritech.net.

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