C.O.C.A. Times

Issue: 2007-March - Vol 8 Num 1

3712 W. SCENIC AVE., MEQUON, WISCONSIN 53092
Phone: (262) 242-3131 OR E-mail: Bedvibr8or@aol.com
In this Issue:
Small change. It was the pennies and nickels that went into the arcade,
scale, vending and slot machines many years ago that helped the families
of storekeepers, bar owners and route operators. That same small change
trickled up to the Mills, Caille, Watling, Jennings and other families to en-
rich their lives. Millions of people of all ages put their small change into
the machines that we collect and treasure today.
Now the members of COCA are working together to enrich our lives
one small change at a time. What started out as a few collectors meeting
twice a year in Chicago has grown to a membership of more than 550.
Together we publish the best and only magazine dedicated to all types of
coin-op. Our meetings have become the place to be with great speakers
and a chance to meet old and new friends. We are headed to Phoenix for
our fourth annual convention on July 27. Our website is growing with
new features. We have initiated a program of member discounts available
only to COCA members from fellow COCA members/vendors.
Our latest successful small change was the initiation of local meet-
ings. These regional gatherings provide an opportunity to get to know
fellow COCA members on a new level. In contrast to our time together
in Chicago or at the annual convention where we are rushing to take in as
much as we can, the local meetings are a relaxing time for socializing, tell-
ing stories, and learning about each other, our machines, and our field of
expertise. They also offer the chance for spouses to meet and share their
interests. There are several local meetings planned for 2007. If you don't
see one on the list near you, why not host one yourself in your area. All
coin-op collectors will benefit by attending a local COCA gathering.
Our next Chicago meeting will be at the home of Jasper Sanfilippo
on Friday, March 30. Only COCA members may go and must go via the
COCA bus. Check out the website (www.coinopclub.org) for more details.
If you have any ideas, questions, complaints or suggestions for our club,
please call me directly at 919-304-4455, or e-mail me at Bill @mebtel.net.
Your membership in COCA is appreciated. Thank you for your support.
Bill Petrochuk
COCA President
All Clasified Items .. ..
FOR SALE Only .. ..
Received by May 1st, 2007
50 Words or Less will be
FREE!
DEADLINE FOR
MAY
• Daval Marval
by Bill Petrochuk (cover story) ...... .4
• A.B.T. Football
by Bill Howard ..... ... .... .............. 6
• Town Broker Down Under.
by John Peterson ........ ......... ...... 8
• Cheater Slugs
by William Daugharty ................ 11
• Friends of the Guardhouse
by Bill Howard ........ ... ............... 12
• Tales of the Hunt
hosted by Jack Freund ....... .... .. 14
Yale Wonder Clock
by Johnny Duckworth
• C.O.C.A. Profile
by Frank DeMayo ............. ...... 16
• Original Literature
by Marshall Fey ............... ..... .. 20
• November Chicagoland
by Jack Kelly ................. .......... 22
• Watling Supreme Plain Weigher #1 2
by Jim & Merlyn Collings ...... 24
• Coin-Op Collecting in Europe
by Sam Mazzeo ....................... 26
• C.O.C.A. Local Gatherings ..... 30
• Selected Auction Results
by Doug Cain ............ ....... ....... 32
• Mills Whatheheckisit?
by Robert Chaney ................... 32
NEXT ISSUE:
10, 2007
For more details,
contact Paul Hindin at:
BedVibr8or@aol.com or
(262) 242-3131
3
A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE
DAVAL MARVEL AND AMERICAN EAGLE
Cover Story ..... by Bill Petrochuk
What was the most popular trade stimulator of all
time? Ask a group of coin-op collectors and the most
likely answer is The Marvel. When visiting the home
of a fellow collector what machine will most likely be
seen? Right again! The Marvel. What coin-op ma-
chine was among the first acquired by most collectors?
Well, you get the idea. Most of us currently have or
have had one and some have built whole collections
around these marvelous wonders.
What made the Marvel and its twin brother the
American Eagle so popular? First, they enjoyed an ex-
tremely long production run. The Marvel appeared in
early 1940. Production ceased during the war years of
1942 through 1945, but came back strong and lasted
until 1952. That is at least nine years of production;
most other trade stimulators only enjoyed one to five-
year production runs. Noted counter game collector
and historian Bill Whelan began collecting serial num-
bers of trade machines before most collectors knew
what a trade stimulator was. He estimates that Da-
val made about 70,000 machines. More than 60,000
of them were post humpback production. One could
conclude that between 25,000 and 40,000 Marvels and
Eagles were produced. Al Douglas and Dave Klein had
been in business in Chicago for about 15 years as the
A.S. Douglas Co. and as Douglas Machine before they
combined letters in their first names and became Daval
in the early 1930's. Scott Industries bought the line in
1948, and then sold out to Comet Industries in 1949,
who continued production until 1952.
When Marvel and American Eagle were first intro-
duced in 1940 they left the humpback style of the Reel
21 and Reel Dice in the dust. The new streamlined look
featured hammerloid baked-on enamel paint and phe-
nol-plastic, slam-proof yellow or red front pull handles.
The biggest improvement over the trade stimulators of
the past was the clock type gear driven governor. This
was the same type of timing device that Mills, Jennings
and Watling had been using for years in their full-sized
slot machines. The replacement of the troublesome
pump type governor was welcomed by operators ev-
erywhere. Groetchen, Daval's major competitor, also
switched to clock governors in their stimulators. Other
improvements of their previous games included a coin
4
agitator to keep the coins spread out in the cash box, a
clog and jam-proof coin chute, and a mechanism that
slid in and out of the cabinet with ease.
Groetchen had re-popularized the token payout of
the early cast iron stimulators with their Ginger of 1937.
Daval copied the token payout slide and tube in both
the Marvel and Eagle. Marvel tokens were good for
one to ten packs of cigarettes, while Eagle tokens were
good for five to 100 free plays. The tokens could either
be dispensed to the winner or retained behind a win-
dow in the visibility version. Machines were created
in the plain gambling model for $32.50, or as gumball
vendors for $34.50, F.O.B. Chicago. By June of 1943,
over-production had lowered the prices to $15.75 each,
or $11.95 each in lots of ten. When the war ended the
price rose to $54.00 for the plain version and $59.00 for
the gumball model.
Marvel was first advertised in 1 ¢ and 5¢ play with
cigarette symbols, and as 5¢ play only with beer strips.
The beer symbols must not have been well received as
production either quickly ceased or never began. The
American Eagle had the standard slot machine fruit
reels and also came with stars, hearts, diamonds, clo-
vers and rings. Machines with numbers symbols are
occasionally found and were also made for export as
well. All machines had three reels with 20 symbols and
10 stops. When three like symbols were lined up the
payout fingers probed the reel disks to activate the to-
ken slide. There certainly is much full-sized slot ma-
chine engineering in these smaller games.
In 1941 Daval introduced the American Eagle De-
fense. This machine had tank, bomb, machine gun, ar-
tillery gun, and paratrooper symbols. These are quite
rare as aluminum became a critical material for war
use and the run was short. Other models included the
Gusher of 1946, which had a hand-load key operated
jackpot on the front, the Gold Award model, first in-
traduced in 1941, and the Comet, which was merely a
Marvel renamed by Comet Industries when they took
over the company in 1949. A non-coin operated model
introduced in 1941 featured a counter on the side to tell
the operator how many plays a patron had made. Metal
award card plates can be found in different sizes and in
either etched chrome or brass finish and with differing

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