C.O.C.A. Times

Issue: 2014-July - Vol 20 Num 2

For many collectors the floor machines represent the zenith of their collecting career. These two beauties would be welcome in any collection.
The Caille PUCK, shown on the left, was adapted from the Mills OWL, probably the most copied slot machine of all time. PUCKs were
manufactured between 1898 and 1901, first by the Illinois Machine Company and then by Caille-Schiemer. The OWL had a five slot coin head,
but the PUCK could take six coins, and is, in fact, the oldest six slot machine made. The name is derived from the Puck Weekly, a popular humor
magazine, and probably was calculated to encourage people to think it was fun to play. Most PUCKs have heads that are cracked or missing,
thanks to the practice of hitting a head with a sledge hammer to put the machine out of commission. The PUCK in the Harrah's collection is
complete and in beautiful condition. The 1905 Caille FORTY-FIVE featured a form of mechanical roulette. It was a beautiful machine with
lots of cast metal on it. It was probably named as it was because there were 45 possible stopping positions on the wheel although some insist
that the popular Colt .45 "six-gun" was capitalized upon.
himself had given it.
Another thing Harper would con-
sider grabbing on his mad escape from
the imaginary fire is the original carv-
ing of the Great Seal of the State of
California.
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Britt says that the seal was found in
a bank vault in San Francisco in 1932.
Nobody knows how it got there. And
though nobody is 100% certain that
this is the authentic first carving, no
other carving has ever surfaced, and
this one has all the distinguishing
marks of the sculptor who was sup-
posed to have carved it. The seal was a
gift to Mr. Lyon from someone whose
name has been lost.
The seal originally hung in the Se-
nate Building of what was then the ca-
pitol of California, San Jose, during
the 1850 session.
A man named Balzar, a governor of
Nevada in earlier days, donated the
gold scale that was used in the Dayton,
Nevada Wells Fargo office to weigh
gold brought in by prospectors during
the gold rush.
Dayton, Nevada also owned a Silsby
Steamer fire engine. It put out fires
around the turn of the century. It has
been completely restored, and could
put out fires today if it had to. The
Silsby Steamer, now at Harrah's, was
on display in the Smithsonian Institu-
tion during the American Bicentenial.
'Tm very fond of the whole collec-
A passing young lady pauses to ponder a Mills FOUR BELLS. The Mills is a floor console built
in 1940, and could take on four players at once.
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