Coin Machine Journal

Issue: 1932 April

FOR SALE— Nickel Automatic record
changing Console, using Samson Pam
Amplifier, complete $250.00 list for
$75.00. Also Portable Radios, Electric
Clocks, Auto Radio, Public Address Sys­
tems and Microphones. Wells-Smith
Radio Corp., 26 N. Wells St., Chicago,
ADVANCE GUM BALL MACHINES
FOR SALE. Guaranteed A I condition,
$2.50 each. Midwest Merchandising
Co., 31 S. Clinton St., Chicago, III.
Slightly used Bingos, 1c or 5c, $7.00
each; Baffle Balls, lc or 5c, $9.00; Bally-
hoos, lc or 5c, $10.75; 3 Jacks, $9.00;
Puritan Venders, $8.50; Stop & Sock,
$5.00; Pin Targets, $5.75. POSTAL
CONFECTION CO., 111 N. Leavitt,
Chicago, Illinois.
TOPFLIGHT
111.
April, 1932
THE COIN M A C H IN E JO U R N A L
98
__________
PEANUT MACHINES, brand new, at­
tractive, strong mechanism, $3.60 in 25
lots. Sample $4.50. Cash with order.
Novix Specialties, 1 191 Broadway, New
York.
XPORTS of coin operated ma­
chines from the United States
have shown a regular decrease dur­
ing the past three years. The ex­
p o r t s figures for 1930 were 6 per
cent below those of 1929. The fig­
ures for 1981 were 22 per cent
under the 1930 figure. In 1931
there were a total of 15,628 ma­
chines shipped out of the country
valued at $746,692.
E
Bet on
The Favorite to Win the
$50,000
N . Gottlieb is now associated with his
brother Dave, in the business of manu-
factoring coin-operated games. Oper­
ators will now get twice as much service
when patronizing the D . Gottlieb Com­
pany of Chicago.
Kentucky Derby of 1932
H A V E CASH for small peanut or gum
ball route on west or southwest side of
Chicago, or will buy slightly used rna-
chines. Address Box 44, care of Coin
Machine Journal.
GEARS
In Stock^Immediate Delivery
,__ i.!
FOR SALE— FIFTEEN LATE MODEL
Mills Five-Cent Jack Pot Front Venders,
like new. Write for prices and particu­
lars. H. E. SPANGLER, P. O. Box 573,
York, Pa.
U
PENNY AND NICKEL BAFFLE BALL
machines in good condition, slightly
used. Quantity of ten or more includ­
ing metal stands, $ 10.00 each. Singly,
$12.00 each. Brooklyn Amusement
Machine Co., 308 Marcy Aye., Brook­
lyn, N. Y.
'
Gears, speed re-
d u e e r s , sprockets,
thrust bearings, flex­
ible couplings, pul­
leys, etc, A complete
line is carried in our
Chicago stock. Can
also quote on special
gears of any kind.
Send us your blue
prints and inquiries.
W rite fo r
Catalog No. 350
Legs that are rigid, firm
and sound—
These are the legs on
BALLYROUND
Chicago Gear Works
769-773 W . Jackson Blvd.
Chicago, 111.
C o in C h u te s
chute GUARANTEED FOR ONE YEAR.
Cannot be played with toothpicks, washers
or other spurious coins. Provided in either
five or one cent type. Finest made chromium
plated housing.
Most sensitive ever devised for this type of ma­
chine and enables the player to develop a high
degree of skill. Made of nickle aluminum highly
polished drill rod actuated by a spring of the finest
music wire which will NOT lose its tension. The
knob is chromium plated, fiber tipped, penned into
shaft so that it locks and cannot loosen or come
off. GUARANTEED FOR ONE YEAR,
Previously Priced at
$2.50 Each
Can be used on Favorites, Ballyhoos, Rain­
bows, Oh Yeah and practically every type of pin
game in the amusement line.
Finest made, slug ejecting, magnetized coin
N ow !
$
Reduced to
1
. 0
0
each
T f 'C i
-
■ ’
• f D
each (Lots of 50)
$ 1 . 5 0
(In Lots of 10 or more)
. 5
0
each (Lots of 100)
B u c k le y M a n u fa ctu rin g C o m p a n y
C h ic a g o ,
111 .
2 1 S 6 -S 8 W . Washington Blvd.
Telephone West 1306-1307
U . S. A .
When writing advertisers mention the Coin Machine Journal. It establishes you as being progressive.
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T H E COI N M A C H I N E J O U R N A L
April, 1932
99
An old Dutchman, returning to
Holland, was asked by a friend what
in his estimation was the strangest
thing he had noticed, and he re­
plied 1 ‘‘The United States has many
wonderful things, but the strangest
is a drink called the cocktail—and
here is how they make it : They put
in whisky to make it strong, then
water to make it weak; gin to make
it hot and ice to make it cold; lemon
to make it sour, sugar to make it
sweet; then they say, ‘Here’s to
you!’ and drink it themselves,”
"And how’s your good wife, Sultan?”
“Oh, she's all right . . . but I have
more fun with the others.”
Lawyer: “Have you ever been
cross-examined ?”
Accused: “Rather—I have been
married ten years and my mother-
in-law lives with us.”
First Collegian: “Jiggers, here
comes a speed cop.”
Second: “Quick, hang out the
Notre Dame pennant.”
"O h Judge, are you sure I ’m the first
witness you’ve ever taken out to dinner?”
"Your face looks very familiar. Are
you sure I ’ve never married you before?”
Her Papa: “Don’t think for a
minute you’re going to marry my
daughter.”
Her Caller: “Fine—-you get me
out of this mess and I ’m your friend
for life.”
New York’s richest debutante has
seven automobiles and four homes,
besides an inheritance of $50,000,­
000, all made in the tobacco busi­
ness. That’s what we’d call keeping
kissable.
A motorist who was picked upun-
conscious after a smash opened his
eyes as he was being carried into a
garage close at hand. He began to
kick and struggle. When he was
afterwards asked the reason he ex­
plained that the first darn thing he
saw was a Shell sign and thalt “Some
darn fool was standing in front of
the ‘S’.”
"Hello, Pet Shop. . . . Change that
bird seed I just ordered to a catnip
mouse!”
Said the tramp as he looked at a
$50,000 reward sign for John Col­
lins, “I can remember when he
wasn’t worth a cent.”
"Shall I put your suitcase in the refrig­
erator car, sir?”
Abe—I went into a restaurant to­
day, the apple pie was a peach.
Friend—That’s nothing, I went into
a speakeasy and had no money so I
let the beer settle.
Abe—Say, I ’d give a thousand dol­
lars to be one of those millionaires.
Enhanced Scans © The International Arcade- Museum
A Minister: “I had no idea pro­
fanity was so prevalent till I began to
drive a car.”
His better half: “Do you hear much
of it on the road?”
Minister: “Why, nearly every one
I bump into swears fearfully.”
Newspapers all over the country have
been giving considerable publicity to the
groceteria units being set up and installed
in modem apartment houses.
Employee—There’s a man outside
with lumbago.
Employer—Tell him I don’t want
lumbago.
A kind policeman in Atchison,
Kansas, noticing two peanut ma­
chines left outside a filling station
over night took them to the police
station for safe keeping and re­
turned them next morning.
“Were you the only sober man
there?”
“Certainly not!”
“Then who was?”
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