Coin Machine Review (& Pacific ...)

Issue: 1939 January

Herm Seiden, Troy, N. Y. operator and brother of Henry Seiden, Albany distributor,
tries his skill on Eureka, four-way free-play multiple, during a recent visit to the plant of
Bally Mfg. Co.
Bally Line
rounded out for
start of year.
50
COIN
MAClilNE
REVIEW
CHICAGO.-A new beverage vendor
"designed to get fussy folks ' money,"
Hawthorne, a ten-way multiple with
double reserve feature , Bally's Twin
Bell, Thistledowns, reserve-type multi-
ple one-shot, Paramount, novelty game
with spinning captive ball, Arrowhead,
freeplay novelty game, Eureka, multi-
ple free-play novelty table, Dixie, seven-
coin console, Bally Reserve counter
game, Hot Vendor popcorn machine and
Rainbow pencil-vendor with buy-back
feature , give Bally Mfg. Co. a well-
rounded line to start off the new year.
Bulk of these machines were demon-
s trated to a group of several hundred
operators who attended Bally's open
house in the Sherman Hotel during the
time of the NACOMM Show in Chicago
in December, and all of them will be
on display, with other new devices, at
the Bally booths at the CMMA Show
at the Sherman, January 16 to 19. Hos-
pitality was the main purpose of the
December open house, yet, according
to President Ray Moloney, Bally's
"baby convention" booked a surprising
volume of business, and particular in-
VISIBLE SLOTTED
COIN COUNTER
The Operator's Friend
Transparent, non-break-
able, with slot gauge
giving absolute accu-
racy in count. shows up slugs, easily emptied into
roll tubes. The best hand counter doing work of
mechanical counter.
For pennies, nickels. Can be
used to stack dimes. Price $1 .25 each either size,
or $2.50 per set. Try a sample.
PERSONALITY - INDIVIDUALITY - DURABILITY
IT IS TRANSPARENT, NOT SCRAP IRON
PENNY
COUNTER
TELESCOPES
INTO
NICKEL
Wrapper Tubes
60c per M, 55c M per 50 M Lois
50c M per I 00 M Lots
ACCURATE
PATTON, PA.
Coin Counter
Company
terest was evidenced in the Beverage
Vendor which requires no plumbing or
water connections.
Characterizing the Bally Beverage
Vendor a s "designed to get fussy folks'
money," General Salesmanger Jim
Buckley pointed out that the thing
meant is repeat-sale money. Declared
he: "If you 've got what fussy folks want,
they keep coming back for more. That's
why the Bally Beverage Vendor is fav-
ored by operators who check the facts.
They know that carbonated beverage
drinkers are very fussy people, de-
manding the true tang and flavor of a
properly prepared drink. They know
that a Bally-vended beverage is pre-
pared in the approved manner, with
syrup and water accurately gauged,
carbonated by the positive-action-
method used in modern bottling plants.
They know that Bally-vended cups,
drawn by the dozens in rapid succes-
sion, are always uniform in flavor and
gas content. They know that rush-hour
business cannot result in loss of spar-
kle and zest. They know, on the other
hand, that a few slow days cannot
cause water-stagnation. They know that
fussy folks recognize the true tang and
flavor in a Bally-vended beverage.
They know they can be sure of a
steady s hare of the fussy folks' money."
Buckley pointed out that a new in-
vention, available only t6 Bally Bev-
erage Vendor operators, blends and
charges the beverage in the operator's
own headquarters in a manner recom-
mended by carbonic beverage experts,
under accurate control, artd at amazing-
ly low cost. Said to be "packaged" in
stainless steel barrels which are quick-
ly attached to the vending unit, the bev-
erage is held under constant pressure,
thus retaining indefinitely the sparkle
and flavor demanded by soft-drink con-
noisseurs, and as a result of the new
Bally method which requires no plumb-
ing or pipe connections, thousands of
new spots are now "open to the big
profits of carbonated beverage opera-
tions."
Buckley also explained that a simple
electrical plug-in is all that is required
to set the machine in motion, and pat-
rons like the fact that the equipment is
fully automatic, requiring no use of
buttons, levers or knobs-factors which
tend to slow up sale s.
Commenting on Hawthorne, one of
the newest of amusement tables, Buck-
ley pointed to the unusual effect of
what is termed "fifth-nickel insurance."
As many as ten coins may be played
into this multiple with double-reserve
feature in a single game, but invari-
ably players will use at feast five nick-
els every time as a result of this plan.
Explaining further, Buckley declared:
"It is first necessary to point out that
Hawthorne has two complete reserve
feature mechanisms, instead of one,
both of which climb to a $50 top. This,
in itself, is a powerful repeat play fea-
ture because even though one reserve
has been hit the other is still on the
job and worth shooting for. A reserve
award can be won only when the fea-
ture light is on, and this lights up at
mystery intervals frequent enough to
s timulate play, but always when the
fifth nickel is deposited, and then re-
mains lit until the end of the game.
Thus live nickels guarantee the player
a crack at both reserves. On test' loca-
tions 'fifth-nickel insurance' has worked
out exactly like its name, insurance
that Hawthorne will average approx-
imately twenty-five cents per game."
Mechanically, Buckley asserts, Haw-
thorne is a "j ob Bally can really brag
about." It's been "given the works," he
says, and it's known to be "right. " Flex-
ible, Hawthorne can be operated with
or without the multiple and with or with-
out the reserve.
In expectation of the firm 's biggest
year to date, an extensive rearrange-
ment of office quarters has created
greater efficiency and added consider-
ably to factory space, relieving to some
extent the strain of heavy production
schedules. Further increase in manu-
facturing facilities is said to be neces-
sary, however, and space has been
secured and awaits only the setting
up of additional production lines.
e
Hecht Nielsen
has only ball gum
displayed at Show.
CHICAGO. - Hecht Nielsen, well
known Chicago vending machine dis-
tributor, who handles the American
Chicle Co.'s Five Star Ball Gum ex-
clusively, reports that his was the only
firm exhibiting ball gum at the Decem-
ber NACOMM Convention, and that the
number of contracts signed and orders
taken for Five Star Ball Gum at this
Show to be filled during the coming
year, far exceeded those of any past
convention.
Nielsen was so well pleased with the
results of his display that he has de-
cided to exhibit again at the CMMA
meeting with his usual attractive selec-
tion of supplies and equipment, includ-
ing Five Star Ball Gum and his com-
plete line of Columbus vendors, and he
invites all of his friends throughout the
industry to visit him during their stay
in Chicago.
e
Robbins Offers Gift
BROOKLYN, N. Y.-Operators attend-
ing the CMMA Show in Chicago, Janu-
ary 16 to 19, will be given an oppor-
tunity of winning one of D. Robbins'
Criss-Cross games. Robbins reports this
new counter skill game with ball gum
vendor as having been carefully tested
on location before offering it to opera-
tors with the assurance of mechanical
perfection plus proven play appeal. De-
tails of the free offer may be secured at
the time of previewing the game, at D.
Robbins & Co.'s booth, No. 107, at the
Sherman Hotel.
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I
Part of the participants in the gala Jubilee Banquet given by David C. Rockola, president of Rock-Ola Mfg. Corp ., Chicago, for
Ro ck-Ola department heads, officers and executives and their wives, at the Graemere Hotel, December 30.
Boll Gum
Lucky Roll
Employees Feted
now made in West.
LOS ANGELES.-Operators Vending
Machine Supply Co. has acquired sev-
eral new titles to leadership in service
to the operator, of which Lou Feldman
and Sid Bloom, co-owners, seem right-
fully proud. First is the fact that the
firm is now making ball gum , and is
the only concern in the West doing so.
From raw chicle, through cooking,
flavoring , molding, coating and polish-
ing, every step in the manufacture of
ball gum is now accomplished within
the sanitary plant of Operators Vend-
ing Machine Supply Co. All flavors , all
sizes and all colors of gum used by
the vending machine trade roll out of
ihis plant, as well as spotted ball gum.
Firm also makes stick gum for use in
vendors, though it is not the only firm
in the We s t manufacturing in this line.
Second fact of which Bloom and Feld-
man are proud is the making of glass
globes for virtually every known vend-
ing machine. Nine different molds for
popular machines are now in use , and
as the only concern in California mak-
ing globes for Operators, Operators
Vending has made available a saving
of 25-cents to 30-cents in ·cost, not in-
cluding the saving in trantporlation
charges.
scores big success
with operators.
LONG BEACH. - "Lucky Roll," the
new counter game recently introduced
by the M. Brodie Company is being
proclaimed by both operators and job-
bers as the "best yet in counter games. "
Such reports have been pouring in
since the machine was first announced
in the December issue of the REVIEW.
Asked why "Lucky Roll " should be
outstanding in the lace of an apparent
overstocked market of counter games,
Steve Brodie replied: "This amusement
game was not the brain storm of an
engineer who had to get out a new
game in order to hold his job. "Lucky
Roll" was developed entirely from the
suggestions of operators, men who are
in the field each day getting direct
public reaction and opinions on all
types of equipment. Each operator had
his own pet idea but when all these
ideas were boiled down the answer
was pretty much the same - "they
wanted a one cent counter game where
the coin itself could be controlled by
the player and where the coin action
would be visible to the player as
well. "
'
at Rock-Ola jubilee
banquet.
CHICAGO. - Five hundred Rock-Ola
employees and their wives joined in a
jubilee banquet at the Graemere Hotel,
here , December 30, as guests of Rock-
Ola Mfg. Carp's President David C.
Rockola. Occasion of the affair, as
pointed out by Vice-President Jack Nel-
son, was the celebration of the splendid
acceptance of the new line of luxury
lightup phonographs for 1939, the thou-
sands of orders which have poured in
since the December Show, and to lay
plans for quick and effective handling
of the forthcoming heavy production
program.
e
e
Hofberg Loses Cor
Noto Soddened
LOS ANGELES.-Sometime during the
course of the meeting of music opera-
tors at the Clark Hotel, here , January
4, Coinman Murray Holberg had a 1936
deluxe Dodge sedan stolen from a near-
by parking lot. Its 1938 license plate
was numbered 29N453, its color was a
turquoise-green, and any operator who
might chance to see a car of this de-
scription during his travels will win
Hofberg's appreciation by reporting it
immediately to police.

LOS ANGELES .-Carl Noto of L. A.
Amusement Games Co., local operating
firm , reports the death of his lather in
Chicago recently. Noto s pent two
months in the lakeshore city during his
lathe r' s illness and s ubsequent to his
death, and also look the opportunity of
vi siting the plants of leading manufac-
turers there. He returned to Los Angele s
in December, having driven both ways.

Best Wishes and Continued Success to
IRVING BROMBERG
ani co_ntinued SUCCESS to your customers with
EXHIBIT'S 1939 LINE of GREAT MONEY-MAKERS

EXHIBIT SUPPLY
4222-24-26-28-30 W. Lake St.
c:o.
Chicago
While department heads, foremen , su-
perintendents, executives, officers and
their wives gathered in the Graemere's
grand ballroom and an adjoining over-
flow room with an infectious high
humor, the seriousness of purpose was
underlying and was brought to the fore
by strenuous efforts on the part of Mas-
ter of Ceremonies Nelson. Twenty-two
key men in the organization were in-
troduced, and each one was cheered
as he responded with appropriate re-
marks and pledged support to make
1939 Rock-Ola's best year.
51
COIN
MACHINE
REVIEW
President Rockola spoke significantly
as the key man of the evening, telling
of the enthusiastic work of distributors
in the field, and stressing the responsi-
bility of everyone in the organization
for has tening efficient production of the
new 1939 Luxury Lightup phonographs
to meet the demands made of the fac-
tory. He gave credit to the men who
had played an important part in pro-
ducing the "phonograph of the year,"
and expressed great pleasure over the
reception of the phonograph by distribu-
tors, operators, and the public. Hardly
before he had finished, the crowd was
on its feet to pay him tribute in an
amazing demonstration which lasted for
fully seven minutes.
Following the conclusion of this por-
tion of the program, Nelson turned the
chair over to "Dorny" Dornfield who in-
troduced a dozen or more smooth
vaudeville acts for the entertainment oi
the guests. Following the entertainment
music for dancing was furnished by the
Deluxe 1939 Rock-Ola phonograph, and
several location owners, attending an-
other dinner in the hotel, hastened to
find out the name of the machine they
heard and hustled off to demand new
Rock-Olas of their operators .
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