Coin Machine Review (& Pacific ...)

Issue: 1939 July

BAILED BY LEADERS OF THE INDUSTRY AS THE
OUTSTANDING BIT OF 1939 !
BATT IMC
CHAMP
Incorporating for the FIRST TIME
PERFECT INVISIBLE
PERCENTAGE CONTROL!
At last! PERFECT INVISIBLE PERCENTAGE CONTROL
is a reality! Heretofore believed impossible in a coin game
. . . this sensational improvement has now been embodied
in this outstanding new hit. So perfect, so fully adjustable,
so dependable in every way that we absolutely guarantee
100% MECHANICAL PERFECTION!
3
COIN
f,fACHIHE
R~VIEW
BATTING CHAMP holds irresistible Big Win-
ner appeal! Player builds up an amazing batting
average up to 80 by skill, right while playing
the game! New Alternate Type Bumpers register
either hits or batting average points; New Live
Ball Action, Free Ball Return, Home Runs and
other appealing features add tremendous
excitement!
Operators report BATTING CHAMP is put-
ting them in Championship money! Order yours
quick!
REGULAR MODEL
FREE PLAY
s1950 s9950
"A GOOD
GAME IS
NEVER. OUT
or SEASON!"
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY
Size
X 22"
44"
Extra Large
Backboard
D. GOTTJ.IEB & CO.
2736-42 N. PAULINA ST., CHICAGO
The COIN MACHINE REVIEW for July, 1939. Vol. 7, No . I. Published monthly at 1113 Venice Blvd., Los Angeles, Cal. Fitzroy 8269. Paul W. Blackford,
editor and publisher. Entered as Second Class Matter July 23, 1936, at the Post Office at Los Angeles, Cal. under the act of March 3, 1879.
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4
COIN
MACHINE
REVIEW
Fl.ASHES
LONDON - British coin machine men
have found that recent war scares have, to
some extent, caused a momentary lull in
their business. However, in summing up
their business at the end of the first half of
1939, they find that phonographs have con-
tinued to be popular. There has been some
slack on new games. No doubt the English
want music with their wars.
PARIS-One of the smallest, yet one of
the most successful from the standpoint of
business transacted, the 1939 French coin
machine show was held here recently. One
of the high spots in the show was the pre-
sentation of the first coin-operated phono-
graph exhibited in France. It was a new
Wurlitzer, and French operators were very
enthusiastic about the machine.
SEATTLE-Arrested while using a mag-
netic device to guide balls into the high
score holes of a marble game, a young
man was sentenced to jail for two months.
A young woman, also held, played the game
while the young man jockeyed the balls
into the high-scoring positions.
CANTON, Ohio-Operators report the
penny arcade business is far ahead of last
year and indications are that 1939 will be
one of the best yea rs in many seasons.
More new machines are in evidence and
operators are taking more pride in their
business. One leader in the business says,
"it looks like penny arcades are at last
going modern."
WASHINGTON, D. C.-U. S. salesmen
outstripped their closest competitor, Ger-
many, two to one in sales during the first
three months of 1939. This fact, shown by
government rec~rds, indicates that the old
U. S. sales punch is not lost. And the coin
machine manufacturers got their share, you
may be sure.
CHICAGO-Candy manufacturers have
until January 1, 1940, to comply with the
new labeling law under the Federal Food,
Drug and Cosmetic act. Under the status
of the Lea Bill, producers must change
their labels to comply with the new laws.
By showing sufficient reason, manufacturers
may have until July 1, 1940.
NEW YORK- Advertising is not as
costly as some people seem to think. A re-
cent survey showed that less than 3 per
cent of the total sum paid by consumers for
the products they buy goes to advertising
costs. In 1937 $45,000,000 was spent for
advertising cigarettes, yet the average cost
for cigarettes selling at 14 cents was little
more than half a cent a package.

JULY, 1939
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https://elibrary.arcade-museum.com

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