Coin Machine Review (& Pacific ...)

Issue: 1939 June

ROPE ON TBE BUMP!
Did You Ever See That On a Menu?
OF COURSE· YOU HAVEN'T
AND YOU'VE NEVER
BEFORE GLIMPSED SUCH VALUES AS THESE:
Alps, free game .......... $50 .00
Bally Reserve .............. 10.00
Buttons .......................... 20.00
Bobs .............................. 10.00
Cargo ............................ 10.00
Dux ...... .............. ...... ...... 8 .00
Exhibit Baseball .......... 18.00
Fiesta ............................ 17.50
Genco Hit ............... ..... 17 .00
Gay Time ...................... 10.00
Hi•Lo .............................. $17.50 Ski•Hi ............................ $ 5.00
Jungle ..... ....................... 10.00 Swing ............................ 15.00
Lightning ...................... 8.0fl
Splash .......................... 15.00
Natural, free game .... 50.00
Oscar ............................ 17.50 Side Kick, free game .. 60 .00
Multi·Races, free game 55 .00 Stop 'n Go, free game 55.00
Palm Springs ................ 17 . SO Turf Champs ................ 20 . 50
Peachy .......................... 32.50
Recorder, free game .... 10.00 Trophy, free game .... 50.00
Rocket .......................... 8,00 World' s Fair ................ 15.00

NEW GAMES
Chi, Coin
89.50
BOX SCORE ............ 89.50
CHEVRON ............... 89.50
5
STAR
SPECIALS
Bumper Bowling

$55.00
(C ra ted $7.00 extra)
Genco
Keeney
Target Rifle
89.50
$35.00
ZIP ............................ 99.50
$25.00
GUN CLUB .............. 89.50
$85.00
OCEAN PARK ......... 91.00
I.ONG BEACH COIN MACHINE EXCHANGE
TOPPER ....................
AIRPORT .................
Daval
Exhibit
Bally
(Crated $7.00 ext ra)
Rock-Ola School
Days Rifle
Daval
1937 Wurlitzer
Skee Ball
Chi. Coin
32
COIN
MACHINE
REVIEW
1628 E. ANAHEIM
Philodelphio Coin
Machine Ops Assn.
By HARRY BORTNICK
The Philadelphia Coin Machine Op-
erators' Association gained official rec-
ognition as a legal busin essmen's or-
gan ization recently when the Common
Pleas Court Number Four of Philadel-
phia granted the group a Charter of
Incorporation. The Charter legally en-
titles the Association to officers and rec-
ognizes its business methods as legal.
This important decision was handed
down by the Court May 28, climaxing a
long struggle by the amusement ma-
chine operators in this area for legal
and official recognition. The judges
agreed in their ruling that pinball
games are legal machines which are
intended for the amu sement of players.
The p lea for a charter by the Phila-
de lphia Association was originally re-
que sted two and one-half years ago.
At that time it was opposed by the po-
lice department and Mayor S. Davis
Wilson, thus initiating the litigation
which was completed this week by a
complete vindication of the attitude a s-
s umed by the Association. The group
has maintained at all times that the
games are for amusement.
Immediately after the C harter was
g ranted coin machine distributors of the
Philadelphia area held a special meet-
ing, a t which time it was decided to
send congratulations to the Philadel-
phia Association for its part in gaining
added respect from the public for the
entire indu stry a s well as recognition
from the courts and civic authorities.
A second court ruling which benefits
LONG BEACH, CALIF.
amu sement machin e operators is the
verdict recently returned by the New
Jersey Superior Court stating that a pin-
ball game is not a gambling instrument
unless it is u sed for that purpose.
It supported the stand of the Southern
Jersey Amusement Machine Operators'
Association that gambling must be
proved upon a machin e before the po-
lice could fine the owner. The Court
therefore reversed the fin e imposed
upon a location own er for possession of
a machine.
Congratulations have poured in upon
executives of the local Association prais-
ing them for h elping to place the indus-
try upon a firm foundation . Extending
his congratulations, Irvin Blumenfeld ,
president of the newly formed Mary-
land Operators' Association, and Harry
Rosenb erg, secretary, visited the local
Association recently.
The two men held a confe rence with
the execu tives of the Philade lphia Asso-
ciation and were given copies of all of
the rules a nd regulations of the group
to aid them in carrying on the building
of their own organization.
e
WANTED
TO
Womon
holds "sit-down"
on game
Play was really "held down"
on an amusement machine re•
cently when one of Philadelphia's
more determined matrons decided
to put a stop to what she termed
her husband's "expensive gam.
bling."
The woman held a sit-down
strike on top of the machine and
refused to move, insisting that her
husband had spent a great deal
of money playing the game. The
machine was finally confiscated
as a means of removing the
woman,
When a copy of an affidavit by
the woman's husband was pre-
sented to police by officials of the
local association, the machine
was immediately returned to the
operator. The affidavit stated that
the man had s~nt 35 cents,
BUY
e
OR
TRADE
LATE NOVELTY GAMES, FREE PLAY AND PLAIN
Rock-Ol a Wor ld Series .......... $85.00
Big Tens, F. P ....................... 30.00
Hit Numbers, F. P ................. 22.50
t een ey Free Races •••••••••••••••• 35.00
s:\D ':ti .. ::::::: ...............................
Bally Reser••• ........................ 12.00
Runnin g Wild ........................ 7.00
Hold ' Em - -- - - 6. 50
:~jg
K eeno - - - - ---'1 10.00
Supre me .......... - - - - 45.00
stop and Go _ _ __ .. 45.00
Side Ki ck ................................ 45_00
Fl eet · - - - - - - - 15.00
Parlay Races - - - - 49. 50
Pick ' Em .................................. 45.00
Derby Oays, SI. T ................. 30.00
Derby Days, F. T ................. $24 .50
K entucky Clubs .................... 64. 50
1938 T rack Times .................. 85.00
1938 Bally Lincol n Fi elds .... 30.00
Tan foran s ................. , .............. 25.00
Preakness ................................ 15.00
Fair grounds ............................ 30.00
Mills 1-2-3, Bally Payou t.... 49.50
Reel 2 1 ......
4.75
CLEVELAND-CHICAGO AMUSE. SALES CO.
2729 PROSPECT AVENUE
CLEVELAND, OHIO
https://elibrary.arcade-museum.com
Jn
tAe
P11ci(ic
'llc14tAweJ t
with
LOUIS
KARNOFSKY
Outside of possibly San Francisco, no
other city in the United States is mak-
ing faster s trides in pioneering the coin-
operated foot oscillator than Seattle.
Leading department stores, shoe stores,
shoe repair shops, beauty parlors, and
the police department have gone down
the line heavily for this device. So well
has this machine done its work and so
great has been the demand by foot-
weary patrons, that Frederick & Nelson,
longest established department store in
Seattle, have a special booth for foot
oscillators.
They are calling Cliff Carter, Ameri-
can Record's ace-high record juggler,
"The Sphinx of Coin Row" after what
happened last month. With the same
look of fixed immobility on his face ,
Cliff went about his business as usual ,
breathing nary a word to a soul. Then
one day he walked in and said matter-
of-factly: "Well, I've gone and done it.
It's Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Carter from here
on in ." Just like that. Coin Row is still
trying to find out the girl 's name.
Superior Distributors, Inc., have been
named exclusive dis tributors for Stew-
art & McGuire 's new Dual, Feather
Touch Cigarette Machines in the state of
Washington. Co-owner Bert Farmer is
predicting big things in the way of
results.
The jobbing end of Heroux Enter-
prises has been incorporated under the
name of Evergreen Novelty Corp. In
charge of this division is Al Gustafson,
veteran coinman. Earl J. Heroux will
confine his activities to arcade manage-
ment. His concessions at Redondo Beach
and Playland Park opened May 13th,
with capacity crowds attending.
Coin Row, particularly the phono men,
will be glad to hear that Mary Casper-
son , for a number of years office worker
at the Wurlitzer office and recently
pinch-hitter for Genevieve DeLong at
Decca, is doing right well for herself in
the employ of the Empire Hotel in San
Francisco.
Employees of the Jack Moore organ-
ization held a business convention in
Portland on May 6th, and while See-
burg's 1939 policy and sales measures
were in the spotlight, there was ample
time for recreation. A dinner and dance
at the Aero club on May 5th and a
Sunday morning breakfast at the Ben-
son Hotel with Henry Anchester, western
sales manager of Seeburg, as host, pro-
vided the employees of the five Moore
branches with "the pauses that refresh."
Coin machines received added dis-
tinction on May 27 when the Shriners
arranged for a display of coin operated
equipment in the lobby of the Civic
Auditorium for their Northwest meeting
and banquet. The purpose was to create
a carnival effect. The 2,000 Shriners in
attendance were high in their praises
No More Empty Cashboxes
No More Damaged Equipment
Your Protection Problems Solved With
THE NEW
NATIONAL BURGLAR ALARM
(PATENT PENDING)
Here is just the protection coin ma-
chine operators have been seeking for
months and months . . . a completely
mechanical burglar alarm to protect
all types of equipment at small cost.
The new National Burglar Alarm is the
only mechanical alarm on the market
today. It can be easily installed on all -
types of coin-controlled equipment in
a very short time. Mechanism is com-
pletely concealed. Being entirely
mechanical there are no batteries to
A Typical National
wear out, no dead alarm when elec-
Installation
tricity is disconnected. The National
is on the job 24 hours a day and gives a rousing sixty second bell ringing ,
clearly audible several hundred feet away, when equipment is tampered
with.
33
COIN
MACHINE
REVIEW
All Types and Sizes to Fit Your Requirements
The National is ava ilable in several different sizes with a special size for
every type of device to be protected . Unequalled prot ection for scales in
outdoor locations. Furthe rmore the National is the lowest priced efficient
alarm availabl e today.
Our engineers will be glad to advise you on the type of alarms necessary
to solve your protection problems. May we tell you more?
PBOTECTO DEVICES CO.
1119 Venice Boulevard
Phone: DRexel 8785
of the Swiss music box and other arcade
equipment furnished by the Evergreen
Novelty Corp.
A movement to organize a local at
the labor temple exclusively for coin
machine service men is now under way.
Better wages and working conditions is
the banner under which they are cam-
paigning. One operator, whose name
we will not mention, is paying his serv-
ice man $12 a week. This service man
is supporting a family on his wages-
or trying to , we should say-and is
finding the temptation of dipping into
the cash box on his own accord hard to
resist. More efficiency and happier em-
ployees will result if the move to organ-
ize culminates satisfactorily.
Personable Frank Allen climbed an-
other notch on the ladder to phono-
Los Angeles, Calif.
graph fame when he received a well-
deserved promotion las t month. He left
for his new post as manager of the
San Francisco office of Decca on May
31. When Allen opened Decca's Seattle
office some year-and-a-half ago the firm
employed but two men. Under Allen's
fine guidance, that number swelled to
four and just last month another, Leslie
Tobey, was added to the shipping de-
partment to handle the sharply rising
volume of business that has been a key- •
note of Allen's mana,ership.
Parties are thrown and banquets are
staged twelve months in the year, but
none come even close to equalling the
annual blow-out tossed by Operator
Arne Holtan. Sixty guests had a terrific
time of it on the night of May 27. Feature
of the evening 's entertainment was an
https://elibrary.arcade-museum.com

Download Page 32: PDF File | Image

Download Page 33 PDF File | Image

Future scanning projects are planned by the International Arcade Museum Library (IAML).

Pro Tip: You can flip pages on the issue easily by using the left and right arrow keys on your keyboard.