Coin Machine Review (& Pacific ...)

Issue: 1939 October

Andrews Sisters Given
"Success" Award
.-SENSATIONAL OFFER 111
FOR ONLY $ 5 900 WE WILL !
CONVERT YOUR 12 RECORD
ROCK-OLA INTO AN . . .
NEW YORK-With over a half million
record sales to their credit, the Andrews
Sisters, Decca favorites, received the ap•
plause of their fellow entertainers, recently,
when members of the National Swing Club
of America held a big jazz jamboree at the
Hippodrome.
The three girls, Maxine, Patti and La -
verne, were presented with one of the
club's trophy awards and a silver disc rec•
ord in recognition of the contribution they
have made to American jazz. President Ed.
J. Harris made the award.

I I
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• •
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SPECIFICATIONS
I-SI ZE: 20'/," high, 21¾" wide, 19¼" deep.
2-I LLUMI NATI O N: Full sized red plastic
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3-CA BI NET: Mouldings of Black Marb lite,
all fl at surfaces of varie gated Am erican
Marblite effects.

The vicar was appealing to members
of his congregation to supply refresh-
ments for the church social.
"And now, please remember," he end-
ed, "what we want are no abstract
promises, but concrete cakes."
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AMERI CA'S LARG EST STOCK O F FI N E US ED PHONOS AT WORLD ·S LOWEST PR ICES!! ,--
I MMED IATE DELI VERY ON NEW SEEBURG SYM PHONOLAS
1:AST COAST PHONOGRAPH DISTRIBUTORS, INC.
625 10th Ave., New York
(Phone: LOngacre 5-4877)
· F.ox· Is Outstanding
Example of Success
28
COIN
MACHIN E
REVIEW
SAN DIEGO.- What makes an operator
successful? The service card of the A. J.
Fox Company of San Diego tells the story.
Seven men on duty 24 hours per day and
each name and phone number is neatly
printed on the card.
In six years Gus Fox has grown from a
one man organization to a twelve man con•
cern. Today he operates about 400 Rock•
Ola phonographs, some 300 to 400 amuse•
ment games of leading makes, 200 Rock•
Ola Lo.Boy scales, over 200 Nation.al Cigar•
ette and Candy Merchandise machines and
a couple hundred penny peanut and gum
machines.
Evidently Gus Fox feels that diversifica•
tion is the answer. He believes in giving
his customers a complete service and help•
ing them to make money through a wide
use of the right type of automatic equip•
·ment.
Another outstanding thing is the loyalty
of every man in the Fox organization. He
pays good wages and goes out of his way
to keep every man happy and satisfied.
Fox is probably one of the most popular
operators on the Pacific Coast and in San
Diego he is tops with thousands of people.
Every year he spends hundreds of dollars
buying Christmas gifts and remembers
every location and everybody working in
that location from the janitor up.
He has a personality that is the envy of
many an operator and when anybody drops
into his office he always has a cheery hello
+ •
COIN OPERATORS
Sam Kressburg, Mgr.
and a friendly drink for those that might
like to indulge.
Salesmen often find it hard to sell Gus
Fox any line that might compete with his
present lines but that's because of his
loyalty to those manufacturers who helped
him in the beginning.

Music Improves Cafe
Service Sez Ed.
LOS ANGELES.-A community news•
paper in Viewpark, suburban community,
had this to say concerning a new phono•
graph installed in one of the town's main
restaurants:
"MUSIC has been put to a use which,
while not exactly new is refreshing, by a
Viewpark restaurant man. He recently in•
stalled one of these phonograph record
machines in his place of business. He notes
that aside from any monetary return, the
effect of harmony, however questionable
musically, in an eating establishment, is
startling.
"Waiters who formerly appeared to be in
the last enervated stages of hookworm have
suddenly become animated jitterbugs. Ham
and eggs appear with the suddenness of a
'hot jive' and hot cakes and waffies are 'in
the groove' to the rhythm of 'a little yellow
basket.'
"One thing that wasn't so good was when
a beeksteak dinner appeared to the strains
of 'The Donkey Serenade' but we must,
perforce, agree with the graveyard shift
boys, whose favorite is 'Two Sleepy Peo·
~~n
PRICES OF MATERIALS IN-
CREASED 100% AND WILL
SOON GO EVEN HIGHER.
BUY NOW BEFORE OUR
PRICES RISE
Items
Price
#25 Small Tool Box .................. $1.65
#30 Large Tool Box .................. 2.25
#35 10 inch Request Record
Case .................................. l,10
#40 12 inch Record Case ........ 1.45
#50 Cigarette Carrying Case 2.95
#60 Wood Record Carrying
Case .................................. 2.00
#65 Fibre Record Carrying
Case .................................. 2.60
#70 Candy and Gum Carry-
ing Case ............................ 2.45
#75 Illuminated Bumper
Grille .................................. 6.95
#75"G" Illuminated Bar
Grille .................................. 6.95
#80 Nut Carrying Case .......... 2.25
#85 Nut Carrying Case
(Dual Comp.) .................... 2.45
#90 8 inch Speaker Cabinet 1.45
# 100 8 inch Economy P. M.
Speaker ............................ 1.95
PHONO- MIKE INCREASES COL-
. LECTIONS ON YOUR MUSIC
MACHINES. Price
$15.85
ECONOMY
Production Company
20 Bank Street
Phila., Pa.

IMPORTANT NOTICE TO ALL EMPLOYERS
+
NEW LAW DEMANDS THAT YOUR EMPLOYEES-full o/ part time -
BE COVERED WITH WORKMEN'S COMPENSA-
TION INSURANCE. Failure to do so is a misdemeanor and liable to a mandatory fine of $300.00.
INVESTIGATE TODAY BEFORE IT IS TOO LATE. Send for FREE COPY of the Law and possible savings through our
plan.
Inc. 1929
Zeigler Insurance Agency, Inc.
417 South Hill
St.
Michigan 0961
Los Angeles, Calif.
https://elibrary.arcade-museum.com
a Succejj o/ Rural cl!ocalionJ
I
I
SPECIAL ROUTE MANAGEMENT
By Robert Latimer
No profess ion requires more versatility
th an the management of a rural route of
automatic phonographs, says Ralph Den-
ton, of Cuba, Misso uri, who is not only
one of th e best-known , but also one of the
most successful owners in the states of
Illinois and Missouri. Like most ops who
run a successful strin g of machin es in such
varied loca tions as bea uty sho ps and tav-
erns, Mr. Denton started in a small way
fi ve years ago, built his string to huge pro-
portions, th en cut it down to 51 machin es,
whi ch he considers th e ideal size for the
maximum profi ts to be obtain ed. He went
through a long process of learning his mar-
ket, ascertaining th e type of music which
would "sell" in each location , and a great
deal of elementary psycholo gy which is th e
fund amental groundwork of hi s goodwill
a nd profits. The result ? Mr. Den ton's 51
machin es are all paying a consistent profit,
a nd he has been able to purchase 20 new
Wurlitzers each year th rough a novel man -
agement system of proven practicability.
"Competition is actually stronger in r ural
locations than in cities," Mr. Denton told a
Corn MA CHINE REVIEW representa tive. " We
have few er good s pots to sprea d around ,
a nd I have found that even th e most co-
opera tive operator likes to try out new
fi elds occasio nally, with th e r esult th at I
often have quite a bit of fri endly compe-
tition to deal with. I have found, however,
that the things which offset this are r eal
service to the loca tion owner, making him a
partner in th e business, and finally, making
it so profitable for him to push my music
th at it's natu ral for him to do so."
First of the basic poin ts wh ich Mr.
Denton considers vital to insurin g his busi-
ness from th e ground u p is a steady policy
of introducing new machines. Unlike many
operators who purchase new machines as
th e need arises, Mr. Denton has always fol -
lowed a strict plan of using a ratio of 20
new machin es to the total of 51. This has
never gone below 19, and th e rest of th e
string, exclusive of a few Wurlitzer 412's,
is less than two yea rs old. The advantage
of this idea, it was pointed out, is that Den-
ton can deprecia te his better machines in
thi s territory in to p-flight locations, th en
move them down without sacrificing one bit
of the a pproval involved. All location
owners on his string appreciate th e idea,
and th e 20 new machines purchased yearly
are a convincin g argument for allowing him
any spot. Although Denton's routes cover
milk bars, drug stores, beauty shops, tav-
erns, and dancehalls, there is always a new
machine fo r the right loca tion, and by co n-
tinually offering this newness-feature, he
makes certain that no one can make a bet-
ter offer.
Service, wh ere the spots are often sepa-
ra ted by as much as twen ty mil es, is an-
oth er im portant factor, one of th e most, in
fac t. Denton's machines all bear a tag
promising speed-limit servic::e in case of
any breakdown-and this is no idle boast.
He has one permanent servi ce man who is
kept busy with tha t sole occupation , a nd
can usually reach th e spot within a half-
hour or fo rty-fi ve minutes, no matter how
far away. On each service call, the service
man leaves th e telephone number at Den-
ton's offi ce, and is often routed over the ter-
ritory for an entire day without touching
th e home office. Contiguously with this it
might be mentioned that Denton's route has
a larger amount of service calls than the
average-attesting to the huge amount of
use poured on every machine. Location
owners have lea rn ed to depend on quick
service of this type, and that con fi dence is
a stron g selling point in every case.
Selecting records is the toughes t job of
all, Denton says, in compari son with the
comparatively easy task of the metropolitan
phonograph operator. City tastes are usual-
ly closely alli ed, and the same music will
pull n ickels, whereas in th e country or
suburb an areas, no such situation exists.
For example, spo tted directly in between
two phonographs whi ch play nothing but
to p-fli ght numb ers by leading popularity
bands is one machine which averages $49
per week on a straight menu of hill-biJJy
numb ers. Other locations are in exact re-
verse. The only plausible way to explain
this, Denton says, is that 25% of his ma-
chin es carry straight sweet music, 25%
hill-biJly numbers, and the remaind er is
scattered in varyin g ratios of popular
bands and novelty hill-billy stuff.
For that reason, Denton has to have
daily contact with his locations, and travels
his entire route almost every day. Five
years of ex perience has taught him to make
the right selections-and in only rare cases
is his judgment unprofitable. • He usually
pi cks 12 hit-parade numbers and 12 novelty
or hill-billy selections, depending on the
youth fa ctor prevalent at each location.
Occasionally, when one machin e fall s off
sharply, changing over from novelties to a
straight progra m of sweet music oft en re-
vitalizes th e profits-this occurring about
once a month on th e average.
All Denton's phonogra phs are changed
completely every week, and as an im portant
point, always at the same precise time.
This clocklike regularity appeals stron gly
to lo ca tions, he has found , and for th at rea-
son he is never more than two minutes off
on record time in any week. This r equ ires
carefully- planned tim e and service, but al-
ways pays results. Th e cash box is always
opened at this time, and commi ssions pai d
aft er th e merchant or owner has super-
vised the counting personally. Denton has
never had a complaint from this angle, and
enjoys unusually complete con fi dence from
every location.
Pushing music wh erever poss ible in good
locations has also paid results. In th ese
spots, usually fin e res taurants, Denton
mak es up a musical menu to co mpl ement
th e real menu, and sees tha t they are left
on tables wh ere wai tresses may suggest
various songs. H e also gives the owner one
"special reques t" a week-- knowing th at
th e location owner will su~gest hi s own
favorite to his patrons.
Finall y, Denton makes a co mplete profit-
analysis twice a year fo r his spo ts, and
shows the owner ca refull y how the machine
can aid both of them. He uses a hill-book
bookkeepin g system, makin g an original of
each week's in come fo r th e owner, and a
duplicate fo r th e fi les. This policy makes
th e average loca tion wide awake to the de-
si rability of pushing the machine, and has
paid excell ent results during Denton's five

yea r experi ence.
lnanaediatt!
RECORD SERVICE
Within a few hours of you is an Authorized
RCA-Victor Distributor who understands the
specialized needs of Phonograph Operators
and is equipped to give you immediate
record service.
~ - - - BOSTON, MASS.-- - ~
Eastern Company
620 Memorial Dr., Cambridge
29
COIN
MACHINE
REVIEW
DENVER, COLO.
Hendrie and Holthoff Mfg. & Sup.
Co.
1635 17th St.
-
MILWAUKEE, WIS. - -
Taylor Electric Company
112 North Broadway
NEWARK, N. J.
Krich-Radisco, Inc.
422 Elizabeth Avenue
NEW YORK, N. Y. - - ~
Bruno-New York, Incorporated
460 West 34th Street
-
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
Raymond Rosen & Compa~
32nd and Walnut Street~!
I
- - WASHINGTON, D. C. ~
Southern Wholesalers, Inc.
1519 "L" St., N.W.
202 S. Pulaski St., Baltimore, Md.
It Pays to Use
VICTOR and
BLUEBIRD
RECORDS
https://elibrary.arcade-museum.com

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