Coin Machine Review (& Pacific ...)

Issue: 1940 March

ST. LOUIS
VARIOUS ASSOCIATIONS ELECT FOR '40 . . .
FIRES CONTINUE . .. TWIN PHONOS USED FOR
DANCE . • . LANSBAUM PURCHASES HOME
OPS MARRY
By Robert Latimer
With the advent of warmer weather in
St. Louis during February, business is back
at its normal key, operators of the city
report, with more accent on tavern and
location profits than was evident during the
recent record cold spell here. Music men
are busy with laying out new locations and
checking the old with "spring in the air"
as the guiding reason.
Fires are still bothering many operators
in the territory. Latest among those to re-
port losses from this source were Paul
Kelley of CentraHa, Illinois, and Fred Pat·
terson, Mount Vernon, Illinoi, ~oth of
whom lost a new phonograph m fires
brought on by the cold snaps. Most pecul-
iar accident of the year was reported from
Chester, Illinois, where Charles Brown,
southern Illinois Wurlitzer operator, saw
two of his machines go floating away down
the Mississippi. when an ice floe tore a
riverside tavern bodily from the shore.
Directors of the Associated Phonograph
Owners of St. Louis' Association got to-
gether for a board meeting in late February
to elect officers for the association, which
now has a complete membership of 56 coin
machine firms and operators of large
routes. All officers are appointed by the
board of directors succeeding the latter's
election, and are thus an integral governing
unit of more than ordinary efficiency. New
officers are: John Clay Steward, president;
John LaBan, vice president; Jack Beck·
man, treasurer; and Martin Balensiefer, reo
elected secretary and "executive" manager
in recognizance of the fine job he turned in
during 1939. The Association is putting up
a unified front against all deleterious oc·
curences in the industry, and has strong
support from all parts of its territory.
Lou Hormonn is among the busiest op·
erators in the city, in addition to his string
of Wurlitzer phonographs, operating the
famous Big Apple Tavern in the suburb of
the city, and managing the Wurlitzer bowl-
ing team which plays weekly against some
of the city's best keglers.
Vincent Sieve, whose unfortunate acci-
dent enroute to the Chicago Coin Machine
Show was reported in the February issue
of COIN MACHINE REVIEW is back in St.
Louis swathed in bandages and a cast,
which however, has not stopped him from
going over the route in his automobile with
a hired driver. He expresses his thanks to
the many operators who sent cards and
MAC MOHR SAYS:
condolences while in the hospital at Bloom-
ington, Illinois, and the A socia ted Phono-
graph Operators' Association, which pitched
in to protect his busines interest while
Vincent was hors de combat in Blooming-
ton.
One of the most novel phonograph in-
stalla tions ever made in the middle west
was a highlight in East St. Louis February
5th, when two new Wurlitzers were used in
combination to hroadcast dance music for
more than 450 people in a ballroom in the
Illinois city. Because of conditions under
which it was impossible to procure a dance
band, the hosts of the dance, which was
held for employees of the packin g industry,
were caught with backs to the wall, until
someone suggested amplified phonograph
music as an adequate substitute. When
contacts were made, it was found that am-
plifiers of sufficient scope were not to be
had anywhere-all being tied up with vari-
ous other celebrations going on simultan-
eously. Accordingly, the owners of the
phonographs to be used spent several hours
synchronizing two phonographs to play the
same record at full blast at exactly the
Lei's Gel Down 10
BARE FACTS
You need Profit
Producing Equipment and
WE HAVE IT!
41
COIN
MACHIN.
II E'IIIW
-What's New-
Bally
Exhibit
TRIUMPH
$114.50
LANCER - - - $99.50
Chicago Coin
Exhibit
FLAG SHIP
104.50 HOME RUN
Genco
Genco
BIG LEAGUE - - 99.50
BIG TOWN
99.50
99.50
----USED BETS----
Airport ...................................... $34.00
Alps ............................................ 15.00
Bangs .......................................... 35.00
Chevron .................................... 22.50
Chubbie ...................................... 12.50
Conquest .................................. 57.50
Follow Up .................................. 39.50
Hold Tight ................................
Majors ......................................
Side Kick ..................................
Snooks ......................................
Spottem ....................................
Up and Up ................................
Ocean Park ..............................
20.00
20.00
17.50
19.50
22.50
22.50
29.50
USED PHONOGRAPHS
Rock-Ola 12·record .............. $35.00
2 Mills Do-Re·Mi
40.00
On Hand for Immediate Delivery
NEW WURLITZER 700. 800. 71. 41
BEADS or TAILS
Come In Today!
The newest counter game on the
market today. Made by Daval
. . . it's Outstanding: it's Differ·
ent! Get one and you'll buy more.
SEE YOUR JOBBER
LONG BEACH COIN MACHINE
CO.
BEACH,
,LONG
1628 EAST ANAHEIM
Phone: 722-64
CALIF.
42
COIN
MACHINE
REVIEW
same time, spotting one at either end of the
hall. Very Ii ttle trouble materialized, and
the dance was voted a huge success de-
spite the nerves of the men in charge.
The second annual meeting of the Asso-
ciated Phonograph Owners of St. Louis,
with installation of new officers as the high-
light, was held February 23rd in the offices
of the St. Louis Decca branch, with Joseph
Turner of Decca playing the role of host.
An attendance prize of a new portable elec-
tric phonograph was won by Seymour
Raiffe, a St. Louis service man with the
Atlas Phonograph Company. New records
and the 1940 plans of the Decca organiza-
tion were "aired" for the boys. Outstand-
ing among the talks delivered was an ad-
dress by Dewey Godfrey, the Association's
legal counsel, who spoke on "What Asso-
ciation Membership Means." Pointing out
that Association cooperation means unified
opinion and a more or less powerful stand
against whatever problems develop in
music operation. Godfrey pointed out that
there is nothing mythical about the group
- it is simply a group of men in the same
business protecting tbeir interests and
working for the good of the whole. After
the meeting, Turner served refreshments in
the Decca office.
Fred Pollnow, midwestern phonograph
tycoon, is sojourning in Florida until
spring, and writes that the weather has im-
proved.
Wilbur Bye, district salesmanager of the
Wurlitzer company, was in St. Louis for a
fpw davs, visiting from headquarters in
Tulsa, Oklahoma.
Walter Hartwig, one of this city's best
known service men, has joined the staff at
Martin BD lensiefer's Wurlitzer headquar-
ters at 1500 Market Street. Balensief er has
just completed a model service shop which
is receiving plaudi ts of everyone in the in-
dustry-equipped with 100 A.C., 110 D.C.
and 32-volt current for handling any type
of equipment.
The pinball field, as is usual, was full of
action during February. W. E. (Bill)
Lucas. has been added to the sales staff at
Carl Trippe's Ideal Novelty Company, and
has begun callinG; on the ops in the in-
terests of Rock-Ola phonographs. Rock-Ola
is /!:oing very well into 1940, Trippe reports,
with advance orders far ahead of last year.
Most vitally concerned of all coin ma-
chines is Triumph, Bally's new game,
which has been swamped with orders
greatly in excess of the factory's delivery
schedule. The new Scientific "Skee J ump"
is another newcomer which made its debut
ausniciously recently at Ideal's halls.
Cigarette men have finally dropped the
fight against St. Louis' two-cent cigarette
tax, which has been the subject mntter of
one of the hottest controversial fights the
legislAture has yet ac ted ullon. A ruling
upholding the constitutionality of the tax
was passed by the S1JDreme comt near the
first of the month, which signaled cessation
of efforts by the cigarette merchandisers of
the city.
New officers were elected by tbe Missouri
Cigarette Service Association in February,
for the first full-veal' pro/!:ram. They are:
Abe Jeffers. president; Jerry Clancy vice
presidfmt; Richard Obergenner. secr~tary;
and Morris Roufa, treasurer. Membership
remains the same, composed of the leading
cigarette vendors of the city.
Danny Lansbaum, veteran owner of the
G. J. L. Amusement Company. bought a
new home in University City, Mo., during
February, and celebrated with a house-
warming for fellow opera tors. William Of-
ferman of East St. Louis was one of the
visitors.
Phillip Brichera, pinball and phonograph
operator, is vacationing in Old Mexico dur-
ing the cold weather, for two months of
touring the more picturesque cities and
villages of Mexico. While there, he in-
tends to get in some big game hunting.
Fires were not confined only to St. Louis
and metropolitan districts, George Row-
land, who recently moved to Poplar Bluff,
Missouri, reports. A fire at Piedmont de-
stroyed both the location and a new phono-
graph early last month.
"Red" Greer, southern Illinois' best-
known pinball and phonograph operator,
moved this month from DuBois to Duquoin,
lllinois, and has purchased a flaming red
Mercury sedan to work his routes. The car,
plus Red's brilliant hair, is becoming a
trademark in the terri tory. Another new
.operator who has gone into major scale
operation in lllinois is Glen Leibig, of
Mascoutah, Illinois.
Clarence Kynion, manager at Missouri
Tavern Supply, Springfield, Missouri, was
married recently, with Ideal Novelty Com-
pany as the background. Both are owned
by Carl Trippe. Harley Morgan, St. Louis
pinball operator who is noted for operating
h is route on a motorcycle, was married to
hi former secretary Feb. 20th at the St.
Louis Master Baker's wedding-night Pl'O-
gram.
Subzero weather has been bad for Carl
Trippe's roller l'ink in Maplewood, Mo.,
Trippe reported, but better weather has
brought the skating jitterbugs back to the
fold. Trippe is using the ring as the ideal
place in which to spot his new Bally and
Rock-Ola products for reception-testing. •
PHILADELPHIA I
GOLDBERG APPOINTED ASSOCIATION INVESTI·
GATOR ••• BANQUET SET FOR MARCH 23 •••
NEW OFFICERS TO BE INSTALLED ••• KEYSTONE
SENDS UNIQUE INVITES ••• CONTEST CLICKS
By Harry Bortnick
PHILADELPHIA - Expecting an in-
crease in his family soon is Operator Sam
Chadwin, a member of the Lerner clan.
Sam is fervently hoping for a boy to help
him carryon with his large route. They
s tart them young in the Lerner family
which is probably why they're such im-
portant operators.
Operator Joseph Sichel says he will prob-
ably enjoy his first vacation since enter-
ing the coin machine business when he
leaves for an extended honeymoon follow-
ing his marriage April 6.
The F lorida sunshine has proven too en-
ticing for another operator and so Paul
Cooper will celebrate his wedding anni-
versary with a trip South. Others in the
local Association who will migrate to th e
Sunshine State are George Silverman and
Herman Hoffrichter who was recently mar-
ried.
New Sergeant at Arms of the Philadel-
phia Coin Machine Operators' Association
is Oscar Spiegel, who for a long time as-
sisted Eddie Richter in guarding the en-
trance during meetings.
As though the partnership of the Pasa-
dena Novelty Company, consisting of four
partners-Max Brown, Harry Mendelsohn,
Nat Choderker and Al Roth-was not large
enough, it seems that the organization will
shortly be enlarged in order to take in two
(See PHILADELPHIA, page 48)
GREAT ARRAY OF BARGAINS
9UALITY RECONDITIONED MACHINES AT LOW PRICES
OFFERED BY AMERICA'S LARGEST DISTRIBUTOR
WURLITZER COUNTER MODEL 51 PHONOGRAPH-Marbleglo Finish .. $ 56.50
JENNINGS ' CIGAROLA MODEL XV............................................................
97.50
GROETCHEN METAL TYPER-Including Name Plates.............................. 159.50
MILLS' MODERNE SCALES ...... _...................................................................
29 .50
Beaut iful Illumi nated Gr ill e
I n. t a ll.d ............ $9.00 Extra
Titl e St ripl __ ........ _.40c per 2000 strips
PHONOGRAPHS
S •• bu rg Mod. 1 A .......................................... $ 29.50
S •• bu rg Mod. 1 B.......................................... 32.50
Seeb urg Mode l H ( Multi-•• I.ctiv.) ....... 49.50
S •• bu rg K 15 .................................................. 69.50
S •• burg K20 .................................................. 99.50
S •• bu rg Rex .................................................. 109.50
S.eburg Royal . ............................................ 11 9.50
S •• burg G.m ................................................ 149.50
See bu rg R.gal .............................................. 169.50
Seeb urg Casino ....................................... _ ... 159.SO
S •• b urg Pl aza ....................
.. ............ 179 50
Wu r litz.r PI 2 .............................................. 37.50
Wurl itzer 4 12 .. ___ ............ __ .. _._ .. _ .................... 44.50
Wu r li tz.r 6 16 ................................................ 79.50
Wu r litzer 24 ................................................ 132.50
Rock- Ola R.gu lar........................................ 32.50
Rock -Ol a I mperial 20 .. ... __ ... __ . ___ . __ ............. 49.50
Rock - Ola Monarc h (20 R.cord 1938) .... 124.50
Mi lls Dance master . __ ............................ ___ ....
TERMS :
17.50
1/ 3 deposit, balance C .O.D.
I
PAYTABLES
I
Sport Page ..................................... .......... $ 64.50
Gra nd.ta nd .................................................... 94.50
P ace nl aker .................................................... 110.00
Hawt horne ................. _ ...... _ ...... _................. 79.50
O.ad Heat .................................................... 89.50
Stoner's Zipper ........... _............
........ 24.50
I
COUNTER GAMES
J
Oeuc •• Wil d .................................................. $
Joker Wi ld ....................................................
Lu cky Pack ...... ...........................................
T a ll y ..............................................................
ABT Target Mod.1 F..................................
ABT Ch a ll .ng.r ..........................................
CABLE ADDRESS :
ATLAS NOVELTY CO.
THE HOUSE OF FRIENDLY AND PERSONAL SERVICE
2200 N. WESTERN AVE.
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS
10.50
10.50
12.50
7.50
14.50
16.50
ATNOVCO

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