Coin Machine Review (& Pacific ...)

Issue: 1941 April

SAINT LOUIS
- - - - - - - Covered By - - - - - - -
ROBERT LATIMER
ST. LOUIS (RC )-March was a mo nth
of pleasant business fo r most of St. Louis'
phonograph opera tors, as a pickup in play
was registered in almost every section of
the city. Contributing fac tors, say such
"analysts" as Ed Fisher, executive manager
of the Associated Phonograph Owner's
Association, was warm weather, political
activi ty in the city vo te which caused more
people to get out fo r evenin gs in their
favorite taverns, a wider choice of popul ar
pieces on the discs offered.
Co ndolences were extended to the fa mily
of Morris Schwayder, phonograph operator,
on th e death of his fa ther ea rly in the
month. Th e Schwayders wer e fa miliar
fi gures on th e routes in So uth St. Louis,
and had only r ecently mo dernized their
phonogra ph line.
The Associated P honograph Owners of
St. Louis met for the regular monthly get·
together March 19th , with several im portant
matters on the docket. Roy Haas, phono
operator from Overland , Missouri, won a
$20 attenda nce prize, including $10 carried
over from th e F ebruary meetin g, wh en th e
lucky member was not present to collect it.
"We're trying to keep every member on tap
a t every meeting," said John LaBan, presi-
dent of th e group, "and we have found the
attendance prize does just that." It was
pointed out that association numbers at
each convocation have grown.
Th e membership took up a collecti on to
aid William Firk, dean of St. Louis service
men, who is seriously ill in a St. Louis
hospital. Fink entered the automatic phono-
graph fi eld almost simultaneo usly with their
invention , and was for many years with
Wal-Bil Novelty Com pany, pioneer distri-
buting firm , now handling Wurlitzer phono-
graphs under direction of P ete Brandt. His
family will be looked after while Bill is
und er the weath er.
A serious note was inj ected to the meet-
ing by mention of a new bill in progress in
the Misso uri state legislature which hints
A quartet spotted at
the special Seeburg
Sho wing at the Hotel
Roose velt in Ho lly-
wood when the E. T.
Mape Music Com-
pany played host to
Southern Califo rnia
operators upon the
first showing of the
Seeburg line fo r '4 1.
Standin g alongside
the HiTone Symphon-
ola are Van ce and Ed
Map e and the other
two gentlemen are
the Bringas Brothers.
b roa dly at banning automatic music from
any type of location in which liquor is sold.
Operators are confident that the bill, spring-
ing fro m the late Mayor's Conventi on in St.
Louis, will be vetoed early. It is pointed out
by promin ent fi gures in th e fie ld that al-
mos t no sti gma is now attached to the use
of automati c music in taverns, despite so me
argum ent from th e bill sponsors tha t it
creates too mu ch famili arity without
thought between tavern patrons. "Natu r-
all y, there are so me arguments agains t
music in night spo ts," Mike Lazaich, pro m-
inent junior operator says. "It is possible
that music might stimulate men to dance
with oth er men's companions, etc., under
encouragement of music and liquor-but if
the phono graph is blamed for such occa-
sions, it is closely following that there
should be no liquor sold anywhere in the
country."
A fi ght agai'nst the bill by the phono-
graph association and the St. Louis tavern
association looms in the futur e as a r esult.
Dewey Godfrey, legal counselor fo r th e
group, and Lou Morris, past president, both
left th e meeting with an injured air-be-
cause no poker or pinochle decks ap peared
for th ese inveterate pl ayers.
Joe Morris, of J . S. Morris Novelty Co m-
pany, is confined to h i's hom e with an at-
tack of influenza, which is still lingering
about th e St. Louis environs aft er almost
si x months of epidemi c proportions. It is
What is said to be the largest remote control installation in Denver is that at the "Brass Rail" ,
at 15th and Champa Streets, where no less than 3 1 Wurlitzer Wall Boxes, t wo Bar Boxes and a
Wur litzer Stroller are available to permit patrons' operation of the Wurlitzer phonograph.
surprising, Bill Betz of W. B. Novelty Com•
pany pointed out, th at so few operators who
min gle with crowds nightly have been
both ered.
Harry Davies has postponed his reported
tri p to Florida. An ardent vacationist,
Davies has spen t more ti me in seeing the
United States during the last year than he
has on his route, one of the larger strings
of the city. Lee Turner, however, found a
chance to make a trip to the west coast and
Califo rnia coin machine headquarters.
William Betz and Martin Balenseifer,
pop ular new managerial team of W. B.
Novelty Company, are receiving congratu-
lations on their steady spread to other parts
of the middlewest with the W. B. coverage.
Opened last month was a new branch in
Wichita, Kansas, and another is doing an
excellent business in Kansas City in the
luxurious P laza district. W. B. is doing an
outstanding selling job wi th the new See-
burg phonograph.
Red-eyed and tired each Thursday is the
bowling team of Automatic P honograph
Co rporation, hea ded by Fred P ollnow. Up
to the hilt in league leadership, the P oll-
now group has been playing all night at
Stein's Bowl, from 9 until 2 :30 or even
later in th e morning.
Seen "sneaking" into night-school typing
classes with .his hat pulled down and collar
up was J ack Beckman, lon g-term operator
of St. Louis who has finally gotten around
to using a typewriter to make out his
phonogra ph record title slips. " Never knew
there was so much to operating a type-
writer," he laughs.
Otto Grief, popular younger opera tor , has
bought a new home at 7 Wilshire T errace
in Webster Groves, Missouri. He welcomed
a numb er of friends out for a housewarm-
in g a few days after the furn iture was
moved in.
Harry Schwab is pridefull y giving away
cigars on th e acqui sition of his fo ur th
daughter since 1930. "All girls" seems to be
his slogan.
Operators are wai ting with quite a bit of
curiosity fo r an announcement by Walter
Gummerscheimer as to what phonograph or
automatic music line he will handle during
la te 1941. Gummerscheimer, who has for
some time operated the Public Sound Sys-
tems Company is givin g up that field to re-
turn to the ranks of coin-equipment di stri-
butors in St. Louis-and operators are mys-
ti fie d as to what line he will handle. Th e
announcement is scheduled fo r some time
in May.
A party of Memphis, Tennessee operators
headed by Arch Kai n were visitors around
St. Louis durin g March. Th ey visited such
prominent distributorships as Arrow Nov-
elty Company, Olive Novelty Company and
W.B.
P ointed out as one of the most swiftl y
growi ng fi rms in St. Louis music circles is
COIN
MACHINE
REVIEW
49
FOR
APRIL
1941
https://elibrary.arcade-museum.com
Music Men Acclaim
Music Mint Boxes
" Ch ick" Roberts, Wo lf Sales; " Mike" Hamm ergren, Wurlitzer general salesmanager; W olf
Riewitz, W olf Sales president; and Spence Reese, Wurlitzer's assistant general salesmanager,
P.nioyed a pleasant get-to gether when the two " brass hats" dropped out of the Denver air for
a quick conference with the W olf officials.
CO IN
M AC H INE
REVIEW
50
FOR
A PR IL
1941
Schewe Novelty Company, headed by Elmer
Schewe, and operated on Natural Bridge
Avenue in North St. Louis. Elmer is speci-
alizing in phonograph rentals, surprisingly
one of his most profitable fields. Mrs.
Schewe is at his should er, selling records,
and generally handlin g "office business"
while Elmer. conducts a good-sized route
through the same district. R entals must be
"sold" ; not waited for, Elmer believes, and
his record shows a machine in use in this
field every 36 hours at an average.
In the pinball field, the news centered
around a humorous incident which occurred
in the halls of Arrow Novelty Company,
Barney Frericks' contribution to the
amusement machine distributing business.
Barn ey, who is a firm beli ever in modernity
in office equipment, recently bought a tear-
gas safe-one of the advanced models which
contain hidden cylinders of tear gas which
release the moment th e lo ck or th e door of
the safe is forcibly tampered with. This
was set up in the rear of hi s office, and
on the second night of its placement, police
called Barney to ask him to shut off th e
safe. Arriving hurri edly at hi s office, Fre-
ricks found that the safe had been cracked
by burglars who entered through the roof,
then feverishly broke glass in doors and
windows in the attempt to get out after the
white gas came rolling out. There was
nothing in the safe but an old envelope, and
one pre-cancelled stamp, laughs Barney.
Accordingly a couple of very di sgruntled
yeggs are resting their eyes somewhere in
St. Louis.
Counter games are selling at possibly
th eir highest peak since 1930, according to
Olive Novelty Company, leadin g distribu-
tors of counter games in this territory. Al
Han eklau and Ben Axelrod, popular man-
agers of th e firm, are convinced that coun-
ter games will have a long life und er their
present widespread popularity.
The Missouri Amusement Machine Op-
erators Association met at Hotel Melbourne
in mid-month, and discussed several recent
legal developments in th e territory of St.
Louis and western Illinois, where new in-
junctions and ordinances are so metim es
making it difficult for th e operator to know
which machin e is permissible at which
location. It was pointed out by th e officers
of the group that play in western Illinois
has outstripped that in St. Louis for pos-
sibly the first tim e in ten years-the r esult
of national defense fund s flowing into the
industries of Alton and East St. Louis,
where hu ge cartridge plants and aluminum
ore industri es are employin g many thou-
sands of men.
Most important topic under discussion
was th e fact that the ordinance closing tav-
erns and bars in St. Louis proper at 12 :00
o'clock on Saturday night, and 1 :30 o'clock
on week nights, has been finally made a
law. Operators are complainin g that this
cuts the in come of every typ e of machin e
tremendously, and worse yet, is sen ding the
type of customer who likes to see his eve-
nings extend many hours past midnight to
East St. Louis, just across t he river. As
has been mentioned before in this column,
a large percentage of the nickels in every
machine in tavern locations comes in fol-
lowing 11 o'clock each evenin g.
Star Novelty Co mpany has purchased a
firetruck red pickup truck, and Lee Turner
bought himself a new sedan before leavin g
on his trip to California.
Harry Walsh is another operator who is
regretfully selling his equipm ent, and
brushing up on military drill- third to be
drafted in th e selective service act in the
past two months.

Silver Skates Sales,
Output Upped
CHICAGO-Said to be meeting with
record-breaking success on location and
out-earning anything recent in the novelty
line, Baily's Silver Skates' production was
vfrtually doubled during the closing weeks
of March, according to report of Bally
Mfg. Co.'s general salesmana ger George
J enkins.
Of the novelty-replay game, he said:
"Repeat orders are pouring in faster and
faster. We have been operating a day and
night shfft for several weeks and now are
compelled to make further arrangements
to step up Silver Skates production.
Operators who have been picketing dis-
tributors' hea dquarters, tryin g to get
games, will be glad to know that our
nea rly-doubled output will soon permit
ca tching up."

Moloney , Moor e
Paint the Town
LOS ANGELES- Back from a three
week visit in Honolulu Ray Moloney, presi-
dent of Bally Mfg. Co., was met at the dock
at San P edro April 9th by Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Laymon, Los Angeles Bally represen-
tatives, and Jack R. Moore, who fl ew South
from Portland to be on hand.
The Laymons took a dvantage ·of th e op-
portunity to the fullest and showed the two
men the high spots of Los Angeles ni ght
life and what real Western Hospitality

means.
LOS ANGELES-According to officials
of th e Music Mint Corporation, distributors
of th e Music Mint Wall and Bar Boxes,
operators from coast-to-coast have placed
heavy orders for immediate delivery as a
result of the full page ad in color which
appeared on th e back page of the March
REVIEW.
"We received sizable orders from almost
every part of the country," declared Gordon
K. Woodard, president of the firm, "and
those who have already received th eir ship-
me nts and placed the Boxes on location are
loud in th eir praises of the money-making
capabilities of the Music Mint Boxes."
As a result of the fine business the firm
is enjoying th e actual manufacturing of
the Boxes has been turned over to Phono-
Tel, Inc., and the Woodard organization,
now operating under the name of Music
Mint Corporation, will handle the national
sales on the product.
Phono-Tel, In c., is a pioneer W est Coast
manufacturer of a utomatic music equip-
ment and their large and well-equipped
factory is now turnin g out dozens of Boxes
daily.
Offices of the Music Mint Corporation
are now located at 3260 Pico Boulevard. ♦
Metermovies In
New Expansion
LOS ANGELES-Metermovies have beea
given the "go signal" by distributors and
operators in all sections of the United
States and in th e Territories, manufactur-
ing officials of Metermovies, In c., have in-
formed the REVIEW, and the large program
of expansion recently outlined in this pub-
lication is not only underway but has out-
grown greatest expectations. Increasing
orders an d the closing of new and impor-
tant distributing franchises has necessitated
revision of the earlier enlargement sched-
ule, Don H eyer, General Manager of Meter-
movies, said. Shipments are now leaving the
plant for all points and are limited only by
the capacity of the rapidly-extending assem-
bly line, and bookings on sh ips to the
Pacific Islands not reserved for defense
orders have been made by the company.
The increasing effects of defense activi-
ties and a growing optimism on the part
of both the public and th e coin machine
i'ndustry, it was reported by advertising
manager Hugh Lacy, have accelerated the
demands for Metermovie entertainment.
" We are receiving hurry-up calls from own-
ers of hotels, cocktail parlors and other lo-
cations extending from Nome, Alaska, to
Havana, Cuba," Lacy said, "with special
emphasis from the centers of defense ac-
tivity, all asking for placements of ma-
chines. The requests are bei ng turned over
to our distributors and operators for ful-
fillment in turn. We are in a position to
feel the effects of a very pronounced new
prosperity trend, and Metermovies are al-
ready riding th e crest."
A prolific output of films has combined
to speed the growin g Metermovie momen-
tum, the company reported, with a numb er
of producing concerns operating under
heavy production schedules, and with a list
of special Metermovie subj ects already
available and awai tin g release dates that
extend far into the futur e.

*
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A style expert is one who can make
a woman feel mod est wh en she doesn't
look it.
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