Coin Machine Review (& Pacific ...)

Issue: 1941 February

Easy-Operating
Policy Announced
CHICAGO-Combining a policy of build-
ing counter games so as to make operating
easier with volume backed up by terrific
demand, The Daval Co. is now producing
Cub and Ace at the rate of one a minute,
or 480 games for each eight•hour working
day, according to report of Al S. Douglis,
president of the firm.
Declares Douglis: "The s peci ally• de-
signed and super·engineered construction
of Cub and Ace, American Eagle and
Marvel are entirely based on making operat-
ing easier for the coinman. That's why
when we built such tiny-sized units as Cub
and Ace we included our original Daval
automatic coin divider and two separate
cash boxes. Regardless of their small size,
the operator need not collect as often as
he did on former small counter games, for
his cash box is three times the size it used
to be and he need call only at regular
intervals and take out his coin, without
even stopping to count it, for he knows
that the location has already taken its
share from its own cash box.
"Even in the construction of the mechan-
ism we have made operating easier. No
nuts, no bolts, no screws - hold one simple
spring catch and the entire mechanism
slides right out into the operator's palm.
This eliminates waste of time. The oper·
ator also knows that because of the pre-
cision manufacturing methods for which
Daval is famous he will not encounter trou-
ble at any time.
"All these points, from the first blue-
prints, and the first designs, are checked
carefully so as to be built from an easier
operation standpoint to assure the oper-
ator the type of product he knows he needs
in these days of speedier servicing and
collecting. All this is equally true of Amer-
ican Eagle and Marvel.
"This principle has undo ubtedly been a
major factor in the heavy demand for our
equipment," Douglis declared. "And 11n-
other important factor is the fact that the
longer these games remain on location,
the more solidly en trenched they become
and the better the public likes to play
them."
The midget games won the approval of
the biggest distributors at the Show, and
that's a good sign for the operator, Douglis
indicated, since none of them can afford
to handle equipment which operators don't
take to.
Among the distributors that came to the
Daval booths to compliment the firm were:
Carl Trippe, Ideal Novelty Co., St. Louis;
Roy Torr, Phi ladelphia; Art Sauve and
Buddy Sauve of A. P . Sauve Co., Detroit;
Mac Churvis, Grand National Sales Co.,
Chicago; Al Stern, Roy Bazelon and Clay-
ton Nemerof of Monarch Coin Machine
Optl'ILt",-,J
YOUR BEST BETS THIS MONTH
Evans TEN STRIKE .................. $25.00
Gottlieb SKEE BALL-ETTE ...... 30.00
Keeney ANTI-AIRCRAFT GUN 60.00
CHICKEN SAMS .................... 67.50
Gottlieb 3-WAY GRIPPER ...... 11.00
A. B. T. CHALLENGER,
late model ............................ $1 2.50
A. B. T. RED WHITE AND
BLUE .................................... 12.75
New Comes ot S99.50
Baker's BIG TIME
Bally FLICKER
Gottlieb SCHOOL DAYS
Exhibit STARS
Genco SLUGGER
Chi. Coin SPORT PARADE
Genco SEVEN UP
Buy 'Em By the Cose
Daval CUB .................. ea. $13.95
Daval ACE .................. ea. 14.95
Case of 6 .................. $75.00
Case of 6.................. 80.00
STILL THE BEST PLACE IN TOWN TO TRADE
SOUTHWESTERN VENDING
MACHINE COMPANY
2833 W. Pico Blvd.
Los Angeles, Calif.
Co., Chicago; I. H. Rothstein of Banner
Specialty Co., Philadelphia; Harry Rosen-
thal of Banner Specialty Co., Pittsburgh;
Irv. Blumenfeld of The General Vending
Service Co., Baltimore; Harry Moseley of
Moseley Vending Machine Exchange Inc.,
Richmond; B. D. and Si Lazar of B. D.
Lazar Company, Philadelphia and Pitts•
burgh.
Harry Payne of H. G. Payne Co., Nash-
ville; Max and Harry Hurvich, of Birming·
ham Vending Company, Birmingham; Ed
Furlow and Si Lynch of Electro.Ball Com•
pany, Dallas, Houston and Memphis; R. D.
Rose of R. & D. Sales Co., Marietta, 0.;
and Washing ton, D. C. ; M. Y. Blum and
Jimmy Passanante of Ajax Novelty Co., De•
troit; Bill Marmer and Ben Goldberg of
Sicking Inc., Cincinnati; H. Zorinsky of
H. Z. Vending Sales Inc., Omaha, N eh.;
Joe Frank of Automatic Sales Co., Nash-
vi lle; Sam London of Milwaukee Coin Ma-
chine Co., Milwaukee; Bert Lane of Sea-
board Sales Inc., New York.
Leo Weinberger of Southern Au tomatic
Music Co., Louisville, Nashville, Cincinnati,
and Indianapolis; Harry Le Vine of Allied
Novelty Co., Chicago; Morrie and Eddie
Ginsburg, Phil Greenberg and Mike Kratze
of Atlas Novelty Co., Chicago, Detroit and
Pittsburgh and Ben Kulick of Atlas, Buf-
falo; Art Nagel of Avon Novelty Sales Co.,
Cleveland ; Al. S. Cohen of Asco Vending
Machine Exchange, Newark, N. J.; Jack
Kauffman of K. C. Novelty Co., Phila•
delphia, Ben Axelrod of Olive Novelty Co.,
St. Louis; Bill Gross of Lehigh Specialty
Co., Philadelphia; Joe Ash of Active
Amusement Machine Corp., Philadelphia.
Dave Bond of Trimount Coin Machine
Co., Boston; Carl Hoelzel of United Amuse·
ment Co., Kansas City; Meyer M. Marcus
of The Markepp Co., Cleveland and Cin·
cinnati; Bill _ Cohen and Benny Friedman
of Silent Sales Co., Minneapolis; Sam
Taran and Herman Paster, of Mayflower
Novelty Co., St. Paul; Ted Bush of Acme
Novelty Co., Minneapolis; Mac Mohr, Mac
Sanders, Harry Kaplan and Irving Brom•
berg of Los Angeles; Rake of Philadelphia;
Lou Wolcher of Advance Automatic Sales
Co., San Francisco.


COIN
MACHINE
REVIEW
71
FOR
FEBRUARY
1941
• •
"I read in the paper about a guy that
ran over a girl and later married her."
"Well, if everyone had to do that, there'd
be a whole lot less reckless driving."
ATTENTION!
Peanut Machine Operators!
By mixi ng ou r cellophan e t ub es of foreig n
postage stamps in yo ur machines, yo ur sales
wi ll d ou b le a nd trip le.
BE FIRST IN YO UR TERRITORY! Write at
on ce fo r free samples of sta m ps and full
deta ils of o ur p lan .
D. Robbins & Co.
11 4 1 De Ka lb Ave.
BROO KLYN, N. Y.
AUTO LOAN PURCHASE MONEY
3 ½ o/o
'/lctice
Zeigler Insurance Agency, Inc.
SAVE 40% OR MORE
Inc. 1929
417 South Hill St.
Michigan 0961
Los Angeles, Calif.
https://elibrary.arcade-museum.com
Newly elected officers of
the Phonograph Owners'
Association of East St.
Louis, Ill. R. H. Schnei-
der, re-elected · president,
is second from left in
front row and next man
is E. C. Steffens , of
Permo Point, who was
guest speaker at the An-
nual Banquet.
So. Ill. Ops
Eat and Elect
COIN
MACHINE
REVIEW
72
FOR
FEBRUARY
1941
by ROBERT L,ATIMER
EAST ST. LOUIS-The night of January
23rd was the scene of unusually gay festivi-
ties at the Broadview Hotel in East St.
Louis, Illinois~ when the membership of the
Phonograph Owner's Association of South-
ern Illinois held their second annual ban-
quet in the green-and-gold ballroom. This,
the second of the yearly celebrations of the
group, was responsible for more than 150
operators and their families on hand to
welcome new officers and summarize the
events of 1940.
Now live times its 1938 size ( the group
was founded in midyear of 1938) the South-
ern Illinois group has become one of the
strongest associations in the middle west,
under the guiding hand of R. H. "Hardy"
Schneider, president of the group for the
past two years, and himself one of the
state's better known township operators.
During 1940, there was not a single case in
which any operator lost a location through
unfair practices, and the number of com-
plaints which are characteristic of any
large scale operation of the type is re-
markably few.
The evening began with a confirmation
of election of officers for 1941, who were
formally introduced late in the dinner.
Elected by the board quietly with the pur-
pose of surprising the group January 23
were R. H. Schneider, re-elected president;
first vice president, L. Kaesberg; second
vice president, Glenn Liebig; third vice
president, T. E. Heffernan; and secretary
treasurer, William Offerman. All officers
were unanimously renamed to their 1940
posts, with the exception of one new direc-
tor. Directors are E. S. McKelvey, Mike
Kappilla, Uarry Schooley, and E. W. Mor-
lence. All were again appointed to the same
positions on the basis of the profitable and
smoothly-operated year just past.
Approximately 30 guests were invited to
attend the second annual banquet, despite
a long standing association rule which ordi-
narily bars distributors or agents from the
meeting of the group. These included the
new president of the Associated Phono-
uraph Operators of St. Louis Association;
John LaBan of the A. M. I. Distributing
Company; Ed Fisher, executive secretary
of the same group; Frank Cummings, In-
terstate Electric Supply Company; Joseph
Turner, Decca St. Louis office; Clarence
Layer, Layer Distributing Company; Wal-
ter Bowman, operator, and members of the
Ideal Novelty Company route management.
During the dinner, wives of operators at-
tending were given a pleasant surprise with
the gift of compacts, decorated with Ameri-
can flags and other patriotic designs. Roast
turkey and wassail bowls made the dinner
more than enjoyable. During the intermis•
sfon following, Schneider, who presided as
toastmaster, called upon well-known figures
in his association for short talks, the guests
listed above, and spoke on the progress of
the group, A joke which had a few mem-
bers covertly hiding their faces was Presi-
dent Schneider's charge that despite the
fact that East St. Louis contains 300 phono-
graphs, not one could be found for music
for the evening's affair. This, it was brought
out, was supplied by a small operator and
route owner of St. Louis who also has a
minor distributing agency-Carl Trippe of
Ideal Novelty Company. There was a rising
vo te of thanks to Carl for this help, the use
of a new Rock-Ola for the dinner.
An ideal testimonial to the high opinion
which the membership of the group holds
for President Schneider was a high point
following his talk. At this time, E. S.
McKelvey, a director in the group, pre-
sented Schneider with a duebill calling for
installation of a complete rathskeller liquor
bar in the basement of Schneider's new
home in St. Louis, includin g all-walnut bar,
electric refrigeration, complete glassware
and accessories all around. This was the
association's method of thanking Hardy
for his hard work in knitting the associa-
tion together, and for once, left him speech-
less.
IAAEPO representative E. C. Steffens,
who recently joined the staff of Permo Pro-
ducts in Chicago, was the principal speaker
for the evening, and spent some twenty
minutes in complimenting the southern Illi-
nois group on their association activities
during the past two years. "Association con-
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Specialized service on shipments of coin-operated games and phonographs.
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fidence and cooperation is the only means
by which phonograph operation can be
kept completely free of discord" Steffens
explained "And we have found that the
twin associations of St. Louis and Southern
Illinois are leading the way for many other
such groups the country over."
The meeting closed with Steffens' talk,
and continued into the wee hours with
dancing and music.

Groetchen Products
Win Show Plaudits
CHICAGO-"They knew they could rely
upon Groetchen to give them something
new," declared Groetchen officials, "and
from the first day of the Show until the last
every member of our staff was busy in the
Groetchen booth demonstrating the merits
of our new and old products to operator,
from every part of the nation.
"At times operators were standing ten
deep around the four large booths in order
to have a look at live new and unusual
counter games. An initial order for 1,000
Pikes Peak games placed by Roy Torr,
Philadelphfa distributor, caused a furor on
the second day of the Show. Pikes Peak is
the new all skill, legal, 5-ball novelty game,
ings in closed territories.
"Two new miniature games with coin
divider and location cash boxes, patterned
after the sensational Imp, attracted unpre•
cedented interest. One of the miniature
games is called Klix, a blackjack game,
and the other is Pok-o-Reel. Although only
slightly larger than Imp, these two new
games have almost four times the cash box
capacity.
" Dial-It is the fourth entirely new and
completely different Groetchen game, un-
veiled for the first time at the 1941 Show.
Indications of the tremendous appeal of
Dial-It is evidenced in the heavy orders
taken for this game, althou gh deliveries
have not been promised before March 1.
"The record volume of orders placed for
Champion proves that operators have recog-
nized it as the industry's newest and finest
token payout game," the factory spokesman
concluded.

Dual Set-Up Needed By
Distrib., says Ginsberg
CHICAGO-"The distributing concern
of today must have really two organizations
-one an administrative and selling organ-
iaztion and the other a buying organiza-
tion," declares Morrie Ginsberg of the At-
las Novelty Company.
"Buyi'ng contacts with sources of supply
are today as important to the distributor in
servicing his operator-customers as are
sales ,contacts. A distributing company
must know where to get games and mach-
ines in satisfying their operator demand for
new and used equipment.
"The Atlas Novelty Company is fortun-
ate in its line-up of factories represented-
the cream of the crop, we believe, in lines
offered in this field. And we are equally
fortunate in sources of supply on used
machines. That is why Atlas never sees a
shortage of used equipment offerings. Our
sources of used machine supply are assured
through years of contact with people who
have such equipment to offer.

" Th is is why Atlas does two big busi-
nesses. One, a big sales volume _in new
machines. And, two, a big business in used
equipment. And this is why Atlas really
maintains two organizations. One to sell
and serve the opera tor. And one to buy." ♦
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