Coin Machine Review (& Pacific ...)

Issue: 1941 March

* ~~:~
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vi der an d Two
LARGE
EXTRA
Separate
Cash
Boxes! Op erat or's Cash
Box holds over $11.00 i n
Penn ies-m ore t han $35.00
in Nickels! le or Sc or
toe mo dels. Th e greatest
mo ney ma ki ng co u nter
ga me ever built ! Perfect
S ma ll Size! Q U IC K !
RUSH YOUR ORDER
NOW !
SAMPLE • • • • • $19 .75
CASE OF 4 • • • $72 .50
1/ 3 With Order, Ba l. C.0. D.
HERB McCLELLAN CO.
Long-Awaited "21"
Introduced by Daval
British Spirit Seen In
Letter to Rabkin
CO I N
MACH/HE
REVIEW
10
FOR
MARCH
1941
LONG ISLAND CITY, N. Y.-The un-
daunted courageous spirit and splendid for-
titude of the British in the raging and
bitter struggle, the calm certainty of ulti-
mate victory- never doubted in the first
place-has been further revealed in a let-
ter to William Rabkin, of International
Mutoscope Reel Co., from the head of one
of England's leading coin machine firms.
Almost a month in crossing the seas, the
letter said, in part:
"Since your letter was written after the
fall of Sidi-Barrani we have confirmation
of the fall of Tobruk. Boy, those Italians
must be busy trying to catch up with their
horses. I wonder if we give the captured
admirals and generals the kind of banquets
you used to give us on ·our visits to the
States?
"You would be greatly surprised if you
could see our people over here. Everybody
smiles and 'wisecracks' the same as ever
and go about their business just as they
did • before the war. Depression is not
known in this country and we certainly
have no room for it here. We are abso-
lutely confident of the outcome and the
results of this terrific struggle. The next
six months will bring such results that
will surprise the world.
"Well, that is how we feel about it." ♦
Big Top Favored
1347 W. WASHINGTON
LOS ANGELES, CALIF.
_
CHICAGO-Discussing market trends,
Bally Mfg. Co.'s President Ray Moloney
recently stated that demand for console
equipment is increasing daily as the spring
season approaches. "This is . particularly
true of the Bally Big-Top console bell
which is now in operation in practically all
sections of the country," he declared. "Op-
erators' reports prove that Big-Top steps
up earnings and gets locations other bells
are forbidden.''

CHICAGO-In keeping with their stand-
ing policy of "giving operators the game
they need at the time they need it," The
Daval Co. has introduced their newest
counter unit, Daval's "21." The device has
been underway for some time and the trade
has been anticipating it but, again accord-
ing to custom, presentation was withheld
until it was possible to make· immediate
deliveries on all initial orders.
"We were over-ordered when we dis-
played the machine quietly to our leading
distributors, and there is no doubt that
everyone of these men would have taken
our entire stock immediately. But," ex-
plained Executive Dave Helfenbein, "to
play fair with all of our men, we are equ-
ally sharing our first huge stock and there-
fore everyone will receive a like number of
machines; as our production gets further
underway we shall ship in huge quantities.
"The demand at the present time from
all of our distributors is that we ship in
cases of four machines each. They tell us
that Daval's "21" has taken the coun try by
storm, and as a result we have received
more initial orders on it than we have on
machines which have been on the market
for some mon ths."
Developed in an experimental depart-
ment which does nothing but follow the
suggestions forwarded by operators, job-
bers and distributors from the standpoint
of making it easier to operate any Daval
game, Daval's "21" is said to have simpli-
fied routine to the point where the average
operator can place three times as many of
the machines and service and collect them
faster than he did in former years with a
third the number.
Some comparisons have been made be-
tween the old Reel "21" game and the new
Daval's "21." According to men who assem-
- -- ----- -
OPERATORS
Nebraska's oldest Distributor of Coin-Operated
Amusement and Coin Devices invites you to write
for prices on any type of coin-operated game,
either NEW or USED!
We can supply your needs at prices that · will be
amazing to you!
BOWARD SAi.ES COMPANY
!TONY MANGANO)
1206 Farnam Street
Omaha, Nebraska
bled both, there is actually no comparison.
Daval's "21" not only features the automa-
tic coin divider and two extra-large separ-
ate cash boxes, but it is also much smaller
in size, simpler in construction, and more
attractive in appearance than Reel "21" .
The newer game's smaller size provides a
more tantalizing action, and its precision·
building is a major improvement, these
workers declare.
Executives of the firm indicate that ad-
vance earning-tests proved the smaller game
to be a bigger moneymaker than Reel "21"
-which, they admit, is "saying something"
in view of the record the earlier game
made as the greatest counter-unit earner
of all time.
Features of the equipment, in addition
to large, divided cashboxes, include a ball
gum vendor built right into the machine so
that it is easily discernible, and fully-
protected shutters which require the player
to follow in rotatron or otherwise the but-
tons will not work, it is claimed.
There are no screws, nuts or bolts to
take out of the Daval mechanism to remove
it from the cabinet; a simple, spring-
controlled release lever slides the works
into the operator's hand where he can
adjust it without need for special tools.
The mechanism itself carries an uncondi-
tional two-year guarantee, executives point
out.

Baker's Pacers
Aristocrat of Consoles
A proven money-maker for ope-
rators who demand high-class
games for consistent profits!
Streamlined, modern, 1941 fea-
tures , absolutely unequalled!
7-Coin Play! Equipped with
Flashing Odds.
Buy With Confidence
Own With Pride
The BAIER NOVEL TY
CO., INC.
2626 Washington Blvd.
Chicago
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7Ae
Pringle Tree
An "O ut-of-the-Industry"
Feature by
M. M. GREEN
B
ACK, just off a little country lane in Upshur
county, W est Virginia, stands a large, hollow,
sycamore tree, third genera tion of the famous
Pringle tree, which marks the site of the first per-
man ent English settlement west of the Alleghenies.
Here, in 1764, the Pringle brothers made th eir
wilderness home in a tree. Here, the first fi elds west
of the mountains were cleared and crops sown.
Located about three miles from the sleepy little
college town of Buckhannon, th e tree is just at the
edge of a small stream, Turkey Run, which en ters
th e Buckhannon river at th at point. The river was
known as "the water of many bends" by the
Indians.
Th e town and the river were named for a stal-
wart and noble Delaware leader, Chief Buckonga-
hanon , who tri ed to wipe the palefaces from his
wild and beautiful land because they smoked the
pipe of peace and th en broke th eir pact. Here
started the agitation between th e whites and the
red men which led to Dunmore's Bloody War, the
first battle of th e R evolution.
The story of th e Pringle brothers an d their life
in a tree began at Fort Pitt 180 years ago. Among
the English soldiers station ed at the fort, which
was at th e junction of the Monongahela and
Allegheny rivers where Pittsburgh li es today, were
John Prin gle and his elder brother, Samuel.
In 1761, the brothers, along with two co mpanions
- Willi am Childers and John Lindsey - deserted
the English 1?;arrison and left t~eir fight with th e
French and Indians behind.
Following the winding course of the Monongahela to George's
Creek, near where Geneva, Pa., is today, they ca mped for a short
time. Th en, taking up the trail again, th ey moved to th e head-
waters of th e Youghiogheny river where they lived for a year.
• While on a huntin g trip one day, Samuel Prin gle discovered a
path which he believed would lead the group to the inhabited part
of Virginia. His comrades were interested in movi ng on, so th e
four woodsmen-soldiers started once agai n.
After many days of travel they reached th e Loon ey's Creek
settlement, then the most remote outpost in Virginia. Soon after
their arrival they were recognized as deserters and Childers and
Lindsey were arrested. Running qui ckly into th e forest, th e
Pringles escaped and wen t to their former ca mp on the Youghio -
gheny, wh ere th ey lived until 1864.
Loving to explore the wilds as th ey did, their Youghiogheny home
soon began to oppress them, and th ey longed to go deeper into
the forests and find what awaited them across th e mountains. So,
with John Simpson, for whom they were trapping at the time, th ey
started again into the hills.
Their journey proved un eventful as they went further and furth er
into the primitive and untouched forests. Then, on the day the
three reached the Horseshoe Bend, near where th e small town of
Parsons, West Virginia, is today, one of the Pringles and Simpson
had an argument. As tim e wore on, the two co uld not settle th eir
differences, and they decided it was time to go separate ways.
The two Prin gles went to geth er, followin g the Tygart river for
so me distance. One night as they sa t hunched beside the fire eatin g
their evening meal, Samuel's strange knowledge of the forest told
him th at somethin g was wrong. Warning John to be silent, Samuel
led him away from the spot and confided hi s belief that un-
friendly Indians were nea r.
As they hid in a thicket of laurel, the hootin g of an owl was
heard through the stillness of the night. Shortly, an answering
hoot ca me from the opposite side of thei r ca mp. As th e two brok e
and ran from the site, the shrill wa r whoops of th e painted red
men pierced the woods.
Pringle Tree, as if ap pears toda y. The present free is the third genera-
tion o f a hollow sycamore free which made a home fo r two pioneers
in the 1760 's. The free is about 43 inches a cross inside and has a cir-
cum ference o f 10 feet . The original free was about t hree times this size.

Tra vellin g with the greatest of speed all through the night, never
darin g to stop, th e Pringles finally threw th eir pursuers off the
trail when they crossed th e Buckhannon river. Going up the left
bank of th e river th e nex t afternoon, they saw a wolf en tering a
large, hollow, syca more tree. Immediately they went to see if
they co uld secure shelter, as a thunder storm was coming.
The tree trunk was co mpletely hollow, and large enough for the
two to make a permanent ca mp insi de. Th ey found that a nine-
foot pole could be turned en tirely aro und in the tree without
touchin g the sides. Th e trunk was about 30 feet in circumference
and nea rly 11 feet at its widest part. In order to have more light
a nd ventilation, th e brothers chopped a hol e in the side of the
tree opposite th e doorway.
So, for two years th e brothers lived in th e wilds, seei ng no
white men other than themselves. Game was plentiful, and no
hostil e Indi ans were seen. Th ey delighted in the fi erceness of the
country, with its rolling hills, sharp mountains, and clea r, winding
stream, wh ere trout and bass leaped high.
But, th e day came when th ey faced the sharp realization that
th ey had but two charges of powder left. Without powder they
faced certain starvation. So, late in the fall it was decided that
John would make the trip back to th e civilization from which they
had co me. With him he took th eir many furs to trade for powder
and other wants. During all this time alone th ey had had no salt,
no bread , and no garden vegetables.
Du e to ill fortun e from many sides, John's return was delayed
several tim es. Samuel, alone in the woods, hoarded his precious
char1?;es of powder until necessity forced him to hunt food . Takin g
careful aim one day, he fired at a large buck - and missed!
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