Coin Machine Review (& Pacific ...)

Issue: 1942 April

VVoodard Bankrupt
LOS ANGELES-Dr. Gordon K. Wood·
ard was adjudged a bankrupt in a petition
filed by him in the District Court of the
United States here on April 4th.
Woodard has been in and out of the coin
machine business during the past few
years; was presiden t of the ill·fated Cine·
matone Corp., which manufactured Penny
Phono; and more recently has been at the
head of the Woodard Mfg. Co., manufac·
turing penny and nickel bar and wall
boxes.
When his last firm closed its doors owing
dozens of local firms Woodard went back
to his Chiropractic work and has been em·
ployed at a local clinic.
First meeting of creditors of Woodard
has been called for April 20th in the Fed·
eral Building office of Hubert F. Laugharn.
Revised Record Excise
Eddy Duchin's Band hears their latest Columbia Recording over a Wurlitzer Colonial during
their smash week at the Buffalo Century Theater. Also heard were constant compliments of
patrons on the beauty, smart period styling and subdued illumination of the Colonial model.
COIN
MACHINE
REVIEW
30
FOR
APRIL
1942
Mape Warns Operators
To Up Phono License
LOS ANGELES-With a series of bulle·
tins L. B. McCreary of the E. T. Mape
Music Co. has been warning music opera·
tors that when the small stock of Seeburg
phonographs and boxes now on hand in the
San Francisco and Los Angeles offices are
disposed of there positively will not be any
more new equipment from Seeburg for the
duration.
Said Mac, "To impress you with the ser·
iousness of the situation, may we say that if
each operator in Southern California or-
dered one new phonograph and only four
wall boxes with it, our stock would be en·
tirely gone and many orders would have to
be returned unfilled."
Mape Music is now restricting the pur·
chase of each operator and more drastic
rationing seems to be in the offing.
LOS ANGELES-On April 2 n d the City
Council voted to instruct the City Attorney
to draw an ordinance which will increase
license fees for maintaining and operating
automatic phonographs from $1 per year
to $5 per year.
New Patriotic Speaker
A complete change·over consisting of 4
Jap cutouts and streamers, each separate
and easily · attached in two minutes, com·
prise the unit.
ST. PAUL, Minn.-Wright, Inc. announ·
ces in this issue a new Patriotic Speaker
designed and built for the best locations
in America and rightly named "The Fight·
ing American."
Douglas Wright, President of Wright,
Inc., stated: "We have eliminated all frills ,
such as the harness to go in the record
player, and we have put the price just as
low as is humanly possible. This new cabi·
net is something to be really proud of and
when you have the opportunity of seeing
one I know you will agree with me."
Timely as tomorrow's newspaper the
speaker carries th e portrait of an Amed.
can Doughboy on the grille.
BENNETT 4000-PLAY
NEEDLE
Passage of the ordinance, it was said,
will affect 5000 such machines in operation
in the city today and increase city revenues
by $20,000.
LOS ANGELES-The local branch of
Decca Distributing Co. notified operators
as follows on April 10:
"In accordance with decision just handed
down to us by the Internal Revenue De-
partment, effective on April 13, 1942, it will
be necessary for us to change the Excise
Tax passed on to you by us, as per the fol·
lowing schedule-
New
Old
Record
List
10%
10%
Price
Excise
Excise
.35
.50
.75
1.00
.0166
.0237
.0356
.0475
.01575
.0225
.03375
.045
Rose Joins Vidor
LOS ANGELES-David Rose, Don Lee
. Broadcasting System's Musical Director,
and his California Melodies Orchestra have
joined the RCA Victor recQrding reper·
toire. First waxings will be "Our Waltz"
and "Holiday for Strings" scheduled for
immediate release.
Shields Has Arcade Machines
To Hell With The Japs
CAMBRIDGE, Ohio-"To Hell With The
Japs" is the descriptive title on the new
Jap change-over being offered Chicken Sam
and S~oot the Ch.utes operators by the
Beverator Co.
LOS ANGELES - Percy Shields who
boasts of the "Little Store With the Big
Bargains" has gone into the buying ·and
selling of Arcade Equipment on a big scale
and is currently offering Western operators
a surprising array of used pieces for Arcade
use.
*
*
*
He: "I'm thinking of proposing to some
girl. What do you think of the idea?"
She: "It's a great idea, if you ask me."
April , 1942
Subscription Order
COIN MACHINE REVIEW
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OPERATOR ______________ -'-
1870 W. Washington Blvd., Los Angeles
Ment~on
NAM~~
~~
~
·
of THE COIN MACHINE REVIEW is your best introduction to our advertiser&.·
L.A. Drafts L·icense Law
LOS ANGELES.-The City C.ouncil or-
dered the City AttDrney .on April 10th t.o
draw up an ordinance fixing a license fee
of $5 a year for all cDin-operated machines
.of the alllusement typt where a nickel Dr
less is required, $10 -a year when mDre
than a nickel is charged. License will
CDver weighing machines, mDtiDn pictures
and shDDting devices but nDt music mach-
ines which are tD be the subject .of a spec-
ial ordinance nDW in preparatiDn.
Merchandise vending machines also came
in fDr attention and an .ordinance was .or-
dered drawn whereby DperatDrs having
grDss annual receipts .of $5000 a year wDuld
pay $10 license fee per annum and an addi-
tiDnal $1 per thousand fDr receipts .over
$5000.
AOLAC Fosters 'S tamp Plan
Norman B. Collin s. Illinois administrator, U. S. Treasury Dept., Defense Saving Staff. thanks
1.000 employees of the Seeburg Corp •• for signin g up 96'7'. on the Payroll Allotment Plan
lor the purchase of De fens e Bonds.
My Hobby 15-
BUILDING SHIP MODELS
By EARL JOHNSON
A musement Machine Operator
St. Louis, Mo.
When I've put in a hard day of servicing
machines, mak,ing collections and arguing
with this and that locatiDn .owner, nDthing
relaxes me mDre than tD gD dDwn in the
basement .of my hDme and wDrk a few
hDurS on a mDdel ship-because mDdel
shipmaking is bDth a hDbby and a chance
tD think. Truthfully I dDn't knDw whether
I make them because .of the feeling of pride
I get when the last halyard is in place and
the ship is ready "tD sail" Dr because I can
mentally wDrk .out the prDblems .of my
rDute while I'm apparently engrDssed in
cutting .out gun ports, gluing yardarms .on .
the masts, Dr setting the rudder .on a minia-
ture clipper.
,
I have made 60 mDdel ships tD date,
beginning with a mDdel .of a RDman Tri-
reme, the kind .of warship which the RD-
mans used tD cDnquer Carthage and
Greece, p.owered by three rDWS .of hapless
slaves .on each side .operating .oars in some
cases 45 feet IDng. I have alsD built the
Santa Maria and Pinta, tWD .of the ships
which CDlumbus tDDk in discDvering Amer-
ka, the Viking ships .of Leif EricsDn, and
several Spanish galleDns .of the type which
transpDrted gDld between the western hem-
isphere and Spain in the 16th Century.
It's a IDt of fun t.o make a ship which
actually represents SDme part .of histDry.
FDr instance I made a mDdel .of the famDus
Frigate Old IrDnsides (CDnstituti.on), .one
of the BDn HDmme Richard, and anDther
.of the M.onitDr, all warships .of the U. S. at
SDme time in her histDry. A IDt .of my
friends want tD buy them, but I w.ould
rather keep the ship Dr dDnate it t.o s.ome
museum Dr histDrical sDciety where I get
the kick .of knDwing I built sDmething
which other peDple like tD I.oDk at. SDme
.of my Mississippi River packets, the .old
side-wheeler steamers which used tD race
between St. LDuis and New Orleans, are .on
display at the Mark Twain memDrial at
Hannibal, MissDuri, and a cDuple .of .others
I have given .out tD IDcati.on .owners in tav-
erns and better IDunges f.or their decDra-
tive effect.
I like to spend part of every ev~ning,
except when I take in a ShDW Dr playa
little pDker, in dDing SDme sDrt .of m.odel
ship building. Usually I "lay the keel" fDr
a new mDdel abDut every tWD m.onths, and
then spend a few days .on the hull at a
time, until finally I get the deck in place.
Then it usually happens that I get ViD-
,lently interested until the last piece is in
place. I usually am building tWD m.odels at
a time, .one mDdern ba.t tleship .or .one sub-
marine at the same time as an .old sailing
vessel. This gives me a chance tD get a
little variety intD the w.ork, which I enj.oy
m.ore in this way.
I use a lathe, balsa wD.od, raz.or blades,.
a chisel, and a jig saw f.or dDing m.ost .of
my wDrk. I buy miniature guns, wheels
and trimw.ork from mDdel supply houses,
because I haven't the time tD dD metal wDrk
tDD. All my mDdels are turned .out .on 3.
wDrkbench in my basement.
HDW did I get started?-Well, I've been
making ship mDdels all my life, beginning
I SUPPDse when I first went tD high SChD.o1.
I have never tried to sell any .of them, Dr
tD ad.opt any .other hDbby. Maybe I'm a
sail.or at heart! - but I never saw an .ocean.
I think the mDst interesting part .of my
hDbby is racing yachts, which I can build
and sail .on a park lake every Sunday ex-
cept when ice f.orms. I have a mDdel .of
m.ost .of the famDus racing yachts built by
the AstDrs, Sir ThDmas LiptDn, etc., and
.one with a clDck-wDrks cDntrDlled rudder
which I can put .on the biggest lake and
depend upDn tD CDme back. It's mDre fun
tD see a ship actually sailing than tD put -
it .on the mantel.
My hDbby helps with the cDin machine
business because a IDt .of bars ShDW pic-
tures .of ships which I can bDrrow tD use
as mDdels. I never have used a phDtDgraph
Dr plans-just build the ship tD duplicate
a painting, a snapshDt I see in a magazine,
Dr even .on calendars_ My sails I make fr.om
stiff ph.otDgraph m.ounting cl.oth, and my
gear from fishlines, sp.o.ols and small steam-
fittings. I guess I spend ab.out ten h.ours a
week .on building ships, and all day Sunday
.on racing my mDdel yachts.
LOS ANGELES-Th e AssDciated Op-
eratDrs .of LDS Angeles CDunty has enlisted
merchan ts in a campaign tD sell mDre de-
fense stamps by prDviding them with an
attractive sign t.o be hung on their cash
register suggesting the custDmer take his
change in Defense Savings Stamps.
A cDmplete .outline .of the plan has been
placed in the hands of each member alDng
with a quantity .of the hanging signs and
repDrts frDm the field are that the mer-
chants are cDDperating admirably and sell-
ing great quantities .of stamps.
Jap Change-Over Ready
SAN ANTONIO~HarDld W. ThompsDn
has annDunced tD the trade that his new
"Hit the Dirty J aps" change-Dver fDr
Chicken Sam DperatDrs is ,nDW ready fDr
delivery.
Unit cDnsists .of entirely new mDlded Jap
figures and flashly new scenery prDcessed
.on heavy cardbDard is furnished with each
unit. The unit can be installed .on any
Chicken Sam Dr Jailbird in a few minutes
and Hitler units are als.o available.
Souvenir Spinning Reels
CHICAGO-Intended to acquaint the
CDin Machine Industry with the part Mills
NDvelty CD. is playing in natiDnal defense
the current issue .of Spining Reels tells an
interesting pictDrial StDry.
The entire issue presents a picture .of the
variDUS patriDtic effDrts and cDntributiDns
.on the part .of Mills, its .officers and its
emplDyees, tD the United States .of America
and its war prDgram.
Penny Tunes Now 2c
LOS ANGELES-Thanks tD the ingenu-
ity .of a lDcal inventDr mDst .of the penny
phDnDgraphs in SDuthern CalifDrnia are ra- .
pidly being changed .over tD a tWD cent
DperatiDn.
The new device, easily installed and very
inexpensive, makes it pDssible tD cDntinue
using the same penny chute but tWD pennies
must be inserted befDre the mechanism trips
and a tune is played.
Viking Specialty Busy
SAN FRANCISCO.- Things are IDDking
up and the industry is apparently getting
used tD difficulties and is learning tD find a
way .out, accDrding tD a repDrt cDming
frDm 1. Vance Wallace .of Viking Special-
ty CD.
"During the past three weeks there has
been a 1.ot .of increased activity in our place
and DperatDrs are really dDing SDme sys-
tematic planning fDr their war mDnth
DperatiDns," said Wallace. "We have sev-
eral exclusive services we have made avail-
able tD DperatDrs and their acceptance .of
.our plans have really been terrific."
Mention of THE COIN MACHINE REVIEW is your best introduction to our advertisers.
COIN
MACHINE
REVIEW
31
FOR
APRIL
1942

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