Coin Machine Review (& Pacific ...)

Issue: 1942 August

YOUR DOLLARS BUY MORE
AT
BADGER SAL~S COMPANY
OFTEN A FEW DOLLARS LESS -
SELDOM A PENNY MORE
We. Have All Models And Makes In Stock
Rock-Olas ••• Seeburgs • •• Wurlitzers • • • Mills
SPECIAL BARGAINS
M I LLS FOUR BELLS (Late l.. .....•..•........... $345.00
MILLS THREE BELLS .................................. 475 .00
MILLS BLUE FRONTS, Cl ub handles,
new crackle fini sh.................................. 89 .50
MILLS V. p .. Blue & Gold, J . P. ............ 47.50
MILLS V. P. BELLS , Chromes, J. P. ........ 57.50
JENNINGS SILVE R CH IEFS ...................... 95.00
JENNINGS RED SKIN CHIEFS .................. 89. 50
PACE ALL STAR COMETS........................ 49 . 50
MILLS JUMBO PARADES.......................... 89 .50
BALLY HI H AN DS .....................................• 139.50
KEENEY SUPER BELLS ................................ 189. 50
BALLY RAP I D FIRE .......................•...........• 159. 50
BALLY DEFENDERS .................................. 169.50
SEEBURG CHICKEN SAMS........................ 99 :50
UTAH 12-INCH P. M. SPEAKER , new......
5.50
W URLITZER MODEL 850 ............................
WURLITZER MODEL 750E ........................
WURLlI ZER MODEL 780E ....................••.•
WURLITZER MODEL 700 ............................
WURLITZER MODEL 500 ....•......................•
SEEBURG 9800 ..........................................
SEEBURG 8800 ..........................................
SEEBURG MAJOR •.•...............••..........••...•
SEEBURG ENVOy •.............................•.....••
SEEBURG CLASSICS ................................
SEEBURG REGALS ....................................
ROCK·OLA PLAYMASTERS ......................
ROCK·OLA MASTERS ..............................
SCIENTIFIC BATT ING PRACTiCE ..•......•••
SEEBURG SAMS WITH NEW JAP ............
EXHIBIT ROTARY MERCHANDiSERS .....•
WRITE
WRITE
WRITE
289.50
179.50
395 .00
349 .50
279.50
279 .50
189. 50
139.50
179.50
189.50
129.50
124. 50
124.50
WANTED TO BUY OR WILL ACCEPT IN TRADE
LATE MODEL PHONOGRAPHS, PACKARD PLA·MOR BOXES, ALL TYPES
ARCADE ECjlUIPMENT. BALLY RAPID FIRES , CHICKEN SAMS,
SKY FIGHTER , ACE BOMBERS -- WRITE EITHER OFFICE -- STATE PRICE WANTED
BADGER SALES CO.
COIN
MACHINE
REVIEW
14
FOR
A UGUST
'942
SEATTLE
SEATTLE.-The rubber-m what there
is left of it-was slapping against the
macadam, and old Sol was smiling all over
the sky. We were driving the General
Motors fugitive along Eastlake Avenue to·
ward the University Bridge, squinting out
the window for signs of a quick remedy for
parch~d throat, whep we spotted it: a neat,
cozy lIttle tavern set off the main street. A
bright neon sign read: "Red Robin."
In less time than it takes to push the
plunger of a coin game, we were straddling
a stool and calling for the amber fluid. The
lady behind the counter turned briskly and
scooped up a glass. And then she stopped
and looked at us-and gave out with that
wide, warm smile that used to knock sales
resistance for a loop in the days when sales
resistance stood like Gibralter before the
cash register. Maybel Dace, the woman who
guided the sales rudder of Harper.Meggee's
record departm~nt to giddy heights, looked
everyone's got a nickel f or
BROTHER BILL
On Columbia: CHARLIE SPIVAK
BADGER NOVELTY CO.
*
1612 West Pico Blvd., Los Angeles, Calif.
2546 N. 30th St., Milwaukee, Wis.
ten·strike for REVIEW readers. We signed
a lot different from the cool, slack· attired
Maybel Dace to guest column the Septem·
Maybel Dace who was dispensing frothy
ber issue. Maybel was told to shoot the
glasses across the shiny bar.
works, to write about anything and every·
After twenty years in the disc business,
thing, to draw on the reservoir of her vast
nine of them as record manager at Harper·
experience, and not to pull any punches.
Meggee, Maybe! yearned for the pause that
So while she rolls up her sleeves and walks
relaxes and also a chance to help her hus·
band, who owns the Red Robin. So a couple . to the typewriter, here's a friendly tip to our
readers: Reserve your September copy to·
of months ago, she reluctantly turned her
day. It'll be a corker.
back to Discland and is now happily en·
COININGS ON THE CUFF- 33 Va%
sconced at Hubby's side.
more service from your phono record . ..
Once past the foam, the liquid wasn't
40 more plays per number . . . longer life
bad, so we talked and sipped and talked.
for your needle . . . protection for the
As the beverage flowed, along with the
abrasive parts of the record ... 350/0 lower
words, we couldn't help but marvel at the
scratch level. All this and nickels too are
wonderful perspective Maybel Dace was
guaranteed by the' new invention of
now able to commandeer. For years she had
listened to the problems of the operator Snohomish's Bill Lindquist. It's a record
lubricant, christened "Record·Life." . . .
from a jobber's perch. Now she was a loca·
The army boys got a break when Decca's
tion owner and had a birds·eye·view of their
Alice Anderson decided to join the ranks
positiOll. Where do most music operators
of Junior Hostesses.
err? Do they fall down on service or record
Slip the cabinet off your Model 24, 600,
selection--or what? And how about job·
600·K or 500 Wurlitzer and replace it with
b ers. ? H ave t h ey an accurate pIcture 0 f the
- - - - - ( See SEATTLE Page 16)
operator and his needs and the location he
serves?
T~e ray of light knifed through the old
cram urn. We started talking fast. Before
the last syllable had di'ed, we had scored a
PANDRAMS
$397.
LOTS OF 5
50
OR MORE
SIN,GLES $424.50
ALL IN A-l CONDITION-LIKE NEW-LATE MODELS
Will Trade For Legal Equipment
PANORAM PARTS & SUPPLIES
Guar anteed Film Cleaner .... $4 .50 Per Gallon
Br and New Monarch 10c Wall or
Bar Box ..............•.....................•.......••.. $7.00
Brand New Adaptor f or Panoram
Used fo r Wall Box::·: •..•.•.•..................•.• 7.00
4 W ir e Armored Cable .............. l0c Per Foot
Combination Adaptor for Phonograph
Panoram Hookup / ........................... $35. 00
SPECIAL!!
FREE PLAY GAMES
Gun Club ..•. $54 .50
5·10·20 .......... 87.50
Victor y ........ 87.50
Home Run,
' 41 ...•........ 59 .50
A . B.C.
Bowler ...... 44 .50
Venus ............ 69.50
J ungle .......... 59.50
SPARKLE LIKE NEW
SPECIALS
Wurlitzer 412 J
A mp lifiers $15 .00
Wurlitzer 41 2
Speakers ..
.
5.00
Keeney Wall
Boxes ........ 12. 50
- .
COMPLETE STOCK OF ALL PARTS FOR EVERY TYPE
PIN GAME EVER BUILT. TELL US WHAT YOU NEEDl
GEORGE PONSER CO.
-
New Equipment is no longer
available. Make your Old
Equipment
763 S. 18TH STREET, NEWARK, N . J .
(All Phones: ESsex 3·5910)
Over 2000 Ne w a n d Diffe re n t Finishes.
Make y our SI S's look like a million ••.
y ou r 24's look like TWO MILLION. W e
can do th e job and DO IT RIGHT!!!!
Come In Today! H URRY!
MILO 1705 J. W. Pico
HERRING
Blvd.
LOS ANGELES, CALIF.
Mention of THE COIN MACHINE REVIEW is your best introdu ction to our advertisers.
UHit Parade" Champions
NEW YORK-What popular songs has
America liked best during the seven years
·of CBS' "Your Hit Parade"? Barry Wood,
:singing star of the program, lists the all-
time favorites-the songs chosen number
one by the public during the years the
show has been on the air.
The musical comedy tune which placed
most frequently was Jerome Kern's All the
Things You Are, which appeared on the
program 11 times during the winter of
1939-1940.
The all-time motion picture number was
Harold Arlen's Over the Rainbow, which
was "Sung by Judy Garland in Wizard of Oz.
Most-played novelties: A-Tisket A-Tas-
ket, The Merry-Co-Round Broke Down and
the Woodpecker Song.
Most-played song adapted from the clas-
sics was Larry Clinton's My Reverie from
Debussy.
Composer most represented in the pro-
gram since the first broadcast was Irving
Berlin.
Today's champion on the program is lin-
gle, 1 angle, lingle, which, incidentally, is
the best selling record of Barry Wood's
career.
E'xcelsior Records Debuts
HOLLYWOOD - Excelsior Record Co.,
fathered by Otis Rene, who has had con-
siderable experience ; in the tune-writing,
producing and recording field, announced
their first record release in early August.
Firm intends to record and promote origi-
nal tunes and all will feature colored artists.
Rene will be remembered as the originator
-of the famous Sing Bands of a few years
ago.
As the first release Rene has a disc fea-
turing Herb "Flamingo" Jeffries who was
the featured vocalist for Duke Ellington
and the star of the production "Jump For
Joy." Title of the tune is At Least You
Could Save Me A Dream. Ditty is a haunt-
ing one and seems to be tailor-made for
automatic phonograph use. Backing up is
the Eddie Beal Trio doing String Foo-
losophy.
Gutshall Cabinet Clicks
- LOS ANGELES-These are busy days at
the Jack Gutshall Distributing Co., for oper-
ators are coming in, examining, planking
their doygh on the line, and carting off the
new Twm-12 Replacement Cabinet to their
favorite spots. Following the initial an-
'nouncement in the July REVIEW the wheels
'started to spin and now Jack is getting
down early each morning to take care of
the lads.
Jack has a "dressed-up" model of the
·cabinet which looks like a million dollars
and is available for a small piece of change
·extra.
The Replacement Cabinet is designed to
take care of a twin-12 mechanism, a 20 or
24-record mechanism. Installations are easy
to make and access is provided from the
front as well as the rear. Cabinet is acousti-
cally treated.
il , STRICTLY INSTRUMENTAL
yes s ir, it's
On Decca : JERRY WALD
* * * *
* -1<
* * * *
M
U
~
I
[
*
* * * *
Government Soes Petrillo as AFM Chiel
Stands Pat on AOgDstl Recording Ban
NEW YORK-The United States Department of Justice has filed an injunc-
tion suit against James C. Petrillo, president of the American Federation of
Musicians, under the anti-trust laws to prevent the union and its president
from prohibiting union members from making recordings for radio, automatic
phonographs and other non-private use.
Action followed Petrillo's refusal to
amend his August lst order stopping all
record making by union musicians. Petrillo
contends that 550 of the 800 radio stations
in the country employ no union musicians,
and that 8,000 to 9,000 musicians could
be employed in restaurants, night clubs and
other locations that now rely on automati'c
phonographs. Admitting that members of
the AFM received $3,000,000 annually from
recording royalties, he emphasized that they
were losing $100,000,00 in potential em-
ployment because of "canned music."
In late July Elmer Davis, director of the
Office of War Information, appealed to Pe-
trillo to "reconsider" his ultimatum on
patriotic grounds, providing the union's
militant $46,000 a year chief with a face-
saving opportunity for postponing his re-
cording ban for the duration.
"I am informed," the OWl director wrote,
"that if you enforce this edict three direct
consequences will be the elimination of
new electrical transcriptions for the use
of radio stations, the elimination of
new popular records for so-called 'juke
boxes,' and the elimination of new popular
and classical records for home consumption.
I am further informed that this move in
all probability will lead to court fights,
possible strikes, and definitely curtail musi-
cal service to the public in the critical
months ahead-months which may well de-
cide the fate of this country's war effort.
"Since several hundred small, independ-
ent stations which are cooperatinng whole-
heartedly with the government in the war
effort depend for their major sustenance on
electrical transcriptions, your order may
well force them out of business and thus
seriously interfere with the communication
of war information and messages vital to
the public security.
"Since, as you say yourself, 'music is
today one of the finest media for maintain-
ing high public morale,' the elimination of
records for use in restaurants, canteens and
soda parlors where members of the armed
forces go for recreation, and for use in fac-
tories where war workers use juke-boxes
for organized recreation, can scarcely fail
to have a negative effect on morale.
"Therefore, on behalf of the people of
the United tSates and on behalf of the War
rine Corps, the Coast Guard, the Treasury
Department, the Office of Civilian Defense,
and the Office of War Information, I sin-
cerely urge that you consider it your patri-
otic duty to stand by your pledge of Dec.
27, 1941, and withdraw your ultimatum of
June 25, 1942. Sincerely, Elmer Davis, Di-
rector of War Information."
The anti-trust action followed when the
Davis appeal went unheeded. In industry
circles the anti-trust action was entirely un-
expected because the United States Supreme
Court had several years ago refused to
uphold a union conviction gained by Assist-
ant Attorney General Thurman Arnold in
the "hod carrier case" which was based on
the principle that a union could not force
employment of unneeded workers.
Regardless of the outcome it seems quite
certain that there will not be a shortage of
records for some months to come. It is
known' that not only do the wax firms have
a large back-log, but that in the past month
they have been recording at a frantic rate.
One recording executive told a REVIEW re-
porter that he was ready with all the tunes
that will be released through January, while
he has a three year supply of classics. Much
the same holds true for all record compa-
nies, who have tried to work out schedules
of releases with the big publishing houses,
and have had every band under contract in
for at least one recording session. One of
the Big Three has over twenty discs by
each of its two top bands, which at normal
release rates should last them over nine
months.
Within the union itself there is consider-
able dissatisfaction with the stand taken
by Prexy Petrillo and many of the topflight
bands are plenty hopped up about losing a
badly needed source of revenue now that
road dates are taking a walloping. In Holly-
wood one veteran record songster passed
the comment that if the union persists he
will turn in his card and hundreds will fol-
- - --
-
I
- - - - TURN PAGE
everyone's got a nickel for
BROTHER BILL
On Bluebird : TONY PASTOR
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~D~e~p:a:rt~m:e:n:t~,~t:h:e~N~a:v ~
y D~e:p~a:r:t:m:e~n~t:,~t:h:e~M~a:- __ ~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~
WESTERN HEADQUARTERS rOR KEN-BAD TUBES
Complete Stock of Tubes ON HAND FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY. Quick
Service. Low Prices. Write for List on Tubes and Other Supplies TODAY!!
SHEI.I.EY RADIO COMPANY
Mention of
THE COIN MACHINE REVIEW is your best introduction to
1841 South Flower Street
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA
our advei tisers.
COIN
M ACHINE
REVIEW
15
FOR
AUGUST
J942

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