Coin Machine Review (& Pacific ...)

Issue: 1943 November

W. G. Gray Expires
Speed
THE DAY OF
VICTORY
AND HASTEN
TO PEACE AND
PROSPERITY
BUY MORE
WAR BONDS
SAVE YOUR TIRES -
GAS
Phone or Write Your Ne eds - PROMPT SERVICE
We are equipped to handle your wants-Complete stock of parts, new and used
9ames, ARCADE ECj)UIPMENT ... Vendin9 machine cards, etc . Our recondi·
tioned machines are tops ••• LOW PRICES .
COIN
MACHINE
REVIEW
6
FOR
NOVEMBER
1943
OPERATORS -
WE RECOMMEND
VICTORY GAME CONVERSIONS FOR SICK PIN GAMES
Now Ready for Immediate Delivery:
S9~!l
New Conversions:
Set
BOMB THE AXIS RATS for Star Attraction
f.o.b.
BOMBARDIER for VICTORY
CHICAGO
KNOCK-OUT THE JAPS (for Knock-Out), SLAP THE JAPS
(for Stratoliner), SINK THE JAPS (Seven Up), SMACK
THE JAPS (for Ten Spot), HIT THE JAPS (for Gold Star)
WE WANT TO BUY
JEE'P-AIR CIRCUS-SKY CHIEF-GOBS
WURLITZER 750's
MUSIC
Wurlitzer 750E
Seebu~ 8800
Seebur9 9800
etc .
SLOTS
Blue Fronts
Brown Fronts
etc .
CONSOLES
Mills Four Bells, 5c
Mills Four Bells, 5c and
25c
Mills Three Bells, late
Keeney Two.Way Sells
Keeney Four·Bells •
etc.
ONE BALL
FREE PLAY
Bally Lon9acres
Bolly Thorou9hbred
Bally Pimlico
Bally '41 Derby
Keeney Fortune
etc.
I
ARCA.DE
ECj)UIPMENT
Bally Rapid Fires
Bally Defenders .
Evans Super Bombers
Kirk Ni9ht Bombers
Keeney Air Raiders
Evans Tommy Guns
lIate model!
Mutoscop4 Sky Fi9hter s
Mutoscope Drivemobile
.. tc.
I-BALL FREE PLAYS
Dark Horse ....•......•••........ $155.00
Sport Spec:ial .................. 149.50
Mills 1940·41 1·2·3.......... 97.50
CONSOLES
BALLY HI HAND-Write
JUMBO PARADE CLUB BELLS $239 .50
Write
SUPER BELLS $249.50
PA~~~9~~CES BAKER~~~~~RS D. D.
All In excellent condition
Blue GI:' ............................ $155.00 .,
Gold Cup.......................... 79.50
Rec:ord Time ........••......••.. 149.50
BEST GRADE COIN WRAPPERS
65c: per M ............•••• 1000 to 50.000
Western Portable FI"me·Arc Welder ........................................................ : ........... $24 .95 .
,
.
-, (World's Lowest Priced Professional Weldin .. Outfit)
HUNDREDS OF GAMES TO CHOOSE FROM
Write for compiete price list
r
PAUL A. LAYMON
DRexel 3209
Mention
of THE
CHICAGO-September 18th the Coin
Machine Industry lost one of its real pion-
eers and beloved members when W. G.
Gray passed away at his home at Lake
Wawausee, Indiana, at the age of 72.
Gray first became associated with this in-
dustry during the Columbian Exposition in
Chicago in 1893 when he was handling
salesboards. Thereafter he started the op-
erating of machines and opened an office
in Cincinnati. As his business grew he
moved to Chicago to be 'near his source of
supply for Chicago, even then, was the
capital of the industry's manufacturing
activities.
He is credited with having built one of
the first coin operated phonographs which
followed perfection of coin-controlled auto-
matic pianos. This venture was worked out
with the cooperation of Walter A. Tratsch
and Lee S. Jones, who was then General
Sales Manager for the J . P. Seeburg Corp.
Gray was active in the organization of
the A. B. T. Manufacturing Co. along with
Jack Bechtol, Dan Odom and Walter
Tratsch and the firm's first offering to the
operators was the A. B. T. Pistol Target.
Later A. B. T. became leader in coin de-
tection and introduced the famous A. B. T.
slug rejectors and coin chutes.
When marble tables made their appear-
ance Gray joined with Lee S. J ones in or-
ganizing the American Sales Corp. which
helped finance hundreds of operators
across the country.
Surviving him ' are his wife and two
daughters. Industry members acting as
pall bearers were Rene Lamoureaux, Ed.
Pace, Lee S. 'Jones, Walter Tratsch, Thom-
as Linane and George Buchmann.
700 Items Released
WASHINGTON, D. C.- A ray of sun-
shine beamed from the nation's capitol
early this month when it :was announced by
Chairman of the Smaller War Plants Corp.
Albert M. Carter, that Uncle Sam will soon
release wartime restrictions and permit
manufacture of certain essential civilian
products.
"About 700 items are being programmed
for production in 1944," said Carter, "in
order to provide the civilian population
with items necessary to heal th , safety and
general welfare."
The chairman urged small plants to set
machinery in mo tion immedia tely to obtain
contracts for manufacture of the prescribed
items. It is contemplated that the items to
be released must be manufactured in part
by small manufactures with open capacity
which have manufactured the items in the
past . • Manufacturers are urged to contact
their local SWPC office at once for full
details.
Program as ou tlined merits the endorse-
ment of all in the Coin Machine Industry
for it signifies a gradual return to manu-
fac turing normalcy which means manufac-
turers in this I ndustry will be able to sup·
ply new equipment after the war in record
speed time if essential manufacturing has
been completely taken ' care of when the
last shell is fired.
Happel to Chicago
LOS ANGELES-William Happel, Jr.,
head of Badger! Sales Co., trained out of
Los Angeles November 13th to attend a
series of meetings in Chicago' on the 15th ,
16th and 17th. He will visit his office in
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, before returning to
the coast.
.
COIN MACHINE REVIEW is your best introduction to our advertisers
Making Democracy and the World
Mutually Sale .,
-by-
ARTHUR GRAHAM GLASGOW, M. E., D. Sc., D. Eng.
fOREWORD
The s ubject her e in treafed is th e mos t cC?m-
prenensi ve as well a s the most fundamental
01 objective s: l or it n ot only means crushing
victory in th is global war, Dut also c overs all
post-war problems 01 peace.
Few will dispu te the desirability 01 ade-
quate " machiner y " lor i mplementin g the best
c onclu sions 01 various studies made. But who
is to decide what is best? And who is to ere ·
ate, operate, and maintain such u machiner y ' ·
- peacelully adjusted to the contin uou s d e-
velopments 01 science and te chnology? Surely
n ot those w ho have p e rmitted ( or cau s ed)
two world-wars in one gene ration- bu t who
else?
The essay. starting with this iss ue and to
be con tinued in the n ext two issues, see ks to
i mprove the quality and authori ty 01 the c on -
trolling human element in national govern-
men t, on w hich all national and international
issues depend.
THE REVIEW presents this s e rie s 01 a r tie/es
l or the thought and consideration 01 the m en
01 our great Indu s try. No endorseme nt is made
on the plan s and s ugges tions ollered and th e
material is p r ese nted solely for s tudy and dis -
THE EDITOR.
c u s sion.
ABUSES DISCREDITING DEMOCRACY
I
OR over a century, marvelously accele-
rated in our twentieth century, science
and technology have been evolving potenti-
alities of a Better World; science by dis-
closing the hidden resources of nature, and
technology by converting such resources to
the use and disposition of man. Even space
has been broadly conquered as a barrier to
human intercourse. -
The substitution of unlimited "artificial"
power for brute and man power has vastly
eased and increased all productivity, and
might have raised the status of man from a
semi-brute to a demi-god, if these immense
captive resources had been utilized exclu-
sively for his welfare and evolution.
But, apart from localized conflict, world-
war has appliea and is now applying all
terrestrial knowledg(l:';,;il1d effort to the de-
F
CHRISTMAS SEALS
struction of man, of his accumulated works,
and even of the earth on which he should
happily dwell. The United Nations are de-
pleting their own natural resources, at max-
imum ra te and cost, to destroy not only the
enemy but also many occupied Countries-
for whose post-war rehabilita tion the United
States must make the chief external con-
tribution.
The destructive phase of this monstrous
sequence threatens the United States with
annual taxation approaching fifty billions;
while budgeted expenditure of $108,900,-
000,000 for the year ending June 30, 1944,
will soon require lifting of the new debt
limit to $210,000,000,000-and "we have
not yet begun- to fight!"
It is puerile to blame science and tech-
nology for the world's incredible misuse of
such wonderful potentialities. Where, then,
rests responsibility for thus crucifying the
world on this cross of knowledge? The re-
sponsibility is primarily on the world's
sta tecraft, which has been worse than stag-
nant while science and technology have
soared toward the skies.
What an indictment of their so-called
statecraft that nations, while acclaiming
freedom as more precious than life, should
have permitted one megalomaniac-starting
wi th a divided nation-to dominate the
national and individual lives of the whole
world!
The more fundamental questions are--
Why have these heaven-sent opportunities,
provided through science and technology,
been entrusted to such statecraft; why are
the navigators of our ships of state so ig-
norant, negligent, or inpotent concerning
their proper course, in the water of the
world? The answer, obviously, concerns
methods of government.
II
Practically, the world is now divided be-
tween two and only two forms of national
government-Unrestric ted Suffrage and Un-
restricted Dicta torship. If any other form
still exists, it is completely dominated by
one of these main groups. These two ide-
ologies are the opposite utmost extremes of
all possibilities in national government; allcl
extreme opposition is always dangerous.
In this case, involving the welfare of the
whole world, the representatives of each ex-
treme have declared, by words or actions or
both, that these two ideologies cannot exist
in peace in the same world; that one or the
other must be destroyed.
Patriotic -Americans abhor the Totalitari-
an State and all of its works. In that sys-
tem, the Creature, by unna tural means, en-
slaves its Creators; and is itself dominated
by a Dictator-inevitably a megalomaniac
with lust for aggrandizement. But hatred of
totalitarianism does not alter the deadly
menace of its aggression, now challenging
democracy in a war of survival.
On the other hand, this ha teful war
proves, as nothing else could prove, the
imperative need of eliminating or neutral-
izing the defects that make our current de-
mocracy so vulnerable. The one and only
way to defend democracy is to make de-
mocracy defensible. To that end, let us
consider the recent outstanding failures of
democracy.
III
In the First World War, raging from
August 1914 to November 1918, many na-
tions joined to make "The World Safe for
Democracy" -but, as seen below, with little
thought of making democracy safe for the
world:
The Imperial Government of Russia was
overthrown from within in 1917, and mod-
ern democracy attempted under leadership
of the eloquent Kerensky. But its power
was inadequate to withstand one Russian
refugee, conveyed secretly from Switzerland
to St. Petersburg by the German enemy-
he called himself Lenin.
Germany, as fruit of the First World War,
adopted modern democracy under the Con-
stitution of Weimar, prepared with Ger-
man thoroughness. But - notwithstanding
great relief from war indemnities, the post-
war flood of American and British cap,i tal
(never repaid), the withdrawal of all alien
forces from the Rhineland, and the return
of the Saar-the democratic structure could
not withstand the present Fuehrer, who had
emerged from the vast opportunities of four
- - - - - - - - - T URN PAGE
NICKEL NUDGERS
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Mention of THE COIN MACHINE REVIEW
IS
your best introduction to our advertisers
CO/N-
MACHINE
REVI EW
7
FOR
NOVEMBER
1943

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