Coin Machine Review (& Pacific ...)

Issue: 1944 March

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Coin
Machine
Review
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MAR C H, 1944
The COIN MACHINE REVIEW for March, 1944. Vol. II. No. 8. Published monthl~ at 1115 Venice Blvd ., Los Angeles 15, Calif. Fitzroy 8269. Paul W .
Blackford, editor and publisher. NEW YORK OFFICE (17) : Ra lph P. Mulligan, 441 LexIngton Ave., Murray Hill 2- 558~. CHICAGO OFFICE (I); C . J . Ander-
son , 35 East Wacker Drive , CENtral 1112. Entered as Second Class Matter July 23, 1936, at the Post Office at Los Angeles, Calif., under the Act of March 3,
1879. SUBSCRIPTION RATES : $1.00 per year or $2.00 for 3 years . 25c per copy.
140 CARLOADS
Tobacco Suffers Curb
RICHMOND. Va.-Leaders in th e to-
hacco industry ha\"e started a move ment to
forre the government to relinquish its crop
co ntro l on th e ra i s in ~ of tobacco. A gov-
ernm ent announ cement recentl y sta ted th at
the su ppl y of ciga rs a nd c igarettes this
yea r will be limited only by th e ma nufac-
turers' ability to produce.
Already so me of th e lea din g bra nds a re
bein g rati oned to johb ers, dealers a nd op-
erators ann th e co ntention is th at thi s con -
diti on will co ntinu e, and prohahl y grow
wo rse, unl ess th e governm en t permi ts more
ar reage to go to tobacco pl antin g.
Th e United Sta tes Depa rtm ent of A ~ ri ­
culture has pe rmitted a 20 per rent acre-
age increase for 1944 but thi s is held to he
insuffic ient.
Th e tota l 1943 ciga rette production
was estim ated at 285Y2 billion, an increase
of 14.2 per cent over 1942. These fi gures,
for th e first tim e, include th e tax fr ee cig-
a rettes se nt to the armed services. The re-
re ntly aucti oned Ru e-cured crop fell way
short of replacin g th e stocks used in thi s
produ cti on, and th e hurley tobacco now be-
in g ma rketed will not begin to restore th e
disappeara nce in ma nufacturers' stock of
th e lea f, acco rdinl!; to reli abl e sources.
AFM Influence
LOS ANGELES-Defi nite indication of
the influ ence th e American F ederation of
Musicians trea ty has mea nt to th e reco rd
ind ustry is shown in th e Musical P opul a r-
ity Poll of thi s issue of TH E R EVIJ:;W.
Th e " P oll" is com piled from listin gs re-
ce ived fro m 14 key citi es and suppli ed
telegra phi call y at presstim e. It is an au-
thoritative a nd auth entic barometer of trends
in vari ous parts of th e country, and in thi s
issue under " Best Selling Records" it will
he seen th at Decca a nd Capitol, who have
made th eir peace with AFM, have taken
over. Decra leads with seve n best sell ers
and Cap itol com es along with two out of
the ten hest sell ers. Columhia ga ins a
li stin g herause of the current popularity
of The Voice and Frank Sina tra's reco rd -
ing of I Couldn't Slee p a W ink Last Night
gets ninth billin g.
or
MISERY
Two Billion OPA Ration Tokens
Promise Real Operator Headache
If Your Copy is Late
Because of the uncertainties of
wartime transportation, many pe·
riodicals will frequently be latl!
arriving at destina tion. If your
COIN MACHINE REVIEW does not
reach you on time, please do not
write complaining of delay. The
delay is caused by conditions aris-
ing after your copy or order has
left Los Angeles.
Organization Forming
NEW YORK- A group of small oper-
ators are getting together to fonn a new
orga nization of music opera tors in New
York City, details of whi ch will be fur-
ni shed to th e tra de shortl y. The new or-
ganization will be known as th e Amal ga-
mated Music Operators' Associa tion.
Kaplan on Business Trip
LOS ANGELES- H arry Kaplan of the
Southwestern Vendin g Machine Co. left
Los An geles on F ebru ary 7th for a buying
and se llin g trip that took him as far East
as Chi cago. Harry is expected back on th e
Coast a round the 25th.
On The Cover--
Some lolks will wear green ties or
small shamrocks on St. Patrick's Day
"in the momin'" but not Joan Darwyn.
She's ready lor the great day with a
headpiece that will really proclaim her
celebration 01 the day.
WAS HINGTO N, D. C.-Na tion -wid e dis-
tributi on of stoc ks of th e new O. P . A. red
and blu e toke ns to ration ba nks through -
out th e co untry is now und er way. Th e
total out put of ove r 2,000,000,000 tokens is
bein g sent out o f th e factory in a south-
western Ohi o c ity a t a ra te of from 40,-
000,000 to 50,000,000 a day. Shi pments art'
all bein g made by express a nd will Lota l
140 carlo ads or app rox im a te ly llOO ton,;.
Des pite th e ava lan r he of protests, OPA
offi c ia ls ma inta in tha t th e shipments will
('ontinue a nd th e use of th e tokens will go
into effec t throughout th e co untry on
F ebruary 27th. Tokens will have a on e-
point value and are intended to facili'tate th e
makin g of "chan ge" in th e use by th e pub-
li c of th e red a nd blue ra tion coupons.
OPA stati'sti cians claim that the tokens will
save retail trade at least $35,000,000 a year
in te rms of time now s pent in countin g
a nd so rtin g stamps.
H owever, th e OPA fi gure boys didn' t
stop to fi gure how much th e sa me tokens
will cost operators of va ri ous types of CO; Il-
o pe ra ted equi pment in term s of time re-
quired to a ns wer service ca lls occasioned
by th e use of the tokens in vending a nd
amuse ment dev ices.
Tokens a re made of fib er and measu ;"p
.642 in diameter and are sma ll er an d
thinner th an dim es.
Whe n th e prog ra m of us ing token,; wa,
first adva nce d last yea r, the National Aut o-
mati c Mercha ndising Associa tion , Chicag') ,
co ntacted OP A offi cials a nd after month s of
meetin gs a nd consulta tion s the A sso ~ia ­
tion was assured th a t th e size would be .88
of a n in ch in di a meter or slightl y larger
th a n a ni ckel a nd small er than a quarter.
This was dee med sa ti sfactory by the Asso-
r iation for su(' h a toke n would not be u ~­
abl e in a utomati c devi ces. Wi, en it was re-
vea led on Novemb er 24th th at th e size h,ld
(See MISERY, Page 32)
THE REVIEW HAS NEVER MISSED AN ISSUE IN THE PAST TEN YEARS!!
NO OTHER COIN MACHINE MONTHLY CAN MAKE THAT STATEMENT!!
COIN
MACHINE
REVIEW
3
FOIt
MARCH
"44
NDNEW
ANOTHER MONTB
NEARER VICTORY!
SUBSCRIPTIONS
ACCEPTED!
HELP BRING IT CLOSER -
MORE WAR BONDS
COIN
MACHINE
REVIEW
4
1.01t
MARCH
1944

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Subscription Department
Coin Mochine Review
1115 Venice Boulevard
LOS ANGELES 15. CALIF.
- / . ~ /J.
"-
- \.-LJ= " ' - ~
INTERNATIONAL MUTOSCOPE CORPORATION
RENEWALS ONLY!
Publishers are now feeling the
pinch of governmental restrictions
on paper consumption, and because
of this many publishers are not ac-
cepting any new subscriptions. For
example, no new subscriptions may
be entered at present for ESQUIRE,
COSMOPOLITAN, GOOD HOUSE-
&
COUNTRY,
KEEPING,
TOWN
HOUSE BEAUTIFUL, HARPER'S BA-
ZAAR, MOTOR BOATING and many
others. This list will sw ell in the
months ahead as additional restric-
tions take effect.
Renew ALL of your subscriptions
NOW! Publishers are accepting re-
newals on all subscriptions of rec-
ord at the present time. Even if
your subscription does not expire
for 10 months or more, RENEW IT
NOW, to avoid future disappoint-
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publishers' rates. Send us your list
today for rates.

BUY
PENNY ARCADE HEADQUARTERS SINCE 1895
Manufacturers of Photomatic and Other famous Coin Operated Equipment
44·01 ELEVENTH STREET, LONG ISLAND em I, NEW YORK
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:From Our Boys In The
From Som ewh ere in th e Aleut ian s
Dea r Mr. Blackford:
Your kind note, in vitin g me to write
on ce-month ly lette rs, has been re('e ived, in
addition to the crisp slip of paper with t h ~
frilly edges_ Whil e items of ~ nte rest up
Aleuti an way a re ra ther sca rce and of littl e
va ri ety, I will keep pennin g 'em unl ess
duty, censorshi p, or ed itorship thwa rt my
efforts.
In this comm erciali zed era, whe re cur-
rency paces a ma n's life, it is a refreshin g
novelty not to be bo th ered with mon ey wor-
ries. Before th e Post Excha nge was estah-
lished, a soldier's spendin g ca pacity was
exactl y ze ro. A l ifetim e of habits, in wh ich
the gree n stuff predominantl y fi gured, was
temporaril y sta ll ed. Whe n th e Post Ex -
change tacked on th eir " Open for Busin ess"
sign, men lin ed up; so deeply in grained
was th e buyin g hab it that they planked
down coins for items for whi ch th ey had
no conceiva bl e use.
A soldier in a n outpost loses co ntact with
reality. Th e probl ems of eye ryday livin g,
some of th em comp lica ted a nd co mplex,
a re mi ssin g. The outposter loses in centi ve
to think for h imself. Th e Arm y provid es
th e fo od, clothin g, she lter, work , entertain -
ment. The soldi er, in foll owin g th e d ictates
of rou tin e, almost beco mes a n automaton.
When he is thrust hack into normal civilian
life, how long wil l thi s readjustm ent re-
quire?
Infolm~
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Service * *
Living happi ly with a woman , accordin p:
to th e ma rriage experts, is a fin e art requir-
ing tact, pati ence, tol erance, a nd enou gh
attributes to fi ll a book.
But li ving with men is no cin ch, either.
To keep co mmunications ro lli ng, occupant:"
of the tents and huts work a round the clock
in different shifts. The dayman walks in at
four p. m. T he hut is cool a nd s leep· in -
ducin g, and the gra veya rder is rollin g off
th e z-z-z·z's in rhythmic self-contentm ent.
Feeling chill y, the dayman turns u p th e
stove. Th e graveyard er commences to . til'
un easily, the rhythm of his brea thin g so und -
in g like spark plug di lli culti es on the fami ly
bus. As the temperature climhs, the grave-
ya rdeI' sti rs mo re u neasily. Finall y he opens
his eyes and says, " F-n -n-n -p-p-f-f-f, it's hot
in here," r.olls over and tries to merge with
Dame Morpheus.
The next time he opens hi s eyes, th e
heavy- lidded opti cs are sull en a nd hostil e,
and the words are there to match th e mood.
"Turn the 'damn hea t down. I'm swea tin g
lik e a pi g."
"It's j ust comfortable, Soldier. Go back
to sleep."
Then th e graveyarder lurches up, and the
battle is on. When the verbal fi esta reaches
the stage where blows are the next order of
the day, som eon e di scovers it is chow time;
so hoth combatan ts call a truce. After a
( See OUR BO YS, Page 12 )
PBBB!
Write MILLS NOVELTY COMPANY 4100 Fullerton Avenue
Chicago, Illinois, for latest Coin Machine Information
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