Coin Machine Review (& Pacific ...)

Issue: 1945 November

SAN FRANCISCO
COIN
MACH/NI!
REVIEW
66
FOR
NOVEMBER
1945
(Continued from Page 64)
the Buckley Wall Box Music System (for
which General Music Co. is distributor),
in order to get first-hand information just
what the prospects are. Brennan stated
that they had been entirely cleaned out of
the diversified equipment and games still
in stock a month ago. All that is available
at present are some reconditioned Buckley
Music Boxes and a few Hideaways.
We had hoped to have some great news
for this issue from Tony Farina, R. A.
Farina and Co., distributors for Arthur H.
DuGrenier, Inc., about additional fran-
chised lines awarded the firm. However,
due to the many uncertainties of the times
ftJrther delays have become inevitable.
Associated Music Operators, Inc., are
having a dinner party on October 25th at
the Riviera Restaurant, 926 Union Street.
Several city officials have been invited as
guest speakers. An excellent dinner and
elaborate entertainment are planned. Pur-
pose of the dinner party is to bring about
a closer correlation between industry mem-
bers and their families, and to get city
officials better acquainted with the aims
and the scope of the activities of the auto-
matic music merchants. Tickets may be
purchased at the Associated Music Opera-
tors headquarters, 1355 Market Street, and
at the Viki'ng Specialty Co., 530 Golden
Gate Ave.
Sarkis Sarkisina, Oakland operator, took
a six weeks' vacation in the East, and re-
turned accompanied by a brand new bride.
His many friends offer hearty congratula-
tions.
Nathan Robinson, San Francisco opera-
tor, has been honorably discharged from
the Army, and has returned to his home
here.
Gisela Ney
S eattl e
With the paper shortage and all, we don't
doubt that this column has served a lot of
unorthodox purposes during the war years.
When winds howled, what better use than
to quash those drafty apertures? For pack-
ing goods-well, why not? And there were
days when tissue paper was awfully hard to
buy.
Our ego came to the fore and whispered
that the column was read, widely read; but
our ego was never made to withstand the
shock of learning that the feature perform-
ance of Lyle Tenney's farewell party con-
sisted of a loud sonorous reading of the
September notes. No fooli'n' ! Boss George
Schnabel mounted a chair and instead of a
soap box oration on whatever soap box ora-
tors soft-soap 'em with, he pulled out THE
REVIEW and commenced to give 'em your
correspondent's word slingings. Chairside
reports reveal that the program was enjoyed
by all, but we weren't there, Sharlie, so
there's no telling how much liquid the page
had to be saturated with before it was en-
thusiastically received.
Four years ago Elmer Teahan sold his
digger and pin game holdings in Seattle and
moved to Portland. He dittoed in the Rose
City and headed for California. The draft
board was getting quite chummy by that
time so Elmer payrolled at Alameda's Naval
Air Station as electronics maintenance man.
Now that the board has lost interest, Elmer's
back in the Pacific Northwest anxious for a
re-baptism into Coinland.
The "For Sale" shingle has been pulled
down from Northwest Sales and the Pepples
will see it through until "D" Day when Ron
receives that little slip of paper which says
Uncle wants him no more. At present he's
armying in Ketchikan, Alaska, while wife
Hazel keeps 'em coining in Seattle.
Merchant Marineman Morrie Dickinson
was aboard ship in Leyte when the VJ lid
blew. "What a show!" Morrie enthused.
"Every army, navy, marine and coast
guardsman used every piece of equipment
and every shell to put on a spectacle that
looked like a combination of every Fourth
of July celebration ever held. If that had
been a false alarm and there was still a
war on, I wonder what the guys would've
used for ammunition." Formerly service
mechanic with Johnny Michael, Morrie is
eyeing the field for a favorable opening.
All right, you out-of-towners, check your
name and address at the door before enter-
ing the Gateway City to the Great North-
west: Bill Baker, Ellensburg; the Farrell
brothers-Charley from Mt. Vernon and
Bob from Oak ·Harbor; the latter half of
Pasco's Wise and Laymon team; Leo De-
lorne, Yakima; L. C. Foisy, Prosser; Har-
old Fowler, Puyallup.
Discussions and counter-discussions on the
men who vend candy, gum, nuts and ciga-
rettes, their war problems and how they
met them has been adequately covered; but
now comes the unbelievable story of a mer-
chandising problem that wasn't a problem
until VE Day and which became progres-
sively worse by the time V-J Day arrived,
until now it's really a rough rassle. We're
referring to the oft-forgotten popcorn pop-
pers. The boys were getting all the short-
ening they required until Germany caved;
the fat kept thinning until the popping pol-
icy reached the point where few orders
could be filled unless shortening was fur-
nished first.
Fifty p~rcent of the twin bundles due at
Decca arrived three weeks late, which is still
a lot earlier than the other fifty is expected.
QUICK SERVICE
James Marshall Huffine, tipping the beams
at six pounds ten and a half ounces, was
checked into the incoming stock file long
before the expectant deluge of records.
He sold his palatial home for $35,000 and
his pin game route to Johnny Michael for
around twenty grand and hied off to Los
Angeles to bask in retirement; but wounds
inflicted by the persistent biting of the coin
bug over a period of six months drew lr".ing
Stept back to familiar Seattle settings. So
he bought a route from Johnny Michael (a
different one than he sold). and is now
happy and gaming.
Amid shrouds of secrecy rivaling the
atomic bomb, Ken Shyvers has been busy
for four years perfecting a musical product.
The wily inventive genius clapped a nine-
year lease on a 90 by 100 foot studio in
Bremerton and imported some of his mate-
rial from England. The result will combine
the best features of automatic phonographs
and wired music, with the long-awaited un-
veiling slated for January 1.
Many a day a close shave almost robbed
Jerry Steffen of the few stray bristles his
upper lid tried to convince the world was a
mustache, but last month, when the dentist
recommended Yank for all his teeth, Jerry
threw in the sponge-and the bristles too-
and made a clean sweep of both mustache
and molars. To help forget the double
tragedy, Op Stan Fehrenbacher's ace me-
chanic oiled his rifle and will soon be on the
way to Winthrop, Wash., where the deer
and the antelope play.
No one can apply that sad lament, "Too
little and too late," to Puget Sound Nov-
elty, who are going all out in their efforts to
establish a successful beachhead on the
post-war trade. Reinforcements recently ar-
rived include former Boeing Foreman Art
Mullens; discharged vet Mike Conley, who
radio-oped for General Spaatz at HQ Sqn
USSTAF and saw action in six major cam-
paigns, including Normandy; Berl Main,
ex-merchant marine officer and machinist
for Boeing and Vultee Aircraft; Boeing's
one-time radar expert Les Kometz; and
Office Worker Dorothy Hill, who left the
insurance business for a better insurance
business.
Jack Howlett, the man who installed the
first radio broadcasting station in Seattle
and who subsequently designed the famous
Ray Gun and other electronic features for
Mills, Keeney, Bally and Guardian, walked
into the World of Tomorrow and came out
with this statement: "All plants have star-
tling developments on their drawing boards
-a direct result of their participation in
the war effort. Some units will feature
electronics in a fascinating manner."
Jack's latest contribution to the World of
Today is perfecting an electronic unit for
schools which provides a multi-band radio
of both short and long wave, plays an edu-
cational transcription and a standard record
on a dual-speed turntable, and will also sup-
ply the facilities of sound control for stage,
,
There never was a better time than NOW to get your
Slots Refinished and Repaired. Replace those makeshift
wartime repairs with sparkling 'brand new parts. New fac-
tory parts available on all models.
CALL US FOR A PICK-UP!
B. R. & ERNIE GRAHAM
1212 E. Colorado Blvd. ( Rear Entrance) Glendale 5, Calif.
PHONE: Citrus 2-2261
\.
CHICAGO COI N' S
"GOAL EE"
TWO CAN PLAY OR
ONE CAN PLAY ·
LOTS OF ACTION-LIGHTS
It's Red Hot
-SEE-
PAIJL A. LAYMON
https://elibrary.arcade-museum.com
assembly and athletic events. All this as-
sembled into one unit, encased in a cabinet,
and meeting the provisions of the Under-
writers' Laboratories. School response has
been instantaneous but lack of parts is re-
tarding full-scale production.
Quick Clickin's-Climax and anticlimax:
Charley White hooked a 22-lb. king at his
favorite Possession Point haunts one day;
when he hurried back the following morn-
ing to continue the good work, this is what
he caught: one two-pound salmon and one
bad cold . . . . Quoting the head of a local
service department: "Manufacturers are
concentrating so fully on new equipment
that they ~re practically igno~ing parts. The
shortage 1s worse than ever.
It took two marriages to do it but Johnny
Michael finally made the paternal grade
with a girl. . . . Rising to the fore as a
result of .good management and a route-
buying spree, Central Music, co-owned by
George Sherwood and Phil Dennison, is
heading for the big time in the phono field.
_ .. Culled from the rumor mill: It's being
grapevined that a special session of the
Washington State legislature will be called
early in 1946 for the purpose of passing
measures governing returning servicemen,
but that, as usual, the lawmakers will de-
vote some time to their regular routine of
trying to put the pinch on the coin boys.
Whirlwinding up the Coast, Automatic
Instrument Co.'s Sales Manager Doc Eaton
spent three days in Seattle singing the
praises of Singing Towers .... It's not only
music operators who are requesting discs
that aren't but collectors of records who will
pay five to ten dollars for numbers three to
seven years old to add to their hobby stocks.
... Prizes, prizes, and more prizes are being
heaped on the silken head of Le Monde
Chic de Larson, Op Porky Jacobs' prize
toy poodle who has just made a triumphant
return from the international championships
at San Mateo, Calif.
After Rip-Van-Winkling for more than
four years, the Allied Phonograph Operators
of Washington is commencing to show activ-
ity . . . - . "Come up to Canada and let me
show you some real fishing and hunting,"
Operator James Stevenson of Vancouver,
B. C., told Western Distributors' Curly
Gohr. And darned if Curly didn't take him
up on it. Awaiting his return, Solly Solo-
mon envisions large juicy cuts of moose
meat .... Add to the Solomon Series: Son
Walter, after boatswaining it in the Coast
Guard for six years, is now a free man.
Highlights of his service career included
chasing subs in the Atlantic, zigzagging with
corvettes in the Aleutians, and manning the
San Pedro Lighthouse.
'Tis being eared about that the new pin
game equipment will cost about double the
pre-Pearl price .... Seven glistening silvers,
totaling 42 pounds, was the net result of
Ken Rader's fishing foray in Ballard . . . .
The itch to keep a-moving caught up with
Western Distributor's Pearl Lee, and the
firm lost a capable stenog.
Sgt. Louis Karnof sky
Salt Lal.e City
Mgr. Tom Douglas of the Yellowstone
Specialty Co. is in the east again on a
business trip.
Sid Stewart, Stewart Novelty Co., has
returned to his managerial desk from a
trip into Montana and Colorado . . He was
accompanied by Geo. Booth. This office
had a visit from former manager Dan
Stewart, who now is in charge of the Reno,
Nevada Casino.
Al McQuaid, formerly employed by
Stewart Novelty Co., returned from the
Photo Electric
, RIFLE RANGE
"Shoot the Jap" . . . "Chick-
en Sams" . . . "Convicts",
are all making top dollars
when converted into the
brand new Coinex Photo
Electric· Rifle Range. Can be
installed on location in 20
minutes by anyone: has
great player appeal: loca-
tion-tested. Rifle Range in-
cludes all the old target
principles. As stu11dard as
sugar and salt-.

$14.75
in lots of 3
$17.50
sample
f.o.b. factory
SEE
PAUL A. LAYMON
COIN
DISTRIBUTOR
1503 West Pico
Los Angetes 15
U. S. Armed Forces Air Corps this week.
He is a Utah war hero, now honorably dis-
charged, and has joined forces with Stew-
art Novelty again as a special sales repre-
sentative. Mrs. Marjorie Nuttall is a new
employee, having taken the ,position of
secretary and Elinor Alldritt is the new
bookkeeper, according to Mi'ss Leonard,
office representative.
B. E. Moran, office manager for Rowe
Cigarette Service Co., is home now recov-
ering from a serious operation which he
underwent in California recently.
Fred Murphy, coin machine department
man of the Heminway and Moser Co., is
currently in Los Angeles, accompanied by
Elmer Hull, representative for Salvador-
Radigues Cigar Co. of Tampa, according
to Marcia Crosby of the office personnel.
Pres. John Moser has again returned to
Mack's Inn at Idaho, for fishing. Ralph
Cracroft, ,office manager, is back from a
visit to California where he went for a
short time with his family.
Milo Nichansky, manager for Canteen
Service of Utah, reports that his brother
Albert G. Nichansky, is expected home any
hour now, having been overseas since
December 1942. Albert is Milo's partner.
He is awaited with much excitement and
enthusiasm. Milo still says he could use
more candy advantageously.
The Atlas Specialty Co. is trying to get
some of the U. S. Armed Service boys
back, upon their release from the army.
Atlas Specialty's manager, Irving Monsey,
is going into Las Vegas on a business trip
soon, according to S. A. McHarg, Eagle
Novelty Co. Boss, which operates in con-
junction with the Atlas firm.
R. L. Holt, well known in the coin ma-
chine industry here for many years, has
opened a new place in Salt Lake City for
general repairing for operators and is also
operating the Rainbow Dist. Co. Rainbow
has 7,100 square feet of display spac~,
fully fireproofed. Holt reports that Rain-
bow Dist. Co. figures to cover Montana,
MACHINE
REVIEW
67
Wyoming, Idaho, Nevada and Utah and
will have several salesmen busy in the
field constantly all year. This new set-up
FOR
is just getting under way and expects to NOVEMBER
have one of the most modern, spacious and
1945
up-to-date places in the Western United
States, giving display service and repair
service of the highest type.
Viola Hutton
Denver
Since Mr. and Mrs. D. J. King have
moved to their new location, they have
largely expanded their operations and have
added more help both in the store and in
the field. King has originated a labor-
saving device for popping corn used in
their machines, which operates at the rate
of 100 pounds per hour. Large bags are
filled from the hopper ready for delivery
to the various machines.
The new quarters are beautifully light
and sanitary, in a highly desirable loca-
tion, and will materially aid Mr. and Mrs.
King in handling their machines. Ample
space is afforded for operation of the pop-
corn device and for display of candy bars.
Lu Shulman advises that hereafter his
company will be Modern Dist. Co. instead
of Modem Music Co. and that he has
found the new and larger quarters for
which he has been looking the past sev-
eral months.
The new location is on Welton Street,
near the center of Denver. The building
is very large and will amply accommodate
the lines which the company will repre-
sent. In addition, the firm will have its
own private alley, which will make it con-
venient for visiting operators.
Lines which Modern Dist. Co. will rep-
resent are Rock-Ola Mfg. Co., H. C. Evans
and Co., 0. D. Jennings and Co., National
Sales Co., and National Cigarette Co.
The new store is now being completely
redecorated and will be ready for occu-
pancy in a short time.
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