operating on Brighton's famous pier. Young
Bill is now a grandfather and going on
50 but he is always coming up with some
new and brilliant ideas for a future winner.
When the first bumpers made their
appearance, John, my youngest brother,
had the idea for a miniature type. The
others thought it a good idea and all,
including Old Bill, suggested improve-
ments, and the first model took shape.
We contracted it out but production was
not up to the promi es made, and we only
received a couple of hundred in six
months; then the Genco Junior appeared
on the market and knocked it for a home
run . We were getting into our stride on
other models when old Hitler started his
tricks, and since then we have been try-
ing to hold our own.
As you know, we cannot do much
building of machines these days, owing
to lack of materials, etc., so we have to
keep ' going with anything we can get
hold of. Anyway, Old Bill knew where
there were a few hundred penny chocola te
vendors which cannot be u ed owing to
sweet rationing and higber costs. He
and Bill J 1'. saw the possibilities of con·
verting same at little cost to a miniature
penny play amusement machine. We
bought them for approximately 75 cents
each and at tbe present time yO llng Bill
has built and is fitting the guts or action
in the first model. The conversion is no!
a big job of work so when we get down
to it, there should be a fair margin of
profit.
Business should take a ~u rn for the
better in the fall as that has always seemed
to be our best timp of the year.
•
EXPAND with NEW MACHINES
Every Coin Machine
Needs the
EHTRA 5E[URITY
01
'?~*
DUO
10EN5
• Triple combin.lrion acrion of
l,j rumblers makes picking vir.
rually impossible.
• "Duo regisrered key plan" -
one key for all your machines.
*
More OliO Locks (Ire illJtalled
ill coill-operClted /lit/chilies tht/II
(11/)' other qllt/lit)' lock.
THE ILLINOIS
LOCK COMPANY
808 South Ada Street
Chicago 7, Illinois
12
LETTERS
TO THE EDITOR
Paul Laymon (right) of Paul A. Laymon ,
Inc., Los Ang eles , p resen ts check for Damon
Runyon Ca ncer Fund to Earle Moloney of
Bally Mfg. Co .
Sales Stimulator
LOS A GELE
BOIll" Adycrtising Sy.-
tern, Inc., is now ready with a machine (not
operated by coi n) designed to stimu late reo
tail sa les. The ma chin e, attac hed to th e cash
register, is electr ical ly operated. It conta in s
a cash jackpot, with the amount based upon
a fraction or a ('ent per ('ustomer. At irreg-
u lar interva ls th e jackpot unloads as th e
purcha e is being run g up.
An additional reature is th e savi ng or
money formerly lost th rough clerical errors,
inasmuch as customers watch their sales reo
corded because they want to win the jack.
pot. Thererore, clerks will not overlook
ringing up sales.
To the Editor: In reference to starting
schools for training coin-operated machine
mechanics in other cities, I believe it would
be detrimental to the best interest of the
Coin Machine Industry at present.
l suggested a mechanics' school in Sep-
tember, 1946, and during the cour e or dis·
cussion, pro and con, at subsequent monthly
meetings, we learned a veterans' course for
music mechanics had been started in 0-
,-ember of that year by another organiza·
tion. After the ,'ets finished their course,
I here weren't enough jobs for the graduates
and the project promptly ended.
In my opinion, those wishing to study en·
gineering would attend an outstanding in-
stitution, such as the Massachusetts Insti·
tute of Technolo!!y. Certain universities are
oustanding for their medical colleges, others
for law, etc. In all such specia lized courses,
the students go to the school, not the school
10 th e students.
I realize that veterans in the Southwc~t
and other sections would rather go to school
nearer home, but with a radio-electronic
background, such as is taught in all voca-
tional schools, a vet would only have to take
an additional six months coin·operated ma·
chine mechanics' course in New York.
Tho,e vets who come under P. L. 16 (dis-
abled) would have their fare paid to thr
New York school and receive up to $200
monthly. Other \eterans classified as 346
(not disabled) receive $65 monthly if Rin-
gle, and $90 monthly if married, 'while at-
tending school.
AAMO members, who are arcade OWII '
ers, operators or distributors in distant sec-
lions of the United States, could ha\'e vet-
erans from their cities trained as mechanicR.
provided they had a one-year radio-electronic
course or the equivalent. In such cases, t hI'
prospective employer, if he thought the vet
needed more money to get by, could suppll"
ment the pay the government allows vr l·
erans while in school. Arter graduation, til<'
vet could return as an on·the-job employec.
This plan would work out very well ror
all concerned and preclude the possibility
of tarting a school for perhaps a single
class, a happened in a previous instancc.
J sincerely believe that a single school,
conducted by the Board of Education, with
competent school instructors and AAMO
and manufacturers upplying guest in trll(,'
tors, using th e latest equipment for teach-
ing, is rar better than numerous schools not
blessed with the above setup.
Until the need for more schools is shown ,
a single school, as now conducted in New
York, which has the facilities for training
400 mechanics yearly, is the answer to the
mechanics' problem .
-F. McKim Smith, president of ational
Assn. of Amusement Machine Own('r~.
"Humpty Dumpty" Called
Revolutionary Type Game
CHICAGO-Heavy advance orders hav ..
poured in for Humpty Dumpty, Gottlieh's
new type pin game which features th e rad·
ically different Flipper Bumpers. These
bumpers satisfy the desire of players for
more complete control of balls and el imi·
nates tilting and rough handling by players.
Said Dave Gottlieb, president of the com-
pany: "In Humpty Dumpty we have some-
thing new which finally breaks away from
the stereo typed pin game pattern of th e past
decade. This player·controlled game is th "
~hot·in·the-arm that has long heen needed
by the Industry."
COIN MACHINE REVIEW