Coin Machine Review (& Pacific ...)

Issue: 1947 February

"
of the
COIN MACHINE INDUSTRY
for
U~~Zl
The Industry's FIRST COMPLETE and AUTHORITATIVE DIREqORY
5"; IIC SECTIONS - 5
1.
2.
MASTER INDEX OF MANUFACTURERS.
A compl.te
alphabetical listing, with addresses. of every known coin
machine manufacturer In the United States.
SOU ROE FilE. Every type of equipment, service or 'UPflie,
avellabl. will be lilted In thll Mctlon with the nam .. 0 the
manufacturers or suppliers. The first complete and accurate
service of Its kind'" be made available.
s.
3.
4.
REGISTERED TRADE MARKS, COPYRIGHTS, etc. Will provide
Instant reference for buyers who know product, by trade
names only.
JOBBERS AND DISTRIBUTORS. Hundreds of jobbers and
distributors with complete addresses and, In most cal." the
type of equipment offered by each.
TRADE ASSOCIATIONS. All recognized trade associations
fn the Industry with names of officers, directors, addresses
and meeting dates.
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25,000 CIRCULATION -
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PUBLICATION DATE - MARCH 1ST
Ad..-ert;s;ng Now Being Accepted. Contact Our Nearest Office.
The COIN MACBINE REVIEW
35 East Wacker Drive:
CHICAGO 1
CENtral 1112
1115 VENICE BLVD ••
LOS ANGELES 15
Fitzroy 8269
441 Lexington Avenue.
NEW YORK 17
Murray Hill 2·5589
Walker said. "It usually comes in mid·
November in the juke box industry, when
we shift over to new 'models for the coming
year, just as in the motor car industry.
"From May 20 to November 30, we turn ed
out 10,000 boxes," he added. The item
stated that the Aireon engineering staff
would be busy with new designs during the
holiday season. New models will be dis·
played at the show but the company plans
a show of its own here before that. Re·
. sumption of production will- depend on
when new contracts are concluded. Rudy
Greenbaum was in conference and too busy
to amplify this report.
Business has held up well for the Advance
Music Co. and dime play is payirig out at ·
special locations, especially where dancing
is allowed.
Frank W. Murray and Edward Jam es
Nettle, perhaps our largest operators, stated
that their Music Service Co., which covers
42 coup ties, has been successful for the past
few months installing dime play phon as,
with 75 machines yielding a third more take
than the nickel play chutes they displaced.
"In some instances," Nettle announced,
"the take was triple. Our Wurlitzers also
require less servicing because we have little
trouble with dimes clogging the machines."
The Auto Vend Co. denied the rumor
that they had "cracked the bottleneck of
small electric motors" which would enable
them to place their drink dispenser on th e
production line soon.
Edward Koch, Automatic Sales System,
has moved his place of business. and will
also do a bulk retail business on confec·
tions. His vending line is ball gum, peanuts
and candy.
Virginia Freck, daughter of Hazel Freck at
Combipe·Richards, is planning to join the
club sometime in February. A former WAC,
Virginia probably will know how to deal
with hubby if he tends to go "out·of·
bounds" or go out at night with the boys
sans a pass. Hazel; by the way, is surely
happy that cigarettes no longer require
pennies in the packs. She said that stuffing
job was plenty tiring. Price Richards pre·
sented Mrs. R. with a cute little white Spitz
puppy for Christmas. Needless to say, she's
thrilled with it.
Woolf Solomon says that CelJtral Ohio
Coin, now a block long, soon will take over
more territory and be a block wide. Brother
Sam, sales manager for the firm, is wearing
a hole in COCME's carpet, inasmuch as the
Missus is infanticipating. In passing, we
might add that one does not pass too
quickly the gals who carry on the affairs of
business in Woolfs tlffice. With respect to
matters of beauty, Solomon is truly a wise
man.
Beer sales dropped off a little when
winter finally caught up with us, but play
oil coin machines seems to be holding up
rather well. Cigarette machines have re-
turned to pre·war form and represent a
goo'd investment now that some profit can·
be realized.
Cigarette tax stamp sales in Ohio last
year increased four and one·half plus mil·
lion dollars over total net sales for 1945,
showing a 42 per cent raise in revenue,
De" ThatcheT
C;olulDbus
Now that Christmas is over and the New
Year is under way, many local operators
and distributors are faced with that peren·
nial headache of squaring accounts with the
Great White Father in Washington. Deduc·
tions, reductions, revised estimates, exemp·
tions and all . the other thousand·and·one
angles to filling income tax returns are pro·
viding them with plenty to do in addition to
boosting current business.
Something else that has an air of the
perennial about it is the age·old custom of
"two becoming one." The first announce·
menf along that line came on the second
day of the year. Jack Shaucet of Times
Tonomatic Corp. and the Missus announced
that their daughter Mitzi Lee is engaged to
Irvin Lichtenstein, formerly with the Army
Air Forces and now associated with Times
Tonomatic. No dafe has ' been set for strew·
ing the orange blossoms.
Also trekking to the altar this month was
Ted Wilcox, salesman at Central Ohio Coin
Machine Exchange. Ted married a Cam-
hridge, Ohio, girl.
Not to be out·done, the word has it that
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1947
according to W. D. Bailey, chief Of the state
division of cigarette tax. He also reported
that the state tax on cigarettes in 1946
totaled $15,641,599. December tax stamp
sales amounted to $1,267,190.
Woolf Solomon. reports that the only
damage wrought when a 19·year-old youth
broke into Central Ohio Coin premises was
a broken window. A burglar alarm pre·
vented the break·in from going unnoticed.
The youth was captured by 'police;
Bill Walker and Adin Shade, partners in
the Majestic Music Co., received a little
publici ty in one of the local pa pel'S re-
cently.
Th~ Automatic Canteen Co. of Columbus
was one of the 13 candy distributing firms
which filed suit for supplemental contracts
requiring the Automatic Canteen Co. of
America to absorb 50 per cent of candy
price increases. The suit was filed in Fed·
eral Court in Chicago. Two other suits filed
at the same time charge the Automatic
Canteen Co. of America with violation of
anti-trust laws and breach of contract. The
company is charged with conspiring with
13 candy companies to prevent Canteen
operators from purchasing supplies directly
from candy manufacturers.
Ed Shaffer showed me a copy of the
firm's new house organ, Coin Profits, and it
looks like a good idea. It will serve as a
link between the company and operators it
services. A new series of Seeburg Music
Systems schools started in January.
Gene Ford, Shaffer salesman, took the
marital step recently with J oanneAllen.
Bernie Flynn, parts manager of the Co-
lumbus Shaffer office, had the misfortune to
lose a finger in a freak accident.
Notes from the little black book: Al
. Logan of Tri-State Amusement Co., Hunt-
ington, believes in starting early. He has
been recaulking his speed boat for next
summer's sport on the Ohio River .•.. Fred
Wolfe of Portsmouth's O. K. Automatic
Music Co. was in an auto accident. For-
tunately there was no serious injury and
Fred returned to work . . . . Mills and Co.
of Huntington is using a promotion-minded
location that plugs its new Seeburg equip-
ment during a local radio program. Bakery
goods are given as prizes for guessing tunes
played on the Seeburg phonograph during
the program .... Huff of Mid-Ohio Amuse-
ment in Mansfield, is enjoying a Florida
vacation . . . . Wirt Ferrell of Huntington's
Ferrell Amusement , Co. has been in Hot
Springs, Ark., for his health. . . . C. H.
Hopkins and Maynard Hopkins of Hopkins
Music Co., Galion, reported no luck on
the.ir first day of the hunting season ..••
Estel E. Shaffer has been , enjoying a well-
earned vacation in sunny-it is, isn't it?-
California . . . . Mike Cohen was in Cleve-
land on business during the first week of
the New Year.
Mike Charie reports that Packard Mfg.
Corp. sent a representative to visit Capital
PIa-Mol' Distributing Co. recently to give
the staff some tips on the new Packard
Pla·Mor phonographs. Mike is one of the
lucky fellows who has received confirmation
of hotel reservations lor the big coin ma-
chine show in Chicago. He says he'll ' be
glad to get away for a little relaxation as
well as see some pretty wonderful stuff.
Another local coinman who is looking
forward to the show is Woolf Solomon.
Little did I know that this husky hustler is
a student of Nietzsche, Santayana and other
great philosophers. Woolf has heen called
upon to spark the Philosopher's Forum at
the show. The subject "How To Live" will
serve as the meat that he and fellow coin-
men will discuss at the Sherman Hotel on
Monday, February 3. A student of all the
great philosophers, Woolf is reported to be
able to give a capsule account of many of
the great men in that field of study.
-
W. C. A,rth.r.
Foreign "Souvenir" Coins
Slug Domestic Market
NEW YORK-Operators aren't the only
ones who are bothered by "lugs with slugs"
-or perhaps it might be said that the phone
company, the subway operators, and the
men who handle station lockers are not the
only ones bothered with slugs and foreign
coins-operators are bothered, too. The
difference is that there's almost no way in
which operator losses can be tabulated. On
the other hand, telephone company officials
aren't inclined to talk, either; they say
they'd rather not even look at the statistics.
But the subways, now-
Last year New Yorkers jammed 194,517
slugs or foreign coins into the subway
turnstiles. Slugs and odd-looking coins pour
in at any time or station. Officials claim
there are actually "slug-happy" characters
who will drop a Swiss nickel into the slot,
watch it pass the bull's-eye (a magnifying '
glass in the turnstile of the Interborough
Rapid Transit Lines) and then brag anout
how they put it over.
While the current crop of foreign coins
seems heaviest from Palestine, Honduras,
Belgium, Holland, Denmark and Japan,
there are even occasional ones from as far
away as Australia, perhaps dropped by re-
turning ex-GI's who have gotten hard-up
and decided to part with their souvenirs.
Last year the subways took in 2,300 Cuban
nickels, nearly 64,000 Canadian nickels.
The latter weren't a total loss-only 15 per
cent.
Still, that's not as bad as the harder-up
characters who will buy chewing gum, chew
it, roll it and palm it to simulate a nickel.
.1£ it makes contact, the turnstile opens.
The worst of it .is, of course, that after
the' lugs with slugs have gone through the
turnstiles, they fool the chewing gum,
peanut or penny chocolate vendors on 'sta-
tion platforms with more unspendable coins.
Some 74,000 foreign metal pieces were
combed out of these machines during the
year-not counting those servicemen may
have tossed in disgust at a passing train.
As for slugs in the subway vending ma-
chines, Al Chalfant of the New York Sub-
~ays Advertising Co. said they weren't even
counted. "We just lump 'em and dump
'em," he sighed.
At American Locker Service, Inc., an
official said they get around 300 useless
coins in their 6,000 lockers in New York
stations every month, including some "from
every corner of the globe." He added, "some
of these bums live out of 10cI{ers. We never
have this trouble in other parts of the
country."
At first, when the war ended, there was a
market for foreign coins among collectors.
An overloaded ex-GI could always drop into
a dealer and get something for his sou-
venirs. Now there is a slump in the coin
mili'ket, and a spokesman for Fifth Avenue
Coin Dealer Hans Schulman said he hoped
it would be permanent. "Most of that stuff
is now junk," he said. "A few months ago
we were getting German, French and Bel-
gian coins by the carload. Local dealers
were going crazy. It's dropping off, thank
goodness!"
Just how worthless some of the coins are
was indicated by foreign exchange. It takes, for example, 20
Russian kopeks to equal a nickel, or 10_
Turkish kurus, 50 German pfennigs, two
Belgian francs or two Czech kronen. And
some of the foreign money is plain alumi-
num or brass.
For the record, it should be pointed- out
that ex-GI's aren't being held to blame for
all the foreign coin dropping. Their prin-
cipal part in the problem facing concerns
with coin-operated devices is that · they
brought the coins back with them. They
made wonderful souvenirs to give to friends.
It's the friends, there's little doubt, who are
cashing them in.
.
Shipman Back in
Full Scale Production
LOS ANGELES--The war halted produc-
tion Of a dozen different types of machines
turned out by Shipman Mfg. Co. and re-
duced its line to postage stamp vendors.
Once again the firm , is ready with a va-
riety of amusement devi.ces an~ vendors.
The following products Will be displayed at
the show:
1. Triplex model automatic postage stamp
vendor with three compartments.
2. Penny Peek Show, still photos of art-
ists' models, third dimensional 35mm film.
3. Hollywood Art Show, a 5-cent amuse-
ment machine showing still views of Holly-
wood models in natural colors on 35mm film _
This is a console type.
4. Spin-It, a 5·cent almond vendor; added
feature is a spinning reel with numbered
race horses.
-
5. Spin-It, a penny nut ma~hine, contain-
ing the same features as the mckel type.
6. Razor Blade Vending Machine, which
dispenses packs of four blades for a dime-
both single and double edge.
Sonora Records to
Sell for 39 Cenfs
NEW YORK-Sonora Radio & Television
Corp. have announced the nrst reduction. in
the price of phonograph records by a major
manufacturer by issuing a new "black
label" platter which will retail for 39 c~nts.
"Our decision to market a low prIced
phonograph record is in line with a crying
demand for less 'expensive luxury items,"
Joseph Gerl, Sonora's president stated. "The
public 'Wants quality merchandise at low
cost and we are prepared to satisfy that
demand with our ne'.\' 39-cent record."
Milton R. Benjamin, general manager of
the Record Division, -said production has
been tooled to turn out 20 million discs this
year.
Record Cig Tax , Receipts
ALBANY, N. Y.-New Yorkers who
smoked a record 34,354,462,580 cigarettes
in 1946 sent the state's cigarette tax receipts
soaring to an all-time high of $32,592,353.
As figured by the State Taxation Depart-
ment, the per ·c apita consumption by New
Yorkers was 2,450 cigarettes, or 122~
packs.
The department reported that sales last
year rose 31 per cent over 1945, when war
shortages still were felt. New Yorkers that
year bough t only 26,145,625,710 cigarettes.
Atom Cigarettes
NEW YORK-No, it's not a trick cig
which explodes when lit, but a new product
named to keep pace with this Iltomic age.
It is an extra long, thin smoke with choite
of four tips: red, green, black and blue. The
appeal will be primarily slanted toward
women who can match tips with the color
of their (1) dress (2) jewelry (3) cocktail
(4) fingertips (5) lipstick.
.
Manufactured by the makers of Phantom
cigarettes, they come 20 to a pack and retail
for 30 cents.
production of Large Cigs
Up. Small Ones Down
WASHINGTON-Sale of standard-size
smokes for the first ten months of 1946
showed an increase of 19.87 per cent com-
pared to the same period a year ago. Large
cigarettes dropped off 98.91 per cent.

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