Coin Machine Review (& Pacific ...)

Issue: 1947 March

... ..,.
JACK FITZGIBBONS
Tafco, Inc.
Mea~derings
COIN
MACH INE
REV/~
14
FOR '
MARCH
1947
JACK PERO
National Sen'ice Sales Corp.
allhe "Mogniliganza"
CHICAGO-One ~ore reason why the
date of the show should be changed: O. A.
(Putt) Kincaid, Northwest Sales' traveling
ambassador, ice-slipped while stepping into
a cab just before opening day and chipped
a shoulder bone. The only exhibits he saw
were those hauled out by nurses and medi-
cos at the hospital. ... One of the cleverest
gadgets sported by coinmen was the button
worn in the lapel of Ray Buechner of Cen-
tral Ohio Coin Machine Exchange. Through
a small battery in his pocket, Ray was able
to flash a red light marked "Tilt" whenever
he desired.
Jim Mangan almost scored the coup d'etat
of the show whenl;.\le carne within a gnat's
eyebrow of arrangmg for Henry Ford II to
address the public relations gathering. Ford,
unfortunately, had already committed him-
self to appear at anotber meeting .. . " Lots
of new faces," was the succinct observation
of Babe Levy. veteran LOWEST PRICES
IN THE COUNTRY! !
5 Wurliher 24, Adapters
included ...... ea. $159.50
3 Wurliher 600K .. ea. 225.00
2 W urliher 500K . . ea. 230.00
Seeburg Colonel
E. S . . .
275.00
1 Rockola Monarch .
165.00
5 Wurliher 61 6 '" ea. 125.00
Rockola 16
95.00
10 Mills Thrones . ea. 150.00
Bowling Leag ue 9 f~
skee ball, crated .... 65.00
• W urlitier Nationa l 14
ft. skee ball, crated . 85.00
75.00
Chico Hockey
... . .. . . . 65.00
Skyfighter
Chico Goalee , like new 225.00
Mutoscope Punching
Bag ... ... .. . . . . " 40.00
Mills Three Bells
5-10-25c .. . . . .... . 335.00
All Equipment in Exc:ellent Order.
Terms: '12 Deposit with Order.
/
Olshein Distributing Co.
1100 Broadway
Albany 4, N. Y.
J. W. COAN
Coan Mfg. Co.
JAKE BREIDT
U·N eeda Vendors, Inc.
gaming in Birmingham, Ala. Formerly han-
dling all types of equipment, Babe now goes
in exclusively for scales.
Our vote for the most welcome sign dis-
played anywhere : the "NoTipping, Please,"
placard at luncheon and banquet tables ...
A state motif was predominant at the Aireon
banquet at the Congress Hotel. Some 300
folks were seated at tables marked accord-
ing to states. A three-piece band theme-
songed for "Dear old" IlJjnois, Washington,
Pennsylvania, etc . . . _ The most Algerish
comman present was George Sax. In 1935
he borrowed $15,000 to launch into the sales-
board business. Today he own s six punch-
board companies, 20 hotel s, three banks,
and is worth about five million dollars.
Dick Fields, son of Packard's Northwest
representative, Fred Fields, looked well fed
and contented. Dick, an expert phonoman
in his own right, is managing A_ F. McFee's
route in Idaho_ "Idaho has stayed with
nickel music," Dick said. "Personally, I feel
it's too late to go to a dime_ Prices on all
other commodities are going down_ This is
no time for music to go up_"
More corroborating evidence that the coin
business has a positive allure which is diffi-
cult to by-pass. was fou nd in a chit-chat with
C. W. Musser of. Kansas City, who retired
from Coinland in 1937. At that time he
operated 540 bell machines and 100 Paces
Races, and h ad sold several race-horse ma-
chine patents to H. C. ,E vans & Co. Musser
was seen wandering among the exhibits with
a nostalgic look on his face_ Asked how
1947 shaped up in the eyes of a vet coins tel',
he said: "I think it will be a good year for
the operator, but not so good for the manu-
facturer. Scarcity of vital materials, plus
their high cost, is making it rough for the
game makers."
Two more ex-coinmen itching to get back
into th e chute were Wayne Odom, Cle Elum,
Wash., and M. L. Polevoi of Akron. Odom
recently sold his pin game and phono route,
but no sooner had the papers been signed
than he mused: '~l may buy a route in Pierce
County and get back in the business." Pole-
voi paid particular heed to pin tables, candy
and nut vendors. "rve been out of the busi- '
ness a year 'llnd it seems like a lifetime," he
commented _
A heart attack on the opening day of the
show hospitalized Art Cooley, vice-presi dent
and treasurer of Mills Industries . . . She
was one of those cute cuties several exhib-
itors employed to draw attention to their
prod uct (in an indirect way, of course).
Strolling along the upper lobby draped in
silks, satins, ribbons and flesh, she was ac-
costed by an operator_ "Who do you repre-
sent?" he asked. "Daval," the damsel re-
plied. "Something new in coin devi ces has
been added," chortled the opel:ator.
Bill WoH (M. S. Wolf Distributing Co.)
buying d rinks for his friends at the Celtic
. _ . lack Gutshall had a booth but spent
very li ttle time there, high-spottilig the
sights of Chicago wi th Homer Capehart . ..
Capehart, by the way, missed the grand ban-
quet. Time and Congress, it seems, wait for
11 0 man .. . One half of Northwest Amuse-
ment Co.'s Arnsberg team (Harry) attend-
ed the show while the other half (Ace) was
in Palm Springs soaking up sunshine_ "We're
starting to expand operations," Harry told
THE REVIEW.
There is no ten-cen t phonoing in Indian-
apolis, according to Clarence Hohman of
.l anes Music. T his firm, incidentally, in-
stalled the city's first individual type music
system . .. 'That smile of deli~ht on the face
of Ed Leese whenever compliments on the
Master Changer and Junior Changer were
passe d around is easily explained. You see,
Ed is the inventor of both items. Asked to
make a prediction on !he future of auto-
matic changers, he said: "From past expe-
ri~nce, I think those which are inside a
location and where the proprietor can keep
an eye on them will do all right. Rut I'm
NICKELS
• • •
Quick as a FI,ash!
With
JUNIOB CHIINGEBS
Highly polished chrome finish - precision mao
chined-weighted non.slip base-capacity thi.r·
teen dollars in nickels-ciispenses five coins from
. -eac:h tube.
$17.50
(Distributor Discounts)
norlhwe:ji
Sa4dif' ~tJ.
3144 Elliott Ave;, Seattle l :I .l as":i"gton
-,
'f.
C. A. ROBINSON
C. A. Robinson & Co.
NICK CARTER
Nickabob Co.
afraid outside spots will be vandalized and
broken into so much they will cease to be of
value to operator or proprietor."
Nominations for the "I'd Like to Murder
the Guy" Club includ e the man who is called
upon to speak at a meeting and says,
"Everything I had intended to say has al·
ready been covered, but-" and th en
rambles on for 20 minutes, confirming hi s
initial statement ... "Just lookin g around,"
was the way Sales board Wholesaler C. F.
. Durheim of Triple D. Enterprises, Great
Bend, Kan., summed up his show sojourn
. . . Two we eks of Palm Springs' sunshine
verved Max Mondschein of Seattle's Acm e
Amusement for th e big event.
"
"
.
,
Lithesome, well-dressed feminine torsos
were draped all over the place but th e per-
sonality kid who topped all other personal-
ity kids was Decca Boother Dayl Rodney, a
winsome chick of 18 who was crowned "Miss
Plastic of 1947," winning the award out of
it group of 40 entrants. Having interviewed
many an eye-ca tcher in his day, your on-th e-
spo t reporter (and what a wonderful spot it
is, too) was agreeably surprised to find at
least one pretty girl who didn't carry a
. sugarload of conceit. Miss Rodney, a Joe
Keith model at present, is not allowing a
pretty face and figure to carry h er torch
through life. She's' studying dramati cs and
radio; doesn't smoke, drinks no co ffee, and
imbibes only to be socia ble. Hollywood,?
"Let 'em (;om e to me if they want me," she
says.
George Sch nabel, major-domo at Puget
Sound Novelty, Seattle, was glad to get oul
of the Pacific Northwest where a 40-mile
gale and snowstorm raged, but when h e ar-
rived in Chi he wasn' t so glad. Seems like
th e storm h ad raced on ahead and was wait-
ing to greet him here . .. Len Ivey, a vet-
eran of the1busin ess si nce 1932 (operated in
Los Angeles, Oakllh-ld, San Francisco and
Sea ttle), is now associated with Schnabel.
Len killed two shows with one birdie, taking-
in the National Boat Meet during the sa me
week as th e Coin Confab. Last October he
won the Class F Hydroplane national out-
board championship in Boulder Dam and is
now officially kin gpin in his class until next
year at the very same ti me wh en he will de-
fend hi s titl e.
Operators and jobbers from Southern Cal-
ifornia, who were too busy to warm their
vo ices over the conversa tional coals during
th'e work week, received ample opportunity
during the train trip to Coin land's Capi tal.
More than a dozen of them were on the City
of Los Angeles. Severa~ days later the lads
got together .in the Leuenhagen-Bullock su ite
for a chinfest. There must have been a magi-
cian in th e house because when the boys
entered the room at 9 there were two fifth s
of whi skey on th e dresser. At 9 :30 the whis-
key had been transformed into empty bot-
tles. The fella> s opined that a 70-30 com-
mission spirt I)
'ekel play would work out
~pr than lO-cerlt play. A
better for th ~ .
growing tet ~ert ('y IJtt th e part of jobbers to-
-..~ .
-
"..
...
. . .
--::;---
JACK M. BROWN
National Service Sales Corp.
ward diversification of lines was also noted.
Those on hand included Bill Simmons, Jack
Dolan, Nels Nelson, Nick Carter, Frank
Showalter, Frank Navarro, Henry Bringas,
Joe Simski; Budge Wright, Portland, Ore.;
and J. D. Cox, San Francisco.
LonCJ Time No See;
Now See and Hear
CHICAGO- Tucked away in an unosten·
tatious suite on the 31st floor of the Con-
tin en tal Hotel was Mills' long.heralded,
long-awaited phonograph. The lightest
mu sic machine on the market, weighing 325
pounds, its cabinet is all· aluminum ; capaci-
ty is 40 tunes (two-side feature); an "X"
marks a unique coin slot designed for
easier customer insertion and for ac-
cep tan ce of bent coins without jimmying
th e chute.
.. • .
T here are two slots: one to handle nickels
for s in gle selections; th e other for quarters
(six hit tun es of the week-no selection).
CHARLES PASCOE
Coin·O·Matic Cashier Co.
Train Depots
Will Go Coiny
CHICAGO- According to "exhihitors at
the Coin Machine Industries, Inc. conven-
tion, the properly equipped railroad station
should fairly jangle with nickel-in-the-slot
gimmicks," the Associated Press teletyped
to its hundreds of newspapers.
"A traveler, among oth er things," says
the AP dispatch, "should be able to get his
shaving needs,. a press for his necktie, a
shine for his shoes, his railroad ticket, a
toothbrush, a book, a horoscope, two flavors
of ice cream, pop corn and an electrically
heated hot dog {no mustard}-all from
coin machines."
POp Corn EatinCJ Contest
CHICAGO- Five wide-eyed youngsters,
aged 10 to 12, sat around ~table containing
more pop corn than th ey'had ever seen in
their lives. Place: Viking Tool & Machine
booth at th e show. Time: 4:30 p. m.,
Permo Has Novel Display
February 3. Purpose : To see which lad
eould devour the most pop corn in five
CHICAGO- Instead of a long recitation
mi nutes.
on the merits of Permo Point needles, th e
When the clocker signalled "stop," two
firm had a unique display de$igned to prove
the excellence of its product. Four turn-
and a half bags of corn -had been gulleted.
tables were set up in a glass enclosure. On _ The winner received $20, with the remain-
turntable "A" was a Permo needle i "B"
ing four pocketing ten dollars each.
contained a sapphire one ; "Ct' and "D"
Bell-O-Matic Buys Plant Site
were competitors' products. The needles
CHICA.GO-In a transaction involving
grooved discs for 11 consecutive hours or
more than $175,000, Bell-O-Matic Corp.
a total of 220 plays. ResUlts of the test,
purchased the block bounded by Kinzie
conducted each day. of the show, demon -
and Lake Sts. and Kilbourn and Kenton
strated which needlt! was less wearing on
Aves. and plans to erect a new plant to
th e record.
\ .
supplClment the present factory.
,
.
COIN
MACHINE
REVIEW
15
FOR
MARCH
7947
'
BRAND NEW EQUIPMENT FOR EVERY TERRITORY!
YOU'VE SEEN THESE WINNERS A T THE SHOW-
Now Order Them From Monarch For Quick Delivery!
5 Ball Free Play Pin Games
Kilroy (Chi Coin)
Show Girl (Williams)
Rio (United)
Vanit ies (Exhibit)
Miss America (Gottlieb )
Double Barrel (Bally)
State Fair (Genco)
Smoky (Exhibit)
Sea Breeze (United)
BRA'ND NEW
SLOTS
Legal Equipment
Bas ket Ba ll (Chi Co in)
Boomerang (Amusematic)
Jack~Rabbit (Amusematic)
Sco re· A· Barrel
Grip-Vue
Pop Up
ACE Coin Counter
A B T Challenger
A B T Target Stands
Silver King Peanut Vendors
Skill Thrfll (Daval)
Best Hand (Daval)
Consoles
Bally Deluxe Draw Bell 5c
Bally Deluxe Draw Bell 25c
Bally Triple Bell
Evans Consoles (All Models)
Mills 3 Bells
One Balls
Bally Entry
Bally Special Entry
Gottlieb Da ily Races
WRITE FOR
PRICES
Mills Black Cherry Bells
}
Mills Golden Falls
Mills Jewel Bells
5<:-10<:-25<:.50<:
J e nnings Standard, Bronze & Del uxe Chiefs
play
Jennings Super Deluxe Lite Up Chiefs
Watling Rol '" Tops
Groetchen Columbias Standard & Deluxe Models
Mills Vest Pockets - Daval 's Free Play
Mill s 25c Q T Glitter gold s
BRAND NEW DE LUXE REVOLVE A ROUND SAFE STANDS . SINGLE ~ DOUBLE ~ TRIPLE Unit
Cabinets . Beautiful . streamline, rugged fini sh. M ~de .. o~ extra ~eayy gauge steel, ins uring many
years of fine service. SINGLE-Box Type Slot Stands~budt to Withstand abuse...
. ........... WRITE
Terms: 1/ 3 Deposit, Balance C . O . D. or Sight Draft
MO'N ARCH COIN MACHINE CO.
1545 North Fairfield Ave .
Armitage 1434
Chicago 22, Illinois
,

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