Coin Machine Review (& Pacific ...)

Issue: 1948 May

Walter Leonard, partner in the M & L
Amusement, Bellflower, died as the result
of a ~eart attack in mid-April.
.
Minthorne Music has leased the former
Nels Nelson quarters on Coin Rowand
will use the spot for storage space_
William Garner has closed his local elec-
tronics shop and gone east to take a
position_
Ed Wisler, formerly with .Wurlitzer and
more recently district manager for Aireon,
has joined the Packard sales force here.
Allan Brown, Jack Eyman and Herman
King, Packard service' managers, - have
really done a job in following up the
tremendous sale of Manhattans.
Slugs have hit San Diego with a ven-
geance. Ray Mengar, vending operator, re-
ported 200 copper slugs picked up in ciga-
rette machines alone.
Denver
The Denver branch of the Jones Distri-
buting Co. is a busy place these days. In
addition to expansion, changes in location
and personnel, it is conducting an exten-
s,ive campaign on the new Seeburg phono-
graph.
This revolutionary instrument,
called the Select-O-Matic, is designated
SICM (Seeburg Industrial-Commercial mu-
sic) for use in factories, clubs, department
stores and game rooms and the Denver
store is most enthusiastic about its possi-
bilities. A showing of the new SICM was
held at the Cosmopolitan hotel on April
3-4-5, with a large crowd in attendance.
The local firm has a program over KMYR
three days a week as well as in the local
newspapers, and expects to begin contact-
ing prospects from now on, promoting home
and industrial units of the machine_
John J. Bonn, of the Ace-Hi Vending
Machines Agency, reports that he is in-
stalling a number of amusement machines
in taverns, mainly in suburban locations;
that at present he has all his machines out
on locations and is ordering more. The
Bally machines are going fine, he says.
Since moving to his new location on Morri-
son Road, Bonn says he has built a new
home and shop and his business has in-
creased. Things are picking up; collections
good since middle of February: and he
expects a good year. \:
A. C. Roberts, of the Wolf Sales Co., was
married April 4 to Toba Wodlinger of Los
Angeles. The ceremony was performed at
the B.M.H. Synagogue in Denver. Present
were the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Maurice E. Wodlinger, Mr. and Mrs. Wolf
R. Roberts, parents of the groom, Mrs. Al
A. Rosenthal and two children, sister of
the groom, Governor and. Mrs. Lee Knous,
General and Mrs. Burwell, and several
executives of the Wurlitzer company.
W. H. Graham, of the phonograph sales
division of the Rock-Dla company, is in
Denver on business .. . . Arthur Weinand,
also of the Rock-Dla company, is the
proud papa of a new baby boy, born April
7. Modern Distributing company reports
that it is still making deliveries of Gott-
lieb's Cinderella machines, but unable to
get the machines fast enough to meet the
demand.
Charles Kaplan, of the P & M Vending
Co., says that business has picked up in
the last two or three weeks_ He has pu t
on another driver for handling h is cigarette
machines. He has also added the Vendall
candy machi ne and is selling a number of
them since the weather has improved. His
salesmen cover territory in Colorado, New
Mexico and Wyoming_
Gibson Bradshaw, of the Denver Amuse-
ment Coo, is confined to his home on doc-
tor"s orders, but says he expects to be
able to return to his office in the near
f uture. Telephones from the office inform
him that business is very good, ' he says,
and t heY' have been selling a lot of new
phonographs,
Francell. C ourey
Seattle
Ralph Alger, of'Hi-Tone Music Coo, has
expanded his operations by going into
partnership with Henry A. Christensen in
a new firm, Hi-Tone Amusement Co. The
partners have placed amusement machines
iIi a number of locations and find Bally's
Hy-Roll a popular game. Hi-Tone Music
will continue its phonograph routes.
Johnny Michael's Seattle Amusement
Coo, local distributor for Packard's Man-
hattan, finds out-of-town operators are
among his best customers for the new
models. Johnny also operates pin ball
games, and right now is putting a fe,w
penny scales out on location. Jerry Steffan,
shop manager, is proud of the fluorescent
lighting recently installed at Seattle
'.,
Amusement.
F. E. Erickson, Wa Oing Mfg. Co. repre-
sentative, made several calls · along Coin
Machine Row when he visited Seattle in
April. Erickson reports that scale business
is good all over the country.
Dale Grimes, of the Jack R. Moore Co.,
has been transferred from the firm's Port-
land office to the Seattle branch as outside
salesman_ . . . The local office is looking
for delivery of wall-boxes from AMI to
fill a large list of orders . . . . Bally's Gold
Cup is selling well, Tom Dal of the Moore
company reports.
.
A State Senate committee investigating
private liquor and bell machine clubs,
after holding hearings in Spokane early in
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
CLOBES




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MAY, 1948
.
April, scheduled another meeting for
Seattle. At its Seattle meeting, th e corn·
mittee was to determine whether other
investigations would be conducted. The
Spokane hearings involved the Ace of
Clubs, Spokane spot, and were concerned
with the salary and bonuses paid the club's
former manager.
C. Allen Smith, of Puget Sound Novelty
Co., reports great activity on their Three·
a·Line game, converted from Victory Derby
and Victory Special . . . ,Puget Sound
Novelty recently purchased a 3V2 ton panel
truck which they find profitable in shut·
tling games to Oregon and Washington op·
erators.
Operators making calls along the Row
in April included Mike Pearson of Port·
land, J . C. Bailey of Pasco, Wash. and
Lonnie Logsdon of Oregon City, Ore.
George Trambitas, of Western Distri·
butors, reports good business on fli pper
button games ... Budge Wright of West·
ern's Portland office finds that Portland
has more operators with small routes than
Seattle, where there are fewer operators
and bigger routes.
Aireon Manufacturing Corp. held a show·
ing of its new Coronet phonograph at the
Olympic hotel here in April, attended by
operators from all over the state. Clayton
Ballard, factory regional represen tative and
his assistants, Jack Turner and Cliff Good·
speed, carne up from Portland for the
showing.
Northwest Sales Co. just received a new
arcade item, Mauser Pistol, from Dale
Mfg. Co.
Business had to take a back seat to
personal affairs at the offices of Heberling
Brothers, local amusement machine op·
erators, in April. Farewells were said to
Don Heberling, who left the Seattle office
to take over the accounting position a t
Smith Automatic Phono Co., Chehalis
branch of Heberling Bros. Jess Bickford,
in the shop, was married April 2nd to
Josephine Angelo, and was busy buying
furni ture. Earl Parsley, office manager,
bough t a house in Renton.
It was a double celebration for Ralph
Alger of Hi·Tone Music Co. Ralph, Jr.
was five and Nancy was one year old on
the same day, April 9th.
Copies of Life, opened to the picture
story on the Select·a·Matic, were conspicu·
ous at the local Seeburg showing at New
Washington hotel . . . Seattle Coin Ma·
chine Co. sold out its first shipment · of
Douglass Automatic Shoe Shiners.
Phil Humphrey
Houston
Houston branch of S. H. Lynch & Co.
officiated at the very successful public
showing of Seeburg's Select·a·Matic mao
chine at a prominent downtown hotel reo
cently.
A. A. Sage, local Lynch branch manager
(a professional entertainer in his own
right), held forth at the loud speaker.
H. A. Franz and J. R. Johnson, both also
of the local branch, were in charge of
guest reception and the demonstration reo
spectively.
The Weaver and Williams Co., a newly
organized distributing firm, was recently
appointed distributor for the complete
Jennings line in the States of Texas and
Oklahoma. Bill Williams, of Houston, and
C. W. (Harry) Weaver, of Dallas, are own·
ers of the concern. Both have been active
in the coin machine trade for years and
are well· known over Texas and the South·
west. Main sales offices are located on
McKinney avenue, Houston.
Lillian Cowart, secretary at Standard
Music Distributors for the past several
years, and Hollis T. O'Quinn were married
March 21. A local church was the scene
of the ceremony. The couple live in Hous·
ton and Lillian resumed her secretarial
duties after the wedding trip.
Doro thy Little, secretary for S. H. Lynch
& Co. for the past three years, was married
April 3rd. James Maines was the lucky
man. The wedding ceremony was per·
formed in Dorothy's church at her home
town, Columbus, Texas. After a wedding
trip, the couple moved into their home in
Houston and Mrs. Maines continued in her
secretarial position.
Jaques Hockman, southern sales man·
ager for Musicraft Records, visited three
days at Macy record store. Hochman reo
ported excellent business for most of the
Musicraft dealers in the South and South·
west.
Taylor & Steele, a major music operat·
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67 Lb •. Approx.
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COIN MACHINE REVIEW

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