Coin Machine Review (& Pacific ...)

Issue: 1948 May

been removed from the enabling act which
encouraged local taxation of vending ma-
chines, and the new amendment (Chapter
278-Laws of 1947 ) is an enabling act per-
mitting local governments to tax amuse-
ment machines at the ·rate of $25 per year.
A proposal to tax machines in general at
$50 a year, never considered very serious
as a threat, was defeated.
Legislation in Mississippi suddenly flared
up during March and became threatening.
A bill proposed to increase the 1944
tax rates (Chap. 131- Laws of 1944 ) on
amusement machines by 100 per cent, and
this bill passed both houses and was signed
. by the Governor on March 23. But a bill
favorable to the Industry was then pre-
sented, to undo the big tax hike and, after
legislative maneuvering, the new bill which
increases amusement machine rates by 50
per cent above th e 1944 fees became law.
Under new law, rates on penny amusement
devices rellJain at old rate of $8 per year ,
and tax on coin radios is $4 per year.
Mississippi also had a proposal for a $100
tax on soft drink vendors, said to have been
promoted by bottlers who do not operate
vendors, but this bill was reported un-
favorably by a House committee.
Kentucky Legislation
After having tax bills for many years,
the Kentucky Legislature fin ally passed a
new law this year (Page 83- 1948 New
Laws), after strong opposition by the or-
ganized trade. But united efforts of the
Industry did accomplish some important
results in amendments to the bill that was
called an Administration bill and therefore
destined to pass.
Amendments included provisions for
transfer of license tags and for seiting
limits to th e tax rates which cities could
assess. Law limits city· rates to not more
than the state tax, although first class ci ties
(Louisville ) may assess double the state
rate.
P enny machines of all types were also
exempted from the state tax, and the three
amendments thus secured by the trade were
considered as highly important.
The Kentucky law includes taxable ma-
chines under the general definition of
"Coin Machines" and 13 lines are used in
the bill to describe the coverage-broad
enough to include legal amusement, music
and vending machines. Some important
types of vending machines are exempted
in the text, including candy, pop corn,
postage stamp, and service machines.
The tax imposed is in the nature of an
excise tax, payable by the owner or lessor
of the machine, in yearly or semi-annual
The Review Calendar ...
Important Dates
May
May
May
May
May
May
May
May
May
May
May
May
May
May
May
I -May Dar
2- 9-Nationa Boys' Week
2- 9-National Family Week
2- 9-National Music Week
3- 9-National Restaurant Week
8 -V-E Day, 3rd Anniversary
8-I5-National Golf Week
9 -Mother's Day
9-I5-National RaISin Week
12 -National Hospital Day
15 -Straw Hat Day
16-22-World Trade Week
23 - " I Am An American Day"
24-31-Buddy Poppy Day
30 -Memorial Day
Conventions
May 7- &-Region III and A Meetings. National
Automatic Merchandising Assn., (Dela-
ware, Maryland, New Jersey, Pennsyl-
vania. Virginia)
Mayflower Hotel.
Wash.ngton. D. C.
Neil Mitchell,
chr., Region A, Aaron Goldman, chr.,
Reg. III.
May 9-1 I-National Peanut Council, annual con-
vention , Soreno Hotel, St. Petersburg,
Fla.
May 17-21-National Assn. of Broadcasters, annual
convention, Biltmore Hotel, los An-
geles.
May 23-27-Super Market Institute, annual con-
vention, Chicago.
May 23-26-Flavoring Extract Manufactur.rs Assn .,
annual convention, Hotel Pennsylvania,
New York.
May 31-June 2-Southeastern Peanut Assn., annual
convention, Biltmore Hotel, Atlanta .
June 13-I6-National Candy Whol .. alers Assn .,
annual convention, Hotel Sherman,
Chicago.
June 13-19-National Dairy Council, Edgewater
Beach Hotel, Chicago.
June 14-17-National Assn . of Music Merchants,
Palmer House, Chicago.
June 14-17- Radio Manufacturers Assn ., Stevens
Hotel, Chicago.
June 20-25-National Confectioners Assn., 22nd
Confectionery Industries Exposition,
Grand Central Palace , New York .
June 20-24-National Assn . of Retail Grocers,
Atlantic City, N. J.
Aug . IB-21-National
Food
Distributors Assn.,
Chicago.
Oct. 25-27-lnternational Assn. of Ice Cream Man-
ufacturers , Atlantic City, N. J .
installments. Rates are $10 per year for
each taxable machine that opera tes for
five to nine cents; and $15 per year for
machines that operate fo r 10 cents or more.
Machines already paying an eccupational
tax, such as cigarette, soft drink and ice
cream vendors, get credit for amount of
occupational tax in paying the new fees.
The tax year runs from July 1 to June 30.
Rift Develops At
Four-State Meet
MINNEAPOLIS- A difference of opin-
ion between Minneapolis distributors and
convention officials had put the success of
?recision Puilt-
if flffTNfNfJ M~T
"AS ESSENTIAL AS ygy'R
CASH REG~T.U"
I
I
Now service in over 10,000 locations,
the MASTER CHANGER has proved it-
self under the severest conditions
.1 I' / /1 •
,
A real time-saver.
"""""" e WiU not stick or jam.
\ • Soon pays 'or its.I'
in ac~rat. change,
• Finish'e d in lustrous chrome.
\
EJtpaad
WITH NEW MACHINES
Mr. Employer:
Why do you not give your em-
ployees the consideration they de-
serve, since it costs you nothing?
The 1% State Unemployment deduction
that you take from their salaries and
send to the State does not buy them
as much unemployment Disability Bene-
fit as you can obtain by purchasing a
regular insurance plan with a Private
Insurance Carrier.
This is not sales talk, but a fact-since
the law provides that no private insur ..
ance company plan complies with the
law unless it gives better protection than
the state lit the Slime cost.
The Association and Group Insurance
Bureau will gladly assist you to make
the cha nge over without charge b y tele-
phoniog them or dropping them a note
at
ZEIGLER INS. AGENCY, Inc .
541 South Sr,rln g Street
~Sale4~,
(leulS/¥( .... T/OIUL DIIU/IUlU
3144 Elliott An.
8
the four- state convention of Upper Midwest
operators' associations in doubt a few days:
before the two-day show opened here at
the Raddison hotel April 26.
Nevertheless, preparation for the conven-
tion-exhibition, the first post-war display to-
Le held in this area, continued without
chan ge during the week preceding the-
meeting.
The rift between the distributors and
convention officials developed several weeks
before the convention over the a dvisability
of hold ing a four-state gathering here in
view of the Minnesota a dministration's cur-
rent campaign against games and gambling
devices. Althou gh Twin Cities operators
were taking various views on the issue, a
large number promised to stay away from
the convention. Four Twin Cities dis-
tributors announced they would not par-
li cipate in the convention.
Hy Greenstein of Hy-G Music Co., Min-
neapolis, said that he and three other dis-
tributors were not only convinced that the-
convention date was ill timed but that it
would arouse adverse publicity that might
well bring about another anti-gambling
crack-down throughout the state.
"The situation here has r eturned to a
semblance of normalcy during the past few
months," he added. "But by holding a con-
vention-exhibition in Minneapolis now- at
the outset of the Northern Minnesota's
tourist season- is bound to cause trouble."
Ken F erguson, Stillwater operator, in
charge of convention publicity, however,
did not share th e Twin Cities distributors'
outlook. He insisted that if the convention
produced unfavorable publicity then the
industry should counteract it by correcting
false ·impressions the public may have.
As the REVIEW went to press F erguson
reported that he had the assurance of three
distributing firms in St. Paul that they
would exlribit their equipment. He added
that a number of manufacturers had ar-
ranged for exhibit space whi ch the fou r
operators' associations were selling for $38.
Los Ange es, Calif,
Michigan 0961
ALL INSURANCE and BOND LINES
Se.tth: 1, Wuhinston
COIN MACHINE REVIEW
Gas Stations as Locations
-

A TRADE STUDY -
In its monthly reports on retail trade
over the country, the U. S. Department of
Commerce calls them filling stations. In
its booklet for veterans, on how to get into
the business, the Department calls them
service stations. In THE REVIEW Chart of
T ,ocations they are called gas stations.
A government report says the gas station
has advanced in 25 years from chiefly an
adjunct to some other business to be a re-
tail business in its own name. Modern sta-
tions are becoming more and more impor-
tant as outlets for a variety of merchandise
and services.
Gas stations have been recognized as ac-
ceptable locations for several types of coin ·
machines for a number of years, depending
on the space and a number of other fac-
tors. They are not the most important type
of location for machines but they are in-
creasing in favor as the modernization trend
spreads in the station field.
In a check of a group of REVIEW read-
ers, one operator who had only music ma-
chines reported having a few gas stations
as locations. Due to the fact that operators
sometimes class motels, drive-ins and high-
way eating places that sell gas, as gas sta-
tions, it is not easy to make an accurate
check on this point.
Among a group of operators who have
both music and amusement machines, 55
per cent had some machines in gas stations.
Among the total number of locations of all
types reported by the group, gas stations
made up about 10 per cent of the total.
Among a group of operators who had vend-
ing machines only, 60 per cent of them re-
ported having some machines in gas sta-
tions. Among all the types of locations re-
ported by this group, gas stations made up
about 6.3 per cent of the total.
The vending machine operators' surveyed
included only one large firm, the rest being
individual operators of candy, cigarette and
bulk vendors. Some of the most conspicu-
ous expansions into the gas station field
have been made by large operating firms.
On a numerical basis in the United
States, gas stations rank fourth among the
35 or more types of locations generally
known to the coin machine trade. In nu-
merical order, the locations rank as, 1.
Apartment buildings, 2. Grocery stores, 3.
Restaurants, and 4. Gas stations. In these
four types of locations there are some so
very small that they cannot be considered
as profitable for coin machines of any type.
But on the basis of total numbers, the above
rank is based on official statistics.
In January 1947 the total number of gas
stations was · generally given as 205,000,
but the official report for 1939 showed a
total of 241,858 stations. The war is said
to have decreased the total number by
about 25 per cent, an official tabulation
for 1944 giving the total as 172,700.
The postwar trend revealed a decided
spurt upward in 1946, as veterans began
to open stations, but this movement is said
to have slowed down to some extent. At
its annual meeting in December last, the
National Congress of Petroleum Retailers
reported the total number of retail gas sta-
tions to be about 225,000. This figure
'would suggest a gain of about 20,000 sta-
tions for the year 1947, although the J anll-
ary and December figures were reported by
two different sources.
Stations Va ry
Operators will consider gas stations as
prospective locations on basis of accessibil-
ity and also on basis of traffic or business
done. Gas stations vary from the small
cross-roads grocery that may have one or
two gas pumps to the syndicate establish-
ments that cost thousands of dollars. The
Saturday Evening Post recently reported a
super station near Los Angeles that cost a
million dollars to build. Government bu-
reaus usually group stations on basis of an-
nual sales into two groups, those having
annual sales of less than $20,000 and those
having annual sales above $20,000. Of the
231,000 individually operated stations re-
ported by the government in 1939, a total
of 201,000 had annual sales of $20,000 or
less.
The national average of sales in 1939
was $11,670 annually, while for 1946 the
average annual sales was running ahout
$18,000. Statistics are not available to show
at what annual sales level a station becomes
a profitable location for coin machines.
Bulk vendors are placed in small stations in
some areas and games may be used to help
pay the overhead on small stations also, by
catering to habitual players.
Before the war, more than half of the
individually operated stations were located
in or near towns having a population of
2,500 or less, or on the highways. Annual
sales of these stations averaged about
$7,433, but some highway stations do a tre-
mendous business.
As to ownership, stations are classed as
either individually operated, or as a chain
system. During the recent scarcity of gaso-
line, independents have complained much
that chain or syndicate systems had an
advantage in getting supplies of gas. The
large operating firms usually have the ad-
vantage in placing coin machines, in most
all cases vendors, in the large chain systems.
Individual operators of machines naturally
gain most by catering to individually owned
stations.
There are some chains that are national
in scope but the majority are probably COIl-
fined to city trading areas. An oil trade
paper reports on a locally owned chain in
Buffalo which now operates 44 stations in
the city, and plans to build 2e new stations
as fast as conditions permit. Similar opera-
tions can be found in many cities over the
country.
When an attempt is made to classify gas
stations so that operators could decide on
which would be suitable for some type of
coin machine, it is found that endless varia-
tions exist in the thousands of stations in
all parts of the country. Even climate has
much to do with the type of machine that
may do best in a gas station, as shown by
the competition in placing soft drink ven-
dors over the South during the summer of
1947.
A book could be written on the variations
in types of gas stations, in different sections
of the country, and the setup and type of
business they do. The chain systems of
stations, and the large operating firms that
seek this type of station, have worked out
checking systems and also plan more on
vending machines in postwar merchandising
plans.
The individual operator who works in a
limited territory can find no better rule
than to study each station in his territory
and make actual tests of different types of
machines_ The one thing he needs to keep
in mind is that a new postwar expansion
in the gas station field is under way, al-
though delayed by construction problems,
and that . gas stations will use more coin
machines than ever and become more im-
portant for coin machines.
What Machine s?
As suggested, the best thing the indi-
vidual operator can do in his territory is to
work out a plan to test stations and also
types of machines that make a profit in
them, guided by his own knowledge of his
territory. Past history also offers a lot of
experience to guide in types of machines
for stations, keeping in mind that times are
changing fast in the postwar period.
1. The summer of 1947 indicated that the
emphasis is on soft drink vendors, of the
bottle type, the movement being pushed by
competition among the major manufacturers
of soft drinks to get outlets for their brands.
The use of manual coolers for several
years before the war, at gas stations, had
shown the value of the outlets for drinks,
and had created a ready-made market for
the vendors. The rush to get out the vendors
was in the southern half of the country last
year, and will be repeated during 1948.
Here, climate is proving a big factor be-
cause of the much longer outdoor season.
The success of soft drink vendors in gas
Coin Machine Operators!
SERVICE WITH
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ANTI-
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COMPOUND
Prevents
Sticking
~"
A clean, white, dry lubricant for slug re-
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SAMPLE.
i ,
SCIENTIFIC LUBRICANTS CO.
3469 N. CLARK ST .• CHICAGO 13, ILL.
In Canada: A. N. ORMSBY CO., Toronto 1
MAY, 1948
9

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