Coin Slot

Issue: 1974 November 003

THE
SLOT
Coin Slot COIN
Magazine - #003
- 1974 - November NOVEMBER
[International Arcade Museum]
1974
Watling Slot Machines, Circa 1910
The illustrations on this month1 s cover and center pages are
reproductions of ads printed by the Watling Scale Co, Chicago ,
Illinois, circa 1910. We are able to print them by the courtesy
of Mr. Russell, 2404 W. 111th St., Chicago, 111. 60655, who was
kind enough to lend us the originals.
The Watling Scale Co. was started in 1889 by Tom Watling,
and by the time the early 1900fs came around, it was well into
the manufacture of all types of coin operated machinery. Their
slogan was: "Good in 1889, better today." If you have ever put
a penny into a scale at a train, subway, or bus station, the odds
are it was a Watling Scale.
Notice that two of the three machines illustrated (numbers
6 and 24) are designed to vend gum, and that all three machines
can be played with either coins or checks. This was an attempt
to circumvent to anti-gambling laws of the period. The theory
was that the player was not gambling if he got a packet of gum
for every coin he put in the machine, and that the machine was
actually a gum vender, and not a gambling device. In practice
it did not work this way, for a number of reasons. Two separ
ate actions were required to get the gum, first pulling down the
arm of the machine to get the reels spinning, second, pushing
a slide in the side of the case to release the pack of gum. An
other deterrent to getting the gum was that the machine held on
ly a small amount of gum inreiation to the amount of play the
machine would get. When the short gum supply was exhausted
the players would ofcourse continue to operate the unit. Then
again, the gum was not of the highest quality, and often those
who chose the gum did not do it a second time I
It is impossible to tell from the illustrations, but I believe
that numbers 24 and 25 are of the variety called "10 stop" ma
chines. On all but the earliest slot machines nine symbols are
always visible in the reel window. Part of the excitement in
playing is seeing the symbols just above and below the center,
or pay-line. How often have we heard said, or said ourselves,
"Look*. If that bell had just been on the next line I would have
won.n Well, the early manufacturers were no dummies. They
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http were there just for looks; needless to say, they
the symbols
were all desirable ones. As far as I can tell, this practice end
ed about 1915. The old Watling machines were very well built,
and are considered prized collectors items today.
© The International Arcade Museum
Page 8
http://www.arcade-museum.com/
THE COIN SLOT
NOVEMBER
1974
Coin Slot Magazine - #003 - 1974 - November [International Arcade Museum]
Book Review by Irv. Scott Wolf.
GAMBLING AND GAMBLING DEVICES, by John Philip Quinn
Originally published in 1912. Reprinted 1969. Hard cover.
308 pages. Available from John W. Caler Publications, 7506
Clybourn Ave, Sun Valley, Calif. 91352.
$15 postpaid.
Even if one has only a cursory interest in gambling devices,
the book Gambling And Gambling Devices will be considered an
entertainingdiversion. It is written by what I consider to be one
of the worlds greatest flim-flam men, John Philip Quinn.
The begining of the book contains a 26 page autobiography of
the author, who was born in 1846, in Randolph County, Mo., the
son of a poor farmer. Mr. Quinn explains how at the age of 14
he took his fathers horse, sold it for $75, and promptly lost the
moneyplaying three card monte. From then on he reminisces
about the next "25 years that I spent in the devilfs service as a
professional gambler." During that period of his life Mr. Quinn
was the guest of a number of county jails, his final debt to soc
iety being paid in Terra Haute, Indiana, where he was convicted
of fleecing a man out of $3,000 in a con game. Mr. Quinn claim
to have been innocent of the crime, and unjustly jailed. In any
event, he was pardoned on Nov. 9,1888, the day he found relig
ion. Or rather, the day he found that he could use religion in the
biggest con game of them all'. It appears that from that point on
he traveled the country, indeed, the world, expounding on the
evils of gamblingat various churches and other organizations,
collecting a comfortable fee for each lecture. Sort of a contin
uation of working the same street, just on the other side.
The book is very generously illustrated with gambling de
vices of all kinds, including a large amount of coin-op ones,
many of which I had never seen or heard of before. That alone
would make ownership of this book worthwhile. Among them is
an "Automatic Roulette Machine", "The Little Monte Carlo",
(Incidentally, Quinn describes the principality of Monte Carlo
in Europe as "The Devil's University"), "The Jockey", "The
Commercial", and a magnificent monster called "The Owl and
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Most of the machines are described witha fair
amount of detail, such as this description of the Mill's Dewey
machine: "This machine has 6 slots... .There are 100 spaces
on an 18 inch dial. Nickel machine pays rewards from lOcents
to $2. Quarter machine pays bigger rewards. . . .It has a non
repeating device which prevents two successive wins on the
same color...." and so forth.
I would consider this book a valuable addition to any col-
ectors' library.
© The International Arcade Museum
http://www.arcade-museum.com/
Page 9

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