Coin Slot

Issue: 1979 February 049

© The International Arcade Museum
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New York residents please add 8% sales tax. No C.O.D.s please.
Name
SAVE! Special combination offer $17.50
Please send me
combinations.
Brooklyn, N.Y. 11202
Also please send
copies of the 1979 Price
Guide and Rarity Supplement at $3.95 each plus
50c for postage and handfing.
Box 240.
K&F PUBLISHING
Please send me
conies of DROP COIN HERE
at $12.95 each plus $1.00 for postage and han
dling.
Here is the best, most accurate, complete, and easy to use guide to the entire subiect of antique coin-operated
machines: slot machines, trade stimulators, vending, and arcade machines. Keyed to tne book, it lists specific prices
and rarity information for each machine pictured, plus many more! Over 400 listings! A must reference for buyers,
sellers, dealers, collectors, and investors.
Now Available! The 1979 Price Guide and Rarity Supplement.
Here is the first and only book to explore this hottest new collectible—antique coin-operated machines—in all
its forms. From magnificent slot machines to clever trade stimulators and intriguing venders to amusing penny
arcade machines, they will delight and surprise you with their novelty and beauty. These machines are the last fron
tier of Americana to be recognized as precious relics from our past and today they are avidly being bought, sold,
traded, and invested in by people who play them, restore them, and appreciate their marvelous designs.
"DROP COIN HERE" presents a wealth of information for collectors, dealers, investors and everyone else with
over 320 excellent photographs of actual machines from the finest collections in the country. In a large 8-1/2 by 11"
hardcover format, 100 pages bring you the fun and feeling of a different era, with 16 pages in full color of over 70
machines! Each machines description includes a date or patent date, size, and manufacturers name and address.
Presented, too, are the history of the machines and their ingenious manufacturers, important features to look for,
where to find them, and how to restore them to operating condition and preserve their striking exteriors.
From the rarest machines to the most popular, 'DROP COIN HERE" brings together the most outstanding exam
ples of gambling, vending, and amusement machines ever produced.
by Ken f> Fran Rubin
The book of Anticpie Coin-Operated. Gambling,Vending and Arcade Machines.
DROP COIN HERE9
Coin Slot Magazine - #049 - 1979 - February [International Arcade Museum]
http://www.arcade-museum.com/
Coin Slot Magazine - #049 - 1979 - February [International Arcade Museum]
THE MILLS BELL BOY:
TRADE STIMULATOR GUM BALL MACHINE
By R. L. Frankenberger
Slot machines are interesting to collectors for a variety of rea
their beauty and artwork, their history, their marketing and
sons:
merchandising methods, and, of course, their mechanical ingenuity.
Most collectors are concerned with getting their machines in
working order. They are not satisfied with the machine being a
piece of sculpture alone; it must also operate as it was designed to
operate.
The mechanical aspect of slot machines is truly one of genius.
As a beginning collector, with no manuals or hints from collectors'
magazines to guide me, I was often amazed at the complexity of
these machines.
There appeared to be no logic to them.
Never
would I master such confusion of levers, springs, wheels, and slides.
I
would commonly sit in front of the mechanism, literally for
hours, trying to work out a mental image of the mechanical train
of sequence.
Simply put-l
mechanism worked
was trying to figure out how the
without actually taking it apart.
I tried to
understand why a spring was placed here instead of there or why
it should be a weak or strong spring.
We all have replaced springs or increased/decreased its tension
assuming that the machine would "work better."
However, it
seems that the men at the Mills factory knew what they were
doing.
What real genius.
In an attempt to improve their design, I
always managed to mess it up, confirming the factory's intelligence.
I often wonder if these men were trained or educated engineers,
designers, and draftsmen. The elegant simplicity of design clearly
illustrates a love for machinery and its efficient and long-term
operation.
day.
It is unlike the designed obsolescence of products to
The fact that so many of these machines survived in such
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appreciations
regarding
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great
numbers after so many years of constant abusive use is
testimony to their marvelous efficiency of design. Those men have
acquired.
131
you some
I recently
It is the Mills Bell Boy trade stimulator. Serial number
is stamped on the metal and wood pieces of the case.
No
numbers are on the mechanism. It looks like a three-quarter size
three-reel slot machine. It is actually a large gum ball dispenser/
trade
stimulator
that Museum
was paid off by the bartender.
©
The International
Arcade
http://www.arcade-museum.com/

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