Marketplace

Issue: 1977 June

MARKETPLACE, VOL. XVI, NO. 377
EDITORIAL
PAGE 2, JUNE, 1977
Bi ll Gersh
.-
Baseball has been the theme of some of the finest coin operated games ever produced.
Back in the 1880s , Adolph Caille and his brothers of Caille Bros . Co ., Detroit, Mich. ,
as well as Herbert s. Mills and his Mills Novelty Co ., Chicago, into the 1890s and even
beyond, featured baseball as a front cover attachment to their slot machines. They also
manufactured various kinds of baseball games from counter type games to the bigger and
more attractive baseball games for Penny Arcades of the 1890s .
Wm . Gent and his Gent Manufacturing Co . , Philadelphia, Pa .• , took over in the 1900s
as top builder of Penny Arcade equipment . One of his most outstanding successes was a
baseball play game for arcades. He was i ollowed a decade later by Chester-Pollard of
New York City, who built the first large , very impressive , walnut cabinet games in the
1920s, among which was a marvelous baseball play game .
In the early 1930s, Wm . Rabkin of Int ' l Mutoscope Reel Co ., New York City, and J.
Frank Myer of Exhibit Supply Co ., Chicago, the two top arcade game manufacturers of
that great era, produced various versions of baseball play games in small and large
cabinetry . It wasn ' t until the mid-JOs when the first pinball with baseball play ac-
tion clicked. This was "Major League" presented by Pacific Amusement Mfg .Co . , Chicago.
It was the first all-electric play baseball game , developed and designed by young Harry
Williams who had also designed the very first all electric pin game - "Contact".
Since then, and as long as Harry Williams was with Williams Mfg . Co. , Chicago, a new
baseball game was produced each and every year. But times change . Video games are in
the picture . Following thru on the baseball theme, these past few video game years , has
been Midway Manufacturing Co ., Franklin Park, Ill ., a division of Bally Mfg . Corp., who
have produced outstanding baseball games . This year , Midway presents , "Double Play" .
And with this game , the industry reaches its 96th year of baseball game production.
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MARKETPLACE
NEWSLETTER
PAGE 3, JUNE, 1977
JffCasino
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Still Number One
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DO THEY EVER SAY THANK YOU? Will the people o
bother to say thanks to Representatives Paul Steinberg and
Charles Papy? I doubt it. How about Gold Coast businessmen"? You
stand to benefit 100 per cent if these two representatives get
anywhere with their House Bill to establish casinos here. Don't we
have the guts to say thanks? There should be a committee all set to
encourage and thank these two men whether they win or Jose.
I've followed their every move, for I am tremendously in·
terested. I do not know what goes on in the m~nds of the fellows who
stand to reap a harvest. There has not been a single recent meeting
held to lend the support that these two representatives surely need.
I am going to try to do something about this.
Here is what is taking place in New York. They aren't facing the
same difficulties as South Florida since they have a goodly
number in their Assembly working for them according to the
following New York Daily News article by Thomas Poster :
t.e
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" CAREY, STEINGUT OKAY BILL TO PERMIT GAMING :
Gov. Carey and Assembly Speaker Stanley Steingut CD-Brooklyn)
endorsed legislation yesterday that would allow the state to
operate full-fledged gambling casinos in "resort" areas including
New York City's theater district, Coney Island, Rockaway Beach
and in the Catskills.
"Steingut's backing automatically assured swift approval in the
Democratic-dominated Assembly. The Republican-controlled
State Senate majority withheld immediate comment, pending
study of the bill, but eventual approval was expected.
" The measure would create an 11-member New York State
Gaming Commission that would actually run casinos 'as one of the
most effective means of eliminating or minimizing such activities
as a source of revenue for organized crime syndicates and
professional gamblers.'
Casino gambling, according to a supporting memo provided by
Steingut, would create new jobs and increase tourism in the state,
just as in the Bahamas, Puerto Rico, Las Vegas and Monte Carlo,
where 'casino gambling is providing a major source of revenues to
their governments.'
Legal casinos would be run by the commission, under Taxation
and Finance Commissioner James H. Tully Jr. It would acquire
property for the casinos and run the entire operation with state
personnel. Profits would be distributed on a 50-50 basis with local
governments.
"The proposal, which is subject to voter approval as a con-
stitutional amendment, developed swift acceptance here by Carey
and State Commerce Commissioner John Dyson."
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"The casinos would have to be a.rp
well.''
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at \eut
approved
mei

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