THE AUTOMATIC AGE
Vol. 5
CHICAG O, S E P T E M B E R , 1928
No. 2
New Coin Machine Operators’
Association Making Great Strides
By O. C. L IG H T N E R
A t last the coin machine operators
have an organization such as they
have always wanted. It is not an
organization
dominated
by
New
York, or Boston, or Detroit, or Chi
cago.
It is an organization in which ev
ery section has equal representation.
It is not an organization com
posed o f five or six men re-electing
themselves to the offices year after
year.
It is an organization o f the great
body o f operators in which the o f
fices must go from year to year to
the leading men o f the industry.
Several attempts at organization
have been made in the past and all
o f them failed. The new organiza
tion has more paid members in three
months than any previous organiza
tion ever did have.
Some want to know why the A U
T O M A T IC AGE cast its lot with the
new organization. W ell, the fa ct is
the old association really had no or
ganization. It provided that all the
offices except one or two was to be
held by Chicago men. Members were
assessed $5 a year but were not al
lowed to vote. No outside member,
that we ever heard of, renewed his
membership the second year and no
local association ever reaffiliated the
second year.
The great m ajority o f Chicago op
erators themselves saw the injustice
o f this procedure and are aligning
© International Arcade Museum
themselves with the new
tion.
organiza
The biggest and best men in the
industry are officers o f the new or
ganization. And they are not there
fo r graft or personal glory but fo r
service to the industry.
Any one who cannot choose be
tween Wm. Sheade on one hand and
Wm. Gent on the other has some
thing wrong with his mind and heart
and judgment.
I f Sheade is a representative o f
the type o f leadership we have in
this industry we ought to be ashamed
o f ourselves.
W e are trying to get the industry
on a higher plane. We are trying
to get proper public recognition. W e
are trying to get new blood in the
industry and capital interested in the
different types o f machines coming
on the market.
They come to the convention and
go away disgusted. W e have been
doing ourselves a grave injustice dur
ing these years we were patient with
Sheade and his crowd hoping against
hope that they would fulfill their
promises to broaden out their organ
ization and get the better men o f
the industry into the offices.
But as long as we handed them
the big profit o f the Exposition on a
silver platter to pay exorbitant sala
ries and expenses o f the bunch to
the conventions they were not going
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