56
COIN
offices and confe re nce rooms . He re Wolf
Reiwitz holds forth in s tate behind his
mahogany desk and here also will be
found the des ks of Stanley Harris and
Secretary Sylvia Hips hman. Harris has
full charge of the cabinet sales and will
s pend most of his time on the road. Con-
ference rooms will be reserved for meet-
ings of the sales force.
The rear of the second floor has b ee n
turne d into an a sse mbling plant for the
cabinets. Two men have been placed on
the s taff of Wolf Sales to handle th is
end of the business. According to W oil,
no expense has been s pared in produc-
ing his cabinet. The finest grains of
mahogany have gone to make the box
itself and the wood is polished down
before the box leaves the plant. Lec-
toli te gives the illumination on the
front and sides of the cabinet. So rap-
idly have orders been booked in ad-
vance for the box that just now has
production caught up with the demand.
The s tory of Wolf Sales Co. Inc.
sounds like a chapter from a Horatio
Alger book. Woll has been in the coin
machine business for thirty-five years
and knows every angle of it thoroughly.
He at one time operated in Colorado,
then in Seattle. Since coming to San
Francisco he first opened a small office
on Mis sion Street, then expanded to a
space in the Action Sales on Ninth
Street. From there he moved to Golden
Gate Avenue last April where his busi-
ness has s teadily increased until the
demand for larger quarters made itse:f
apparent. The COIN MACHINE RE-
VIEW joins his many friends in wishing
Woll Reiwitz hearty congratulations and
s ucce ss in his latest expansion.
e
Gongratulations and 'Best Wishes
to
WOLF SALES [0., Inc.
Ln their new home and enlarged
quarters
•
THE HUB ENTERPRISES
43 South Liberty St.
Around Northern
Colifornio
By D. H. PETSCH
SAN FRANCISCO (RC)-Bally Bev-
e rage Vendors have arrived in San
Francisco and it is the opinion of Johnny
Ruggiero that they are going to live up
to the good old Bally name and mop
up the market. Bruce Scrievers of the
local office spent the las t two weeks in
Chicago studying the mechanics of the
machine and returns more enthusias tic
than ever over its possibilities. Accord-
ing to Ruggiero , from the broadsides
alone , advance orders have come in
from all parts of Northern California.
Jack R. Moore has held demonstrations
of the machine in all of his West Coast
Baltimore, Maryland
offices with amazing enthusiasm ex-
pressed by operators attending. What
appeals to them, says Ruggiero, is that
every cup is a perfect blend of coco-
cola, the same that one can buy in a
bottle.
Bally's Fifth Inning, the new baseball
game on the market, is due in San
Francisco any day now and Manager
Ruggiero predicts a sunny future for it.
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Caro are the
proud parents of a baby girl, Mary Lou,
born the latter part of March. Mrs. Caro
is secretary at the Jack R. Moore office,
now on leave-of-absence.
"Seeburg phonographs are going big
in Northern California," says Vance
Mape. All types of models are selling,
too. Vance is on the board of directors
MACHINE
REVIEW
CctnplitnehtJ
c( tl,e
MILLS NOVELTY. COMPANY
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