Buckley 10 Cent Slot Machine

1949 Buckley Black Cherry 25 cent: 1941 Mills Diamond Front 10 cent: 1940 Mills Diamond Front 5 cent: 1930 Pace. Slot Machines To Be Restored: Purchase A Slot Machine Today And Your Shipping Is FREE If You Reside In The Lower 48 States. 1930's Jennings Little Duke One Cent Penny Slot Machine With Gum Vendor. Vintage 1930s Buckley Cent A Pack Coin Op Gum Ball Trade Simulator Slot Machine. Vintage Ford Gumball Machines Gum Ball Machine Collection 10 Cent. Vintage 1¢ Regal Gum Ball Vending Machine Penny. The first mechanical slot machine was the Liberty Bell, invented in 1895 by car mechanic, Charles Fey of San Francisco. The Liberty Bell slot machine had three spinning reels. Shop for-and learn about-Antique and Vintage Slot Machines. Las Vegas and Atlantic City may be the gambling capitals of the United States, but the symbol of.

Buckley criss cross slot machines
Mills Novelty Company, Incorporated
IndustrySlot machines, vending machines and jukeboxes
FateDivestment (jukeboxes);
divestment and merger (slot machines); and
acquisition (vending machines)
SuccessorMills Novelty Co. Restores & sells violanos and other Mills products
Founded1891
(as M.B.M. Cigar Vending Company)
Defunct1948 (jukeboxes);
1954 (vending machines); and
1980s (slot machines)
HeadquartersChicago
Herbert Stephen Mills (deceased);
Robert W. Brown CEO
Websitemillsnovelty.com

The Mills Novelty Company, Incorporated of Chicago was once a leading manufacturer of coin-operated machines, including slot machines, vending machines, and jukeboxes, in the United States. Between about 1905 and 1930, the company's products included the Mills Violano-Virtuoso and its predecessors, celebrated machines that automatically played a violin and, after about 1909, a piano. By 1944 the name of the company had changed to Mills Industries, Incorporated.[1][2] The slot machine division was then owned by Bell-O-Matic Corporation. By the late 1930s, vending machines were being installed by Mills Automatic Merchandising Corporation of New York.

Family[edit]

Buckley 5 Cent Slot Machine

The origins of the business lie with Mortimer Birdsul Mills, who was born in 1845 in Canada West (today's Ontario, Canada)[3] but who later became a citizen of the United States, resident in Chicago, Illinois. Mortimer Mills would have 13 children.[4] One son, Herbert Stephen Mills, was born in 1872 when his father was about 27.[3] In 1892, Bert E. Mills, the youngest of Mortimer Mill's children was born.[4] In about 1895, Fred L. Mills, the first of Herbert Mills' sons, was born.[5][6] Ralph J. Mills, Herbert's second son, was born in July 1898.[6] In about 1900, Herbert Mills, the third son of Herbert Stephen Mills was born. His younger brother, Hayden ('Bill') Mills, was born two years later in about 1902.[6] The Mills brothers were raised in Oak Park, Illinois, and continued to live in that area until at least the mid-1930s.[6] In 1929, Herbert Mills had died aged 57, leaving a fortune to his wife and eight children.[7] The business was continued with Fred L. Mills, Herbert's first son, taking over as president[8] while his three brothers, Ralph, Herbert, and Hayden held other top management positions.

History[edit]

Mortimer Mills was granted United States patent 450,336 on 14 April 1891 for an improvement in 'coin-actuated vending apparatus'. The improvement allowed the purchaser to select the product being sold and manipulate it so that it was carried to the point of delivery.[9] Focusing on the devices covered by the patent, Mortimer Mills founded the M.B.M. Cigar Vending Company sometime between 1891,[3] and 1895.[4] Over half a century later, the company would promote itself as having been founded in 1889, two years before the date of the patent, and by H.S. Mills rather than his father.[10]

Mortimer B. Mills's patented 1891 contribution to cigar vending

In 1897, the company launched the Mills Owl, which was the first mechanical upright cabinet slot machine. The machine's design included a circle of owls perched on a lithographed tin wheel. The machine was a great success and the company would later adopt an owl motif as its trade mark.[11]

In 1898 [1], Mortimer Mills sold a controlling interest in the company to his son, Herbert S. Mills,[4][7] and the name of the company was changed from M.B.M. Cigar Vending Company to Mills Novelty Company, Incorporated.[3] At that time, the company was located at 125-127 West Randolph Street, Chicago.

In 1904, Mills Novelty Company was an exhibitor at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition, the 1904 St. Louis World's Fair. Its pavilion was run by Ode D. Jennings, who would later establish a competitor to Mills.[12]

In 1906, Bert Mills left school at the age of 14 to work for Mills. He would later establish a separate company, Bert E. Mills Corporation, and, in 1946, help to develop the first vending machines to sell hot coffee.[4]

In 1907, Herbert S. Mills collaborated with Charles Fey, the inventor of the slot machine, to produce the Mills Liberty Bell.[13]

In 1926, the company had moved to a plant of 375,000 square feet (34,800 m2), comprising a factory and administrative building, at 4100 Fullerton Avenue in the northwest of Chicago.[10] Mills would distinguish itself by being one of only a few firms to manufacture both machines for gambling and vending machines.[4]

In 1928, Mills entered the market for coin-operated radios and multi-selection phonographs.[3] Between 1929 and 1948, the company manufactured and sold jukeboxes by the names of Hi-Boy, Troubadour, Dancemaster, Do-Re-Me, Swing King, Zephyr, Studio, Throne of Music, Empress, Panoram, and Constellation.[14]

By May 1935, the company was run by the four sons of Herbert Stephen Mills: Fred L. Mills was President, Ralph J. Mills was Vice President in Charge of Sales, Herbert S. Mills, Jr. was Treasurer and manager of the plant, and Hayden Mills was Secretary. The family's wealth included a private yacht named Minoco, after the family firm.[6]

In about 1935, Mills was engaged by Coca-Cola to produce a standing dry automatic cooled vendor for bottles. The result, the model 47, was the first of its kind for Cola-Cola.[1] By the late 1930s, gum vending machines were being installed by Mills Automatic Merchandising Corporation of New York. The machines made use of technology protected by United States patents assigned to Mills Novelty Company, including number 1,869,616.[15][16]

Buckley Slot Machine For Sale

In 1940, the Mills company introduced Soundies, short 16mm musical films played in a coin-operated movie jukebox, its projection and sound mechanism made by RCA. Wartime restrictions curtailed manufacturing of the jukeboxes, but the Mills company continued to produce and distribute new films for them into 1947.

During World War II and by 26 April 1944 the name of the company had changed from Mills Novelty Company, Incorporated to Mills Industries, Incorporated. On 26 April 1944, a representative of the firm, D. W. Donahue, was appointed to a planning committee of the coin machine manufacturing industry. The committee was concerned with the transition of the coin machine factories from war production back to their former use.[2]

In July 1944 it was reported that Fred L. Mills, the then President of Mills Industries, had died at the age of 49 of a stomach aliment in St. Charles, Illinois.[5]

During World War II, Mills received authorised federal funding to use its industrial facilities to produce bomb carriers, directional antenna, hand control slip rings, and poppet valves.[17]

On 1 April 1946, Bell-O-Matic Corporation was established as the exclusive distributor worldwide of all Bells and related products manufactured by Mills, and employed all of the former personnel of the Coin Machine Department of Mills. The stated rationale for the change was that the market for the products of the Coin Machine Department and the markets for the other products of Mills were quite distinct.[10]

The last jukebox produced by the Mills Novelty Company was the Constellation (model number 951). By some mechanism, it appears that the front grille medallion from the jukebox ended up being incorporated in the 1948 Tucker Sedan, as a horn button.[18]

By January 1948, the company was financially troubled and had petitioned the federal court for time to pay its debts. In December 1948, the company sold all of its phonography inventory to H. C. Evans of Chicago.[18]

By the end of the 1940s, the Chairman of the Board of Mills was Ralph J. Mills and the President was Herbert S. Mills. Both men were Vice Presidents of Bell-O-Matic Corporation, whose officers included President V. C. Shay and Vice President in Charge of Advertising Grant F. Shay. Both companies were still located at building in Fullerton Avenue, Chicago.[10] The Bell-O-Matic Corporation would later relocate to 135 Linden Street, Reno, Nevada.

In January 1951 it was reported that the industry manufacturing slot machines in the United States, then almost entirely based in Chicago, had suffered a major blow. A bill had been signed which banned slot machines from federal property and prohibited their shipment in commerce between states. At that time slot machines were allowed only in the states of Nevada, Montana and Maryland (where they were allowed in only four counties) but were operated illegally throughout the country.[19]

In October 1954, F. L. Jacobs Company, a manufacturer of automobile parts based in Detroit, announced that it had acquired both Mills Industries, Inc. and Selmix Dispensers, Inc. of Long Island City, Queens (another manufacturer of equipment in the vending and dispensing industries). At that time the main products of Mills Industries were commercial ice cream freezers, frozen custard and milk shake machines and all types of vending machines. During 1953 and 1954, the company had added a coin-operated coffee vending machine, a three-flavor beverage bottle vendor, a citrus fruit juice vendor, and an ice cream package vendor to its product line. The intention of F. L. Jacobs Company was to operate Mills Industries as an independent subsidiary. However, component parts for the equipment were to be produced in the factories of F. L. Jacobs in Detroit, Traverse City, Michigan and Danville, Illinois.[20] By September 1954, the controller of Mills Industries was James A. Pound.[21] In November 1955, Mills Industries announced a project to consolidate, over a number of years, most of its operations in Traverse City, Michigan.[22]

In November 1955, Mills Industries, Inc. announced a coin-operated vending machine, developed jointly with H. J. Heinz Company, that would dispense a tin can of hot food (one of a selection of six soups or dinners), a can opener, and a spoon. The cans were maintained a constant temperature of 150 °F (65 °C). The machine was intended for use in factories or large offices, and the company claimed that it was a first of a kind in the United States.[23]

By the early 1960s, there were five major manufacturers of slot machines in the United States. The table below sets out their approximate comparative percentages of sales:[24]

Leading United States manufacturers of slot machines in early 1960s
ManufacturerLocationShare of market
Jennings & Co., a division of Hershey Manufacturing Co.Chicago40%
Mills Bell-O-Matic Corp.Chicago and Reno35%
Ace Manufacturing Co.Maryland15%
Buckley Manufacturing Co.Maryland5%
Las Vegas Coin Machine Co.Las Vegas5%
100%

By the early 1960s, the Bell-O-Matic Corporation was being run by Tony Mills. He sold the company to American Machine and Science, Inc. (AMSC) owned by Wallace E. Carroll (later the chairman of Katy Industries), reportedly for USD500,000. AMSC had also acquired O. D. Jennings & Company and the two companies were merged to form TJM Corporation. AMSC would later merge with CRL Industries, Inc. (subsequently renamed CRL Inc.).[25]

TJM Corporation was run by Tony Mills and his brother John Mills. The merged company failed to compete successfully with the electro/mechanical models produced by Bally and also suffered because it had not protected its intellectual property rights in Japan. The company ceased trading in the 1980s.[26]

The name 'The Mills Novelty Company' still survives today, in the form of a business that installs digital player systems in the Mills Violano Virtuoso.[27] The registered owner of United States trade marks 78625380 (the Mills Novelty Co. prize ribbon) and 78625372 (the Violano Virtuoso Self-Playing Violin and Piano laurel wreath, lyre, banner and ribbons) is Robert W. Brown of Wisconsin.[28]

Mills Violano-Virtuoso[edit]

Mills Novelty Company's automatic violin and piano player
Henry K. Sandell's patented 1905 contribution to self-playing violins

The main inventor of the Mills Violano-Virtuoso was Henry Konrad Sandell, a contemporary of Thomas Edison, who was born in about 1878. Henry Sandell arrived in the United States from Sweden at the age of about 10 in about 1888. He was granted his first United States patent on the mechanism at the age of 21, in about 1899 and put his proposals and patents before the Mills Novelty Company in about 1903.

Mills Novelty Company DeLuxe Violano Virtuoso
The DeLuxe model has two independently playing 64-note violins and a 44-note piano

On 27 March 1905 Henry Sandell filed an application for a United States patent for an electric self playing violin. The patent was granted, as number 807,871, on 19 December 1905 and assigned to Mills Novelty Company.[29] This forerunner of the Violano-Virtuoso was known as the Automatic Virtuosa. It was marketed in 1905. At the time player pianos and mechanical coin-operated devices were extremely popular.[30]

Subsequently, a piano mechanism was added to the violin mechanism, and the combination came to known as the Violano-Virtuoso.

The United States Patent and Trademark Office had a display of several significant inventions at the Alaska–Yukon–Pacific Exposition in Seattle in 1909, including an early Violano-Virtuoso.[30] The company used this event to promote the Violano-Virtuoso as 'Designated by the U.S. Government as one of the eight greatest inventions of the decade' on all subsequent machines.

The Violano-Virtuoso was not available to the public until 1911.[30] Technology used in the instrument was patented on 4 June 1912, under United States patents 1,028,495[31] and 1,028,496.[32] Early Violan-Virtuoso's have a glass divider between the violin mechanism and the piano mechanism. Machines with two violins are known as the De Luxe Model Violano-Virtuoso or the Double Mills.

In 1914 an instrument was made especially for the Smithsonian Institution.

Slot

Production seems to have finished in 1930.[30]Poker edge free download crack. Henry Sandell died in 1948, aged 70. By his death he had been granted over 300 patents, many for the technology used in the Violano-Virtuoso.

The exact number of machines produced is not known. Estimates are between 4,000 and 5,000.[30] Today, some sources estimate that only about 750 of the single machines and fewer than 100 of the Double Mills still exist, while other sources estimate that several thousand machines survive. However, the Violano-Virtuoso have the highest survival rate of any type of player piano; they required little maintenance when they were first produced and that is still the case for those that survive.

A common player piano operates pneumatically. The Violano-Virtuoso was all electric and all the moving parts were set in motion by electric motors or electromagnets. A company catalogue states that they ran on 'any electric lighting current' and used 'no more than one 16-candle power light.' They were designed to operate on 110 voltsdirect current. In locations that had 110 volts alternating current (or other types of power supply) the instruments were used with a unique converter unit.

The violin had four strings, with an octave available on each string, and could reproduce 64 notes. All four strings could be played simultaneously. This allowed the possibility of four-part independent counterpoint. A vibrato could be produced.

The strings were played by small electric powered rollers, which were self-rosinating, and a chromatic set of metal 'fingers'. The violin had no finger board. A small metal 'finger', activated by an electromagnet, rose from under the string lifting it in a 'V' shaped slot thus stopping off the string. The strings were bowed by four small wheels made of discs of celluloid clamped together in a dish-shaped form. These applied just the right pressure to the strings and were driven by a variable-speed controlled motor. This and a mute allowed the volume of sound produced to be varied. The violin produced a full tone and was able to sound 1/2 note double stops at ragtime tempi. The staccato coil allowed the bows to leave the string a fraction of a second before the 'fingers'. The violin stayed in tune by a sophisticated array of tuning arms and weights. The vibrato was produced by using an electromagnet to shake the tail-piece of the violin.

The piano had 44 notes, half the number of keys found on a normal piano keyboard. It was played by regular hammers using a standard player piano action. The hammers were activated by electromagnets. The piano frame was made of iron, shaped like a shield, and symmetrically strung. The bass strings were at the centre of the frame and the treble strings radiated out to the edges from the centre. This arrangement distributed the string pressure more evenly across the frame and helped keep the piano in tune.[30]

The machine plays with the insertion of a nickel in the slot

The Violano-Virtuoso was coin-operated and its mechanism was capable of holding up to 15 coins. Some models were made for domestic use and did not have the coin mechanism.

CASINO BONUS T&Cs. . Wheel of fortune online game free play. Next, choose one of many IGT that have this game in their offer. Among such casinos are: Winward, Unibet UK, Grosvenor, Plush, Casinoland, Casino Calzone, Kaboo, Monster, Cheeky Riches, PartyCasino, 21 Dukes, Slots Force. Each promotion listed on FreeSlots99 has Terms and Conditions that are available on the casino website.

The instrument used rolls of perforated paper. Most of the rolls had five tunes on them, the popular tunes of the day. Individual tunes could not be selected. Over time, the Mills Novelty Company produced approximately 3,121 different rolls. Each arrangement of a song was identified by a unique number. Some songs appear on more than one rolls. Attempts have been made to produce a complete 'rollography' for the Violano-Virtuoso. A list has been produced that covers more than half of the different rolls that were ever produced. Rolls 1 to about 1000 and 1800 to 2500 are well documented. Information between rolls 1000 and 1800 is very sparse and it may be that these roll numbers were never used.

The Violano-Virtuoso was a heavy object. The first page of the Violano Virtuoso manual stated that to lift the instrument from the delivery wagon would need '3 good men'.

The Violano Virtuoso was designed for public places, and can be considered to be a beautiful work of craftsmanship. The wooden cabinet in which the mechanism was housed could be oak or mahogany.

In addition to the Violano-Virtuoso, the Mills Novelty Company developed a variety of other automatic musical instruments. These included the Viol-Cello, the Viol-Xylophone, and the Mills String Quartette.[30]

References[edit]

  1. ^ ab'Mills Soda Machines'. Retrieved 2006-08-28.
  2. ^ abTerry Cumming. 'WW2 Pinball Stories - Industry People and Mfrs'. Retrieved 2006-08-28.
  3. ^ abcdeGert Johansen Almind. 'Jukebox History 1914-1933'. Danish Jukebox Archives. Retrieved 2006-08-28.
  4. ^ abcdefKerry Segrave (2002-10-01). Vending Machines. McFarland & Company. ISBN0-7864-1369-7.
  5. ^ ab'Milestones'. TIME magazine. 1944-07-17. Retrieved 2006-09-04.
  6. ^ abcde'Novelty Suit'. TIME magazine. 1935-05-13. Retrieved 2006-09-04.
  7. ^ ab'Mills Novelty Co'. Amusement Resources International. Retrieved 2006-08-28.
  8. ^F. Mills Name MI Plant Exec; Start 3 Shifts. The Billboard. 1951-07-02. pp. 77, 79. Retrieved 2011-01-17.
  9. ^'US Patent 450,336'. United States Patent and Trademark Office. Archived from the original on 2006-12-20. Retrieved 2006-09-02.
  10. ^ abcdSpinning Reels, Catalog Issue, The Story of Mills. Chicago: Bell-O-Matic Corporation. 1949. at The Pinball, Antique Slot Machine and Console Page
  11. ^'Owl'. International Arcade Museum. Retrieved 2006-08-28.
  12. ^Richard Bueschel (1992-06-15). Jennings Slot Machines 1906-1990: Illustrated Historical, Maintenance and Repair Guide to Jennings Mechanical and Electromechanical 3-Reel Bell Machines.
  13. ^'History of Slot Machines'. Ken and Jackie Durham.
  14. ^'Other Jukebox Manufacturers Serial #'s & Estimated Production'. Tom DeCillis. 2002-06-26. Retrieved 2006-08-28.
  15. ^'Games Manufactured by Mills Automatic Merchandising Corp'. International Arcade Museum. Retrieved 2006-09-01.
  16. ^'US Patent 1,869,616'. United States Patent and Trademark Office. Archived from the original on 2006-12-20. Retrieved 2006-09-01.
  17. ^'World War II Industrial Facilities: Authorized Federal Funding - States G-L'. Heritage Research Center, Ltd. Archived from the original on 2006-08-18. Retrieved 2006-08-27.
  18. ^ ab'Tucker (The Man and his Dream) and the Mills Jukebox'. Tom DeCillis. 2006-05-15. Retrieved 2006-08-27.
  19. ^'Goodbye, Bandits'. TIME magazine. 1951-01-15. Retrieved 2006-09-05.
  20. ^'F. L. Jacobs Co. Shows Profit'. Traverse City Record-Eagle. 1954-10-30.
  21. ^'Title not known'. Traverse City Record-Eagle. 1955-09-24.
  22. ^'Mills Launches Consolidation Project Here'. Traverse City Record-Eagle. 1955-11-19.
  23. ^'Machine By Local Firm'. Traverse City Record-Eagle. 1955-11-25.
  24. ^United States. Congress. House. Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce (1962). Gambling Devices. U.S. Govt. Print. Off. p. 124.
  25. ^'CRL Inc. - Company Profile, Information & Research'. Thomson Gale. Retrieved 2006-09-03.
  26. ^Feddy Bailey, quoted at 'Mécanique électrifiée ??'. Flippers-jukeboxes.net. Archived from the original on 2007-09-28. Retrieved 2006-08-30.
  27. ^'The Mills Novelty Company'. Retrieved 2006-08-28.
  28. ^'United States Patent and Trademark Office'. Archived from the original on 2006-12-20. Retrieved 2006-08-28.
  29. ^'US Patent 807,871'. United States Patent and Trademark Office. Archived from the original on 2006-12-20. Retrieved 2006-09-11.
  30. ^ abcdefg'2003/8/10D Music roll in box, Violano Virtuoso, 'No. 2929 - Favorite College Football Marches''. Powerhouse Museum, Sydney. Retrieved 2006-09-10.
  31. ^'US Patent 1,028,495'. United States Patent and Trademark Office. Archived from the original on 2006-12-20. Retrieved 2006-09-11.
  32. ^'US Patent 1,028,496'. United States Patent and Trademark Office. Archived from the original on 2006-12-20. Retrieved 2006-09-11.
  • Bowers, Q. David. The Encyclopedia of Automatic Musical Instruments. ISBN0-911572-08-2 Vestal, New York: The Vestal Press, 1972.
  • Kitner, Michael L. and Reblitz, Arthur A. The Mills Violano-Virtuoso..the famous self-playing violin and piano..how it works, how to service and rebuild it, together with a fascinating collection of previously unpublished pictures concerning its history, its inventor, and its manufacturer.ISBN0-911572-33-3 Vestal, New York: The Vestal Press, 1984.
  • Reblitz, Arthur A. The Golden Age of Automatic Musical Instruments. ISBN0-9705951-0-7 Woodsville, New Hampshire: Mechanical Music Press, 2001.

External links[edit]

  • Mills Novelty Company web site Home of the Violano
  • Jukebox-World Forum, Serial Numbers, classified ads and more
  • Antique Amusements My collection of antique slot machines.
  • Arcade-History A full list of coin-operated machines manufactured by Mills Novelty.
  • [2] Graphical Timeline of Mills Novelty Co. productions (from 1897 to 1968)
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mills_Novelty_Company&oldid=922052266'
Videos Slot Machine Restoration How To Spot a Reproduction How To Unjam a Slot Machine Contact Me

Machines that I currenty have for sale

I have been on quite a buying spree lately.

I was in the basement the other day (which is where the majority of the machines are) and came to the realization that it is time to sell some stuff. I am simply out of room.

Below are some of the machines that I have decided to part with. Once the collection is back under control I will pull what has not sold off the market.

Many of these machines have been in my personal collection for decades and many are really nice original machines.

If a machine is not marked sold do not assume it is still available. I may have sold it and not had a chance to update the web page.

If you are seriously interested in any machine please send me an email and I will give you details (i.e., price).

Watling Rol-A-Top Bird of Paradise Restored (plated)($.25)

SOLD

Watling Rol-A-Tor Vendor Front with Gold Award ($.25) Restored (plated)

SOLD

Watling Rol-A-Top Coin Front ($.10) Restored (Plated)

SOLD

Mills Futurity ($.05) Very nice original

SOLD

Mills Horse Head Bonus ($.10)

SOLD

Mills Castle Front ($.05) with skill stops, gold award, original fortune telling strips.

SOLD

Diamond Bell Cherry Front Rol-A-Top with Side Shooter. 1 of three known to exist.

SOLD

Matched set, penny thru dollar Mills Castle Fronts

SOLD

Restored $.25 Cherry Front Rol-A-Top Console.

SOLD

Restored Pace Bantam

No longer for sale

Jennings Little Duke

SOLD

Restored dime Cherry Front Rol-A-Top Console

No longer for sale

Very nice original dime Checker Board Rol-A-Top with Tic-Tac-Toe feature. I still have the original shipping crate.

Caille Aristocrat

SOLD

Restored (by Fred DeBaugh) Watling Treasury with rare Gold Award feature

SOLD

Very nice original $.25 Jennings Prospector

No Longer For Sale

Very nice all original $.05 Mills Castle Front

SOLD

This is one of the nicest all original machines I have ever seen. 100% original. It even has the jackpot counter in the back of the machine. The picture does not do this machine justice.

Penny Rol-A-Top

No longer for sale

Very nice $.05 all original Watling Bird of Paradise Rol-A-Top

SOLD

Very nice original Watling Rol-A-Tor coin front with mint vendor

SOLD

Restored (Fred Debaugh) Cherry Front Rol-A-Top

SOLD

Restored $.50 Watling Rol-A-Top

SOLD

Mills Futurity - Complete with gold award, cheating mechanism and side vendor

SOLD

Cast Iron FEY Gum Vendor

SOLD

Mills Poinsettia - Restored - has free play feature

SOLD

Mills Futurity - Complete with cheating mechanism

SOLD

Very nice original $1 Jennings Prospector

SOLD

Very nice original Pace Royal Comet

No Longer For Sale

Restored (John Joseffey) Watling Treasury

The following machines were part of an estate I bought last year.

Genco - VERY RARE - Only a few known to exist. It looks like a trade stimulator but is really a slot machine AND a gumball vendor.

SOLD

Below is an article that the late Dick Bueschel wrote about this machine. This is the only article I could find about this machine.

Some pages back, 14 to be exact, we described the C&F BABY GRAND first made by Field in Peoria in 1932, then moved to Chicago in 1933. We posed the question: 'Let's.. assume the F.' in C&F was Field. If so, who was 'C'?'
The answer may or may not be in this colorful 1934 automatic payout Baby Bell machine which is decidedly unique and apparently extremely rare. The strange fact is that this is the only time you'll ever see the Genco name on an automatic payout slot. Before Genco produced the BABY GRAND the firm was deeply committed to pinballs and counter games. After that it was almost pinballs exclusively. So it was one year, and one model, for payout Bells.
Compare this BABY GRAND to the previously described C&F model. You'll see the family resemblance right away, only now a bulging covered payout cup has been added to an extensively cleaned up cabinet Other differences include an integral marquee at the top with a '1C Ball Gum 1 C' legend — typical for a counter game but literally unheard of for a payout slot and various approaches to an Art Deco trim. Then there's that play handle. What a wiggling wonder. The final touch is the visible gumball window, for this is a vender, among a lot of other things.
Who was Genco? If you are a pinball wizard the name would drip from your lips like fine wine. So would the name Gensberg. In a way it's a tale of four brothers, starting with Lou. Back in 1930 Louis W. Gensburg was making charms in a small loft factory space on North Ashland Avenue in Chicago. His big customer was another Chicago outfit that made a confection called 'Crackerjack', one of the tastiest and most successful junk food products of the late twenties and early thirties. Listen to the words of the song 'Take me out to the ball game'. A later verse says: 'Buy me some peanuts and Crack-er-jack. I don't care if I never get back (to work, or home, or whatever).' Then his brother Dave said 'let's make counter games' or something to that effect, and joined him in 1930. Then his brother Meyer did too, and the Genco (For Gensberg Company) Manufacturing Company was born, to become a significant factor in the business of making pinball games. Then brother Sam came along and set up his own pinball company called Chicago Coin Machine Company. Some people believe it was ChiCoin that made BABY GRAND.
The 'trades' of the day saw it differently. The March 1934 issue of THE COIN MACHINE JOURNAL solidly credits the machine to Genco, and
goes on to say, 'A new type pay-out machine which might be classed in the Bell field but which is an entirely new construction is the pay machine by Genco which attracted unusual attention'. Maybe Sam's, too! But maybe not
Back to assumptions. If Sam Gensberg staked Field to the engineering and maybe production of the BABY GRAND, ChiCoin could be the 'C' in C&F. We know the Genco, and maybe the Chicago Coin, model is later.

Superior Races

This exact machine appeared in Coin Slot 34.

It is a dime machine which makes it even more rare and desirable (one of the few times a dime machine is a bonus).

Not For Sale

Jennings Triplex

Same machine, different lighting conditions caused the colors to be different.

SOLD

Mills Futurity

Has odds changing mechanism (commonly missing on Futurities)

SOLD

Mills Horsehead Bonus

SOLD

Mills FOK

SOLD
Really nice complete Mills Silent FOK. Mech, cabinet and castings are in very nice condition. Original wood grained back door is really nice. These seldom survive in this kind of condition. It was very common for operators to put their initials on the sides of the cabinet. This machine has that. I have had a number of machines over the years which were branded this way. Mech is very clean and nice and has superb original tin lithographed fortune telling reel strips. You can usually tell the condition of a machine by the reel strips in my opinion. Rarely if ever do you find a beater slot with nice original strips. The only negative to the machine that I saw was a chip on the right corner of the back bonnet. This doesn’t detract from the overall quality of the machine and is not seen with the back door on.

A. C. Multibell - Rare Machine

SOLD

Pace Waitress - SOLD
Buckley Bones - SOLD
Watling Cherry Front Rol-A-Top - SOLD

Watling $.01 Rol-A-Tor with gold award - rare machine

SOLD

Watling $.01 Treasury

SOLD

Watling Gum Vendor

SOLD

Jennings Golf Ball - SOLD

Mills Lion Head -

SOLD

Mills Dial - Rare machine

Has side vendor

SOLD

SteepleChase

SOLD

Mills Baseball

Has all the good stuff. Scroll to right to read about it.

SOLD

Mills Baseball slot machines came with different features. This one has deferred pay and the mech unit is there and complete and also the parts on the sub base are complete. Quite often part or all of this feature is missing. Nice reel strips. Nice clean mech. Cabinet is very nice and has the gold stencil as original. I was unaware anyone was redoing the stencil when this machine was purchased, mid 80’s to early 90’s. I assume it has been redone as it is too nice to be original. Lithographed play field on the front is a nice original. Machine pays and plays as it should. It even still has the security door for the cash box. Overall it’s a very nice machine.

Mills Castle Front

SOLD

Millard Gum

SOLD

Rex Gumball

SOLD

Superior Trade Stimulator

Pretty unusual machine

SOLD

Climax - SOLD

Fill Up


SOLD

Hole In One Gum Game - Rare - SOLD