Vintage Button Push Slot Machine Baby Face

10.01.2021by
  1. Vintage Slot Machines
  2. Vintage Button Push Slot Machine Baby Faces
  3. Vintage Button Push Slot Machine Baby Face Masks
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Gameroom Show sells pre-1940s vintage slot machines in excellent, working condition. These rare antique slot machines are also known as “one-armed bandits” because they were originally operated by one lever on the side of the machine as opposed to a button on the front panel, and because of their ability to leave the gamer impoverished. Gameroom Show sells multi-slot machines, Watling. Get the best deals on Vintage Slot Machine when you shop the largest online selection at eBay.com. Free shipping on many items Browse your favorite brands affordable prices. Coin Mechanisms Inc. Is the worldwide leader in supplying high-speed electronic Coin Comparitors to the slot machine industry. Current models include the Coin Comparitor (CC) and the Micro Comparitor (MC). 12 volt push button switch Product details: Square illustrated push button with lamp,fits to most control panels,various colors for your selection. Push button for game machine Button comes with securing nut,easy to attach or detach from most game machines. Download Push sounds. 13,524 stock sound clips starting at $2. Download and buy high quality Push sound effects. Vintage slot machine. Cartoon slot machine window face - slot machine stock illustrations. Slot machine icon square button set - slot machine stock illustrations.

Vintage Slot Machines

We also have:

Beer Barrel Trade Stimulator
& Pretzel Dispenser

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Circa 1934, made by A.J. Stephens and Company.

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Five cent play, insert nickel and pull spout on right side of barrel

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Beautiful and unique beer barrel case,

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Features a unique vendor that vends pretzels

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Has reel strips and an award card that feature pretzels

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Excellent restored condition,

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Fully working with lock and key

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Appears all original except for replacement award card and new locks & key.

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Dimensions: 13' wide, 8' deep, 11' high

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Price: $2750 plus $49 shipping ($59 shipping west of Denver)

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To Order: use SECURE ORDER FORM

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For more information: E-mail along with your name, location and phone number

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Free wolf run slots for fun. Or call 202-213-1585 10 a.m - 9 p.m. East Coast time.


Be sure to include your location and phone number.


$2750


Sale - $2750

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Mills Perfection

Price: SOLD plus $49 shipping ($59 shipping west of Denver)

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To Order: use SECURE ORDER FORM
or call 202-213-1585 (10 am - 9 pm East Coast Time)

Other Inquiries, email: durham@GameRoomAntiques.com


SOLD

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Cent A Pack
Trade Stimulator & Gumball Dispenser

Circa 1935s, made by Buckley ManufacturingCompany

The machine & case is in original condition, with a very heavy duty very well constructed replacement door with gumball entry chute and coin release button.

See Photo of Back Door Closed and see photo of Back Door Open

Fully working with lock and key, The reel strip and award card are replacement.

Dimensions: 9' wide, 9' deep, 12' high

Price: plus free shipping to mainland USA

To Order: use SECURE ORDER FORM
For more information: E-mail along with your name, location and phone number
or call 202-213-1585 10 a.m - 9 p.m. East Coast time.
Be sure to include your location and phone number.


SOLD

SOLD
Button

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Art Deco
Pick-A-Pack
Windmill Trade Stimulator
with Real Cigarette Packs

circa 1933, made by Garden City Novelty Company and features real cigarette packs in the bottom of the machine

Insert a penny or nickel on top of the brand of cigarettes you want and push down the plunger

If the pointer with your brand of cigarettes stop between the two pointers on the top, you win a pack of cigarettes.

Beautifully restored, Neat art deco design in the casting. Dimensions: ' wide, ' deep, ' high

PRICE: SOLD plus $49 shipping ($59 shipping west of Denver)

To Order Go to SECURE ORDER FORM
or call 202-213-1585 (10 am - 9 pm East Coast Time)
or send an SEND AN EMAIL along with your name, location and phone number.
We also accept PAYPAL - Submit Secure Order Form with request to pay via PAYPAL.


Restored
SOLD

Restored
SOLD


Restored

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More Trade Stimulators

Vintage Button Push Slot Machine Baby Faces

Decorating Your Gameroom

  • Vintage Gas Pumps for Sale

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HISTORY OF TRADE STIMULATORS

Trade stimulators, as the name implies, were designed to stimulate business either by attracting customers into a specific store or by giving the customer another reason to spend his loose change when paying for merchandize.

Even though trade stimulators were extensively used in the 1890s, they weren't called trade stimulators until 1907 when the Mills Novelty Company used the term in one of its catalogues.

The most popular early trade stimulators were the Bicycle and the Fairest Wheels. With both of these machines the weight of a penny caused a wheel to rotate and, like a carnival wheel, the player hoped the wheel would stop on a high number so that he could win multiple cigars or other merchandise. Other popular machines during this era were the penny drops and flips.

The bartender or store attendant paid winners over the counter since trade stimulators did not automatically pay out cash like slot machines. Winners usually received free merchandise, such as a cigar or a pack of cigarettes. Some trade stimulators had automatic token dispensers so that the store attendant didn't have to be called every time there was a winner. These tokens were stamped with the store's name or the winning value, such as 'Good For A Free Cigar' or 'Good for 5ó in Trade'.

Although trade stimulators became less popular for a period, their popularity rebounded in the 1930s. Many operators utilized them instead of slot machines because there were lower in cost and smaller in size, as well as needing fewer repairs and posing less legal problems. By the late 1930s, trade stimulators were increasingly becoming known as counter games.

Many trade stimulators, especially those made in the 1930s and 1940s, also dispensed gumball. The gumball feature allowed operators to claim that the stimulators were vending machines and not gambling devices. Operators claimed that the machine were made to dispense gumballs for a coin and that the spinning reels were for amusement purposes.

The 1930s trade stimulators were generally ornate and appealing to the eye, while in the 1940s they became more utilitarian. After the Johnson Act, which made gambling machines illegal, was passed in the early 1950s, merchants started using punchboards instead of trade stimulators.

For a list of trade stimulators available for sale, visit the Trade Stimulator Sales List

For a list of Trade Stimulator Manufacturers and Game Names, visit the Manufacturer and Game List Web PageCopyright: 1996 Ken Durham.

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Vintage Button Push Slot Machine Baby Face Masks

Ken Durham
GameRoomAntiques
Email: durham@GameRoomAntiques.com
Secure Order Form

http://www.GameRoomAntiques.com
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