Mercury Penny Slot Machine

Mercury Penny Slot Machine

The Coin Collector albums do not contain PVC. This album includes slots for all of the Mercury Dimes issued from 1916 to 1945 including the 1945-S Micro S. Six additional blank slots can be used for proofs, varieties or other coins. Pages: 2 Slots: 78 plus 6 blank slots. Old 1942-P MERCURY DIME SILVER COIN XF $8 (sea) pic hide this posting restore restore this posting. 1939 Mills QT 'Smoker' Slot Machine-5 cent play-Near.

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Groetchen 'Mercury' Trade Stimulator:
$305

The Mercury trade stimulator was produced by the GroetchenTool & Manufacturing Company (126 N. Union St., Chicago, IL) from1939-1940. The machine is exceptionallyclean inside and out. The cast-aluminumcabinet still contains it's original finish.The identification plaque is in excellent condition and reads'MERCURY; INSERT 1¢ TO SPIN REELS; TEST YOUR SKILL; LINE UP THREE OF AKIND; FOR AMUSEMENT ONLY'. Internally,mechanism parts have a patina and are in excellent condition. The mechanism includes a token chute loadedwith 33 brass-clad tokens. Each tokenreads 'GOOD FOR 1 PACK OF CIGARETTES'. Reel strips contain cigarette pack emblemsand are in excellent condition with full color.Emblems include Lucky Strike, Camel, Kool, Wings, Chesterfield, OldGold, and Twenty Grand. Backdoor key isincluded.

Function

Inserting a penny in the coin slot and pushing down thebrown-knobbed handle will cause the machine to fully-function. Allow the handle to pneumatically return tothe raised position. (Without inserting a coin, the handle can be pushed down,but the machine will not function.) Thecoin will drop onto the floor of the machine and the reels will spin brisklyand then lock into position. Ifthree-of-a-kind emblems appear in the windows, a token will be dispensed fromthe lower right side of the machine.Coins on the floor of the machine are collected by removing the backdoorand tipping the machine to the rear while taking care to insure the reelmechanism does not slide out.

Maintenance & Cleaning

The reel mechanism is removed by opening the backdoor andsliding the mechanism out.Reinstallation is equally as simple…raise the handle on the front of themachine and slide the mechanism back in place.

History

Trade stimulators of this sort were often used in taverns orsmall grocery/drug stores during the 1930s and 1940s. Gambling restrictions were avoided since thepay-out was not cash, but rather a token that could be traded formerchandise. The benefit to themachine's owner was that customers would (on average) have to insert more coinsthan the merchandise's retail value…netting the owner additional profit. For example, where a pack of cigarettes couldbe purchased outright by the customer for 15¢, he might go through an averageof 20¢ before winning a pack from a trade stimulator machine…double the profitfor the owner when the wholesale price was 10¢/pack.

Dimensions are 9” wide, 10” deep, and 10” tall.


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The British phrase the penny dropped is used to indicate that someone has finally understood or realised something.

It was originally used with allusion to the mechanism of a penny-in-the-slot machine. The following, from The Leeds Mercury (Yorkshire) of 30th August 1911, evokes this mechanism:

PAPER PENNIES.
OTLEY LAD’S PRANK WITH AUTOMATIC MACHINE.

A number of imitation pennies made of paper were produced in the Otley Police-court yesterday, in a case in which an Otley schoolboy, Teddy Paley, was charged with stealing two packets of chocolate from an automatic machine.
It was stated that the machine was placed at the door of Mr. Thos. Coates’s shop in Station-road, Otley. Mr. Coates said he had suffered during the past twelve months through boys inserting these paper pennies and also various kinds of base coins, brass checks, and tins. He could hear from the shop when a penny dropped, and as there was no sound when these paper coins were put in, he went to the door and found Paley in the act of taking out the chocolate. Four paper coins were inside the machine.
The lad’s father said his son had got into bad company. He had been to Guiseley with a boy, who had showed him how easy it was to get chocolate from these machines.
Paley, who expressed penitence, was bound over for twelve months, and placed under the care of the Probation Officer.

Gas in particular used to be supplied to certain consumers on the automatic penny-in-the-slot principle. One of the earliest mentions of this that I have found is from The North-Eastern Daily Gazette (Middlesbrough, Yorkshire) of 4th September 1890:

Mercury Penny Slot Machine Collectors

THE “PENNY IN THE SLOT” GAS SYSTEM AT BOLTON.

The Bolton Corporation are now supplying gas on a novel principle. There are 7,000 houses in the town not using gas, though they have fittings. Most of these dwellings are occupied by artisans and workers of a poorer class, and their custom is sought as gas consumers in this way—each tenant, by putting a “penny in the slot” of a machine provided for the purpose, is supplied with 25 cubic feet of gas.

By 1890, penny-in-the-slot machines had become all the rage, to the extent that penny in the slot was a proverbial phrase; there were for example automatic postal boxes supplying postcards and stamped envelopes with paper enclosed, automatic insurance boxes providing an insurance for 24 hours against accidental death, and automatic photographic machines that The Pall Mall Gazette (London) mentioned on 8th May 1890:

REVOLUTION IN PHOTOGRAPHY.
A PHOTOGRAPH DELIVERED AUTOMATICALLY IN 45 SECONDS IN EXCHANGE FOR A PENNY.

Boxes next to slot machines. You wouldn’t know it after watching this remarkably tone-deaf trailer for that 2K Sports put out on Monday.Touting the feature set for MyTeam, the basketball behemoth’s version of Ultimate Team, 2K Sports put out a video that literally depicts pachinko and slot machines. Two years ago, the president of the publishing company over the series said they.

The Press of the kingdom declare the invention “marvellous.”
TRUTH.—I am told that before long we shall have the Automatic Photographic Camera on the streets and in the Railway Stations. A friend who inspected the Machine at Messrs. Salters, West Bromwich, the other day, informs me that the likeness is taken within three seconds of dropping the proverbial penny in the slot, and that the complete picture is delivered in about 30 seconds. In point of speed, at any rate, this beats Mr. Weller’s “profeel machine.”

AUTOMATIC PHOTOGRAPH COMPANY (Limited).
PROSPECTUSES WILL BE READY ON SATURDAY NEXT.

The earliest figurative use of the penny dropped that I have found is from On getting educated, published in The Ripley and Heanor News and Ilkeston Division Free Press (Ripley, Derbyshire) of 10th April 1931:

One of the advantages of walking is that one makes a lot of interesting and informative contacts.
[…]
One pleasant autumn afternoon I was approaching Cromford via Lea (and what a lovely old bridge the one at Cromford is) when I saw a fragile-looking man leaning on a gate.
“You don’t look very grand,” I said. “Can I help you in any way?”
“No, thank you kindly. I’ve got a new complent. What’s squealers, mister?”
“The only squealers I know are pigs,” I replied. “Where’s the trouble?”
“You see, sir, I’ve had bronikle pneumonia, but I got over that, and yet I couldn’t get about, so my missis her axed doctor what was matter with me now. The doctor he said, ‘Oh, he’ll get right in time; he’s got squealers.’”
Then the penny dropped and I realised what it was.
So I said to him, “Yes, I know what it is. You are short of breath and always feel tired, I expect.”
“That’s just it, mister. Then it isn’t serious?”
“Not if you take care of yourself,” I replied.
“There’s one thing as does me good,” he went on, “and that’s a thimblefull of brandy, but I’m spent up.”
So we arranged matters.

Mercury Penny Slot Machine

The second-earliest instance that I have found is from the Skegness Standard (Skegness, Lincolnshire) of 20th April 1932:

THINGS WE WANT TO KNOW.
The identity of the gentleman who was allowed to go for a drink after assisting the missus on Sunday?
And how long it took him to fathom the problem as to why the hostelry was closed at 1.15 p.m.
And if the penny dropped on suggestion of his spouse that he had forgotten to advance his watch an hour?
And if he has made a mental resolve to guard against a similar happening in future years?

The following is from the Derby Evening Telegraph & Derby Daily Express (Derby, Derbyshire) of 1st July 1932:

“She was only a gasfitter’s daughter, but she had slots to meter,” may have been a very good joke, but it took my wife a long time before the penny dropped, comments Witty Half, Allenton.

The same year, on 19th November, The Derbyshire Times and Chesterfield Herald (Chesterfield, Derbyshire) had the following in its column The play hour & league of junior citizens:

Dear Little Chums,
Most of my entrants for last week’s competition failed to notice that the ship was sailing backwards and that there was no thumb hole in the artist’s palette. But nearly everyone was right with the giraffe, which I thought was the most difficult; in fact, I had to study this one some little time myself before “the penny dropped.”

The giraffe in the 12th-November issue; the game consisted in saying what was wrong with the pictures.

Mercury Penny Slot Machine Slot

(related:look after the pennies and the pounds will look after themselvespennies from heaven)