Music Trade Review

Issue: 1921 Vol. 72 N. 23

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
JUNE 4, 1921
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
47
PATENTS MUSIC SHEET TRACKER
Details of Patent Granted to John T. Rydberg
Bearing Upon the Proper Relation Between
Traveling Note Sheet and Tracker
WASHINGTON, D. C, May 31.—John T. Rydberg,
Harrisburg, Pa. (now a resident of Brooklyn),
was recently granted Patent No. 1,373,100 for
devices commercially known as automatic music
sheet trackers, designed for co-operation with
automatic player-pianos by means of which the
proper relation between the traveling note sheet
and the tracker is maintained.
In this character of mechanism there are sev-
eral considerations which become important in
order to produce a practical arrangement,
among which may be mentioned simplicity and
stability of structure to prevent likelihood of
the device getting out of order and requiring
expert mechanics to repair; elimination of valve
complications; adaptability to conventional types
of player instruments; positiveness and quick-
ness of the control means; 'and last, but not
least, the provision for operation without fail
regardless of the condition of the note sheet as
to irregularities of the edges or other portions
due to wear and tear and atmospheric changes.
With these phases in mind the patentee con-
ceived the invention of this application, which
is simply designed for attachment to well-known
players without material alteration in their con-
struction, and possessing the several features of
advantage above referred to, as well as others.
The invention consists of a pneumatic embody-
JELGIN METAL NOVELTY CO.
Manufacturers of Highest Quality
Player-Piano Hardware
Transmissions and Gearings
and Metal Specialties
Special Built Machinery
and Tools
ELGIN
Established 1853
ILLINOIS
ing a movable member which under normal con-
ditions of operation of the traveling note sheet
is effected by balancing pressure or "tension"
at opposite sides and controlled through the in-
strumentality of operative connection with sup-
plemental apertures in the tracker or tracker
bar, said apertures immediately becoming opera-
tive upon abnormal movement of the note sheet
effecting a relative movement of the parts to
thereby normalize feeding of said sheet onto
the take-up roll.
Special features of the invention include the
provision of suitable conduits on the tracker bar
into which the supplemental apertures aforesaid
open and means for equalizing the lateral pres-
sure on the music roll whereby the pneumatic
may be normally free of outside pressure so as
to be quickly responsive to shift the roll sup-
port for effecting relative movement of the note
sheet with respect to the tracker bar.
Of considerable importance is, firstly, the com-
bination with the pneumatic of means for con-
trolling its action so that its movements in the
normalizing of the travel of the music note sheet
will be accomplished quickly and positively, but
with a decided absence of objectionable jerki-
ness, this being the function of what is termed
neutralizing or pressure-checking valves form-
ing a part of the invention; and, secondly, the
special connection intermediate, the movable
clement of the pneumatic and the shiftable music
spool such that a minimum amount of pressure
or power is required to produce the desired
movement of said spool.
Subsidiary to the foregoing, but of equal im-
portance, is the combination with the tracking
control means above referred to of means for
rendering said control means inoperative, which
said means is operable incident to the rewinding
of the note sheet upon the music spool so that
such rewinding will be accomplished smoothly
and without tearing the edges of the sheet.
RUBBER BELLOWS CLOTH OF EVERY DESCRIPTION
OUR SPECIALTIES
Rubber Cloths and Tubing
For Automatic Pianos and Piano-Players
L. J. MUTTY CO.
BOSTON, MASS.
TO DISCUSS WORLD TRADE PROBLEM
Americans to Be Prominently Represented at
International Chamber of Commerce, to Be
Held in London Late This Month
Some 200 delegates from all sections of the
United States will attend the first conference of
the International Chamber of Commerce, to be
held in London, England, during the week of
June 27, and a number of prominent bankers and
financiers will present reports and submit recom-
mendations regarding business conditions of the
world. Transportation and finance will be the
chief subject of discussion, but the question of
production will also find a place on the program.
IBANEZ COMMENTS ON MUSIC
Declares That It Is the Invention of Our Age
and Explains Why
In a recent magazine article on "The
Future of a Novel," by Belasco Ibanez, the fol-
lowing reference was made to modern music
which is worthy of thought: "The novel is an
original creation of modern literature. When
historians ot the future ask what we, the in-
tellectual offspring of the eighteenth, nineteenth
and twentieth centuries, have contributed to the
development of art, we may answer proudly:
music and the novel. No one will venture to
question that claim.
"Music is an invention of our age. Of course,
there has always-been music; but real music, the
art of producing psychological effects by sound,
belongs to our epoch and is one of our great
achievements. For hardly more than a century
and a quarter has profane 'popular' music been
clearly distinguishable from religious ceremony,
and in that brief period of time it has attained
an eminence and excellence which really seem
insuperable."
Consult the universal Want Directory of
The Review. In it advertisements are inserted
free of charge for men who desire positions
of any kind.
Refer all inquiries to Dept. X
SYLVESTER TOWER CO.
Towers Above
All Others
" Grand and Upright Piano-iorte Actions
Keys. Actions. Hammers. Brackets and Nickel Kail Furnished Complete
431 to 147 Broadway
.
.
.
.
CAMBRIDGEPORT, MASS,
INVISIBLE HINGES
"OUT OF SIGHT
HEED OUR ADVICE
The man who uses Behlen's Varnish
Crack Eradicator can afford to figure
lower, yet makes more profit on a re-
finishing job, than the man who does
not use it.
The reason—he saves the time, trouble
and expense of scraping off the old var-
nish and shellac and the finished job is
just as satisfactory too—if not more so.
Send for a sample can to-day and try
it.
H. BEHLEN & BRO.
Anilines
Shellacs
Stains
Fillers
10-12 Christopher St., New York
Near 6th Ave, and 8th St.
EVER IN MIND"
And when you're satisfied
that we've the best punch-
ings on the market, cut
clean and accurately from
the best of material in
celluloid, cloth, felt, fibre,
leather, paper, rubber or
whatever you want, give
us credit and send your
orders to
When you fail to
see an unsightly
Hinge protruding
you know "SOSS"
is the answer.
Soss Hinges
emphasize beautiful
wood finishes as
there is no project-
ing metal on either
side of door.
Made in
numerous sizes.
C. F. GOEPEL & CO.
Send for Catalog "S"
137 L 13th STREET
NEW
YORK
SOSS MANUFACTURING CO.
H
Grand Ave. and Bergen St.,
BROOKLYN, N. Y.
•Illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
48
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
JUNE 4, 1921
A LIVE COLUMBIA DEALER
THE MODERN MUSIC ENTERTAINER
IDEN PAYNE WITH CARAVAN
F. C. Jacobs Doing Thriving Grafonola Business
at Stevens Point, Wis.
Portable Phonograph Taking the Place of the
German Band, Street Fiddler and Singer as a
Means of Getting Money From Householders
Stage Director for Frohman Interests to Ad-
dress Gatherings of Edison Dealers
Stevens Point, Wis., is a town of about 7,500
population and F. C. Jacobs, Columbia dealer
in that thriving community, is an old pioneer in
the music industry. He has spent many years
Window Display Featuring Columbia Record
in the business and through the use of consist-
ent and effective publicity is known throughout
the section of country as "The Columbia Man."
The photograph shown herewith, featuring a
window display prepared by Mr. Jacobs on be-
half of the Columbia record, "Where the Lan-
terns Glow," is typical of the publicity methods
used by this progressive Columbia dealer.
NEW MUSIC SHOP IN PEORIA
Peoria, 111., has a new music shop capitalized
at $30,000, in which Russell L. Stutzman, former-
ly of Bloomington, is interested. The newly
formed organization takes over the C. E.
Wheelock & Co.'s Victrola department. The
main floor of the storeroom, which was formerly
occupied by the latter concern, will be used by
the new firm.
EDISON DEALERS MEET IN ST. LOUIS
Herewith is shown a quartet of Edison men
who attended the St. Louis dealers' meeting,
held at the Hotel Statler, on April 25. From
left to right they are: T. J. Leonard, general
manager, Thomas A. 'Edison, Inc.; J. J. Calla-
The old-fashioned German band, the wander-
ing violinist, the vocal soloist, who for years
have been entertaining the residents of the apart-
ment houses in the uptown part of New York,
are being replaced these days by the portable
phonograph. It is not uncommon now to hear
the strains of an operatic aria ascending from
the back yard. The peripatetic music venders
are now using these portable phonographs to
good purpose. Quite a repertoire of music is
carried in the record form and the tastes of the
community are served whether it be classic or
jazz music, while vocal and violin solos are also
on the program. This portable phonograph is
certainly an improvement on the old German
band and where the machine is a good one and
the records selected worth while it certainly has
an element of advertising value for the talking
machine dealer which cannot be overlooked.
Among the other operatic and theatrical stars
who will address the Edison dealers at their
Caravan Convention sessions in New York, New
Orleans, Chicago and Vancouver, this June, will
be Iden Payne, who, for the past four years,
has been the general stage director for Chas.
NEW SUMMER VICTOR FOLDER ISSUED
Attractive Piece of Literature Designed to
Stimulate Sales of Small Models
The Victor Talking Machine Co. has just
issued a most attractive and generally appealing
bit of literature for the use of dealers in de-
veloping Summer business. It is in the form of
a folder, with an attractive Summer scene in
colors on the cover, and is captioned: "This
Summer—a Victrola." The center of the folder
is in the form of a spread and shows illustra-
tions, together with descriptions of Victrolas
IV, VI, VIII, IX and No. 80. The folder is
designed to permit of the dealer's own imprint
on the back and should prove of distinct value
in stimulating Summer sales.
NEW KINDERGARTEN RECORDS
Columbia Co.'s Educational Department Issues
Twelve Records for Children
The educational department of the Columbia
Graphophone Co. has issued twelve new kin-
dergarten records in the series it established a
few months ago. The set now comprises twenty
records, offering eighty selections in all of the
world's best music, spe-
cially interpreted for
the child's needs. Ap-
proved by Patty Smith
Hill, associate profes-
sor, Teachers' College,
Columbia
University,
and personally super-
vised by her assistants
in the Horace Mann
School of Teachers'
College, Ethel M. Rob-
inson, Helene Kneip
and Louise Birch, these
records represent re-
markably fine interpre-
tations of these classics
for the purpose.
Through the large
sales already secured
prominent
educators
have come to recognize
the distinctive charac-
ter of the work the
Edison Men at St. Louis Convention
Columbia educational
ban, Edison supervisor; A. H. Curry, president department is doing for the schools of the
and general manager, Texas-Oklahoma PHono- country. Not only have they testified that these
graph Co., Dallas, Tex., and J. W. Scott, Am- records are ideal for children, but that the en-
berola supervisor.
tire series is excellent school equipment.
Iden Payne
Frohman, Inc. . Among other plays that he
has produced for the Frohman interests have
been "Declassee," "The Off Chance," "Belinda"
and "The Lady of the Camelias," with Etjiel
Barrymore; "Dear Brutus," with William Gil-
lette; "Humpty Dumpty" and "At the Villa
Rose," with Otis Skinner, and the Barrie play,
"Mary Rose," with Ruth Chatterton. During the
same period he has concurrently held the posi-
tion of visiting professor of dramatic art at the
Carnegie Institute of Technology at Pittsburgh
His other important productions, independent of
Charles Frohman, Inc., in New York, have been
"Caesar's Wife," with Billy Burke; "Justice,"
with John Barrymore, and "Pendennis," with
John Drew. Mr. Payne won his spurs as a pro-
ducer in connection with what is known as the
Repertory Movement, in England.
The subject of Mr. Payne's address to the Edi-
son dealers is to have an interesting angle on
their training and will be entitled "If Salesmen
Were Actors."
SAMAROFF TO MAKE RECORDS
Famous Pianist, Who Has Been Heard Witn
Favor Throughout Country, to Record Ex-
clusively for Victor Talking Machine Co.
Olga Samaroff, the distinguished pianist, in
fact one of the foremost women pianists before
the American public, recently signed a thrc-e-
year contract to make records exclusively for
the Victor Talking Machine Co. The first
records of Mme. Samaroff will be announced at
an early date, as this prominent artist recentlv
made extended visits to the Victor laboratories.
Mme. Samaroff just recently finished a series
of eight Beethoven recitals in Aeol'an Hall,
New York. Her interpretations of the piano
sonatas of the great master came in for the
highest praise. The critic of the Sun said:
"The undertaking was one of serious character
and it was carried forward in a serious spirit.
Mme. Samaroff is a pianist of more than com-
mon intelligence, a devoted student of her art,
and a woman of alert mind. Her playing of
the adagio of opus 106 was a truly beautiful
performance."

Download Page 47: PDF File | Image

Download Page 48 PDF File | Image

Future scanning projects are planned by the International Arcade Museum Library (IAML).

Pro Tip: You can flip pages on the issue easily by using the left and right arrow keys on your keyboard.