Presto

Issue: 1920 1746

f* K e & T
January 8, 1920.
O
THE
TALKING MACHINE
News of the Week in the Phonograph Field
A MECHANICAL AGE
This being an age of suggestion—an age
when any easier, more labor-saving method
of doing a thing is immediately adopted and
gradually perfected — t h e talking-machine
idea of reproducing the human voice and pro-
ducing music has had the impetus of that sug-
gestion from the very start. A small dog steal-
ing a bone from a larger one in a village street
may start a general canine fight that will in-
volve nearly every cur and thoroughbred in
the town. Just so, the modest beginnings of
the talking-machine started a fire of enthusi-
asm that has developed into a flame that has
lighted the whole civilized world and some
parts of heathendom.
This is an age of machinery. Coal is mined
and transported by machinery, trousers are
manufactured by machinery, and pressed by
machinery; hair and wool are clipped by ma-
chinery; cows are milked by machinery, or-
chards are sprayed by machinery, millions of
men during the last four terrible years were
mowed down by machinery, and millions of
men, women and children are being entertain-
ed, soothed and instructed by the machines of
the theaters and the machines of music—the
talking-machine and the player-piano.
It is a mechanical age—mechanical to the
nth degree of the qth power. No good dentist
today will extract a doubtful tooth until he
first takes an X-ray picture of the roots of all
the teeth in the half of the mouth in which the
ache is felt; no novice is permitted to try out
in a position that calls for an expert. And
Nature, herself, is the most exacting taskmis-
tress of all. Nature can be overcome only by
employing other powers of nature; in this way
water may be compelled to flow up hill.
The old poets sang of the harmony of the
spheres. That harmony is being realized to-
day in the universality of music; and the most
universally-used instrument at the present
time is the talking-machine.
TROUBLES OF GERMAN DEALERS.
The use of the ten pfenning piece in coin-
operated instruments in Germany has been discon-
tinued since the meeting in Leipzig recently of the
Association of German Dealers in Mechanical and
Automatic Musical Instruments. Taxation troubles
are harassing the trade. It seems that manufac-
turers must now pay a new 10 per cent tax on
the instruments they make and that retail dealers
have to pay another 5 per cent. The law authoriz-
ing towns to place local taxes of any desired amount
on the use of automatic music instruments operated
on the coin in the slot principle was criticized. It
seems that some towns tax these automatic instru-
ments at one mark per day, other towns at two,
three, even more marks per day. So the ten pfennig
piece must be discontinued because the sum is too
small.
NEW CONTRALTO IN RECORDS.
Gabriella Besanzoni, the newest great contralto
of the Metropolitan Opera Company, has signed up
with the Victor Talking Machine Company and
America will soon hear her wonderful voice in Edi-
son records. Signorina Besanzoni is a Roman by
birth, young and beautiful, and her voice is pure
mezzo-soprano. She has appeared in Italy, Spain,
South America, Mexico and England and scored
a triumph in every country.
PENNSYLVANIA DEALER SELLS OUT.
E. J. Lannon, Susquehanna, Pa., has purchased
the stock of music and phonographs, of Joseph P.
McMahon, who has had a store on Franklin avenue,
that city, for several years.
THE ELLIS
Made to Fit Any Phonograph
THE PHONOGRAPH IN SCHOOLS
Western Writer Points Out the Growing Field of
Uses for the Machines.
The phonograph as an educational adjunct is com-
ing more into favor and its adoption for hitherto
untried purposes is the subject of many a report.
Of course, much of the present favor is due to
the perfection of the machines since the time they
were first put on the market, the perfection of the
records and the technic of recording the actual
performance of the artists.
"There are other uses of the phonograph besides
the entertainment and museum values, such as the
commercial and the educational. It is the latter use
that is interesting me just now, especially its use
in connection with the public schools," says Edwin
J. Stringman, writing in the Rocky Mountain News,
of Denver, Colo., recently.
"No one thing has done as much for the ad-
vancement of general musical appreciation as the
phonograph. No one thing can do as much for
the aesthetic development of the youth, consider-
ing cost and accessibility. It is the most efficient
method we have. Only a moment is necessary to
adapt this method to the various contingencies that
arise in the day-to-day routine in the public schools.
How much better pedagogy it is to illustrate the
songs of the birds when the classes are studying
that phase of nature. The subject matter sticks and
the correlation remains a valuable asset to the
child's education. When the pupils are studying
the life of Washington, for instance, and the author
tells that he liked to dance the minuet is the proper
thing to show them exactly what a minuet is like
from a musical standpoint."
E M P I R E E N T E R T A I N S GUESTS.
The T. J. Beasley Furniture Company, 243-245
South Main street, Memphis, Tenn., in advertising
the Empire talking machine, says: "When conver-
sation lags, how easy to turn to the E M P I R E for
help in entertaining the guests! It is a fascinating
task to fit your entertainment to your audience—
to sec them smile and muse and grow dreamily
reminiscent under the magic spell of harmonious
sound. You have at your beck and call the wonder-
ful works of the masters of music in infinite variety,
from the high clear notes of the famous prima
donna to the rollicking rhythm of the latest rag-
time song; from the martial tones of the military
band to the lilting melodies of Hawaii. And what
a matchless medium for your entertainment is the
E M P I R E talking machine.
TO BUILD CABINETS.
The Orinoco Furniture Company, Columbus, O.,
has closed a $i,00O,00O contract with the Sonora
Phonograph Company, of New York, to build phono-
graph cabinets. The local company's plant will be
enlarged and its working force increased. William
B. Lincoln is president of the furniture company
and is also president of the Lincoln Chair Company,
where some of the cabinets will be made. Mr. Lin-
coln announced that the chair company plant will
be enlarged soon. Arrangements are being made to
issue $100,000 in preferred stock to add to the cap-
italization of the Orinoco Company, which is capi-
talized at $100,000.
MAKES T H E MASTERTONE.
The Phelps Factories, Columbus, O., produce the
Mastertone phonograph for which exclusive merits
are claimed. "Of all the instruments in the world
today, there is nothing that can compare with the
wonderful Mastertone. It stands as a leader in
musical reproduction, in mechanical and cabinet
construction, in beauty and dependability," states the
company. "We cordially invite you to visit our fac-
tory show rooms and hear the wonderful Master-
tone under any test of comparison you may devise."
AN INFORMAL OPENING.
The informal opening of the new music store of
the Maison Blanche, one of the finest talking ma-
chine houses in New Orleans, La., was a recent event
of much interest in the local trade. The talking ma-
chine department embodies all modern improve-
ments and the homelike note is strongly emphasized
by the furnishings and appointments.
In producing a Musical Instru-
ment that will serve its intended
purpose, great care must be ex-
ercised as to the alliance of good
and useful improvements; you
will then be assured of a per-
manent and profitable business.
The Ellis will transform
your phonograph into a
Musical Instrument.
Ellis Reproducer Co.
Powers BIdg.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
"Hear That Tone"
A MOTTO JUSTIFIED BY
ACHIEVEMENT
The remarkable clarity of tone re-
production which characterizes all
FUEHR & STEMMER
PHONOGRAPHS
is due to the PERFECTED TONE
CHAMBER which, with the in-
genious TONE MODIFIER lifts
these instruments far above other
talking machines.
Write for particulars.
BEAUTIFUL ORIGINAL CABI-
NETS WITH PIANO FINISH.
Make your Talking Machine De-
partment pay.
FUEHR & STEMMER PIANO CO.
Chicago, III.
A Talking Machine
Triumph
Dealers who want Talking Machines that
n e v e r d i s a p p o i n t will find them here.
Manufacturers will be interested in the
new Zifstf Record File.
S*nd for Illustrated
Ask about it.
Circular*.
DETERLING MFG. CO.
TIPTON, IND.
AUTHORIZES STOCK ISSUE.
Stockholders of the Emerson Phonograph Com-
pany have authorized an issue of $500,000 8 per
cent cumulative preferred stock of $100 par value,
redeemable at the option of the directors on thirty
days' notice subsequent to January 1, 1923, at $115
a share.
That excess—saved—is Capital.
Enhanced content © 2008-2009 and presented by MBSI - The Musical Box Society International (www.mbsi.org) and the International Arcade Museum (www.arcade-museum.com).
All Rights Reserved. Digitized from the archives of the MBSI with support from NAMM - The International Music Products Association (www.namm.org).
Additional enhancement, optimization, and distribution by the International Arcade Museum. An extensive collection of Presto can be found online at http://www.arcade-museum.com/library/
58
PRESTO
SHEET MUSIC TRADE
SHOWS NEW LIFE
The "Get Together" Movement Is Taking
Hold of the Song Writers and Publish-
ers, and Dealers May Soon Have
Something to Sell.
By T. ROGERS LYONS.
January 8, 1920.
Mr. Powell explains his idea further in these words:
If both sides come in and get together there will
be a gateway for a starter, and it won't be long be-
fore the gate won't be neded—there won't be any-
thing to have a gate in.
So, everybody—user and writer—get a gait on and
help open that gate.
Send in a card—it won't take but a second—and
say you're ready for the get-together idea.
The more writers we hear from the easier it will
be for us to deliver the goods in the line of real help.
You can fight like sixty for sixty writers—you can
compel attention if you have a thousand with you.
The more users of material we get help from the
better material these users will get.
Shoot out a helping hand one to the other. There
IVPLTST BE a helping hand if we are all to climb or
find a gateway.
Rests with Independents.
So far so good. If the independent writer listens,
and the performer using songs listens, and then
both act, the start is made and the music game is
then open to all. The right songs written, and then
sung, will be publishel either by established publish-
ers or by a new publishing concern, and that song
will pay.
But there is another step in the matter. That is
to keep this movement as well as the songs pro-
duced and published, before the dealer, the dis-
tributor, and that is the reason this matter appears
here.
When the "Get Together" movement starts it
must be a triangle. The producer and publisher one
side; the stage and publicity mediums another,
while the third is the musical instrument dealer of
America.
Sheet Music Men, Watch It.
Wherefore it is suggested that the sheet music
dealer watch this "Get Together" movement and,
when the time comes, act! See to it that the good
song, by an unknown writer, published by an un-
known publisher, popularized by unknown singers,
has its proper chance on your music counter.
If this propaganda really gets started, we will see
again a HIT made a hit by popular discrimination,
and not by machine plugging. This pronouncement
contains matter that all interested in sheet music
should consider.
There is right now a rising sun of opportunity for
any independent writer, or publisher, of good songs.
The signs of the times all point that way. First is
noted the scattering of the publishing houses all over
the United States that was spoken of recently in
Presto.
Next, in viewing the situation, we stumbled onto
the get-together corner of Van B. Powell, and noted
with great pleasure what he said on page 36 of the
Nov. 22nd "Billboard."
He urges the song writer to do better work, and
if not given an opportunity, to "GET TOGETHER"
and make the opportunity. Presto said, March 8,
1914:
The Day of Opportunity.
"Today is the opportunity of the independent pub-
lisher, because organized music publishing, insult-
ing publications, and a controlled stage, are all eco-
nomic mistakes; that the members of the Hit Alley
Trust now recognize, and while Hit Alley is devis-
ing ways and means to get back the power it has
frittered away, this is the time for the Independent
to come to his own. If you ever expect to down
the present popular song trust, get together. To-
day is the opportunity of the independent."
The independent did not come; only timidly ven-
tured to look on and see what Presto could do for
him. Since that time Hit Alley, as a combination,
has gone down under the load mentioned; it has
been scattered. The "Billboard" said in November,
1919:
A Helping Hand.
"GET TOGETHER—write something worth
while." Then, addressing the stage: "GET TO-
GETHER, and use these worthwhile offerings of
the independent and unknown writers." All that is
Smith & Heiby is the lively firm handling talking
necessary is that the writer and user get together. machines in Bucyrus, O.
E. KOPRIWA CO.
When in Chicago visit our showrooms
at the Factory
2220 Ward Street, near Clybourn Ave.
Tel. Lincoln 2726
Bureau Now Established Will Foster Better Re-
lations Between the Republics.
The International Trademark Registration Bu-
reau of the American Republics established at Ha-
vana in pursuance of the convention adopted at the
Fourth Pan-American Conference, in Buenos Aires
in 1910, will unquestionably serve as one of the chief
measures to bring the American Republics into
close relationship with each other, is the belief of
Dr. Mario Diaz Yrizar, director of the International
Trademark Registration Bureau at Havana, Cuba.
The bureau will have as its main object the great-
est kind of protection possible for all products to
which a trademark is given. Due to the efforts of
the United States and Cuban governments, it has
been possible to establish the office entrusted to the
supervision of the Cuban Republic with a view to
carry out the provisions of the convention adopted
at Buenos Aires.
The steps to be taken in getting the mechanism of
registration under way have advanced considerably,
so far as concerns the United States, the Govern-
ment of which has already approved the regulations
of the bureau and made an appropriation of the
quota due from the United States toward the sup-
port of the bureau. The Republic of Honduras is
likewise officially known at Havana to have ap-
proved the regulations and appropriated its quota.
Similar action is expected in other countries, of
which unofficial word has been given indirectly to
the bureau, as in Nicaragua and Panama.
The practical aim of the bureau is to enable mer-
chants and manufacturers to deposit their trade
marks in the countries which constitute the Pan-
American Union, and in a simple and economical
way to secure extension through the International
Bureau at Havana of the protection given at home.
With the application for such extension of trade-
mark protection will go a money order of $50, and
an electrotype of the design of the mark. The
patent office at Washington, for example, will trans-
Quality—Supremacy—EBE—New York
THE ORIGINAL RELIABLE
ARTISTIC CARVINGS
for PIANO and PHONOGRAPH
Manufacturers
HIGH-GRADE CARVED
NOVELTIES
Lamps, Wall Brackets, Book Ends,
Pedestals, etc.
TO SAFEGUARD TRADE-
MARKS IN SOUTH AMERICA
RIAINO
(STRICTLY HIGH GRADE)
Snare Sellers.
Certain Satisfaction
Thirty years of satisfactory service in American homes.
QBNERAL OPFICES AND FACTORY
WEBD and DAYTON STREETS
KROEGER
BRINKERHOFF
(Established 1S32)
Player-Pianos and Pianos
Hi* Lin* That Sells Easily and Satisfies Always
BRINKERtlOFF PIANO CO. m S £ X £ " CHICAGO
BAUER PIANOS
JULIUS BAUER © COMPANY
Office a n d Warerooma
Factory
1335 Altgeld Street. CHICAGO
Old Number. 244 Wabash Ave.
New Number. 305 S. Wabash Avo.
Leins Piano Company
Makers of Pianos That Are Leaders
in Any Reliable Store
NEW FACTORY. 304 W. 42nd St.. NEW YORK
1
The name alone is enough to suggest to dealers the Best
Artistic and Commercial Values.
The New Style Players Are Finest Yet. If you can
get the Agency you ought to have it.
KROEGER PIANO CO. '
NEW YORK, N. Y.
and
STANFORD. CONM,
TWO TRADE WINNERS
HARTFORD
I CHURCHILL
If you want Good Goods at Right Prices, here ars two
that will meet your requirements—Players and Pianos.
RELIABLE — FINE TONE — BEAUTIFUL
Made By
HARTFORD PIANO COMPANY
1223-1227 MILLER STREET, CHICAGO
Enhanced content © 2008-2009 and presented by MBSI - The Musical Box Society International (www.mbsi.org) and the International Arcade Museum (www.arcade-museum.com).
All Rights Reserved. Digitized from the archives of the MBSI with support from NAMM - The International Music Products Association (www.namm.org).
Additional enhancement, optimization, and distribution by the International Arcade Museum. An extensive collection of Presto can be found online at http://www.arcade-museum.com/library/

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