Presto

Issue: 1920 1750

25
RESTO
February 5, 1920.
THE
THE ELLIS
TALKING MACHINE
Made to Fit Any Phonograph
News of the Week in the Phonograph Field
SERVICE AND SERVICE
"Service" has been made the slogan of a
great many talking machine houses. It is a
word representing a purpose; the desire and
ability of the houses to give to the customers
something more than a receipt for the price of
the goods sold. The slogan indicates that
the talking machine dealers value the good-
will of the public, and shows the purpose of
retaining trade and making customers feel
they are getting a little bit more than they
actually contract to pay for.
The theory of service is an excellent one,
but in reducing it to practice business sense
should be the guide. There must be a well
defined limitation to generosity. Let ten talk-
ing machine dealers talk about service and
you will hear ten versions of the meaning of
the word and its application. That is because
the question of service has not received the at-
tention it merits. One man's service may be
salutary to the trade and another's spoil an
otherwise good field of prospects. The efforts
in many places to standardize service is an
acknowledgment of this truth. Service in-
volves every action of the dealers, every proc-
ess in the talking machine and record deals.
Plainly its importance is paramount.
But while there is service the customers can
legitimately demand and which they naturally
expect, there also is service that in a way ex-
presses the generosity of the dealers. The
latter costs money and takes time and so cuts
into the legitimate profits. Service, sensibly
administered, is an excellent institution in any
house, but too much service involving as it
must, inadequate charges or no charges at all,
represent a leak that can develop into a very
substantial loss. It is well that the question
of service interests the talking machine dealers
in many cities, and dealers everywhere should
follow their example.
WHEN FRIEND EDITOR CALLS
Advertising is taking some of the profits
of today to build up profits for tomorrow.
So when the local editor comes around to sell
you space in the newspaper that all the town
reads, don't conceive the idea that the price
of the service you buy is a handout. It is
generally very poor advertising space that is
not worth the rates charged for it.
It is possible that you have more orders
for talking machines than you can fill just
now. In the opinion of the tyro in business
there is no necessity for advertising in such
a condition. The question, "Why advertise
when I cannot fill orders for talking machines
already sold?" is about as logical as, "Why
pay life insurance when I am perfectly
healthy?" Remember, advertising is primarily
business insurance—making sure of sales when
all your standing orders are filled.
The smallest dealer can get an illuminating
lesson from the action of many big adver-
tisers in various lines. Many of these adver-
tisers are big manufacturers who are away
behind in orders and yet advertise more gen-
erally, lavishly and elaborately than ever be-
fore. Because they are far-seeing they are
taking a generous share of their profits and
putting them into advertising insurance. They
are protecting themselves against the time
when production will have caught up with the
demand and they must again go into the
market with a hustle.
A good thing for the talking machine dealer
to remember is that nothing forces action on
the part of a hesitant prospect like a well-
conceived advertisement. But another thing
worth remembering is that there is nothing
more quickly forgotten than advertising. Let
the greatest of the national advertisers stop
advertising for six months and it will find
itself forgotten by the buying public.
The talking machine dealer may be an ex-
cellent citizen and a splendid fellow person-
ally, but the value of his name in business lies
in its being advertised in connection with the
commodity he sells. Advertised, too, to such
an extent that it is constantly in the minds of
those who are expected to buy one of his
machines or continuous supplies of his records.
It is only by advertising persistently that
name value can be kept alive. When Friend
Editor urges you to continue or even increase
your space appropriation, remember he has the
means to keep the market in a receptive mood
for future purchases. The editor is more than
a business creator for the present; he insures
you for the future.
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 Etas will transform
your phonograph into a
Musical Instrument.
Ellis Reproducer Co.
Powers Bldg.
"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.
BENEFITS OF ASSOCIATION
Having Become Affiliated with the N. A. of M. M.
the Talking Machine Men Tell Why.
Since the Talking Machine Men, Inc., of which E.
G. Brown of Bayonne, N. J., is president, became a
part of the Music Industries Chamber of Commerce,
its officers have been making renewed efforts to
increase interest and membership. Following is the
latest letter by Mr. Brown to the talking machine
trade:
The many advantages of a membership in our
Association have already been explained to you;
but a recapitulation will not be amiss, viz.:
Mutual protection against trade abuses;
The securing of proper and beneficial laws, and
especially the elimination of detrimental legislation;
The promotion and dissemination of useful ideas,
forms, etc., among our members;
By co-operation and the power of organization
secure many needed reforms in our business.
These and many other advantages are to be had
by membership in our body.
I have secured the applications of a goodly num-
ber of New Jersey merchants and would greatly
appreciate your application also.
HANDSOME SYRACUSE WAREROOMS.
The Galli-Curci room in the Clark Music Com-
pany's building, 416 South Salina street, Syracuse,
N. Y., is where the most complete assortment of
phonographs in the city is displayed. Perfection in
the methods of demonstration is embodied in the
warernoms where the Victrola, Edison Diamond
disc, Sonora, Aeolian Vocation and Pathe machines
are exhibited by the Clark Music Company. The
rooms of the building are named for songbirds and
great musicians.
FIRE IN CABINET FACTORY.
Fire starting from spontaneous combustion in
the rubbing room of the Cardinal Cabinet Company
at Wabash, Ind., caused a fire loss of about $50, but
the flames started an automatic sprinkling system
and before the water could be turned off a con-
siderable number of phonograph cabinets were
ruined.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
FUEHR & STEMMER PIANO CO.
Chicago, 111.
"
Guesswork Won't Do"
—The ACME allows test with
le drag of the needle throughout
the length of the
record.
Acme Speed Indicator
—is precision made.
—clears the tone arm.
—1 o c a t e s
motor
troubles.
registers 78 and 80
revolutions.
Made by
The Acme Engineering & Mfe. Co.
1622 Fulton St.
:
:
:
:
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/
26
PRESTO
with the instrument, but right there is danger, for,
if no new records are had everybody will soon get
tired of the same selections and vote a phonograph
a nuisance and out of date. Remember that some
one has very truly said: "Your phonograph is as
new and as interesting as your newest records."
So, then, if phonograph owners want to cash in
on your dividends of happiness on the investment
in a phonograph, new records must be bought often.
Choose records in groups of five or six at a time.
One new record at a time is soon played to death.
By buying several at a time, the interest is divided
and maintained and the whole family enjoy it. No
one would go to the same concert every night—
why play the same records every night?
Record catalogues and monthly lists are free for
the asking. Use the catalogue and make up a weekly
list of the records.
HOW TO BUY RECORDS
Some Lines by Which Dealers May Add to Their
Sales.
There are thousands of new phonograph owners
who are confronted with the problem of choosing
new records. The dealers are often asked how to
make selections. Here are a few words of advice
and suggestion which may help.
Tn the first place, all phonograph owners must
remember that it's the records which make the
music. Without records the talking machine will
make about as much music as your refrigerator or
your sideboard. Of course, a supply of records went
THE WONDERFUL
"FAIRY" Phonograph Lamp
NEW "MARIK" PHONOGRAPH.
The Win. Marik Mfg. Co. of Sturgeon Bay, Wis.,
an old established woodworking concern of north-
eastern Wisconsin, has been developing a phono-
graph for the past year and has now begun manu-
facture upon a quantity scale. For the present the
output will be marketed direct to the retail trade,
largely in eastern Wisconsin, but eventually it is
intended to establish outlets through the jobbing
trade. The new "Marik" phonograph is made in all
the processes from raw lumber to the finished ma-
chine ready for the home. For several years the
factory has been making cabinets for other manu-
facturers.
Truly a Work of Art. Scientifically Constructed
Sale* Unprecedented. Secure Agency Now.
T h e greatest
practical nov-
elty offered to
the Phonograph
trade—
The
"FAIRY"
Phonograph
Lamp
"looks" and
" s p e a k s" for
itself. In ap-
pearance luxur-
ious, It achieves
its g r e a t e s t
triumph in its
tone.
A newly pat-
ented s o u n d
amplifying
chamber, radi-
cally differing
from the con-
ventional de-
signs, gives a
true m e l l o w
tone of volume
equalling that
of most ex-
pensive instru-
ments.
Electrically operated and equipped with a specially
designed invisible switch, regulator and tone modifier.
Let us tell how sales of the "FAIRY" have re-
quired our maximum output ever since its appear-
ance in 1918.
SEARCHES FOR VANISHED VOICE
Son of Jessie Bartlett Davis Seeks Records of
Mother's Singing.
Will J. Davis, Jr., of Chicago, is searching for
"the voice that is still," the voice of his mother, Jes-
sie Bartlett Davis, who sang some of her most beau-
tiful songs into the phonograph twenty-five years
ago.
"Since I made my appeal for the old records," he
said today, "I have received a number of letters that
look promising. Friends are searching their attics
for them, End I feel sure a few will be found. I am
willing to pay almost any price within reason for
them.
"I once had all my mother's records—'Genevieve,'
'O, Promise Me,' 'Robin Hood' and others, but after
her death I felt as if I couldn't listen to them again,
and so I threw them into the furnace.
"Now I have four children of my own, all musi-
cally inclined, and I would like them to know the
sound of their grandmother's voice. The records
Avere made by the Columbia Gramaphone company,
which was absorbed by the Victor company, and
were reproduced on a machine the duplicate of that
on the Victor trademark with the little dog.
The William A. Waggoner Talking Machine Com-
pany, Fort Wayne, Ind.; capital, $100,000; talking
machines. Directors, William A. Waggoner, John
C. Waggoner. George Beuchel, J. R. Pulver.
WYMAN, BABB NEW STORE.
Wyman, Babb & Company, 604 Republic building,
are opening a new store this week in Chicago
Heights, 111. The location is at 25 Illinois street on
the best corner in town in a fine new brick building.
It is the best commercial building in the city of Chi-
cago Heights. The population of the town is about
24,000. Chicago Heights is one of the noted steel
manufacturing cities of the Chicago suburban group,
and just now its inhabitants have more money to
spend than they ever had before, which shows the
excellent judgment of Wyman, Babb & Company in
locating one of their branch stores there.
DETERLINQ
Talking Machines
Challenge Comparison in
every point from cabinets to
tonal results.
Prices attractive
goods. Write us.
CHICAGO, ILL.
Dealers who do not sell
TONOFONE
ACME SOUND AMPLIFIER
deny to their customers
their undeniable right to
the full enjoyment of
the phonograph and
records which they sell
them.
Enables the repair man to locale the precise point of origin of unnecessary
noise in the motor without lost of time or useless disorganization of the
mechanism which results from guess /ng or sense of hearing alone.
&cme engineering & JfflanufacturingCo.
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS
METAL MOTOR BOARD SUPPORTS
PLAYS ALL RECORDS ON ANY PHONOGRAPH
AND
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS
-^^One
Needle Plays as many as 50 Records
Marvelous Tones
Wonderful Enunciation
Gets every tone without scratch or squeak—
will not injure finest record.
THE REPAIRMAN'S STETHOSCOPE
Everybody's Talking About It!
Positively no other is like it—it has set a new
standard.
TALKING MACHINE SPECIALTIES
&cme Engineering & JWanufacturingCo.
1622 FULTON STREET
EVERY DEALER NEEDS TONOFONE
It helps to sell machines and records because it
plays them better.
EVERY DEALER CAN GET THEM
Indicates Motor Waver
CLEARS THE T0NEARM
And
A STE4DY MOTOR
MEANS
GOOD REPRODUCTION
Packed 4 in a box to retail at 10c; 100 boxes in a
display carton costs the dealer $6.00 net.
Write for full particulars about advertising helps and the name of the
nearest distributor.
Makes Possible a Motor Test
with the
Drag of the Needle
R. C. WADE CO.
Throughout
The Length of the Record
110 South Wabash Avenue
DETECTS and LOCATES DEFECTS
geme engineering & jWanufacturing Co.
1622 FULTON STREET
fine
TIPTON, IND.
MAKES EVERY PART OF MOTOR ACCESSIBLE
1622 FULTON STREET
for
Deterling Mfg. Co., Inc.
The Universal Talking Machine Company, Rock-
ville, TIL, is scheduled to expend $400 in improve-
ments at 225 South Church street.
ENDLESS-GRAPH MANUFACTURING COMPANY
4200-02 West Adam* Street
February 5, 1920.
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS
I
-
-
CHICAGO
If you want a Salesman or Workers in
any branch of the Business: if you want
a Factory, try a Want Ad and get it.,
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/

Download Page 25: PDF File | Image

Download Page 26 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.