Presto

Issue: 1920 1765

PREiTO
May 22, 1920.
25
AT the very beginning, we desire it to be understood that while
jCX Eliphalet Remington and his son Philo E. Remington, officers of the
Remington Phonograph Corporation, are of the original Remington
family, makers of the Remington fire-arms and typewriters, they are not at present
connected with any of the other Remington industries.
The Remington Phonograph Corporation has an authorized capital stock of
$1,000,000, with no bonds or preferred stock. The company will manufacture
a phonograph of the highest possible quality, worthy of the illustrious name
REMINGTON.
The Remington Reproducer is Entirely New in Principle
The Remington Phonograph follows the invention of a reproducer by a well-
known telephone expert, who has succeeded in developing a sound box, which,
it has been demonstrated time and again, improves the tone of any phonograph
by at least 25 per cent. The company has had numerous offers to induce it to
market the reproducer separately but is fully convinced of a satisfactory demand
for a completed instrument possessing phonograph qualities superior to anything yet
offered to the public. These qualities are achieved through the Remington Repro_
ducer and other exclusive patented features owned and controlled by the corporation^
The corporation will confine itself to the manufacture of phonographs and con-
centrate its efforts on the handling of this single article and its parts and appur-
tenances. It does not contemplate engaging in the making of pianos, cabinets
or other furniture.
Briefly, the Remington Reproducer is made so as to obtain the freest vibration of
the diaphram, thereby making possible the reproduction of many of the soft tones
which are too often lost by reproducers in general use today.
Officers and Directors
The officers and directoiS of the company are all business men experienced in conducting enter-
prises of size and consequence. They are: Philo E. Remington, president; James S. Holmes,
vice-president; and Marc B. Thomas, secretary-treasurer. E. Remington, I lion, IN. Y.; Hairy
F. Sieber, Philadelphia; L. C. Kendall, New York; Robert W. Dunlap, Baltimore and G. Henry
Stetson, Philadelphia, are the directors.
Location of Plant
The plant will be located in Ilion, N. Y., the home of Remington industries for over 100 years.
Management
The business will be under the general management of
James S. Holmes, vice-president of the company, who
has been connected during the past twenty years with
several of the laigest piano companies in the industry.
General Offices: 1 666-1 666 Broadway, New York
Philo E. Remington,
President
James S. Holmes,
Vice-Prcsident and General Manager
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/
May 22, 1920.
26
BRIEF BITS OF LATE NEWS
(Continued from page 24.)
Standard Phonograph Motors, Inc. At the recent
meeting at which the change was effected new offi-
cers were elected.
The Widdicomb phonograph has been added to
the line of the music department of the J. L. Hud-
son Co., Detroit.
Al. Waltamath, after an absence of a year and a
half with the U. S. Army abroad, has returned to
the phonograph department of the J. W. Brown
Piano Co., Canton, O.
D. Dcs Foldes is manager of the Grafonola Shop,
Norfolk, Va.
Achor & Weldon handle talking machines and
records in a new store recently opened at Modesto,
California.
The Baas Music Shop, Rock Island, 111., will move
to a new location about the end of August.
William A. Carey has opened a new store on Mon-
roe avenue, Rochester, N. Y.
C. R. Ross is manager of the Portland Phono-
graph Co., Portland, Ore., which handles the Puritan
phonograph.
The Reed-Klapp Phonograph Co., Middleton, O.,
held a formal opening of its new store recently.
The Talking Machine Co., Victor retailers in
Philadelphia, has moved its central store and offices
from 143 South Broad s-treet to 1225 Chestnut street.
W. V. Davies, heretofore partner of R. T. Shelly
in the music business in Marshalltown, la., has sold
"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.
his interest to his former partner and retires from
the business.
Roy Shirlein has bought a half interest in the A.
B. Coover Talking Machine Company on Columbia
street, Union City, Ind.
C. R. Hays has opened a music department in the
Dankworth Pharmacy on Belmont street, Bellaire,
Ohio.
Miss Florence Roman will manage the Limbeck
& Nelson music store, Aunawan, 111., as soon as the
branch is opened.
The store formerly occupied by the Keystone
Store, Bellefonte, Pa., is now occupied by the Gheen
Music Co.
Herman Spitz, agent for a talking machine com-
pany, has taken an option to purchase the store
property of Mrs. Julia Smith, at Main and. Spring
streets, Sag Harbor, N. Y.
The W. F. Duker Company, Quincy, 111., has pur-
chased the Columbia Graphonola agency from the
Leowenstein Music Company.
SEATTLE MANAGER RESIGNS.
Frank Dorian, of the Seattle branch of the Colum-
bia Graphophone Company, has retired from busi-
ness. After spending a few months in California he
will go to New York, where he will make his home.
He and C. V. H. Jones were Portland visitors dur-
ing the week. Mr. Jones has resigned his position
with the Columbia company. He was wholesale
representative of the Seattle territory. Mr. Jones will
accompany Mr. Dorian to California and will make
his home there and go into a different line of busi-
ness. Mr. Ackley, the new manager of the Colum-
bia company, has not yet arrived, and until his ar-
rival, George Brown, assistant manager, is in charge.
ELDREDGE R. JOHNSON'S GIFT.
Elrlredge R. Johnson, president of the Victor
Talking Machine Company, Camden, N. J., has given
$50,000, and F. Wayland Ayer $25,000 toward the
Camden Y. W. C. A. fund. Mr. Johnson's gift is
conditioned that sufficient funds are raised to go ahead
substantially with the building project. The fund
now stands at $122,000. Business girls were gather-
ing coins and bills at the ferries last week to help
build the new home.
NEW SALES MANAGER.
C. L. Johnson is the new sales manager of the
Blackmail Talking Machine Co., New York, which
handles the Victor line in a wholesale way. Mr.
Johnson was recently with Bristol-Barber, New
York, and previous to that was manager of the
talking machine department for Steger & Sons,
branch in Newark, N. J.
BOOKLET TELLS
UNIQUE STORY
Dainty Publication in Which the Remarkable
Powers of the Apollo-Phone Are Told
in Entertaining Style and
Artistic Illustrations.
An unusually artistic and effective booklet has ap-
peared in which some of the advanced attainments
of the Apollo-Phone are described in attractive terms.
The booklet is entitled "An Epoch Making Instru-
ment," and it is the work of the publicity depart-
ment of The Apollo Piano Co., of DeKalb, 111. Typo-
graphically the publication is so attractive as to fit
the facts of which it treats. It is printed, in clear
type, with a blue border in which the face of the
mythologic god after whom the Apollo is named
forms a conspicuous part. But, of course, it is what
the booklet says that is the chief interest. The in-
troductory page is as follows:
An Epoch Making Instrument.
For years the world of music lovers has dreamed
of the perfect union of the player piano and phono-
graph. It dreamed of an instrument that would not
only bring to the home the great opera singers, the
great violinists and all masters of the musical art,
but would give to all the wonderful privilege of ac-
companying, and thus sharing in the performance of
the great artists.
Many experiments were attempted by other piano
manufacturers, but it remained for the manufactur-
ers of the Apollo to achieve the ideal in the Apollo-
Phone.
It is significant, that the genius of the organization
which created the metronome motor, the transposing
device—the dynaline and other notable inventions
that have made the player piano a musically artistic
instrument, was responsible for this achievement
which has broadened the influence of music.
Unlimited Possibilities.
Following that succinct setting forth of facts fa-
miliar to the trade, but still new to very many who
long to own such an instrument as the Apollo-Phone,
are four pages in which are told the "Unlimited Pos-
sibilities of the Apollo-Phone" as a player-piano, as
a phonograph and as a "straight" or manual piano.
There is also stress put upon the unique feature of
the instrument by which "the harmonious union of
the phonograph and the highly artistic player-piano
opens up new fields of delight to all who love music."
This chapter concludes with the suggestive and
desire-impelling statement that the Apollo-Phone is
PRESTO
Dealers who do not sell
Buyers' Guide
TONOFONE
deny to their customers
their undeniable right to
the full enjoyment of
the phonograph and
records which they sell
them.
THE WONDERFUL
"FAIRY" Phonograph Lamp
Truly a Work of Art. Scientifically
Contracted
Sale* Unprecedented. Secure Agency Now.
T h e greatest
practical nov-
elty offered to
the Phonograph
trade—
Indispensable to
dealers and salesmen
The
PLAYS ALL RECORDS ON ANY PHONOGRAPH
FAIRY"
Phonograph
Lamp
" l o o k s" a n d
" 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 moBt 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.
ENDLESS-GRAPH MANUFACTURING COMPANY
4200-02 West Adam* Street
CHICAGO, ILL.
One Needle Plays as many as 50 Records^
It is a reliable book of ref-
erence in determining
the
origin, make and standing of
any instrument.
The Presto
Buyers' Guide is filled with
the information which adds
strength
to
a
salesman's
statement and removes all
doubt of his sensible claims
for the goods he sells.
Marvelous Tones
Wonderful Enunciation
Gets every tone without scratch or squeak—
will not injure finest recoid.
Everybody's Talking About It!
Positively no other is like it—it has set a new
standard.
EVERY DEALER NEEDS TONOFONE
It helps to sell machines and records because it
plays them better.
EVERY DEALER CAN GET THEM
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 (he name of the
nearest distributor.
Price: 50 Cents
R. C. WADE CO.
110 South Wabash Avenue
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/

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.