Presto

Issue: 1922 1898

19
PRESTO
December 9, 1922.
SMALL GOODS AND SUPPLIES
submitted, will, through their representatives on the
consulting committees to the Central Committee on
Lumber Standards, indicate their approval or make
suggestions looking to the future progress of the
Piano and Phonograph Manufacturing Industries
work.
Represented on Important National Committee.
After the central committee and its advisory staff,
The Music Industries Chamber of Commerce, the the consulting committee, have collected and analyzed
Association of Wood Using Industries, of which all information concerning standardization and simpli-
purchasing department heads in many piano and fication of sizes, grades and names of lumber prod-
phonograph manufacturing industries, the National ucts, its findings will be submitted to the producers,
Lumber. Manufacturers Association, the National distributors and consumers of lumber through their
various associations.
Lumber Association and the American Society for
Testing Materials are all represented on the Central
Finally there will be arranged a national conference
Committee on Lumber Standards which is prosecut- of accredited representatives of all lumber and other
ing the work of introducing standardization of names, interests at Washington to take final action and adopt
grades and sizes throughout the lumber industry, and specific practices in all of these fields, which may
which will meet jointly in Chicago December 15 with have the support of the Department of Agriculture
the consulting committee of lumber technicians and
through the Forest Service, and of the Department
experts.
of Commerce."
The various associations and others interested,
after giving close study to the suggestions already
PORTABLE RECORD OUTFIT.
Making records on the one-night or one-week
stands is the effective advertising stunt of Signor
Friscoe, the xylophone artist, whose records made for
several record producing companies are considered
good sellers. Provided with a recording machine,
he demonstrates for his audiences how phonograph
records are made, and in so doing records the voices,
singing, or recitation and instrumental selections
made by members of the audience on the occasion.
Juvenile Parade Drum
Signor Friscoe carries with him his own recording
Retails For
machine and this highly diversified performance has
been making a great hit wherever he has appeared.
STANDARD COMMITTEE MEETS
The American Favorite
c/udwia
oo
RADIO CLUB IN ARGENTINA.
Argentina has just organized a radio association in
the city of Rosaria, with forty members according to
a report from Consul Bonney, to the department of
commerce. The organization intends to obtain board
of trade quotations from Buenos Aires by radio. Ex-
perimental receiving radio sets are made in Rosaria
by C. E. Smith, of Smith & Kirkwood, and sell for
about $38, but difficulty is anticipated, due to the
fact that the radio patents are controlled by a com-
pany in Buenos Aires, and patent interference is an-
ticipated.
OUR PHONOGRAPHS IN ENGLAND.
American phonographs and records occupy a prom-
inent place in the Manchester market, although the
import duty and the prevailing adverse rate of ex-
change is having a marked effect upon sales, accord-
ing to Consul Ross E. Holaday, Manchester, Eng-
land.
Send for Circular and Prices. Dealers write.
Ludwig & Ludwig
Drum Makers to the Profession
1611 No. Lincoln St.
Chicago, 111.
THE CELEBRATED
President of American Piano Supply Co. Declines
Re-election as Head of Chamber of Commerce.
John T. Chidsey, president and treasurer of the
American Piano Supply Co., New York, and who for
the past year has been president of the Bristol Cham-
ber of Commerce, Bristol, Conn., recently declined
the honor of re-election to the latter office on account
of the demands of his own business affairs. At the
election last week he was succeeded by Frederick G.
Hughes, vice-president of the New Departure Mfg.
Co.
The American Piano Supply Co., is well represet-
ed on the Bristol Chamber of Commerce, Two direc-
tors of the supply company are also directors of the
Bristol chamber. They are Charles T. Treadway,
president of the Bristol National Bank and vice-presi-
dent of the Horton Mfg. Co., and Fuller F. Barnes,
treasurer and general manager of the Wallace-Barnes
Co.
IMPORTED PHONOGRAPHS.
The recent statistics from the Bureau of Commerce
give a few surprising facts about the importation of
talking machines into the United States. Last year
this country imported talking machines to the amount
of $613,143. Of this amount Germany sent machines
to the value of $348,953. Switzerland sent $131,969
worth and twenty-seven other countries sent their
share.
WILSON DRUMS
AND
ACCESSORIES
The Recognized Standard
Drums of distinctive design to retail at a
very moderate price. Each is the fin-
ished result of expert craftsmen work-
ing towards an ideal. Piano dealers find
that the addition of WILSON products
means new customers, greater profits and
more sales.
Send for New 96 Page Catalog
WILSON BROS. MFG. CO.
Makers of Fine Drums and Accessories
218-20-22 N. May St.
CHICAGO, ILL.
TRUCKS
(Felten & Guillmum*}
IMPORTED
MUSIC WIRE
That Are Labor Savers
in Black, Red and Green
Label Brands is
Your equipment is not complete without our TRUCKS for handling
Pianos and Talking Machines.
UNEXCELLED
The "P & G" Blue Label Brand is
again being used by Rudolph C.
Koch in the manufacture of the
Reinwarth Covered Base Strings.
Sill Trucks and End Trucks
for Pianos
HAMMACHER, SCHLEMMER & CO.
PIANO and PLAYER, HARDWARE, FELTS and TOOLS
NEW YORK, SINCE 1848
J. T. CHIDSEY WAIVES HONOR
With the LEA TALKING MACHINE TRUCK, one man can
handle the Edison Chippendale, Victor No. 17, Cheney No. 6 Queen
Anne, and other large makes, from show-room to any apartment
floor.
4th Ave. and 13th St.
Ask for Circular
SSSnuTf
• " wi " •"
JULIUS
MADE ONLY BY
BREGKWOLDT & CO. § 3 U * b
r
"
SELF-LIFTING PIANO TRUCK CO.
Manufacturers of
FINDLAY, OHIO
Piano Backs. Boards, Bridges, Bars.
Traplevers and Mouldings
THE
SOLE AGENTS FOR RUDOLF G9ESE WIRE
WESTERN REPRESENTATIVE:
" 1. BI^C^HOIDr, Pres.
Cbicodo, UL
W. A. BEECKWOtDT, Sec. &
CO
Manufacturers of High Oracle
fe
CENTRAL STJSEL a WIRE CO..
119-137 N. Peorla Street.
O S. KELLY
,
PIANO 'PLATES
SPRINGFIELD
-
-
OHIO
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/
20
December 9, 1922.
PRESTO
AMERICAN
PIANO SUPPLY
COMPANY
Felts, Cloths, Hammers,Punchings,
Music Wire, Tuning Pins, Player
Parts, Hinges, Casters
A FULL LINE OF MATERIALS for PIANOS and ORGAN
When in Need of
SUPPLIES
Communicate with Us
American Piano Supply Co.
110-112 E. 13th St.
New York
SCHAFF
Piano String Co.
Manufacturers of
MEANING OF CENSUS FIGURES
Near-Sighted Economists Are Directed by Daily
Newspaper to Observe True Meaning.
"The census shows that about $98,000,000 worth
of talking machines and records were manufactured
BUSH & LANE PHONOGRAPH.
in America last year, against about $159,000,000 in
1919," says the Elmira Advertiser, Elmira, N. Y.,
The T, W. Hopkins Music Co., Danville, 111., is
which comments thus on the statistical fact:
developing a big business in the Bush & Lane phono-
"Near-sighted economists are seizing on these fig- graph, made by the Bush & Lane Piano Co., Holland,
ures and talking about 'tremendous decline in phono- Mich. In advertising the machine this week the com-
graph production.'
pany says: "What you have a right to expect in the
''The decline, you'll notice, is revealed only in way of mellow, sweet tones, of mechanical perfection
money, reflecting lower prices. In actual number of and of endurance are exactly what you receive in the
phonographs and records, there was a big gain. It's Bush & Lane—and more. Its superfine design and
hard to get the price hoax out of the brain and think construction of musical parts properly convey the
of economics in terms of actual commodities."
sound-waves from record to you. The tone values
are emplified and delivered without the mingling of
mechanical noises. We're anxious to have you hear
ADVERTISING PHONOGRAPHS
this worthy instrument."
Prominent Publicity Man in the Talking Machine
Field Contributes Wise Words to Discussion.
The advertising contest for music merchants con-
ducted by the Music Industries Chamber of Com-
merce, has elicited many interesting expressions from
prominent men in all phases of the music trade. A.
L. Walsh, advertising manager for the phonograph
division of Thomas. A. Edison, Inc., in a recent let-
ter said that there is urgent need at this time for
the elevation of advertising to a higher plane when
the music industry is emerging from a period of
depression.
Mr. Walsh said the time has passed when the
advertising of the small dealer can be profitable if
conducted in a hit or miss fashion. He condemned
the "drag 'em in" brand of advertising and said even
the smallest dealer should build for permanency in
his printed publicity. Mr. Walsh cited the experi-
ences of a music publishing house which discovered
hundreds of homes in various parts of the country
where the family phonograph hadn't been played
for three months.
"Better advertising and concerted effort by all
music merchandise would change all that," he said.
"Let's see better advertising in the talking machine
trade—advertising that doesn't start the public talk-
ing about the other fellow's defects but about your
virtues."
Piano Bass Strings
2009-2021 CLYBOURN AVENUE
Corner Lewis Street
CHICAGO
PERFECT PUNCHINGS
AT
C.F. GOEPEUCo
T
137 E A S T I3 -* ST.
N E.W YORK.
properly formulated to conform production and con-
sumption to each other, would effect an annual sav-
ing of hardwood timber equal to 500,000,000 feet of
sawn lumber, is it not worth while to get the answer
to any objection that can be urged against the accom-
plishment of the program to which the Hardwood
Manufacturers' Institute is committed?
RECORDING MANAGER RESIGNS.
T. P. Radcliff, manager of the recording studios of
the Aeolian Co., New York, for the past two ye&rs,
has resigned to enter the advertising field. Mr. Rad-
cliff will go to Europe to develop the business in
France and England of Elizabeth Arden, health and
beauty specialist, 673 Fifth avenue, whose business is
of international size. He is well known in the phono-
graph trade through his connection with the educa-
tional department of the Victor Talking Machine
Co. for over seven years.
GOOD DRUM SALES.
The all metal $10 drum which the Wilson Bros.
Mfg. Co., Chicago, recently placed on the market,
is showing steadily increasing effects. One dealer
has just sent in a rush order for six of these drums,
exactly one month after the first sample was sent
to him. From Canada, there is also a big demand
for these drums, and for advertising matter concern-
ing them.
BUY RECORD FACTORY.
Talking machine records will be manufactured in
Jersey City, N. J., by the Cameo Record Manufac-
turing Co., which recently took over the plant for-
merly operated by the Brunswick-Balke-Collender Co.
The Cameo Record Mfg. Co., has a record factory in
Bridgeport, Conn., which will continue in use.
BOOKLET ON HARDWOOD
Waste Elimination in the Consumption of the Prod-
uct Is Little.
A new booklet issued by the Hardwood Manufac-
turers' Institute is intended for users of hardwood
lumber as well as producers. "Waste Elimination in
the Consumption of Hardwood Lumber" is the title
of the booklet, which is a closely reasoned argument
for a new system of grading and inspection of hard-
wood lumber on the basis of consumers' needs as de-
termined by a careful study of their operations. As-
sertions that the old and present method of grading
is wasteful and inadequate to meet modern conditions
of both production and utilization are supported by
many concrete examples, two of the most striking of
which are pages of drawings of typical hardwood
boards, graded under the prevailing system, showing
the too great diversities of boards admissible under
one and the same grade.
In the preface the object of the booklets aie ex-
plained and this is said: "If, as is asserted by those
informed, the loss and waste in the lumber industry
in the United States is $1,000,000,000 per year and
much of this is due to the lack of scientific utilization
from the timber harvest through manufacturing
processes. If, as is estimated by some of the most
capable and practical men in the industry, as well as
by scientific students, the more efficient production
and more complete utilization of lumber, which
would result from standardization of grade rules
Comstock, Cheney & Co.
Ivory Cutter* ind Manufacturers
Established 1867
Strauch Bros.
All Well-posted Piano Dealers, Sales-
men, and the Piano Buying Public
recognize the value of this name on a
Piano Action,
For more than 55 years it has been associ-
ated with the best products of the Piano
industry. It has always represented
Quality and Merit
When a Piano Action bears the name of
Strauch Bros, it is an additional guarantee
of the quality of the instrument containing it.
STRAUCH BROS.,Inc.
Piano Action*, Hammers and Repairs
327 to 347 Walnut Ave., at 141»t Street
NEW YORK
WESSELL, NICKEL & GROSS
Manufacturers of
Piano Keys, Actions m Hammers
i V O R Y A N D COMPOSITION-COVERED ORQAN KEYS
The onlj Comfiny Furnishing the Keys, Actions, Hammers and Brackets Complete
ffelegraph and R. R. Station: Essex, Conn.
x
Office and Factories: Ivory ton, Conn-
PIANO ACTIONS
HIGHEST GRADE
ONE GRADE ONLY
FACTORIES:
We«t Forty-Fifth Street, Tenth Avenue and WMI
Forty-Sixth Street.
OFFICE:
457 Wait 45th Street
NEW YORK
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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