Presto

Issue: 1923 1902

54
PRESTO
THE WILSON GUARANTEE
January 6, 1923.
handle the Edison Chippendale, Victor No. 17,
Cheney No. 6 and other large makes from showroom
to any apartment floor.
It Is Accepted by a Host of Professionals and Re-
liable Dealers Everywhere.
The drums and drummers' supplies manufactured
by the Wilson Bros. Mfg. Co., 210 to 222 N. May
street, Chicago, are made for the profession, but are
sold through the dealers. It is a merchandising fact New and Old Concerns Secure Charters in Various
Places.
well known to the trade and profession. In fact,
"Order through your dealer" is a Wilson Bros. Mfg.
Herbert Piano Co., Bronx, New York; $50,000; H.
Co. phrase well known and generally obeyed by the T. and W. C. and J. D. Ohlsen, Sr,, 7528 Morris ave-
men in the bands and orchestras. Bandsmen realize nue, Bronx.
the advantages of having a reliable dealer as inter-
A merger announcement is: Bloomingdale Piano
mediary. The drum manufacturer, the dealer and the Company, Arcade Realty Company and Walters
ultimate consumer find equal satisfaction in the ar- Piano Company, Manhattan, with Bloomingdale
rangement that the slogan suggests. Obeying "Order Bros.
through your dealer" always has pleasurable results.
The Mogul Electric Co., New York; to deal in
Wilson drums and accessories are known from one radio goods; $5,000; J. P. Mirandy, S. M. Knaoo and
end of the country to the other, and it is an ad- L. Wilder.
mited fact in the music profession that pleasure in
A. Schochet, New York; to deal in phonographs;
their use goes with the possession of a Wilson drum $40,000; A. Schochet, D. Lerman and A. Mintz.
or a drummer's accessory.
The L. Meier & Sons Co., Cleveland, O., recently
The Wilson guarantee is something that "goes" celebrated its twenty-fifth year in the talking ma-
with the great host of professionals who use Wilson chine business.
drums, with the old dealer customers of the company
The American Andioscope Co., New York; to
and with the new piano merchant customers who manufacture talking machines; $300,000; E. F. Reis,
have found that the addition of Wilson products A. Y. Hansen and L. Zolla.
means new customers, greater profits and more sales.
The Simple A Radio Corp., New York; to deal in
radio supplies; $10,000; L. R. Carajat, A. R. Desantos
A POTENT POSTER.
and W. F. McHood.
A poster that stimulates desire in the average boy
is the "Champion Drummer Boys" of America pro-
GOOD STRING TRADE.
vided for music dealers by Ludwig & Ludwig, drum
Indications
the first of the year for the business
makers to the profession, Chicago. It is an interest- in bass strings at are
unusually encouraging, according
ing bit of store and window attractiveness and deal- to the Schaff Piano String Co., Chicago, which has
ers will hardly need the suggestion "Paste in the kept the factory running at full speed during the
Window" to do so. The group of portraits includes holidays, with a minimum of two days off for inven-
Joseph A. Richardvill of the famous Jones Boy Band tory- "Just how the orders will be will depend on
of Vincennes, Ind., a sturdy little chap who looks what piano manufacturers find in their inventories,"
not more than six years old; George Patterson, a an official of the company said, '"but we are sure to
famous juvenile drummer of Patterson, N. J.; Michael be busy for some time with our back orders. None
J. Howe, Los Angeles, Calif., eight-year-old cham- of them are being cancelled."
pion of the Pacific Coast, and Master Rich, Brook-
lyn, four-year-old drummer entour with Greenwich
COPPER PRICES.
Village Follies, the greatest juvenile drummer in the
The effect of the mounting price of copper is one
world. These juvenile champions are noted for their
military band and orchestral drumming ability and all of uncertainty to piano wire manufacturers and other
industries using the material. Though the copper
use Ludwig drums.
market has reached 14c, it is not fived there as se-
curely as it might be, as some sales continue at I3%c
LABOR SAVERS.
Most producers are willing to sell at the
Foremost among the labor savers in the piano re- delivered.
present
price
for delivery through the first quar-
tailers' business are the trucks made by the Self' ter, and a few level
will
make a delivery well into second
Lifting Piano Truck Co., Findlay, O. In fact, no quarter.
dealer's equipment is complete without the trucks
made by the company for handling pianos and talk-
A STEINMETZ DEVICE.
ing machines. The line comprises sill trucks and
end trucks for pianos and the Lea talking machine
The pallophotophone is the name of the new de-
truck. Most progressive piano houses are aware of vice invented by Charles P. Steinmetz, the wizard of
the uses and advantages of the piano trucks, but some the General Electric Company, New York, which is
new hpuses in the talking machine business have yet designed for "photographing" the voice to synchro-
to learn of the merits of the talking machine truck. nize with moving pictures. The pallophotophone has
With the Lea 'talking machine truck one man can introduced into radio broadcasting an entirely new
element, the possibility of making a master record of
a speech and of broadcasting it days or weeks later
from scores of radio sending stations.
NEW INCORPORATIONS
IN MUSIC GOODS TRADE
Dividends
Declared!
BUSY IN KENTON, O.
The musical merchandise business of the Albert
Fink Music Co., Kenton, O., has been extended to
include a large variety of imported goods. The
house has built up a very satisfactory business in
orchestra and band instruments of American manu-
facture. The firm has devised a scheme of advertis-
ing to make known its new departure to the pros-
pective buyers in its territory.
Dealers, E V E R Y -
W H E R E , declare
that Clark Orchestra
Rolls produce bigger
dividends from electric
pianos than other
makes of electric rolls.
TALKING MOVIE LECTURE.
The first showing of the lecturing movie in New
York was given in the lecture hall of the Radio
Show, at the Grand Central Palace recently. The
lecture, originally delivered several weeks ago by
a Western Electric engineer, was recorded electric-
ally on a phonograph disc. At the exhibition, the
audience heard at the proper instant the explanation
of a moving picture which they saw on the screen.
A Safe Investment
CLARK ORCHESTRA ROLL CO.
DeKalb, 111.
NEWS OF SMALL GOODS FIELD
Many New Names Appear in Musical Instrument
Business and Old Ones Continue in Activities.
A well planned music roll department has been
added by the Van De Walle Music Co., Seymour,
Ind.
Satisfaction with sales in its music roll department
is. freely expressed by the Pacific Music Co., San
Francisco.
Music rolls are given considerable attention in the
music department of the Smith, Metzger & Wright
Co., Warren, Pa. The department was recently ac-
quired by G. Gifford Smith, who means to operate it
as a separate unit under the firm name of G. Gifford
Smith, Inc.
Miss L. McGhee is the new manager of the record
department of the Martin Music Store, Springfield,
Mo. Miss McGhee was formerly with the Lehman
Piano Co., St. Louis.
Lorene Riley has taken charge of the roll depart-
ment of the music department of Meier & Frank,
Portland, Ore., and with Wm. G. Woodward the
manager of the department is planning to put in a
complete stock of Ampico rolls in both the classical
and popular. Miss Riley has ben in charge of the
roll department of Sherman, Clay & Co., of Portland,
for the past four years.
PREPARE FOR FOREIGN TRADE.
More than 3,000 students in high schools through-
out" the country are taking foreign trade as a major
study, according to Glen Levin Swiggart, specialist
in commercial education and chairman of the Com-
mittee of Fifteen, at a foreign service training con-
ference last week at the Hotel Sherman, Chicago.
Representatives of various universities teaching com-
mercial subiects were in attendance at the conference.
A continuation of black walnut as a favorite wood
for veneers and solid uses is anticipated from the
lively demand for walnut logs in all the Missouri
and Tennessee points .noted for shipping the
products.
If It':
Musical Merchandise
We've Got It"
26 years of faithful service in the
interests of our dealers have
placed Tonk Bros. Co.high in the
estimation of the musical mer-
chandise trade throughout the
country. If you are not a mem-
ber of the Tonk family, an initial
order will convince you of the
integrity and sales-producing
value of Tonk service. :
:
!
Send For Catalog
TONK BROS. CO.
323 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago, 111,
C. G. CONN, Ltd., Elkhart, Ind.
C. D. GREENLEAF, Pre*.
J. E. BOYER, S.e'y
World'* largest manufaetatw* el High Grid* Band and Orchestra Instrument*. Employ* l,Mt
•xpert workmen.

All of the most celebrated Artist* use and endorse Conn Instrument*.
Famous Bandmasters and Orchestra Director* highly endorse and recommend the uee of the
Conn Instruments in their organisations.
'
Conn Instruments are noted for thtoir ea*e ef playing, light - and' reliable vafo* or bay aeltani
quick response, rich tonal quality, perfect intonation, tone carrying quality, artieticnes* mi eVaign,
beautiful finish and reliable construction.
' ',• . . . . . . . .
Conn Instruments are sent to any point in tin U. J>. subject to ten Cay* free trial. BMMMB store
or agencies will be found in all larg* citie*. Write for catalogue*, price*, etc.
C. G. CONN, Ltd.
DEPT. MS.
ELKHART, IND.
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/
55
PRESTO
January 6, 1923.
SHEET MUSIC TRADE
TO PUBLISHERS
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinii
THE COMBINED CIRCULATION
OF PRESTO (EST. 1884), AND MUS-
ICAL TIMES (EST. 1881), IS BY FAR
THE LARGEST IN THE FIELD OF
THE MUSIC TRADE. COMBINA-
TION RATES OF SPECIAL AT-
TRACTIVENESS FOR ADVERTIS-
ING SPACE IN BQTH PAPERS
WILL BE MADE TO MUSIC PUB-
LISHERS.
This department is designed to advance the sales
of sheet music, and give any current information in
the Sheet Music Trade.
This publication believes that Sheet Music will
pay the dealer, just as any other commodity pays
those who merchandise it properly.
The conductor of this department will review
any numbers that are sent in for the purpose. It is
not the intent to criticise, but to review these offer-
ings, giving particular information of the theme and
a description of the musical setting of the number
discussed.
Address all communications to Conductor Sheet
Music Dept, Presto. 407 S. Dearborn, Chicago, 111.
LIBRARIANS IN CONVENTION
Sheet Music, Roll and Record Departments Among
the Topics Discussed in Chicago.
Music departments, roll and record loan depart-
ments were among the topics discussed last week at
the mid-Winter meetings of. the American Library
Association in the Hotel Sherman, Chicago, Carl B.
Roden, librarian Chicago Public Library presided at
a session which dealt with the standardization of
library service.
Close to one thousand libraries in the United
States have music sections of some sort, the state of
Massachusetts coming first with 343 collections.
New York state is second with 104 libraries with mu-
sic sections. Only seven libraries have regularly con-
stituted roll and record sections. Lack of appropria-
tions for music sections prevent the spread of the
music service in the libraries.
Miss Horine, librarian of the Springfield public
library pronounces the player roll department estab-
lished early this year a success. Some of the music
rolls were purchased and the rest donated. The
stock is card catalogued and issued for a two weeks'
period.
wouldn't rather hear a good male quartet produce
close harmony in The Old Oaken Bucket than hear
Mary Garden sing Thais.
If one could just listen to the male quartet old-
oaken-bucketing and see Mary's back at the same
time, nothing more would be desired.
Hardly anything could be finer than Juanita sounds
to a drunk who is singing it.
Rachmaninoff is the only pianist who can simul-
taneously wear a prison haircut and make a crowd
listen willingly to piano solos.
Little German bands formerly made the worst mu-
sic, but modern jazz has them badly abraded.
I know very little about music—almost little
enough to be a New York critic.
"De bottom ob de flouah barrel makes mighty po'
music," Uncle Eph says.
A resolution favoring the foundation and mainte-
nance of a national conservatory of music by the
United States Government was passed at the forty-
fourth annual convention of the Music Teachers' Na-
tional Association, at the Hotel Pennsylvania, last
week.
Dr. Leonard McWhood of the music department
of Dartmouth College, sponsor of the motion, in-
cluded in it a proposal to have a committee appointed
to aid in the promotion of such an institution.
The following were elected members of the Execu-
tive Committee of the association: Charles D. Boyd,
of Pittsburgh, James D. Price, of Connecticut, and
Frederick Holmberg, of Oklahoma.
The cellos, setting forth apart,
Grumbled and sang, and so the day
From the low beaches of my heart
Turned in tranquillity away.
First of Year Finds New Businesses and an Old
One in New Quarters.
The beginning of the new year saw quite a few
And over weariness and doubt
changes in the sheet music business of Los Angeles,
Rose up the horns like bellied sails,
Cal., but the changes are of the kind which denote
Like canvas of the soul flung out
the activity of the music business in that city. A new
To rising and orchestral gales.
business is that of Hatch & Rice, opened in the
store of the Geo. J. Birkel Co. The firm is com-
Passed on and left irresolute
posed of Mr. Hatch, formerly of Philadelphia, and
The ebony, the silver throat.
George E. Rice, who has been with the Schirmer
Low over clarinet and flute
store. It is also understood in the trade that a new
Hung heaven upon a single note.
sheet music department will be opened in the store
of the Wiley B. Allen Co.
DOUBLING UP.
A teacher of music in a public school was trying
The tearing down of the third section oft the Fifth
to impress upon her pupils the meaning of f and ff Street Store this week caused the moving of the
in a song that they were about to learn. After ex- sheet music department to Goodman's Department
plaining the first sign, she said, "Now, children, Store, Seventh and Hill streets. This department
what do you say; if f means forte, what does ff in charge of E. M. De Motte, has a big clientele,
which wide notice of the removal has apprised of the
mean?"
"Eighty!" shouted one enthusiastic pupil.—Youth's change of address.
Companion.
"THE LOVE YOU
FIRST GAVE ME"
A Song of the better class. Very pretty
melody. Will go well anywhere. One
of the kind that never grows old.
Orchestrations now ready
25c
WM. STERN, Publisher
6219 MAY ST.
:-:
CHICAGO, ILL.
American Popular Music Bulletin Service.
FORE!
MAKE WAY
FOR THE
Four Foremost Sellers
"LOVE OF THE AGES"
Endorsed and Suns by Cyrena Van Gordon
"DREAMING OF LOVE'S OLD DREAM"
The Son* Ton Have Been Waiting For—
"You're the One Little Girl for Me"
A Ballad You Will Never Forget
"When I Dream that Avid Erin is Free"
TANA
Oriental Fox-trot Ballad,
as Catchy as the Flu.
Send for professional copy:
Orchestration, 25c.
Celebrated Humorist Gets Plumb Sarcastic but His
Frank Philosophy Proves Antidote.
Stewart & Aarrestad Pub. Co.
Successors to
GOTT © HENDERSON
166 W. JACKSON BLVD.
CHICAGO
JUST OUT!
Nobody Lied
Sweet Indiana Home
My Buddy
California
Tomorrow Will Be Brighter
Than Today
Carolina in the Morning
Silver Swanee
Childhood Days
When Shall We Meet Again
Lovable Eyes
Out of the Shadows
Your Eyes Have Told Me So
Dixie Highway
Just a Little Blue
Polly
MAY BELL ANDREWS
(McKean Co.)
PENNA.
qst
on Anything in Music
?s ~«u^--
HERBERT J. GOTT
REMICK SONG HITS
A New Waltz Song; add this to your Xmas
list. Composed and published by
ELDRED
A Tribute to Ireland's Independence
Brin8made, N. D.
"Mother, Dear, I'm Sad and Lonely,"
Music Printers
West of New York
ANY PUBLISHER
OUR REFERENCE
Music Teachers' National Association in Convention
in New York Pass Resolution.
CHANGES IN LOS ANGELES
AT THE SYMPHONY.
STRICK GILLILAN ON MUSIC
Strickland Gillilan, the humorist, pipes a few mu-
sical notes" in the funny page of the Saturday Eve-
ning Post. Strick struts off with a sarcastic whang
at the well known human race when he says:
"Music is divided into two classes: The kind every-
body likes to hear and the kind it is fashionable to
pretend you like." Then he proceeds as follows;
Anybody can like musical music, but it takes edu-
cation to like the kind that isn't musical.
Bill Nye said he had been given to understand
Wagner's music was a great deal better than it
sounded.
Ram'shorn music is pretty rotten, but the walls of
Jericho fell for it.
There is hardly any honest person in America who
ASK FEDERAL MUSIC SCHOOL
WORK DONE B Y
ALL PROCESSES
J. H. REMICK & CO.
New York
Chicago
Detroit
1054-2060 W.Lake St., Chicago, 111.
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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