Presto

Issue: 1924 1960

22
PRESTO
LISTEN=IN TO "ECHO" ORGAN
Philadelphia Diners Last Week Heard Effects Sent
for First Time by Radio.
UJhere Supply
always meets
Hie Demand 7
Hardware, Felts, Cloths, Hammers, etc
for Pianos, Organs, Players, Talking
Machines, Special Stampings, Turn-
ings, etc., when you order from us.
The American Piano Supply Co., Inc.
No. 112 East 13th Street
NEW YORK CITY
SCHAFF
Piano String Co.
"Echo" organ effects, long dreamed of by radio
engineers, were produced last week for the first time
electrically at a demonstration in Philadelphia which
was given at the annual banquet of the Institute of
Political and Social Science. They followed a paper
by W. H. Martin of the American Telephone and
Telegraph Company, and Dr. Harvey Fletcher of the
Western Electric Company, explaining the funda-
mental principles of high quality broadcasting and
reproduction and declaring that radio listeners more
and more were insisting on quality rather than on
long distance "stunts."
Through loud speakers in one end of the long ban-
quet room the diners heard the music of the main
organ at a local broadcasting station, while other
loud speakers at the other end projected the music of
the echo organ, installed at a distance from the main
organ, but picked up by the same microphone.
The banquet room was connected with the broad-
casting station by two wire circuits, the music from
the main organ being received over one system of
amplifiers and from the echo organ over another.
Beautiful antiphonal effects were produced.
Heretofore, those in charge of the demonstration
said, radio audiences had not been able fully to appre-
ciate the effect of the echo organ. With the new de-
vices, they declared, listeners to transmitted music
would hear the echo as distinctly as the main organ.
Most modern pipe organs are equipped with echo
attachments. In some cases there are two separate
instruments, one of which has pipes of small scale
and soft tones for distant effects. They are operated
by a single keyboard.
Manufacturers of
TELLS BANJO'S ORIGIN
Its Development from Simple Shape to Present
Scientific Form Told by Dr. R. E. Challis.
Piano Bass Strings
2009-2021 CLYBOURN AVENUE
Cor er Lewis Street
CHICAGO
PERFECT PUNCHINGS
AT
€.F.GOEPEL*Co.
OUAUTT (( [ y\
twine**
137 E A S T I3 T -? ST.
NE.WYORK
The varieties of banjo has induced Dr. R. Ellmore
Challis to tell about the first and simplest form ot
the instrument in an article in the Philadelphian Pub-
lic Ledger.
"The man who, sixty years ago," said Dr. Challis,
"conceived the idea of stretching calfskin over a rim
and attaching thereto a neck and strings, started
something, the end of which, in those days, was not
even dreamed of. Contrary to general opinion, the
banjo was the invention of a white man and not a
Negro. The name of the inventor was Joe Sweeney,
and his name figured in the naming of the instru-
ment, for which, at that time, he had devised no
especial name.
"According to the story which is generally accepted,
Joe Sweeney produced so much music from his inven-
tion that the neighbors declared he was a whole band
in himself, and nicknamed him 'Band-Joe.' The con-
traction to the present name of the instrument is
readily seen.
"Thus, the banjo was born in America, christened
here, and for a long time was played in this country
exclusively, although today it has become practically
a universal instrument. For a long while it was
pla)'ed for amusement only. Then it gradually en-
tered the minstrels, appeared on the vaudeville stage
and latterly on the concert platform. Within the last
few years it has been universally accepted by the
dance orchestras of the country, and recently two
national vaudeville circuits have adopted it for use in
their theater orchestras.
"Like all virile families, the banjo family grew, and
from the common ancestor devised by Joe Sweeney,
there are now five distinct varieties of the instrument.
These are the ordinal banjo, a long necked instru-
February 16, 1924.
ment; the tenor-banjo, a shorter necked instrument;
the mandolin banjo, still shorter; the guitar banjo and
the banjo ukulele.
"When I say that the banjo is now the most popu-
lar musical instrument in the United States, I am not
talking at random, for there are about 4,000,000 of
them in the United States today, and I very much
doubt if there is anything like that number of other
instruments.
"Modern science has aided in the tone and carrying
power of the instrument by the invention of various
devices, and the banjo in use today is as different from
the crude instrument of Joe Sweeney as was the old
harpsichord from the modern grand piano. Truly our
only American musical instrument has made gigantic
strides within the few decades which have elapsed
since its invention, and so numerous are the perform-
ers on it that a national organization, which includes
mandolin and guitar players, has been formed and
annual conventions are held to promote interest in the
fretted instruments."
WOOD'S AND MOISTURE
Experiments by Federal Laboratory Shows Coating
of Varnish Merely Retards Moisture.
According to experiments made by the Forest
Products Laboratory, Madison, Wis., varnishes do
not completely prevent the transmission of moisture
to wood. The covering of varnish merely retards
the absorption and one species of wood is affected
like the others.
The panels used in the experiments were of yellow
birch, basswood, red gum, African mahogany, white
ash, white pine, Sitka spruce, Southern-yellow pine,
bald cypress, incense cedar, white oak, Western yellow
pine, Port Oxford cedar and sugar pine.
Three coats of high-grade spar varnish were applied
to four panels of each species. Two panels of each
species were brush coated and two were dipped by a
special dipping machine designed to secure an even
coating. The panels were allowed to dry seventy-
two hours between coats and ten days after the final
coat before they were given the moisture resistance
test.
The moisture resistance test consisted in exposing
the panels for seventeen days to a humidity of 95-100
per cent, or in an atmosphere practically saturated
with moisture.
At the end of this test it was found that all the
brushed treated panels had absorbed between 5 and
6.5 grams of moisture per square foot of surface, and
the dipped panels between 4 and 5 grams.
Charles E. Cameron, Newark, N. J., recently was
granted a patent for a position rectifying device for
playerpiano rolls.
Paragon Foundries
Company
Manufacturers of
Paragon Piano Plates
Oregon, Illinois
HAMMACHER, SCHLEMMER & CO,
PIANO and PLAYER
HARDWARE, FELTS, TOOLS,
RUBBERIZED PLAYER FABRICS
New York, Since 1848
4th A W . 311(1 13th S i
PRACTICAL PIANO MOVING SUPPLIES
INCREASE SELLING POWER
One-Man Steel Cable Hoist; Two-in-One
Loaders, Trucks, Corers, etc.
G«t Our N*w Ctrc ulara and Pric*a
PIANO MOVERS SUPPLY COMPANY
LANCASTER, PA.
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/
PRESTO
February 16, 1924.
GLUE USED IN PIANO MAKING
Formula for Blood Albumen Glue Worked Out at
Forest Products Laboratory.
Glue being one of the important materials in the
making of a piano, the quality of the commodity is
a matter of vital consequence to manufacturers. For
this reason piano manufacturers pay particular atten-
tion to selecting quality glues, and sometimes they
mix the glue to be used in the piano factory.
In order to assist manufacturers of pianos and
others in properly preparing glues, the Forest Prod-
ucts Laboratory has prepared, in co-operation with
the University of Wisconsin, a number of papers on
glues. The manufacture, preparation and application
of blood albumin glues is covered in a recent publi-
cation.
Prior to 1917 only a few companies in this country
were using blood albumin glue, says the writer of this
paper, and practically all of these had formulae of
their own, which were considered secret. About 1917
there began a marked demand for water resistant ply-
wood for military purposes, and this created a de-
mand for all kinds of water resistant glues, both
casein and blood albumin. The latter glue is admir-
ably suited to many purposes and conditions of serv-
ice and is still used by some manufacturers.
Prepared blood albumin glues are not offered on
the market, owing chiefly to the decrease in solubility
of the albumin with age. The glues are, therefore,
mixed at the time of using. They may be made
either from the fresh blood of slaughtered animals or
from black soluble blood albumin obtained by process-
ing the fresh blood. To make the use of fresh blood
feasible the supply must be readily accessible to the
place of manufacture, inasmuch as rapid decomposi-
tion takes place and renders it unsatisfactory for
glue purposes.
Unless utilized at once it must, therefore, be treated
with a preservative or converted into a dried soluble
THE HEART OF THE
PIANO
form. The dried soluble albumin is the form from
which the glue is generally made, and is obtained by
subjecting the fresh blood to a process for removing
the fibrin and part of the red corpuscles and then
evaporating to dryness at a temperature below the
coagulating point of the albumin, which is approxi-
mately 160 degrees Fahrenheit.
A BUSY ROLL
DEPARTMENT
ATTRACTIVE CONN SIGN.
One of the most attractive signs in the most bril-
liantly lighted district in New York is that featuring
the instruments of C. G. Conn, Elkhart, Ind. It is
on a building on Broadway near Forty-seventh street,
and apart from its artistic qualities is strongly sug-
gestive of the desire to buy. Under the picture of a
boy playing a cornet is the caption: "Stir the Fires
of Youthful Ambition." It is estimated that close to
a million people pass the new Conn sign in the course
of a day, twenty-five per cent of whom are from
out-of-town.
CABLE N I G H T AT WJAZ.
Cable night at WJAZ broadcast radio station, Chi-
cago, is a new departure of interest to the piano
trade. A recent program was arranged by those in
the radio repartment of the Cable Piano Company.
The entertainers were Earl Billings, pianist; Weldon
Whitlock, tenor, Zetta Gay Whotson, violinist; Clara
Louise Thurston, harpist; Louise Mueller, soprano.
COLUMBIA
WORD ROLLS
February Releases
SYNCHRONIZED WORD ROLLS
Title:
793
792
791
790
789
788
787
786
THE STANDARD ACTION CO.,
CAMBRIDGE, MASS.
LEATHER
HEINZMAN W I T H STARK & COWAN.
John Heinzman, formerly with Stark' & Cowan,
has taken over the Pacific Coast representation for
Clarke & Leslie Songs, Inc., of 1591 Broadway, New
York. Mr. Heinzman is a well known figure on the
Coast. Incidentally, Clark & Leslie's new number,
"So This Is Venice," is creating quite a sensation.
Paul Whiteman's Victor release will be on sale the
22nd of February.
PLAYERS
ORGANS
PIANOS
Strauch Bros.
Packing, Valves, AH Special Tanned
Bellows Leather
T. L. LUTKINS, Inc.
NEW YORK
782
781
780
779
778
777
776
775
774
773
772
771
770
Played by:
Your Mamma's Gonna Slow You
Down
Clarence Johnson Fox-trot
When Lights Are Low
Billy Fitch
Waltz
"The House of David" Blues
Clarence Johnson
Blue
Mean Blues
Art Gillham
Blue
The Land of Broken Dreams Art Gillham
Waltz
Every Day
Gladys Bagwill Fox-trot
London Bridge Is Falling Down (On the
Isle of Childhood Dreams)
Art Gillhan
Waltz
How I Miss You, No One Knows
Gladys Bagwill
Waltz
So This Is Venice
Art Gillham Fox-trot
Hard Luck Blues
Everett Robbins
Blue
It's Not the First Time You Left Me
(But It's the Last Time You'll Come Back)
James Blythe Fox-trot
Maggie (Yes Ma'am) Everett Robbins Fox-trot
Tripping Along
James Blythe
Waltz
A Smile Will Go a Long, Long Way
Everett Robbins Fox-trot
Are You Lonely? Gus Drobegg Marimba Fox-trot
Midnight Blues
Clarence Johnson
Blue
Just For Tonight
Gus Drobegg
Waltz
If I Can't Get the Sweetie I Want
(I Pity the Sweetie I Get)
Clarence Johnson Fox-trot
You Didn't Want Me When I
Wanted You
Gus Drobegg
Waltz
What Do You Do Sunday, Mary?
Billy Fitch Fox-trot
Keep Yourself Together, Sweet Fapa
Clarence Johnson Fox-trot
So This Is Love
Billy Fitch
Waltz
Old Fashioned Love Clarence Johnson Fox-trot
When It's Night-Time in Italy
Everett Robbing Fox-trot
Low Down Fapa
Clarence Johnson Fox-trot
To Retail at
Why Pay More?
Eatabliahed 1867
PNEUMATIC LEATHERS A SPECIALTY
785
784
783
709
C. A. Gaetz, who has conducted a music store at
51 West Long street, Columbus, Ohio, for a number
of years, has purchased the entire building, 49-53 West
Long street, and 114-116 North Front street.
FOR
TUNERS"
of
W H A T H A P P E N E D TO WALNUT LOGS.
Going through some old newspaper files, W. Janes,
of Paris, Mo., recently ran across an old clipping from
a Hannibal, Mo., paper of 25 years ago, comment-
ing on the fact that Mr. Janes, who was then living
at Hunnewell, was shipping walnut logs to Germany,
says the Paris Appeal. Only the finest were being
used for the exporting and these were first heaved
square by hand so they would lie close and not roll
when loaded on an ocean vessel. Mr. Janes com-
menting on the clipping, says that he was probably
furnishing stocks for the guns with which the Ger-
mans twenty years later killed so many American
sons. One of his sons, D. P. Janes, of Moberly, was
a captain in the American Army during the World
War.
RADIO MUSIC FOR HOSPITAL.
Radio music is supplied to the patients of the
Metropolitan Hospital on Blackwell's Island, New
York City, by means of a portable set which is con-
veyed from ward to ward and floor to floor on a
stretcher wagon. The set, donated to the hospital by
the New York Tuberculosis Association, brightens
the lives of the patients.
40 Spruce Street
The Background
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.
75
None Better.
Made of the best materials
obtainable.
Will please your trade and
double your sales.
Quality and price make
Columbia rolls the deal-
er's best profit producer
in a roll department.
A trial order will con-
vince you.
Here ar«
BASS STRINGS
STRAUCH BROS.,Inc.
OTTO R. TREFZ, Jr.
327 to 347 Walnut Ave., at 141»t Street
NEW YORK
Special attention given to the need* of the toner and
the denier
8110 Falrmoiint Avenue
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
Piano Action*, Hammer* and Rapairm
Columbia Music Roll Co.
22 S. Peoria St.
CHICAGO
ILL.
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 22: PDF File | Image

Download Page 23 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.