Presto

Issue: 1924 1967

PRESTO
20
April 5, 1924.
SMALL GOODS, SUPPLIES AND RADIO
THE CONN-BOSTON STORE
This Week Headquarters for the New England Ter-
ritory Will Be Opened at 488 Boylston Street.
Beginning this week the New England business in
the instruments of C. G. Conn, Ltd., Elkhart, Ind.,
will be transacted from the Conn-Boston Store, 488
Boylston street, Boston. The C. C. Ward store at 249
Columbus avenue will be continued to handle the
goods at retail. At the completion of the clearing out
sale at the latter number last week, Mr. Ward said
goodby to the business he has loved and ably served.
On retiring from active business he will live at his
beautiful home in Newton, Mass.
The main store of the Conn-Boston Store will be
at 488 Boyston street, where the wholesale and retail
phases of the business have adequate space to grow.
The old Ward store at 249 Columbus avenue will be
continued until the big Conn clientele get familiar
with the new location of the Boston business of the
C. G. Conn Co. The retention of the old store is
considered necessary for a time as it has been asso-
ciated with the sale of Conn instruments for the past
thirty-eight years.
LATEST QENNETT RECORDS
New Popular Songs and Dances and Foreign Num-
bers Comprised in Salable Records.
New dance melodies, songs and foreign numbers
are included in the list of Gennett records released
this week by the Starr Piano Company, Richmond,
Ind.
In the new dance melodies are: Ringelberg Blues,
fox-trot (Gerbrecht-Bandue-Hartmann), and Ain't
That Hateful, fox-trot (Creger-Gerbrecht-Bauduc),
Naylor's Seven Aces (5393). Baptistown Crawl, fox-
trot (May-M. Neal-Hitch), and Ethiopian Nightmare,
fox-trot (Bump-D. Neal), The Happy Harmonists
(5402).
Latest Popular Songs—Say It Again (Conrad and
Friedlander) and It's a Man Ev'ry Time It's a Man
(Dubin, McHugh and Dash), sung by Lewis James
(5400). Maybe (She'll Write Me) (Turk-Snyder-
Ahlert), and You're in Kentucky (Little-Gillespie-
Shay), sung by Jack Kaufman (5398).
Foreign Numbers of Charm—Spanish—Martinez
(Tango) (D. Fortunato) and La Cruz De Guerra,
one-step, La Orquesta de Nava (no. S-5368).
Italian—Turbine D'Amore (Valzer) (Filosa) and
Vita Artistica (Mazurka Sentimentale) (Rapisarda),
G. Iasilli and His Orchestra (I-53?8).
Welsh—Y Bwthyn Bach To Gwelll (Welsh Song)
and Can Y Llanc Chwerthinllyd (Welsh Song), David
Brazell (5381).
OPENS IN WATERVILLE, ME.
Charles Odell and Francis B. Odell, Waterville,
Me., are owners of the Brunswick Shop, Inc., opened
last week in a desirable location in the business center.
The left side of the store is to be utilized for the
selling of Brunswick phonographs and records. Three
sound-proof booths are being constructed with double
windows and at the end of the room are other booths
which will be used for stock rooms. A beautiful
lighting scheme with an arch at the lower end of the
room will add much to the appearance of the place.
RECORDS IN CORNER STORE.
Five phonograph records containing jazz music
and the offerings of famous artists, a package of
needles for the same, a strip of movie film, and Chi-
cago newspapers bearing the March 25 date line—
all representative of civilization as it obtains in 1924
—were sealed away in the corner stone of the thirty-
two story Straus building at Michigan avenue and
Jackson boulevard, Chicago, this week.
Manufacturers of
PIANO ACTIONS
ONE GRADE ONLY
The Wessell, Nickel & Gross action is a
guarantee of the grade of the instrument
in which it is found.
FACTORIES:
1\JI7W
* . &W4tth. U t i W
VHlJIf
I VJI\1\.
Another Winning List Includes Latest Fox-Trots,
Waltzes, One-Steps and Blues.
The artists who recorded the Columbia music rolls
for April are old favorites with Columbian roll buy-
ers and the success of the roll products of the Colum-
bia Music Roll Co., 721 N. Kedzie avenue, Chicago,
is considerably aided by the pepful manner in which
its rolls are recorded. Here is the list of April win-
ners with the name of the recording artist stated:
Tell Me You'll Forgive Me, waltz, Harry Geise;
Boy Scouts Parade, march—one-step; Nine O'Clock
Sal, one-step, Harry Geise; Lost My Baby Blues, blue
fox-trot, Harry Geise; —Maybe She'll Write Me—
She'll Phone Me, fox-trot, Billy Fitch; You Can Take
Me Away From Dixie, fox-trot, Harry Geise; Sad
Hawaiian Sea, marimba waltz, Clarence Johnson; My
Dream Moon, fox-trot, Harry Geise; California, Here
I Come, fox-trot, Clarence Johnson; Kentucky Sure
as You're Born, fox-trot, Billy Fitch; Hoo Doo Blues,
blue, Harry Geise; Twelve O'Clock at Night, fox-
trot, Clarence Johnson; Hawaiian Memories, marimba
waltz, Billy Fitch; Until Tomorrow, waltz, Clarence
Johnson; Nobody's Sweetheart, one-step, Harry
Geise; Immigration Rose, fox-trot, Everett Robbins;
Land of My Sunset Dreams, waltz, Harry Geise;
Steppin' Out, fox-trot, Clarence Johnson; Egyptian
Rose, fox-trot, Everett Robbins; Twilight Rose, fox-
trot, Harry Geise; Eileen, fox-trot, Clarence John-
son; I'm Goin' South, fox trot, Harry Geise; Blue
Island Blues, blue, Clarence Johnson; When Mother
Sings Sweet and Low, fox-trot, James Blythe.
HARP FROM BABYLON WATERS.
FILM SHOWS ROLLS IN MAKING.
The Louvre, in Paris, France, has received from
A motion picture company which specializes in
Syria a harp the strings of which have been mute for films made in industrial plants recently took a movie
3,700 years. It was unearthed on the banks of the snap in the San Francisco factory of the Q R S
Euphrates by the archaeologist, Franz Oumont.
Music Co. It is one of an educational series and
shows every step in the making of music rolls from
The McDowell & Castator Music Co. has recently the recording of the master roll by the pianist to the
opened a store at 106 East Adams street, Arkansas mechanical work in the plants of the company in
Chicago and San Francisco.
City, Kan.
WESSELL, NICKEL & GROSS
HIGHEST GRADE
COLUMBIA ROLLS FOR APRIL
OFFICE
457 W . 45^
Comstock, Cheney & Co.
TRUCKS
That Are Labor Savers
Your equipment is not complete without our TRUCKS for handling
Pianos and Talking Machines.
Sill Trucks and End Trucks
for Pianos
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.
Amk for Circular
Ivory Cutters and Manufacturers
MADE ONLY BY
Piano Keys, Actions and Hammers
SELF-LIFTING PIANO TRUCK CO.
FINDLAY, OHIO
IVORY AND COMPOSITION-COVERED ORGAN KEYS
Th« Mily Company Furnishing t h * Key*, Actions, Hammers and Brackets Complete
F t y>nd01
Telegraph and R. R. Station: Essex, Conn.
Office and Factories: Ivory ton, Conn.
THE O S. KELLY CO.
Manufacturers
of
High
-
Saw Mills
"* JULIUS BRECKWOLDT & SON, ING. Fulton
Chain
Manufacturers of
-
OHIO
and
Tupper Lake
Piano Backs, Boards, Bridges, Bars*
Traplevers and Mouldings
SOLE AGENTS FOR RUDOLF GIESE WIRE
WESTERN REPRESENTATIVE:
Grade
PIANO PLATES
SPRINGFIELD
" "
DOLGEVILLM-Y
CENTRAL STEEL & WIRE CO.,
119-127 N. Peorla Street,
J. BRECKWOLDT. Pres.
Chicago, III.
W. A. BRECKWOLDT. Sec. & Treas.
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
April 5, 1924.
COINOLAS
FOR
RESTAURANTS, CAFES and
A M U S E M E N T CENTERS
Style C-2
FROM THE BIGGEST
ORCHESTRION
21
SELLING FACTORY BANDS
Promising Phase of Musical Merchandise
Dealers' Business Is in Promoting Bands
in Industrial Plants and Shops.
Music dealers in all towns have an opportunity to
make good profits in band instrument sales. The
schools provide openings for band instrument sales
even in the smaller towns and in the larger towns and
cities where manufacturing industries are a feature of
progress the factories provide the possibilities for
sales. The part of music in recreation in the big
industrial plants is recognized by the foremost cap-
tains of industry, so it was not surprising, a little
while ago, when the Los Angeles Chamber of Com-
merce created an Industrial Bureau of Music.
As a result of the work encouraged by the bureau
there are eight industrial bands in LQS Angeles. Sev-
eral more are in course of being organized. The
Auditorium of the Chamber of Commerce is given
over to the choral groups and orchestras from the
commercial and industrial organizations two nights
every week.
In other places throughout the country the forma-
tion of bands in industrial plants is not an experiment,
in many places the Chamber of Commerce has fos-
tered the formation of bands in big plants and the
organizing of groups from several smaller plants into
one important band. Rotary, Lions, Kiwanis and ad-
vertising clubs are active in band formation in all
parts of the country, thereby helping the cause of the
music dealer. But live dealers do not wait for the
active bodies named to hand him a chance to make
profits. He is a bit of an organizer himself. The
band idea is spreading and the music merchant who
is anxious to expand his business helps in every way
in the spreading.
There is nothing experimental in the factory band
and the keen captains of industry realize the utility of
music in relation to factory work. The value of the
refreshing break in the monotony of the day's work
is conceded by many factory heads who frankly ad-
mit they "don't know a note of music." The active
music dealer in doing a little promotional scouting
will find few manufacturers prejudiced against the
bands and not many indifferent to the band formation
schemes.
ADVANCE VOCALSTYLE LIST
What the Cincinnati Roll Manufacturers Will Release
for May Shown in Following List.
The Vocalstyle Music Co., Cincinnati, Ohio, has
issued an advance typewritten list of its May bulle-
tin, which contains the following popular dance
tunes. The name of the composer is printed in paren-
thesis:
Blue Grass Blues, Meyers and Schoebel (Jack Car-
ter) ; "Chicago Blues, Biese, Altiere, Williams (Hilda
Myers); Comfortin' Gal, fox trot, by Wendell Hall
(L. Stevens); Daddy's Wonderful Pal, waltz, Freed-
inan. Nelson and Link (L. Stevens); Has Anybody
Seen My Cat? fox trot, Cams, Blanco and Leopold
(Abe Cole); I Wonder Who's Dancing With You
Tonight, fox trot, Dixon, Rose and Henderson (Abe
Cole); It Looks Like Rain, fox trot, Wendell Hall
(L. Stevens); "I've Got the Lonesome Mammy
Blues, Levy, Long and Corbett (Abe Cole); Jail
House Blues, Al Smith and Williams (Abe Cole);
Maybe (She'll Write Me—She'll Phone Me), fox
trot, Turk, Snyder and Ahlert (Mary Allison);
Mexicali Rose, waltz, Stone and Tenney (Mary Alli-
son) ; Mindin' My Bus'ness, fox trot, Kahn and
Donaldson (Billy Waterworth); Morning Will Come,
fox trot, Jolson, DeSylva and Conrad (Billy Water-
worth) ; Nine O'Clock Sal, fox trot, LeRoy, Hays,
O'Leary and Ingham (Hilda Myers); Rock Me to
Sleep in My Rocky Mountain Home, fox trot, Harty
and Dixon (Dick Osgood); Shufflin' Mose, blues,
Lottman, Napoleon and Signorelli (Hilda Myers);
Sighing Sands, marimba waltz, Koehler, Magine and
Lyons (Mary Allison); Swing Low, Sweet Chariot,'
song (Buck Johnson); Tell Me Radio, fox trot,
Mitchell and Silver (Hilda Myers); That's Why You
Make Me Cry, marimba waltz, Verges-Therrien
(Mary Allison); Where the Lazy Daisies Grow, fox
trot, Cliff Friend (Hilda Myers); Whose Izzy Is
He, fox trot, Brown, Green and Sturm (Billy Water-
worth); Why Did I Kiss That Girl, fox trot, Brown,
King and Henderson (Jack Carter).
WANT SLINQERLAND BANJOS
Great Growth in the Sales of Banjos of All Kinds
Reflected in the Factory Activity.
The banjo vies with the saxophone in popularity.
Banjos, like saxophones, are in big demand and the
number of banjo users grows with the passing of
every week. The formation of banjo clubs, organiza-
tion of new dance orchestras and the calls of indi-
vidual customers all make for the importance of the
banjo in the stock of the musical merchandise dealer.
That satisfactory phase of the business of the music
dealer is reflected in the activities in all departments
of the Slingerland Banjo Co., 1815 Orchard street,
Chicago, where forty styles of banjos are manufac-
tured. Not only are present conditions in the retail
trade indicated by the number of banjo orders re-
ceived daily by the big banjo manufacturer, but the
pleasant expectations of dealers for a continuation of
a banjo business are conclusively shown.
The new catalog of the Slingerland Banjo Co., is a
good thing for any music dealer to have in his files.
The extent of the lines of banjos, banjo mandolins,
tenor banjos and banjo ukuleles suggest new profit
opportunities to dealers already handling the banjo
line and shows the possilibities of expansion to the
music merchant confining his efforts to a specialty.
1
THE SMALLEST PHONOGRAPH.
The Cameraphone is a new English portable phono-
graph that has no relation to a camera except its
shape and appearance. The manufacturers claim "it
is the smallest real gramophone in the world." When
closed it resembles in size and appearance the ordi-
nary box camera. The actual dimensions of the
Cameraphone are 7 inches by 6 inches by 4->4 inches,
and despite its lilliputian size it embodies the main
features of the non-portable machines. Extremely
ingenious in design is its patent amplifying chamber,
skilfully contained within a shell globule and which
fits closely into the lid when closed. In addition it
is equipped with a Swiss motor, highly-plated goose-
neck tone-arm and specially patented insulated sound-
box.
NO FREE BROADCASTING.
April 15 has been set as the time limit for musicians
to play or sing free of charge at radio broadcasting
stations, James C. Petrillo, president of the Chicago
Federation of Musicians, announced this week. At
a recent meeting of the musicians' federation it was
decided to charge $8 for a three-hour engagement
after April 1. The action of the union specified that
the $3 should be paid regardless of whether the play-
ers were engaged thirty minutes or the full three
hours.
C G. CONN, Ltd., Elkhart, Ind.
Tiny Coinola
THE SMALLEST
KEYLESS
C. D. GREENLEAF,
J. E J BOYZR, See'y
AF Pros.
P
World's largest mtn
of High Grade Band and Orchestra Instru ent*. Employs l,fet
export frarkmea.
All of the most celebrated Artists us* and endorse Conn Instruments.
Famous Bandmasters and Orchestra Directors highly endorse and recommend the vee el ta»
Conn Instruments in their organisations.
Conn Instruments are noted for their ease ef playing, light and reliable Talre or key
quick response, rich tonal quality, perfect intonation, tone carrying quality, artieticness ef
beautiful finish and reliable construction.
Conn Instruments are sent to aay point in tk i U. S. subject to ten or agencies will be found in all large eities. Write for catalogues, prices, etc.
C. G. CONN, Ltd.
DEPT. MS.
Manufactured by
The Operators Piano Co.
16 to 22 South Peoria St.
CHICAGO
FAIRBANKS
ELXHART, IND.
mN0 PLATES
THE FAIRBANKS CO., 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/

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