Presto

Issue: 1924 2002

PRESTO
December 6, 1924.
SHEET MUSIC AND RADIO
FINAL SHOW REPORT
the song will be presented at the Hennepin Theater
and will appear the following week at the State-
Lake Theater, Chicago.
RETAILING RADIO
Figures About Third Annual Radio Exposition
at the Coliseum, Chicago, Tell Story
of Success.
E. GRANT EGE'S APPEAL
Amazingly Quick Development of the Newest
Business Brings the Goods Into Impos-
sible as Well as Ideal Places to
Sell.
The final report of the Third Annual Chicago Radio
Show proves that this season's local wireless exposi-
tion was by far the most successful industrial ex-
hibition ever held in this country. The total attend-
ance there for six days was 173,200.
The wholesale business transacted by the exhibi-
tors was more than double that of the Manhattan
fair. The 239 Chicago exhibitors booked over
$6,500,000 worth of orders, and, strange to say, most
of the business was done by the younger and smaller
concerns. Fourteen nationally known manufacturers
went into the exposition oversold for 1924-1925, due
principally to the large number of orders taken by
them at the First Radio World's Fair, and, conse-
quently, were unable to accept any new business at
the Coliseum.
Close to 5/J00 jobbers and dealers from all parts of
the world were in attendance at the show. The DX
Instrument Company, Harrisburg, Pa., won the silver
cup awarded by the management to the exhibitor
securing an order from the most distant point from
Chicago. The DX Company sold a bill of $2,000 to,
the Australian Radio Corporation, Perth, West
Australia. The runner-up in this unique competition
was the Westinghouse Union Battery Company,
Swissvale, Pa., which landed a good sized order from
John Chambers, Ltd., Hobart, Tasmania. Another
distant order was booked by H. C. Forster, of the
Utah Products Company, Salt Lake City, Utah, who
sold a bill of goods to a Melbourne, Australia, con-
cern, while the J. T. Boone Corporation, Detroit, sold
considerable equipment to the United Distributers,
Ltd., Sydney, Australia. Orders numbers 984 were
booked from European countries and close to 1,400
orders were taken from dealers in Mexico, Central
and South America.
Three handsome trophies and one "honorable men-
tion" were awarded to new inventions, as follows:
Miss Gail Savage, Brooklyn, N. Y., a silver cup
for the excellence of her combined amplifier and loud
speaker; the Celotex Company, Chicago, a silver cup
for the superior qualities of Acousti-Celotex for
acoustical control of sound; Paul B. Armstrong, Chi-
cago, a silver cup for the excellence of his "Arm-
strong Speaker"; E. T. Flewelling, of Highland Park,
111.; A. J. Haynes, of New York City, and J. Elliott
Jenkins, of Chicago, were awarded silver cups as
tokens of appreciation of their various ul'.ra-valuable
contributions to radio.
Oscar Ryan, of Chicago, was given an "honorable
mention" on his "Ryau Diaphragm," and several other
minor honors were conferred, which will be an-
nounced later.
One outstanding feature of the show was the ap-
pearance of Miss Edith Bennett, the young American
concert star, who was acclaimed "The World's Fin-
est Radio Einger" by a special jury of radio-musical
experts.
FEATURES HEARST HIT
Celia De Neppel, Mexican Singer, to Travel Orpheum
Circuit Singing "Broken Dreams."
Celia De Neppel, who is called Mexico's Galli-
Curci, is to tour the principal cities of the West with
the Orpheum Vaudeville Circuit and sing a number
of popular hits, among which "Broken Dreams," late
Hearst release, is foremost.
The Hearst Music Publishers, Ltd., Toronto, Can-
ada, considers itself fortunate in securing the famous
Mexican coloratura soprano to further popularize the
song already well liked by song lovers.
The merits of "Broken Dreams" were recognized
by Mme. De Neppel upon her arrival in Chicago re-
cently where she visited the offices of the Hearst
Music Publishers, Ltd., at 54 West Ran'dolph street,
and immediately accepted the offer to use the song
on her tour in the vaudeville circuit.
Mme. De Neppel recently sang over WEBH, Chi-
cago Evening Post broadcasting station, and she
was termed by that paper, "One of the world's
greatest soprano singers."
The first city to hear "Broken Dreams" from the
vaudeville stage will be Minneapolis, Minn., where
President of National Sheet Music Dealers' Associa-
tion Asks Co-operation in Near East Project.
E. Grant Ege, president of the National Associa-
tion of Sheet Music Dealers, in a recent letter to
members, asks co-operation in observing Golden
Rule Sunday, December 7, which was set as the
occasion to help destitute children of the Near East.
He asked members to use the photographs andpo^st-
ers provided for window and store display "and
matrices and other material for newspaper adver-
tising.
"The children who will profit by this contribution
are a part of the legacy of the World War," wrote
Mr. Egc. "They are not only without father or
mother, but most of them are without country. The
majority of the children are under twelve years of
age. Exclusive of these already being cared for
there are 100,000 in refugee camps hungry and
shivering."
SUE OVER RADIO PATENTS
Hazeltine Corporation and Others Claim Neutrodyne
Receiving Patent Rights Have Been Violated.
A complaint filed last week in the Federal Court in
New York City by the Hazeltine Corporation, the
Independent Radio Manufacturers, Inc., and thirteen
associated companies, accuses the Radio Industries
Corporation of infringing the neutrodyne radio re-
ceiving patents, having "aided and encouraged acts
of infringement" against the inventions of Professor
L. A. Hazeltine.
The plaintiffs ask for a permanent injunction re-
straining the defendants from making or selling
apparatus which infringes the neutrodyne patents,
and that the defendant be compelled to pay "all such
lawful gains, profits and advantages had by said
defendant," as well as three times the total damages
sustained by the plaintiffs.
GERMAN RADIO EXPORTS.
Exports of radio equipment from Germany have
grown considerably during the past three years, ac-
cording to recent export statistics. Monthly exports
increased steadily from January to April, 1924, but
decreased in May and June. In the January to June
period of 1924 Germany's exports of radio equipment
to Great Britain amounted to 223 metric tons;
Sweden received 86 tons; Argentina, 24 tons; the
Netherlands, 23 tons; Denmark, 13 tons; China, 10
tons; and the United States, 9 tons. Shipment to
all countries amounted to 520 metric tons. In the
first half of 1923 total shipments were 289 tons, and
in the corresponding period of 1922 they were only
137 tons. Exports of radio equipment to the Nether-
lands, to Argentina, and to the United States' were
less in 1924 than in the last two years.
PREDICTS RADIO MOVIES.
The first demonstration in sending photographs by
wireless from England to the United States was
given at Radio House, London, last Sunday. A new
system, developed by R. H. Ranger of the engineer-
ing department of the Radio Corporation of America,
was used. Sixteen photographs were transmitted in
eight hours. The demonstration, which was made
at half the possible speed of the apparatus to insure
perfect results, was under the direction of G. S. Whit-
more, chief of the Marconi communication bureau,
and R. G. Ward, engineer of the Radio Corporation.
It was predicted the next thing which would be
accomplished by radio would be the sending of mov-
ing pictures.
SHEET MUSIC DAY AT CLUB.
Monday, December 8, will be Sheet Music Men's
Day at the luncheon and meeting of the Piano Club
of Chicago at the Illinois Athletic Club. The sheet
music phase of the music business is well represented
in the membership of the club and more members
from that division are expected Dec. 8. It is the
purpose of President Schoenfeld to make, the sheet
music representation in the club the equal of any
other branch of the music trade.
RADIO IN MUSIC STORE
Manufacturers and Jobbers Find Musical Character
•»X-J
of a Store Helps Sales of Receiving
Sets.
A couple of years ago the store sign denoting
the sale of radio supplies was of scant interest to the
average passer-by. Radio was something generally
associated with the communication between ships at
sea or between ships at sea and wireless stations on
land. The wireless operating room on ships was
made familiar to the public in the movie dramas
where the disabled wireless operator with one hand
frantically tries to send forth the S. O. S. call for
help for the doomed ship. Old stuff today!
But with the improvement of receiving sets came
a greater degree of interest in radio science, first
among the people of scientific minds, the students in
technical schools and such. Then with the spread of
broadcasting stations the number of radio fans in-
creased; radio became known as a means to home
entertainment of a most interesting and enjoyable
kind. Radio had projected itself as a profit possibil-
ity for merchants.
Saw It First.
The first to embark in the radio business were the
electrical goods dealers because of the character of
the new line and the t-upposed ability of the electrical
goods handlers to give radio service. But with a
rush the call for radio sets and accessories demanded
a wider field of showing and selling. Radio goods
appeared in the most unlooked for places. Butchers,
bakers and candlestick makers saw in radio the means
to amassing a fortune. It is amazing how many have
tried or are "trying" radio. The hardware merchants
vie with the electrical goods dealers in numbers and
energy in the new fieid.
Music Stores Ideal.
But from the first the music stores were considered
by the radio manufacturers and jobbers as the ideal
places for the sale of radio sets and they have now
become the most important means to distribution.
Unquestionably the music store is the most suitable
place for the retailing of radio. The musical features
of the broadcasted programs, in a convincing way, as-
sociates radio with the music store.
The radio manufacturers and jobbers found in the
music stores radio sak's places that commended them-
selves from several standpoints. For one thing the
music stores are usually tasteful in appearance and
well appointed. They have attractive booths and
rooms well adapted to display radio and provide
opportunities to prospective customers to listen-in to
the brodcasting programs. In handsome and com-
fortable surroundings the radio receiving set "sells
itself."
The Financial Considerations.
In the music store, too, the radio prospect finds
a more capable class of sales people. The wholesale
dealers in radio are mindful of the fact that the music
stores have staffs of outside salesmen thoroughly
familiar with the house-to-house canvassing phase of
selling. And not the least important consideration is
that the financial considerations in the retailing of
radio are best understood by a trade which has per-
fected the installment plan in selling. As the radio
industry develops this phase in the distribution of
radio products will gain even greater consideration.
EAST BEATS WEST.
Tho Soon Hee, a Chinese youth attending the Lane
Technical High School, Chicago, met and vanquished
all competitors in the test at the recent Radio Show
in the Coliseum, by wiring up The Chicago Evening
America's filter tuner in one hour and twenty-eight
minutes elapsed time. The filter tuner which he con-
s t r u c t e d in the test has wonderful capabili-
ties in cutting through interference and bring-
ing in far away stations.
Tho Soon Hee's
closest competitor in the set making test was John
Harrison Hartley, New York, prize winner at the
Radio World's Fair and challenger in the Chicago
contest.
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/
December 6, 1924.
DANCER FAVORS JAZZ
Mordkin, Russian Ballet Leader, Says It Would
Perk Up Opera Features.
Mikhail Mordkin, the famous dancer and origina-
tor of opera ballet features, has espoused jazz. "Jazz
music has such a funny laugh," he said. "I want to
get it into the the ballet. That will revive the ballet,
which is slowly dying for want of new ideas.
"Jazz is so grotesque that it could be easily trans-
lated into good pantomime," he explained. "Not a
divertissement, but a full evening's entertainment.
We can keep the classical fundamentals of the ballet
and still set them to jazz. In the greatest sym-
phonies and ballets there are movements that are
syncopated, and so are the minuet, the gavotte, the
tango, the polka, the quadrille.
"I have discovered in America that all these can
be made into jazz. It is nothing but a matter of
rhythm."
Mordkin admitted that his espousal of jazz would
be considered by his friends and admirers as rank
heresy.
RADIO INVENTORS JOIN HANDS
Lee De Forest and Roy A. Weagant Will Jointly
Contribute to Developments.
Two pioneers of radio development, Lee De Forest
and Roy A. Weagant, have joined hands after twenty
years of independent work. Each has contributed
greatly to the advancement of the art, and their
association now in the same laboratory, it may be
expected, will be productive of better broadcasting
apparatus.
While De Forest is well known to the radio fan.
Blanketing the Country
This advertisement will appear in all the im-
portant newspapers in North America.
his new associate, since 1908, has been actively en-
gaged in radio engineering.
His work with Fesscnden at that time soon brought
him to the attention of the radio world, and in 1920
he became chief engineer of the Marconi Wireless
Telegraph Company, since absorbed by an American
corporation.
Weagant was awarded the Morris-Liebman prize
for his inventions and improvements of antenna de-
sign, notably his vsystem for balanced aerials, by
which static is eliminated. He is a charter member
and fellow of the Institute of Radio Engineers and is
identified with other scientific societies. He is also
the inventor of the circuit which bears his name.
THE PLACE TO BUY RADIO Jil
Combination Advertisement of Chicago Music
Houses Tells the People Where to Purchase.
An instructive advertisement appeared in last Sun-
day's Chicago Tribune. It was handsomely illus-
trated and the text, under the display heading of
"The Music Store the Right Place to Buy Your
Radio" was as follows:
It took the better music houses to bring radio to
its present perfection. Ojuce the problems of trans-
mission were solved, radio authorities turned to the
tone specialists of the Music Industry for advice
and guidance in perfecting tone quality.
These same experts are still at your service—in
any of the stores listed below—ready to help you
select a receiving set whose resonance and tone
quality will be particularly suited to your specific
needs. A radio purchased from one of these houses
is bound to be satisfactory.
And besides getting exactl}' the set you want,
you have the comfort of doing business with an
old establishment whose known reliability assures
you of authentic value, regardless of- price.
Following was the picture of a radio set, with
loud speaker in place, and the following admonition—
both terse and sensible:
"See these music nouses before deciding the radio
question: W. W. Kimball Co., pianos, 308 South
Wabash avenue; Lyon & Healy, Wabash and Jack-
son; The Brunswick Shop, 225 South Wabash ave-
nue; Bent Music Shop, 214 South Wabash avenue;
The Rudolph Wurlitzer Co., 329 South Wabash ave-
nue; Steger & Sons Piano Mfg. Co., northwest cor-
ner Wabash and Jackson; Wade Twichell Co, 3'11
South Wabash avenue"
SONG WRITER DIES.
Thomas J. Grey, writer of several successful popu-
lar songs, died in New York last week at the age of
thirty-six. His talents included the ability to write
humorous plays.
W/jic/t of these Song Hits
do you like best f
TALLAHASSEE
BROKEN DREAMS
!T WONDERFUL WORLD •*&•?'
BOBBED HEAD'
BRINGING HONE THE BACON
BETTER K E E P AWAY
Best Loved CHRISTMAS CAROLS Wo ^ U si a c nd
Booklet 5x8 for Piano Manufacturers and Dealers.
Used in large editions every year. Order now.
Send for samples to
STATE REGISTER, Dept. A, Springfield, 111.
No E/vmA/s/cE FEE
1st Prize
2nd .
3rd
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$5002-°
$2002-°
% 1002?
*25*s
Ask v o u r Music Dealer aboui the
f/£AQST MUSIC COMPETITION and Oet
your Voting Coupons from him
Kiuit Main Pw.» CUIM
Take Advantage of this Business Pushing Publicity
Get your full share of the business fay putting
this competition over.
All Material Supplied FREE.
Write any of our offices.
HEARST MUSIC PUBLISHERS OF CANADA
Limited
WINNIPEG
NEW YORK
25
PRESTO
CHICAGO
TORONTO
VANCOUVER
NEW RADIO PATENT BUREAU
Radiant Energy Division Just Formed by Govern-
ment Headed by C. D. Backus.
The patent office at Washington has created a new
division to handle applications for patents on inven-
tions dealing with radio. The new division, which
is known as the "radiant energy division," will be
headed by C. D. Backus, who for fourteen years has
been in the electrical energy division. Dr. William
A. Kinnan, first assistant commissioner of patents,
will supervise the new division.
The new radio division has twelve examiners, and
is the farthest in arrears of any division in the patent
office. It is hoped that with the change the patent
office can catch up on radio inventions.
At the present time there are pending around 2,000
applications for patents on radio apparatus. To
date, about 2,500 patents have been granted dealing
with radio, while in the neighborhood of 10,000 appli-
cations have been turned down.
There has been a tremendous increase in applica-
tions for radio patents during the last year. At pres-
ent they are fairly raining into the patent office.
The first important radio patent was granted to
Marconi in 1896.
SHEET MUSIC TRADE NOTES
A Few Items Interesting to People in Sheet Music
Department Are Printed.
"Follow the Swallow," a Remick hit, is a big seller
in Tacoma, Wash.
A display of selections from operas given by the
San Carlos Opera Co., playing in Boston last week,
made by the Oliver Ditson Co., resulted in lively
sales.
The new manager of the sheet music department
in the Oakford Music Co., Omaha, Neb., is Miss
Marie Novak.
The business of the Schirmer Music Co. in the
Steinert Building, Providence, R. I., has been sold
to the Coleman Music Co., a house with a lively
sheet music department.
"Howdy Do," the "radio song" composed by C. P.
Harrison, manager of the Ted Brown Music Co., Chi-
cago, has a hundred verses. Mr. Harrison composed
"Arizona Blues," "Drifting Back to Dreamland," and
others.
"Dainty Miss" and "If We Should Part," the first
a fox-trot and the second a ballad, are two new num-
bers published by Sherman, Clay & Co., San Fran-
cisco.
JOHN HAD NO BANANAS.
John Crotty, Chicago, drove his flivver over an
enbankment on the Illinois Central Railroad tracks
last Sunday night and the machine landed upside
down on tracks thirty feet below. Police rushed to the
scene. They heard a voice, but couldn't lift the car
to find out whose voice it was, so they called the
fire department. Firemen hoisted the car to the
street. Then Crotty got up and sang, "Yes, We
Have No Bananas." The cops smelled his breath
and locked him up.
ADVERTISING SONG BOOKS
Editor Presto: One of our customers inquires
about a collection of old-fashioned songs, suitable for
giving out to prospects and the general public. If
you can inform us where these are printed, you will
confer a great favor, and incidentally boost the piano
business, as it is a foregone conclusion that every-
one receiving a book will need a piano on which to
produce the accompaniments.—A Jobber.
Reply: About the best book of the kind within
our knowledge is put forth in quantities by the Illi-
nois State Register of Springfield, III. We believe
if you write to that concern you will get a sample of
about what you want.—Presto.
Over 50 songs, words and music for 4 voices and piano,
?'i p.p., 6x9, in editions with special illuminated cover
printed to order as wanted. Mention Presto.
REMICK SONG HITS
Mandalay
It Had to Be You
There's Yes, Yes in Your Eyes
Dreamer of Dreams
Follow the Swallow
New Kind of Man
My Best Girl
Me and the Boy Friend
Little Black Buddy
Until Tomorrow
Old Pal
Goodnight, Sleep Tight
Where the Lazy Daisies Grow
Bring Back the Old Fashioned Waltz
The Grass Is Always Greener (In the
Other Fellow's Yard)
J. H. REMICK & CO.
New York
Chicago
Detrvit
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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