Presto

Issue: 1927 2120

20
March 19, 1927.
PRESTO-TIMES
HOOVER RADIO ANNOUNCEMENT
Our large stock is very Beldom depleted, and your
order, whether large or small, will receive imme-
diate attention.
In addition, you get the very
beat of
Felts; Cloths; Hammers; Punching*;
Music Wire; Tuning Pins; Player
Parts; Hinges; Castings; etc.
We have
in «tock a full line of
Pianos and Organs.
materials
for
AMERICAN PIANO
SUPPLY COMPANY
110-112 EAST 13th STREET
NEW YORK
Worry Over Player Details
is avoided by the manufac-
turer who uses the
A. C. Cheney Player Action
in his products. He knows
everything is all right and
that the best musical quali-
ties of his pianos are develop-
ed by the use of this player
mechanism.
A. C.CHENEY
PIANO ACTION COMPANY
CASTLETON, N. Y.
SCHAFF
Piano String Co.
Manufacturer* of
Secretary of Commerce Believes New Commission
Will Straighten Out Chaos in Broadcasting.
Secretary Hoover has announced the separation of
the radio division of his department from the bureau
of navigation, of which it has heretofore been a part.
Hereafter the radio division will be an independent
unit under the direct supervision of Secretary
Hoover. William D. Terrell, who has been chief
radio supervisor of the bureau of navigation, was
appointed chief of the new radio division.
It is the expectation of Secretary Hoover that the
new commission will speedily straighten out the chaos
now existing in the air. The commission is to have
original jurisdiction over such matters as the alloca-
tion of wave lengths and the licensing of broadcast-
ing stations. After the first year the department of
commerce will have original jurisdiction with the
commission acting as an appellate body on contro-
versial matters.
goods department of the J. W. Greene Co.,
Toledo, O.
Musical merchandise is handled by G. E. Allen,
who recently opened a store in Morton, Minn.
The National Association of Musical Instrument
and Accessories Manufacturers met at the Buffalo
Athletic Club, Buffalo, N. Y.. March 3 and 4.
The Wisconsin Radio Trade Association have or-
ganized a salesmen's contest for the summer in which
$1,500 worth of prizes are offered, the first prize
being $500.
AMERICAN PIANO SUPPLY CO.
House Carries Large Stock of High Grade Materials
and Is Prompt in Shipment.
The American Piano Supply Company, 110-112
East 13th street, New York, is proud of its reputation
for prompt news in shipping the orders of piano man-
ufacturers, piano tuners and piano repairmen. The
house carries a big stock which is never depleted.
The catalog of the company is a good thing to have
on file and the name and address an excellent thing
to have at hand at all times and particularly in case
Many New Names Appear in Musical Instrument of an emergency requiring an order by telegraph.
Piano manufacturers, repairmen and tuners who
Business and Old Ones Continue in Activities.
want the best in piano supplies and in the quickest
The Fix-It Phonograph Shop, Washington, D. C, time will appreciate .the methods of the company. It
which specializes in phonograph repairs, moved last carries a big line of felts, cloths, punchings, music
week from 715 H street, N. W., to 70 H street, N. W. wire, tuning pins, player parts, hinges, casters, ham-
Thomas W. Woodward is proprietor.
mers and everything in the line of materials for
Three display windows are advantages appreciated pianos, playerpianos, reproducing pianos and organs.
by Max Lang, Olean, N. Y., talking machine dealer,
in his new store in a specially remodeled building at
MUSKEGON FIRM RECONSTRUCTS.
239 North Union street.
The La Rue Music Shop, Columbus, Ohio, has
Complete reconstruction of old Collins Music
been moved to 144 South High street. Miss Julie House building at 426 Western avenue, Muskegon.
LaRue is proprietor.
Mich., into a modern business block was started last
A big merger by several lumber and milling inter- week. About $8,000 will be spent in remodeling and
ests in British Columbia, is anticipated, according to redecorating the structure, according to Lawrence
P. Collins, manager. It is expected that it will be
the Vancouver, B. C, newspapers.
The Charles S. Walton Co., 200 South Tenth street, about two months before the building will be ready
for occupancy again. In the meantime the company
Philadelphia, recently filed a voluntary petition in
will be located at 448 West Western avenue.
bankruptcy with liabilities of $10,962 and assets of
$3,849. David A. Amrum is receiver.
The Plaut-Cadden., Co. has remodeled its music
A vigorous letter campaign for sales has been
inaugurated by Sam Sautelli, manager of the small and furniture store at Norwich, Conn.
NEWS OF SMALL GOODS FIELD
GENERAL PIANO KEY
REPAIRING
24-HOUR
and Greater
E. A. BOUSLOG, Inc.
INDIANAPOLIS, IND.
Comfort
SCARFS,
CUSH-
IONS,
COVERS
SERVICE
RECOVERING
BUSHING
SHARPS
2106 Boulevard Place
Greater Beauty
Bench Cushions, Piano Throws, Bags
for Small Instruments, Upholstered
Bench Tops.
Illustrated Folder* On Request
Period Drapery and Mfg. Co.
PIANO KEYS RECOVERED
Piano Bass Strings
2009-2021 CLYBOURN AVENUE
Heaviest grade Pyralin Ivory, beveled
and polished to look like the finest ivory
keyboards built. Beautiful work, guaran-
teed. Sharps ebonized, bushings, etc.
We begin work on your keys the minute they
arrive. Write for New Price List.
Cor er Lewis Street
McMACKIN PIANO SERVICE
CHICAGO
Factory: 1721-3 Mondamin Avenue
DES MOINES, IA.
HAMMACHER, SCHLEMMER & CO.
PIANO and PLAYER
HARDWARE, FELTS, TOOLS,
RUBBERIZED PLAYER FABRICS
New York. Since 1848
4th
and 13th St.
NEW ALBANY, IND.
OTTO R. TREFZ, Jr.
PIANO BASS STRINGS —PIANO REPAIR SUPPLIES
TUNERS AND REPAIRERS
Our new Illustrated Catalogue of Piano
and Player Hardware, Felts and Tools
is now ready. If you haven't received
your copy let us know.
2110 Fairmount Ave.
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
The Piano Repair Shop
Pianos and Phonographs Rebuilt by
Expert Workmen
Player-actions installed, Instruments
rennished or remodeled and actions and
keys repaired. Work guaranteed. Prices
reasonable.
Our-of-town dealers' repair work solic-
ited. Write for details and terms.
THE PIANO REPAIR SHOP
339 South W&bash Ave.
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/
Chicago
March 19, 1927.
21
PRESTO-TIMES
COINOLAS
FOR
RESTAURANTS, CAFES and
A M U S E M E N T CENTERS
FACTS ABOUT THE BUYERS
Proportion of Women Purchasers of Musical In-
struments a Surprising Thing Revealed by Survey.
Out of every ten instruments sold by musical mer-
chandise dealers, ten are sold to women. The fact
is revealed in a survey recently made by the Conn
Music Center, Elkhart, Ind, among the dealers in
twenty cities. The estimate of women as buyers is
made from the results of 320 actual transaction,.
A surprising thing to many is that the preferences
of the fair buyers were similar to those of the male
purchasers of musical instruments. One might con-
sider, however, that nine per cent of the trombone
buyers out of the 320 transactions was a big num-
ber, or that sixteen per cent of trumpet buyers was
equally surprising. Fifty-two per cent of the women
bought saxophones.
Other interesting facts that may enlighten the
musical merchandise dealer in his pursuit of business
is that 74 per cent of the buyers were under thirty
years of age. Fully thirty-four per cent were under
twenty-one years of ago, nineteen per cent between
twenty-one and twenty-Jive and twenty-one per cent
between twenty-five and thirty.
MAKING TOWN BANDS
Style C-2
FROM THE BIGGEST
ORCHESTRION
New Method Distributes Cost and Is Proving Great
Stimulation to Local Music Enthusiasm.
The guiding principle behind the law that permits
a community or town band is that the cost of
maintaining that band is shared by all, and this makes
the individual cost a matter of a few cents a year.
In this way, it is easy to build up and maintain a
musical organization which a town can be proud of
without placing the burden of its support on any one
element in the community.
This new method of maintaining bands has received
the indorsement of numerous business men and or-
ganizations throughout Illinois. By this means, a
specified sum is made available for band purposes
each year.
Under the older method, local business men made
up an annual purse for the support of the band, on
the theory that whatever stimulates community activ-
ity reacts to the benefit of business. This arrange-
ment made the financing of a band hard, uncertain
and unjust. The new plan is being welcomed in
many places as the most equitable, democratic, as
well as most practical method. The bill was made a
law on June 27, 1925.
TALKING MACHINE EXPORTS
Value of Machines Sent to Foreign Countries in 1926
Shows Increase Over 1925.
Exports of American talking machines for 1926 ex-
ceeded those of 1925 by a million dollars, according
to figures published by the Bureau of Foreign and
Domestic Commerce. The total value of the talking
machines shipped abroad during 1926 was $3,280,000
compared with $2,270,000 in 1925.
The increase in 'the exports of talking machine rec-
ords for 1926 compared with 1925 was equally well
marked. The total number for 1926 was 5,538,000,
valued at $2,222,000, as compared with $1,720,000
in 1925.
Mexico was our best customer for talking machines
last year and bought $420,000 worth, just double that
purchased in the year before. Australia bought ma-
chines .to the value of $330,000 in 1926; Cuba, $263>
682; Argentine, $243,000, and Columbia, $290,000.
A BANJO DEMONSTRATION.
A $5,000 display of custom built banjos was ex-
hibited and demonstrated at the Harding & Miller
Music Company's store, 524 Main street, Evansville,
Ind., on March 5, by Ralph Dexter of Kalamazoo,
Mich. Dexter was formerly with the Paul Whiteman
and Vincent Lopez orchestras and also has appeared
in vaudeville with a banjo specialty act.
HENRY DREHER GIVES PRIZE.
A grand piano has been awarded by Henry Dreher,
head of the Dreher Piano Co., Cleveland, O , to be
offered as a prize in the choral contests to be held
at the national gathering of the German choral so-
cieties in Cleveland next June. Other valuable prizes
will be donated by Cleveland music dealers in the
contests in which four thousand people will partici-
pate.
A CONN TRADE MARK.
C. G. Conn, Ltd., Elkhart, Ind., has applied to the
United States Patent Office for registration of the
name C. G. Conn, Ltd., as a trade mark for the
following instruments: Trumpets, alto horns, cor-
nets, French horns, tenor horns, valve trombones,
slide trombones, baritone horns, euphoniums, bass
horns, sousaphones, bugles, saxophones, clarinets,
oboes, flutes, piccolos, 'cellos and carrusophones.
OPENS SAN FRANCISCO BRANCH.
A branch of the Continental Music Co., Chicago,
musical merchandise jobbers, has been opened at 140
Second street, San Francisco. Paul M. Gazeley, sec-
retary of the company, is manager of the branch,
which will take care of all business west of the
Rockies. A complete stock of all lines handled by
the jobbing house will be carried.
NEW TENOR UKULELE.
Rutan, Inc., Kansas City. Mo., manufacturers of
professional ukuleles, is now introducing a tenor-
ukulele which is said to be meeting with a good
demand. John Rutan, head of the company, who is
traveling in the west, reports a lively interest among
dealers and professional players in the new instru-
ment.
Philip W. Oetting & Son, Inc.
213 East 19th Street, New York
HIGH GRADE
Folding Organs
School Organs
Sole Agents for
WEICKERT
Hammer and Damper Felts
Practice Keyboards
Grand and Upright Ham-
mer* Made of Weickert Felt
Dealers 1 Attention Solicited
A. L. WHITE MFG. CO.
215 Englewood Ave., CHICAGO, ILL.
Fine Action Bushing Cloths, etc
KEYS RECOVERED AND REBVSHED
Tiny Coinola
THE SMALLEST
KEYLESS
FRIELD MILLER & COMPANY
Samples of Work on Request
Prompt and Efficient Service
3355 North Illinois Street, INDIANAPOLIS, IND.
Manufactured by
The Operators Piano Co.
715-721 N. Kedzie Ave.
CHICAGO
FAIRBANKS
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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