Presto

Issue: 1927 2133

June 18, 1927.
PRESTO-TIMES
20
STRING PLANT EXPANDS
The V. C. Squier Company, Battle Creek, Mich.,
Double Size of Factory.
Us!
Remember
Our Urge stock Is very seldom depleted, and your
order, whether large or small, will receive Imme-
diate attention. In addition, you ret the very
beat of
Felts; Cloths; Hammers; Punching*;
Music Wire; Tuning Pins; Player
Parts; Hinges; Casting*; etc.
W« have In stock a full line of materials for
Pianos and Organs.
AMERICAN PIANO
SUPPLY COMPANY
110-112 EAST 13th STREET
NEW YORK
• • t>
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.
V. C. Squier Company, Battle Creek, Mich., makers
of violins and strings and other musical supplies, is
building a new factory at 429 Lake avenue, corner of
Janoah. The new building will be 32x67 feet, two
stories in height, and will be constructed of red brick.
With the new building, the factory will more than
double its capacity and within interval of two years
or so, it is planned to raze the present units of the
plant, the Lake avenue factory that has been in use
for years and 'the residence connected with it on
Janoah avenue, replacing them with a building that
will complement the structure now in process of
erection.
This entire factory is given over to the making of
violin strings and those for other stringed instru-
ments, as well as string-winding machines, perfected
by the mechanician, J. Gus Crawford, who has been
affiliated with V. C. Squier for years.
The violin department was taken to the Nichols
Building, North Jefferson avenue, seven years ago,
when the business of the string department grew to
such proportions it had to take over the entire fac-
tory. Floyd W. Parsons, son-in-law of Mr. Squier.
is in charge of sales and shipping, while Mr. Squier
has the repair department.
Raymond Gould, brother of Mr. Squier, is manager
of the violin department, and in full charge of the
factory, in which thirty or more people are employed
during the season, which opens in August and closes
around the first of May while the rest of the year the
number ranges from 18 to 20.
Shipments are made mostly within the United
States, though some strings are sent to the old coun-
tries, the jobbers doing the exporting for 'the most
part.
In the violin department high grade violins are
manufactured. They are sold to professional players
and are to be found all over the country. A great
deal of repair work is done also.
A 48-page catalogue listing violins and strings for
all instruments using the bow, and supplies for all
bows, cases, fittings and the like is issued annually by
the Squier company, officers in which are: V. C.
GENERAL PIANO KEY
REPAIRING
Squier, president; Mrs. V. C. Squier, vice-president;
Raymond Gould, treasurer and manager; J. Gus
Crawford, secretary.
This industry was started in 1890 at 433 Lake ave-
nue by Mr. Squier in a little building 10x21 at the
rear of his old home, and from that modest beginning
the present splendid attainments have emanated. Mr.
Squier had studied violin making for eight years in
Boston, Mass., learning his trade from his own father,
Jerome B. Squire, a famous maker of violins, then
going to Wooster, where he studied still further
with some of the greatest violin-makers in the United
States.
NEW TYPE PIANO BENCH.
The Gulbransen Company, Chicago, made its in-
itial showing of a new type piano bench with fancy
beveled top and stretchers. It is one of the most
sturdy and substantial benches on the market, and
at the same time possesses eye value to an unusual
extent. The legs are gracefully tapered also. This
will be the standard bench of the Gulbransen line,
adaptable to all instruments except the small upright.
It has full size music compartment.
AROUSING T H E BAND SPIRIT.
The Whiteland Boys' Band, Whiteland, Ind, an
organization containing fifty skilled musicians, played
a concert at the high school gym at Fortville, Ind.,
recently. One of the purposes of the concert which
was sponsored by the Lions Club was to instill an
interest in the organization of a boys' band there.
Prof. Henry has been working on the project for
some time and now has over sixty boys signed up.
No definite date has been set for the organization.
HOLD MUSIC WEEK CONTESTS.
Twenty-one children won silver medals of the New
York Music Week Association in elementary violin
contests held throughout the city, for a grade of 85
per cent or better, recently. Prominent musicians
acted as judges in each case. The contestants were
divided into Grade A and Grade B. The judges de-
clared the standards demonstrated by these young
musicians exceeded the standards of last year's con-
tests.
Downey Coleman, lumber dealer of Oakland City,
Ind., has bought a half-interest in the American Wal-
nut Co., of Rvansville, Ind.
Greater Beauty
and Greater
SCARFS,
GUSH-
IONS,
COVERS
24-HOUR SERVICE
SCHAFF
Piano String Co.
Manufacturer* of
RECOVERING
BUSHING
SHARPS
E. A. BOUSLOG, Inc.
2106 Boulevard Place
INDIANAPOLIS, IND.
Comfort
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
Cor er Lewi* Street
CHICAGO
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.
McMACKIN PIANO SERVICE
Factory: 1721-3 Mondamin Avenue
DES MOINES, IA.
HAMMACHER, SCHLEMMER & CO.
PIANO and PLAYER
HARDWARE, FELTS, TOOLS,
RUBBERIZED PLAYER FABRICS
N«w York, Since 1848
4th Ave. and 13th SL
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
Playei-actions installed. Instruments
refinished 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 Wabash 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
June 18, 1927.
P R E S T 0-T I M E S
COINOLAS
FOR
RESTAURANTS, CAFES and
AMUSEMENT CENTERS
Style C-2
FROM THE BIGGEST
ORCHESTRION
TANGLED RADIO PATENTS
Dealers Attending Chicago Radio Trade Show
Discuss Cleaning Up Conditions in Situ-
ation Regarded as Desperate.
Dealers attending the radio convention in Chicago
this week were confessedly desperate over the in-
volved patent situation effecting the industry. They
attended the first Radio Trade Show at the Coliseum
in the hope that light might be thrown on the situa-
tion, allowing them to go back home and do business
without the fear that they may be ruined by being
caught in an infringement suit.
It was not until the Federal courts began to un-
tangle the radio patent snarl that these dealers began
to worry. As one court decision follows another the
distributors and dealers, as well as the manufac-
turers, are becoming more and more alarmed. They
have suddenly realized that the Federal laws give
the owner of a patent the exclusive right to manu-
facture, use and sell his device. This means, in the
eyes of the law, that the small dealer may be a patent
infringer just the same as the wholesaler or manu-
facturer of an unlicensed set, and the lawful penalty
for such infringement may force the dealer to return
to the patent owner all the profits he has made in
handling the infringing device, in addition to triple
damages if the court so decides.
The show at the Coliseum was a private affair for
the dealers and the general public was not admitted.
The trade was presented with three patent situa-
tions of vital importance to them. The first was that
of the hundreds of patents owned or controlled by
the "R. C. A. Group," of which the members are the
Radio Corporation of America, the General Electric
Company, the Westinghouse Electric and Manufac-
turing Company and the American Telephone and
Telegraph Company. The second was the Latour
patent situation which includes 81 patents and patent
applications relating to radio. The third is the Hazel-
tine situation which embodies four or five patents
covering various types of receiving apparatus.
An important angle of the general patent situation
Crossman Lumber
Company
Choice Lower Michigan
End Dried White Maple
Quartered Maple
Wide Maple
All thicknesses
21
seen was the discovery that the protection of any
one or two of these groups of patents is not suffi-
cient to allow a dealer to legally sell any modern
radio now on the market. Practically all the dealers
attending the show understood the patent situation
as regards the "R. C. A. Group," and insisted that
the manufacturers be licensed under its patents. This
is due to the fact that the group has been vigorously
protecting its patents in the courts for several years,
and a number of important decisions have been ren-
dered.
The situation as it effects the trade was summed
up today by a prominent dealer of New York City
who said that he and his fellow dealers were in a
serious predicament since they realize that unless the
sets they sell are fully licensed under the R. C. A.,
Latour and Hazeltine patents, 'there is a possibility
that years hence the owner of any one of these
patents may take from the dealer by court action all
his profits on selling the infringing set during the
intervening years.
RUBBER RESTRICTION EFFECTS.
Realization that the Stevenson rubber restriction
scheme will, in the long run, benefit Dutch rubber
production at the expense of the British plantation
interests is very slowly and surely coming to the
rubber trade in England. With Malayan exports
once more restricted to 60 per cent, consumption still
failing to improve, and rubber prices displaying a
decided weakness at a shilling, 7 pence and a half
penny a pound, an increasing number of the pro-
ducers are realizing that the price paid for restric-
tion by the British industry may be too high.
KEEPING YOUNG WITH RADIO.
Radio is keeping Americans young by spreading
youthful thoughts and ideas throughout the nation,
according to V. Edward Scott, special investigator
of the Freed-Eisemann Radio Corporation. The in-
fluence of the average entertainment program is felt
even in communities where there are but weekly
newspapers and citizens in the most sparsely settled
districts are able to keep up-to-date and in touch with
world events through their radios.
TO RECTIFY INTERFERENCE.
Hearings intended to rectify radio broadcast inter-
ference that result after the June 15 allocations go
into effect were announced June 9 as the procedure
contemplated by the Federal Radio Commission. An
order (General Order No. 15) providing that any
station may file complaints with the Commission for
signal interference by other stations was issued simul-
taneously with .the statement.
A reorganization meeting of the Moose Drum and
Bugle Corps, Elgin, 111., was held last week with the
director, T. Cotton, all the former members, number-
ing twenty, being present to rejoin. An effort will
be made to enlarge this membership.
Grand Rapids, Michigan
Philip W. Oetting & Son, Inc.
213 East 19th Street, New York
HIGH GRADE
Folding Organs
School Organs
Sole Agents for
WEICKERT
Hammer
Practice Keyboards
215 Englewood Av«.. CHICAGO. ILL.
Felts
Grand and Upright Hani'
men Made of Weiekert Felt
Dealers' Attention Solicited
A. L. WHITE MFG. CO.
and Damper
Fine Action Bushing Cloths, e t c
KEYS RECOVERED AND REBUSHED
Tiny Colnola
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
PIANO 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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