Presto

Issue: 1927 2141

14
PRESTO-TIMES
August 13, 1927.
by The Parker-Young Company should be addressed
to the newly organized company at Lisbon.
"We feel that this change will be the means of
giving you even better service than it has been pos-
Lisbon Manufacturing Company, Lisbon, N. sible for you to have in the past," is the statement
of the Lisbon Manufacturing Company, through its
H., Formed to Take Over Piano Parts
general manager, Wm. P. Long. "With our very
Business of Parker-Young Company.
large holdings of timberlands, mills, and an organ-
The Lisbon Manufacturing Company, Lisbon, N. ization especially trained in the manufacture of piano
H., has just been organized, and acquired August 1 parts, we believe we can offer you quality merchan-
the piano parts business heretofore conducted by dise at a fair price and unequaled service for many
years to come. We sincerely hope that we will con-
The Parker-Young Company at Lisbon, N. H.
H. B. Moulton, president of The Parker-Young tinue to receive your orders in the future, that we
Company, will also be president of the Lisbon Man- may have an opportunity of proving this statement."
ufacturing Company, and he needs no introduction
to the piano trade. The rest of the management
VENEER FIRM INCORPORATES.
will comprise the same personnel who have been
The Dixie Veneer Co., Richmond, Va., with a
directing the activities of this branch of The Parker- capital stock of 200 shares common (without par
Young Company for a number of years. L. R. value) and $150,000 preferred stock, was recently
Bressler will be with the company as sales manager incorporated with John R. Dean of Chicago, presi-
and will give the same personal contact as in the dent, and E. M. Preston, secretary. Irvin G. Craig
past.
and R. H. Knight are also incorporators.
Commencing August 1st, the executive, sales and
manufacturing officers will all be located at Lisbon,
Viroqua, Wis., lays claim to the youngest band in
so that any correspondence from that date on rela-
tive to the piano parts business heretofore conducted the country. Twenty children in the local school's
kindergarten, a regular, uniformed, marching, musical
organization, makes up the band.
NEW SUPPLY HOUSE
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.
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.
1305-09 North 27th St.,
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
Greater Beauty
and Greater
A. C. CHENEY
PIANO ACTION COMPANY
SCARFS,
GUSH-
IONS,
COVERS
CASTLETON, N. Y.
SCHAFF
Piano String Co,
Manufacturer* of
Comfort
Bench Cushions, Piano Throws, Bags
for Small Instruments, Upholstered
Bench Tops.
Illustrated Folder* On Request
MUSICAL INSTRUMENT WOODS
Specialized Uses Found for Varieties Which Have
the Highly Desirable Character of Resonance.
Apparatus has been used to test and determine tbe
vibratory qualities of wood, and formulas and equa-
tions involving higher mathematics have been worked
out to express values; but no scientific process has
found out much more than has been ascertained by
simple experiments with different woods by prac-
tical makers of musical instruments.
The most highly specialized use of wood, due to
its resonance, is found in the piano sounding board.
The finest spruce goes there, though occasionally
other woods have held the place. Southern white
cedar was once more popular than spruce as sound-
ing boards, but it is not so now.
The piano is not the only musical instrument which
profits by the resonance of wood. The pipe organ
does it, but probably not so much as formerly. Most
pipes are now made of metal. The quality of wood
in a violin has much to do in determining the value
of the instrument. The old master makers of vio-
lins, like Stradivari, Amati and Guarneri, selected
their wood and prepared it with as much care as
they bestowed on the actual shaping and joining.
Maple has always been one of the finest violin woods,
and it is nearly always combined with some soft-
wood like pine or spruce.
Some of the finest working in wood is done in
producing high-class horns for talking machines.
The resonance in the spruce horn of the Starr pho-
nograph is a noted feature. The horn is a sort of
sounding board, corresponding to that of the piano.
There are very fine instruments which are made
without wooden horns, but many persons claim that
the wooden horn gives a softness and richness of
the tone which is extremely rare.
The xylophone is a small musical instrument which
does not rank very high in science or art. Its name
GENERAL PIANO KEY
REPAIRING
24-HOUR
SERVICE
RECOVERING
BUSHING
SHARPS
E. A. BOUSLOG, Inc.
2106 Boulevard Place
INDIANAPOLIS, IND.
Period Drapery and Mfg. Co.
NEW ALBANY, IND.
The Piano Repair Shop
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 Nevj Price List.
Corner Lewis Street
McMACKIN PIANO SERVICE
CHICAGO
Factory: 1721-3 Mondamin Avenue
DES MOINES, IA.
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 Aye.
Chicago
FOR_TRUE ECONOMY BUY
PERFECTION
Benches and Cabinets
The line that sells on sight and satisfies always
STYLE 25
Send for catalog and price list
PERFECTION FURNITURE COMPANY
1514-1520 Blue Island Ave.
Chicago, 111.
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/
August 13, 1927.
15
PRESTO-TIMES
COINOLAS
FOR
RESTAURANTS, CAFES and
AMUSEMENT CENTERS
Style C-2
FROM THE BIGGEST
ORCHESTRION
is a combination of two Greek words meaning "wood
sound." The music which it produces is caused more
by the vibrations of wood than is the case with most
musical instruments which utilize the resonant quali-
ties of that material. The manufacturer's success
with this instrument, as with most others where the
resonance of wood has an important function to per-
form, depends upon the care with which the wood for
the rods are selected, shaped, seasoned and mounted.
Most softwoods listed in this industry do not owe
their place to their resonance. For instance, much
white pine and sugar pine are manufactured into keys
for organs and pianos, but they are preferred for
those places on account of their lightness and smalJ
tendency to warp, and not for any quality of res-
onance which they may possess. Such softwoods
as hemlock, Douglas fir, yellow pine and cypress are
demanded for the frames of large instruments to give
the necessary strength without too much weight or
at too great a cost.
Hardwoods constitute eighty per cent of all the
material furnished by forests to the manufacturers
of musical instruments in this country. That figure
a'one tells the story of the importance of this class
of woods along the line indicated. Measured in feet,
there is much more softwood in the United States
than hardwood—five or six times as much. But in
kinds or species, hardwoods are far more numerous
than the others. Manufacturers engaged in the in-
dustry under discussion use not only more kinds of
hardwoods but a larger quantity. Five feet of hard-
wood go to these manufacturers to one foot of soft-
wood.
Maple leads all the others which follow in the
following order: Yellow poplar, chestnut, oak, elm,
birch, basswood, red gum, black walnut, beech, ash,
cottonwood, tupelo, cherry, sycamore, butternut,
buckeye, holly, hickory.
Maple leads, not because this wood has some spe-
cial use which accounts for the large demand, but it
is due to the general fitness of maple for many parts
of musical instruments. Most of its qualities are
good ones, and it has many. It fills numerous places
and does it well.
Louis E. Cook has opened a new music store at
451 San Benito street, Hollister, Cal.
FIELD FOR COINOLAS
Great Extent and Continuous Development
of the Market for Coin-Operated Instru-
ments Interests Dealers in Line.
The comprehensive line of Coinolas of the Opera-
tors' Piano Co., 715-721 North Kedzie avenue, Chi-
cago, includes instruments of all sizes suitable to
cafes, restaurants, ice cream parlors and amusement
places, from the biggest orchestrion to the smallest
keyless instrument—the Tiny Coinola. The expan-
sion of the market for coin operated instruments
should prompt the alert dealer to investigate the
presentations of the Operators' Piano Co.
The great development of this phase of the music
business is a fact noticed by everybody in the music
trade. It is a phase of the business that is really only
in the beginning and the wonderful possibilities of its
growth is an alluring thought for the ambitious man.
It is a comparatively new business and has no ham-
pering precedents for the new man. The size of the
field is great and the necessities for each kind of cus-
tomer explaining the variety in the line of such
houses as the Operators' Piano Co., whose range of
Coinolas is as comprehensive as admirable.
The Kroh Music Co. of Muskogee, Okla., has
opened a store in Holdenville, Okla.
Wanted. Tfoung Men!
—to become specialists in a field which will not
only pay them exceptionally well but which
will give them social standing and prominence!
O young men looking for such an opportunity v/u
have an unusual offer. Right now in numberless
cities and towns in the United States, there is a jjrtat
shortage of piano experts, technicians and tuners.
The few masters there are, are earning large salaries
for thl3 exceptionally pleasant work. Their time is
Crirrcr'
their own. They meet the best peo-
rKtC
pie *nd »»n establish a wealthy clien-
o j « , \ . • ' e l e - W e c a n flt J"'U f o r t h ' 8 profession
Send for free book- in L .oroximately 12 short weeks' time!
let which tells. al
„ „ not 8 musician ,
Now don . t
about t our u practical
You don't neu<1 to be. In fact, 60 per
?!!! £°™ « h 'g™'^ pent of our g, aduatea never took a music
e omu i e s s o n And
now
they
are earning from
$250 to $. r >j() a month!
pportunity you are looking for. Pull yourself out
the rut. Make a place for yourself among the
estpeople. Our complete course in our new $85,-
00.00 laboratory fits you for a real paying pro-
fession. You can do it. Others have with noVtter
backing: than you have. Find out the facts anyway.
POLK COLLEGE OF PIANO TUNING
Polk Building. D*U1O
La Port.. Ind.
T
Crossman Lumber
Company
Choice Lower Michigan
End Dried White Maple
Quartered Maple
Wide Maple
Polk College of Piano Tuning, La Porte. Ind.
Please send me a copy of your free booklet.
I like the idea of becoming- a professional
piano expert.
All thicknesses
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
Felts
Grand and Upright Ham~
mert Made of Weickert Felt
Dealers' Attention Solicited
A. L. WHITE MFG. CO.
and Damper
Fine Action Bushing Cloths, etc
215 Englewood Ave., CHICAGO, ILL.
Tiny Colnola
THE SMALLEST
KEYLESS
KEYS RECOVERED AND REBUSHED
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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