Presto

Issue: 1929 2227

14
May 15, 1929
P R E S T 0-T I M E S
APEX RADIO MEN
HOLD CONVENTION
Spring Convention of Apex Division of United
States Radio and Television Corpora-
tion Draws Fifth of Nation's
Jobbers to Indianapolis.
Radio jobbers from all parts of the United States,
representative of one-fifth of the entire radio indus-
try in the country, attended the recent annual spring
convention of the Apex division of the United States
Radio and Television Corporation at the Hotel Sev-
crin, Indianapolis.
The United States Radio and Television Corpora-
tion, in which Allen G. Messick is chairman, is a
consolidation of the Apex Radio Company, the Case
Radio Company, the Allied Manufacturing Corpora-
tion and other cabinet and accessory manufacturers.
The corporation recently acquired the Robbins Body
Corporation, Indianapolis, linking that plant with
three plants at Marion and one at Wabash in a $5,-
000,000 merger.
Radio in Every Home.
Every home in the United States will be equipped
with a radio by 1935 at the present rate of buying by
the American public, Mr. Messick told the jobbers at
the opening of the convention, which was devoted to
discussions of sales and advertising plans. The pro-
gram on April 29 included a tour of inspection at
the Robbins plant, and a dinner and entertainment
on the roof garden of the Hotel Scverin.
More than two hundred jobbers left on a special
train April 30 for Marion, Indiana, where they in-
spected the Case radio plants of the company and
looked over the new line of radio equipment on dis-
play at the Marion Country Club, where they had
luncheon.' After a business meeting in the after-
noon they attended a community party at the fac-
tory and the Marion coliseum at night.
"Approximately 9,000,000 of the 28,000,000 homes
in the United States now have radios," Mr. Messick
said. "This means that 19,000,000 homes are yet to
he equipped. More than 3,000,000 new radios will be
sold in this country in 1929. If this rate is continued,
it will take about six and a half years to provide every
home'in America with a radio.
"Nearly $2,000,000 is being spent every day in the
United States for the purchase of radio receiving
sets, cabinets, speakers, parts and combination ra-
Th« H«pp«, Uarcellua and Edouard Jul»* Piano
manufactured by th«
HEPPE PIANO COMPANY
ar» tha only pianos In th« world with
Three Sounding Board*.
Patented In the United States, Great Britain,
France. Germany and Canada.
Liberal arrangements to responsible agents only.
Main Office. 1117 Chestnut St.
PHILADELPHIA. PA.
dios and phonographs. The nation's bill will total
more than $700,000,000 in 1929. Phenomenal growth
of the radio industry in recent years is indicated by
the fact that in 1922 sales of radios in this country
totaled only $60,000,000 or less than one-tenth of the
present volume. Today more than 175,000 persons
throughout the United States are dependent on the
radio industry for their livelihood, including toilers
in factories and offices, wholesalers, jobbers, retailers
p.nd radio salesmen."
To Produce 6000,000.
The United States Radio and Television Corpora-
tion this year alone expects to produce 600,000 radio
sets, it was said at the meeting. The corporation's
plants in Indiana have floor space of 652,000 square
feet. W. C. Perkins is president of the corporation,
and Arthur E. Case is vice-president in charge of
manufacturing.
The Robbins plant in Indianapolis has been
equipped to be the world's largest and most complete
radio cabinet factory. With the inclusion of the five
Indiana plants in the merger, Indiana will be the fifth
largest radio producing state in the Union.
PERFECTION CO. MOVES
TO LARGER QUARTERS
Makers of Perfection Benches Begin Opera-
tions in Bigger Plant Equipped with the
Newest in Machinery.
LAROS, JOLAS PLAY
"AT THE BALDWIN"
Two More Informal Evenings "At the Bald-
win" Featuring Pianists of International
Fame Delight Millions of Music Lov-
ing Radio Listeners on Nation-
wide Hookups.
Another internationally known pianist. Jacques
Jolas, was the featured artist "At the Baldwin," Sun-
day, May 12. He was assisted by the Baldwin Sing-
ers in a Brahm-Liszt program.
Jolas, pupil of Teresa Carreno and Isidor Phillipp.
and well known to concertgoers in Europe and thi>
country, was born in America but spent most of his
youth in Alsace Lorraine. At the age of fifteen.
Tolas returned to this country where he has resided
since, with the exception of three years of study in
Paris and Berlin.
*
Jolas began his career as a piano player in a cafe,
but it was not long before a prominent musician no-
ticed his great talent and took him to Teresa Car-
reno, who offered to teach him. Since that time his
rise has been steady and last season found him, after
touring Europe, returning to this country to play in
all the leading cities.
Lams, Jolas.
Although identified with modern music, Jacques
The Perfection Furniture Company has moved
from Blue Island avenue to 2267-69 Clybourn avenue, Jolas is at heart a romanticist and the Brahm-Liszt
Chicago, where it is occupying much larger space, program which he played "At the Baldwin" is an ex-
pression of his deepest musical sympathies.
necessitated by the growth of its business. President
Earle Laros, noted American pianist and conductor,
F. S. Smith and his partner, Henry Fahn, superin-
was the featured artist "At the Baldwin" Sunday,
tendent of the plant and a very skillful cabinetmaker,
May 5 over WJZ and associated NBC stations.
are very proud of their new quarters, a three-story
Laros was assisted by the Baldwin Singers.
brick building with 25,000 square feet of floor space.
The makers of Perfection benches are installing mod-
Mr. Laros, besides being a well known concert
ern machinery for wood-working and other processes. pianist, is organizer and conductor of the Easton
All heavy machinery will be in the basement, but
Symphony orchestra in his native state of Pennsyl-
one other floor will also be occupied by machines. vania. Among orchestras with which he has ap-
The firm will operate its own lathes and do its own
peared are the New York Symphony and Philhar-
carving and turning.
monic and the Philadelphia and Cincinnati Sym-
phonies.
Fine Cabinet Work.
He made his first appearance at the age of eleven,
One of the handsomest combinations of woodwork
followed by seven years' study with Raphael Jeseffy.
the reporter has seen is the Perfection Furniture Com-
Later, he won a scholarship to the Master Class which
pany's new radio cabinet, an exclusive design, with
diamond-matched doors, panelings in walnut and gum, Feruccio Bosoni was conducting at Basle. Switzer-
and dainty inserts of other fine woods. It speaks land. Others with whom he worked were Mme. Gar-
for itself that Mr. Smith has just returned from a
rigue Ferguson, Rubin Goldmark and Paolo Gallico.
successful trip in Wisconsin, in the course of which
"Pianist with a Message."
he took a good sheaf of orders for these cabinets.
With an orchestral repertoire of standard and mod-
ern concerti and recital programs which range
E. A. KIESELHORST RETURNS.
through all schools from the sixteenth century to the
E. A. Kieselhorst, president of the Kieselhorst
present day, Mr. Laros is an artist whose popularity
Company, St. Louis, has returned home following a
rests on a solid musical basis. He has been called
flying visit to Chicago, where -he conferred with
"the pianist with a message."
Messrs. Pletcher and Page and other directors of
Mme. Dayas, noted pianist, will give the Baldwin
the Q. R. S. Music Company and with some of the
Zenith Radio Corporation's personnel, relative to the hour program on Sunday, May 19.
Mme. Dayas has chosen compositions of Mendels-
merger of the Q. R. S. with the De Vry Corpora-
sohn, Liszt and, as she expresses it, "of course,
tion. Reflecting on the 30 years of steady growth of
Q. R. S., Mr. Kieselhorst grows more enthusiastic Chopin."
daily over the prospects of the newly-formed com-
Mme. Dayas was accorded ovations recently in the
bine.
East when she displayed her remarkable musician-
ship in recitals at the Guild Theater, New York, and
before the Society for the presentation of Contem-
REBUILDING STARCK MAIN STORE
The P. A. Starck Piano Company's store at 228-230 porary Music in Philadelphia.
Her musical career was begun at an early age, for
South Wabash avenue, Chicago, is being thoroughly
rebuilt. Several separate rooms are being constructed her parents were pianists, pupils of the great master,
along the north side of the store in which to demon- Liszt. Their home was in Finland where Karin was
strate radio sets and devices. When the overhauling born. She taught and concertized in Europe, also
is completed, this big store will be one of the most appearing in a number of joint rcc : tals abroad with
attractive anvwhere in the United States.
Gieseking.
99%
interested prospects become customers
« |p ^ A ? j o |p
PERFECTION BENCHES
are used by people who have good taste, appreciate fine things and know sound values.
De Luxe
Louis XV
Send for Catalogue
2267-2269 Clybourne Ave.
Chicago
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/
May 15, 1929
15
P R E S T O-T I M E S
R A D I O
GREAT EXPANSION
LOOMS FOR ERLA
Impulse Given to Manufacturing Activities of
Electrical Research Laboratories by the
Taking Over of The Cable Com-
pany's Chicago Plant.
Purchase of the Chicago plant of The Cable Com-
pany by the Electrical Research Laboratories (Erla)
presages large scale expansion in the manufacturing
activities of this pioneer institution, according to Bur-
ton Greene, president.
Cabinets as well as receivers, electro-magnetic
pick-ups and dynamic speakers will be manufactured
in the new quarters, under the most modern and effi-
cient production methods, using the straight-line prin-
ciple of assembly and materials conveyance.
Real estate acquired measures three acres, with area
under roof 300,000 square feet.
Land now vacant
allows for the tripling of present floor space. Ap-
praised valuation of the property is $1,300,000.
Equipment for manufacturing 1,500 cabinets daily
was taken over as part of the purchase, including a
battery of five dry kilns with a capacity of ten car-
loads of lumber. Contemplated additions to equip-
ment, together with a rearrangement of the produc-
tion layout are expected to increase cabinet capacity
to a maximum of 2,500 per day, without extra floor
space.
Cable employees previously engaged in the plant in
piano manufacture, are being retained as nucleus of
the Erla cabinet manufacturing division. Piano stand-
ards of workmanship and finish are expected to rule
in Erla cabinet manufacture, as a result.
Manufacturing operations now conducted at the
Erla plant at 2500 Cottage Grove Ave., and at the
Greene-Brown plant at 5100 Ravenswood Ave., Chi-
cago, will be transferred to the Cable plant as rap-
idly as possible.
Mass production of the entire new Erla line, in
eluding cabinets, is scheduled to be under full head-
way at the new plant in another sixty days. Mean-
time, productieoi of new Erla models at the present
Erla plants is being maintained.
JESSE FRENCH OPENS WHOLESALE
AGENCIES.
The Jesse Erench and Sons Piano Co. has estab-
lished wholesale agencies for the handling of its new
line of radio receivers in Scranton, Pa., and in Dallas,
Tex., and sales offices in Boston, Mass., under the
management of Lester G. Jones; and in Los Angeles,
Cal.. under the management of Marshall Breeden.
In connection with the enlargement of the sales
force an extensive advertising program is being ar-
ranged, which will include radio programs from most
of the broadcasting stations in the middle west. With
this extensive advertising campaign, the management
hopes to increase the radio volume to capacity pro-
duction.
A new sales office opened recently in Dayton, O.,
took orders for forty-eight radios in two weeks, and
RADIO RECEIVING SETS
RADIO PARTS
RADIO-PHONOGRAPHS
was so pleased with the machine that it has arranged
for a series of programs to be broadcast soon from
station WSMK.
"SCHOOL RADIO" DEMONSTRATED.
Centralized radio tor schools was demonstrated re-
cently in the New Utrecht High School of Brook-
lyn by Stanley & Patterson, Inc., a sales agent for
the Radio-Victor Corporation of America, to enable
educators to observe af first hand the operation of
a radio system especially adapted to school use.
As many loudspeakers as are desired in the various
classrooms may be connected to a master control
panel. A lime clock automatically starts and stops
the programs. A simple buzzer system is used to
notify the operator at the control panel when to
change the radio program or switch over to the
phonograph mechanism.
This demonstration forecasts the important part
radio is destined to play in supplementing existing
methods of teaching.
SUMMER RADIO SALES.
The radio industry still has much to do to
strengthen the sale of receivers during the summer
months, information compiled by the merchandising
division of the Radio Manufacturers' Association in-
dicates.
Much progress has been made toward equalizing
the distribution of sales throughout the year, for sales
during June, July and August have been increased
from an average of only 6% previous to 1928 to 14%
of last year's total. Still, much remains to be done to
convince the public that the uitility of the radio does
not end with the advent of warm weather.
TO HANDLE MAJESTIC PAPER.
The Grigsby-Grunow Company announces the for-
mation of The Majestic Corporation, with offices at
120 South La Salle street, Chicago, to finance the
paper of its authorized dealers in connection with in-
stallment sales of Majestic electric radio receiving
sets. All of the stock of The Majestic Corporation
will be owned by the Grigsby-Grunow Company.
The decision of the company to finance the install-
ment paper of its dealers has caused no little dis-
satisfaction in the local banks throughout the coun-
try, which heretofore handled the paper.
ARCTURUS RADIO CO. BUYS FACTORY.
Arcturus Radio Tube Company has purchased the
factory building at No. 708 Frelinghuysen avenue.
Newark, N. J.. in connection with its plan of ex-
pansion. This building will add 111,000 square feet
to the present 45,000 square feet of manufacturing
facilities of the company and will provide for an in-
crease in production of from 17,500 tubes daily to
about 45,000 tubes. Operations will be started four-
teen days and extended as rapidly as possible, accord-
ing to President C. H. Braselton.
t
NO SUMMER BROADCAST SLUMP
There will be no summer slump in radio broadcast-
ing this year, for chain broadcasting has now been
established on a basis that insures quality entertain-
ment the year round. Broadcasters are announcing
that the popular radio programs heard weekly during
the winter evenings will be enhanced rather than dis-
continued this summer.
TAXING BROADCASTERS.
The radio industry is manifesting unusual interest
in the proposal of license fees for all broadcasting
stations in the country in order to pay Government
radio administration costs. In accordance with a Sen-
ate resolution the Radio Commission is preparing a
schedule of fees for different kinds of licenses.
With 40,000.000 radio listeners in the United States
and the annual radio administration cost to the Gov-
ernment amounting to only $800,000 a year, Uncle
Sam is paying only two cents a year per listener.
It is believed by radio listeners that taxing the
broadcasters will result in inferior programmes and
make it necessary for them to sell more time to adver-
tisers to meet expenses, thereby cutting down the
time left for entertainment.
RMA CONVENTION AND SHOW PLANS.
The greatest radio assemblage in history, as well
as the largest 1929 industrial gathering in the United
States, is now assured for the Radio Manufacturers'
Fifth Annual Convention and Trade Show at Chi-
cago, June 3-7, at the three Chicago hotels—the
Stevens Hotel, the largest in the world; the Congress
and the Blackstone, all close together on Michigan
avenue. The entire trade show space of over 30,000
feet has been oversold, it is announced by President
H. H. Frost of the RMA. An attendance of close
to 25,000 persons connected with or interested in
radio manufacturing, merchandising and broadcasting
is expected.
SUMMERTIME RADIO THEN AND NOW
"Due to the remarkable organization and develop-
ment of broadcasting, the eighth summer of radio
broadcasting comes unnoticed by the broadcast lis-
tener,'' states J. L. Ray, president of Radio-Victor
Corporation of America. "Conscious of the benefit
of a repetitious and cumulative message, most large
commercial program sponsors are continuing their
efforts through the summer months."
LYON & HEALY ADDS SPARTON.
Lyon & Healy, Chicago, has added the Sparton
radio line to the radio department which now features
eight different makes. "The new 1929 Sparton radios
have been added in order that Chicagoans may con-
tinue to have the opportunity for direct side-by-side
comparison of every leading radio," the company
states.
CANVASS TELEVISION PROGRESS.
Recent developments in television are to be con-
sidered by the Radio Manufacturers' Association's
television committee at 10 a. m., Wednesday, May 15,
at ihe Hotel Mayflower, Washington, D. C.
With the installation of radio in the Vatican, Pope
Pius can talk to the Catholic world by means of the
most powerful broadcasting station.
Planning on enlarging its stock and display room,
the Erickson Music company, La Crosse, has leased
the second floor of the building it now occupies. The
second floor will be used for piano display rooms,
while phonographs, radios and sheet music as well as
band instruments will be displayed on the main floor.
Recitals sponsored by the Will A. Watkin Co., Dal-
las, Texas, feature the observance of National Music
week at the Watkin music salon.
NOWF IEADY
THE PRESTO B BUYERS' GUIDE
PRICES
EDITION OF 1929
Is now ready for distribution
Send your order at once and copies will go
forward by first mail after receipt of order
PRESTO
417 S. DEARBORN ST.
One Copy Postpaid 50c
Three copies postpaid $1.40
Six copies postpaid $2.50
Twelve copies postpaid $4.50
Special prices for larger quantities.
Subscribe for Presto-Times with the Buyers' Guide as a
Premium.
Address—
PUB • LISHING CO.
CHICAGO, ILL. U. S. A.
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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