Presto

Issue: 1929 2228

June 1, 1929
PRESTO-TIMES
7:00 P. M.—Annual R. M. A. banquet, Grand Ball they point out to future of at least one radio receiver
in the remaining 36,000,000 homes, plus a present
Room, Stevens Hotel.
replacement market of 8,000,000 sets, which increases
National Association of Broadcasters.
annually.
10:30 A. M.—Meeting N. A. B. Board of Directors,
Importance of Replacement Market.
Congress Hotel.
That the replacement market is one of the im-
Federated Radio Trade Association and Radio Whole- portant markets at the present time is attested by the
salers' Association.
fact that of the 12,000,000 sets in operation only
10:00 A. M.—Open meeting, South Ball Room, Ste- 4,000,000 are of modern A. C. operation. All in all,
vens Hotel. (All members of the it looks like a great year for radio.
Radio Industry invited.)
Plans for welcoming the incoming delegates to
Address by Michael Ert, President, the Firth Annual RMA Convention and Trade Show
F. R. T. A.
are in the hands of Paul B. Klugh, vice-president and
Federal Radio L e g i s l a t i o n , Hon. general manager of Zenith, as general chairman. At
Frank D. Scott, Legislative Coun- a luncheon with G. Clayton Irwin, Jr., trade show
sel, F. R. T. A., Washington, D. C. manager, Mr. Flanagan and Mr. Geddes, Mr. Klugh's
Address on "Latest Developments in committee, completed every detail.
Television," D. E. Replogle, Chair-
Those who serve with Mr. Klugh as official greet-
man R. M. A. Television Com- ers are the presidents of five Chicago radio manufac-
mittee.
turing companies. They are: B. J. Grigsby. Grigsby-
Remarks by Peter Sampson, President Grunow Company; R. T. Pierson, Bremer-Tully Man-
Radio Wholesalers' Association.
ufacturing Company; W. L. Jacoby, Kellogg Switch-
Remarks by Henry M. Steussy, Chair- board & Supply Company; L. F. Muter, Leslie F.
man Radio Retailers' Group.
Muter Company, and Eugene Farny, All-American
Remarks by John M. Redell, Chair- Mohawk Corporation.
man Manufacturers' Representatives'
German Band as Greeters.
Group,
Henry
C.
Forster
of Utah Radio Products, chair-
v
Report of Executive Committee.
Round Table discussion of future plans. man of the convention and program committee, has
discovered a German band that he believes is one of
Music Industries Chamber of Commerce.
the loudest and most melodious in Chicago. This Ger-
9:30 A. M.—General Session National Association man band, led in spirit by Bandmaster Forster, will ac-
of Music Merchants, Drake Hotel. company the reception committee to all of the depots.
(Members of the Radio Industry The minute a train bearing the delegates comes to a
stop, the German band will get into action, and a
invited.)
couple of apprentices to the membership of the music
Trade Show and Room Exhibits, Stevens, Blackstone makers will unfurl a huge "welcoming" banner, under
and Congress Hotels.
which all delegations will be photographed.
1:00 P. M. to 5:00 P. M.—Trade Show Hours.
Mr. Forster has also given much attention to the
Thursday—Radio Manufacturers' Association.
annual banquet and to the broadcasting of the ban-
10:00 A. M.—Closed membership meeting, North quet program through some sixty or seventy stations
Ball Room. Stevens Hotel. (Dele- associated with the National Broadcasting Company.
gates and Alternates only.) (All According to present plans the galaxy of stars will
Delegates and Alternates must at- entertain both the visible and invisible audiences from
tend; $50.00 forfeiture for FAIL- 9:30 to 11:00 p. m., Chicago Daylight-saving time
On the $50,000 program will be: Charles Mar-
URE of Exhibitors' Delegate or
shall, tenor; Schumann-Heink; Werrenrath, baritone;
Alternate to attend.)
7:00 P. M.—Annual banquet National Association Gladys Rice, formerly with "Roxy"; "The Happiness
Boys," Jones and Hare, and the Chicago Civic Opera
Music Merchants, Drake Hotel.
Symphony Orchestra. Phillips Carlin, New York
Federated Radio Trade Association and Radio Whole- city, will officiate at the microphone.
salers' Association.
Twenty Male Voices.
10:00 A. M.—R. W. A. closed membership meeting,
During
the
dinner,
and prior to the broadcast, two
South Ball Room, Stevens Hotel.
score or more of artists will present a varied and
10:00 A. M— Meeting of Radio Retailers. P. D. R. entertaining floor program. A feature will be a chorus
No. 1, North, Stevens Hotel.
of twenty male voices, a jazz orchestra and head line
10:00 A. M.—Meeting Radio Manufacturers' Repre- vaudeville numbers. After the broadcast dancing will
sentatives, West Ball Room, Stevens continue until 1:00 o'clock.
Hotel.
Among the radio manufacturers who are sponsors
Music Industries Chamber of Commerce.
of the broadcast program are: American Bosch
7:00 P. M.—Annual banquet, National Association Magneto Corp., Springfield, Mass.; Atwater Kent
of Music Merchants, Drake Hotel. Mfg. Co., Philadelphia; Bremer-Tully Mfg. Co, Chi-
(Members of the Radio Industry cago; CeCo Mfg. Co., Inc., Providence; Crosley Radio
invited.)
Corp., Cincinnati; E. T. Cunningham, Inc., New York-
Trade Show and Room Exhibits, Stevens, Blackstone city; John E. Fast & Co., Chicago; Charles Freshman
Co., Inc., New York city; Grigsby-Grunow Company,
and Congress Hotels.
Chicago; Jensen Radio Mfg. Co., Chicago; Kellogg
1:00 P. M. to 10:00 P. M.—Trade Show Hours.
Switchboard & Supply Co., Chicago; Colin B. Ken-
nedy, Inc, South Bend, Ind.; The Ken-Rad Corp.,
Friday—Radio Manufacturers' Association.
10:00 A. M.—Meeting Board of Directors, P. D. R. Owensboro, Ky.; Kolster Radio Corp., New York
city; The Magnavox Co., Oakland, Cal.; Naticnal
No. 1, North, Stevens Hotel.
12:30 P. M.—Joint luncheon meeting Board of Direc- Carbon, Co., Inc., New York T city; Radio Corpora-
tors R. M. A., F. R. T. A., N. A. B., tion of America-Victor, New York city; The Rola
M. I. C. of C, P. D. R. No. 2, North, Co., Oakland, Cal.; Silver-Marshall, Inc., Chicago;
The Sparks-Withington Co., Jackson, Mich.; Steinite
Stevens Hotel
Radio Co., Chicago; Sylvania Products Co., Empo-
Trade Show and Room Exhibits—Stevens, Blackstone rium, Pa.; United Reproducers Corp., Rochester,
and Congress Hotels.
N. Y , and Chicago; The Utah Radio Products Co.,
1:00 P. M. to 6:00 P. M— Trade Show Hours.
Chicago; Zenith Radio Corp., Chicago.
Chicago bound! For the greatest trade show and
convention in the history of radio, and incidentally
the infant industry can step to the head of the class
for annexing first rank when it comes to turnout at
industrial conventions.
Expect Attendance of 29,000.
At this moment, on the basis of advanced registra-
tions, Radio Manufacturers' Association officials are
predicting an attendance of around the 29,000 mark.
To reach the radio capital of the nation, radio men
are adopting all available means of rapid communi-
cation—airplanes, automobiles, special trains and spe-
cial cars on limited trains.
Just as an indication of the volume of radio busi-
ness which may be expected to roll up during the
radio season, Maj. Herbert H. Frost, president of
RMA, stated that it is his opinion that it would
exceed $800,000,000 or more, possibly just falling short
of the billion dollar mark.
Bond P. Geddes, executive vice-president, and M. F.
Flanagan, executive-secretary, are keeping in close
touch with markets and their report is equally enthu-
siastic. With but 12,000,000 American homes out of
48,000,000 supplied with radio receivers of any kind,
PIANO MEN'S CONVENTION
(Continued from page 5.)
on its career of ambition throughout every corner
of the universe.
It is a slovenly thought to imagine that the piano
has been downed by radio. Nothing of the kind has
happened. Radio grew on its own independent stalk
and the truth of this assertion may be reached by
any fair inquirer. To the rational nature of the
piano manufacturer, to his dignity as a being en-
trusted with the sacred franchise of thought, this may
be very important. True, the piano business has yet
something to gain and a good deal to be rid of, and
this is a time for keeping the mind open to all truth
and not slumbering on the pillow of tradition. It is
a time to use an aggressive rather than a receptive
intelligence in the piano business.
Recognize the Service of the Trade Press.
The flop of the piano business has caused the think-
ing men of the trade to make a re-estimate of the
great services of the trade press. They realize now
that if disaster was launching itself they hastened it
onto the skids by withdrawing their ads. at the most
critical time and thus knocking the blocks out from
beneath the sliding ship. Some of them have so ex-
pressed themselves to Presto-Times recently. And
now as they return to the trade press they realize
that this points to a standard outside themselves. It
is difficult for men whose business knowledge is ma-
ture and settled to realize, to keep as a constant fac-
tor in their thoughts, that some of the elements in
their own business faith and practices ought to be
modified by increasing knowledge and experience.
Because an old method has brought success the plan
gets clogged in the back of men's minds, leading
them into a fallacy. The fallacy consists in identi-
fying the new and sweeping changes of business with
our present and limited knowledge of them. A good
trade paper can help because it acts in a double
capacity—as an outsider looking in and as an insider
looking out. It is more than the voice of one crying
in the wilderness, for it generally speaks advisedly.
New Yorkers are fair; Presto-Times' Eastern corre-
spondent found them so. They have closer personal
contacts than the people of any other city under
heaven on account of their crowded and herded ways
of living and traveling (it requires ribs of twisted
wire to stand the morning and evening crushing in
the subways) and this has taught their thinkers that
any sort of improvement will come most effectively
from conscious co-operation and not from the blind
conflict of individuals. Calculated individual selfish-
ness no longer wins anything, for today the feelings
of mankind fix the scale of values, and anybody will
buy a piano the more readily if he feels that it is a
thing to be loved and trusted.
INVITATION TO BANQUET.
The National Association
of
Music Merchants
invites yourself and ladies
to attend its
Twenty-eighth Annual Banquet
on Thursday evening, June sixth
Nineteen hundred and twenty-nine
at half after six o'clock
The Drake
Upper Michigan Avenue
Chicago
Homer Buckley to Speak.
Homer Buckley has an engaging personality, is
a speaker who holds the attention of his audience
and
he has an exceptional message to present. He
A premier radio program, an all-star assemblage of
radio, operatic and stage headliners, will be broad- has spoken before innumerable associations and or-
cast over a national chain, Wednesday evening, June ganizations at various times. He has made an ex-
5, by the Radio Manufacturers' Association, compris- haustive study of the subject of merchandising in
all its various aspects and is looked upon as an au-
ing virtually all prominent makers of radio products.
thority on the subject. Mr. Buckley is a charter
BOXED CUT
This all-star program, dedicated to the radio public member of the Advertising Club of Chicago and was
by the Radio Manufacturers' Association, will be in a member of the Organization Committee for the first
connection with the banquet of the Fifth Annual Con- convention of the Associated Advertising Clubs.
President Roberts Pleased.
vention of the R. M A.
The R. M. A. program will include:
It gives President Roberts and the members of
Madame Schumann-Heink, the universal favorite the Merchants' Convention Committee a great deal
of Grand Opera, and radio broadcast.
of satisfaction to be able to announce that Mr. Buck-
Reinald Werrenrath, famous baritone of the oper- ley has very graciously accepted the invitation to
atic and concert stage.
address the members of the Merchants' Association
Gladys Rice, formerly of the "Roxy Family."
and they confidently state that they believe this talk
will be one of the high lights of the convention. Mr.
Charles Marshall, the celebrated American tenor.
Jones and Hare, "The Happiness Boys," of radio Buckley will take as his subject, "What Must I Do
to Stay in Business and Meet the New Competition?"
and stage fame.
The Chicago Civic Opera Symphony Orchestra.
This galaxy of stars, comprising a program pre-
Lilli Lehman, famous opera singer, died last week
sented at a cost of about $50,000, will appear at the at her home in Berlin, Germany. She was 80 years
(Continued on page 7)
old.
BROADCAST AT R. M. A. BANQUET
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/
June 1, 1929
PRESTO-TIMES
RADIO MEN'S CONVENTION
(Continued from page 6.)
annual R. M. A. Banquet at the Stevens Hotel, Chi-
cago. The program will be broadcast through the
courtesy of the National Broadcasting Company and
about sixty-five associated stations on a National
hook-up from the Atlantic to the Pacific Coasts,
through the key station of WJZ.
The broadcast will be from 9:30 p. m. Chicago day-
light saving time (8:30 p. m. Central Standard Time),
until 11 p. m. Chicago time on Wednesday evening,
June 5.
The program and announcements will be in charge
of the broadcasting favorite, Phillips Carlin of New
York, of the staff of the National Broadcasting Com-
pany.
The R. M. A. banquet at the Stevens Hotel will be
attended by about 2,500 to 3,000 persons. It is a fea-
ture of the great annual gathering of the radio indus-
try, the largest industrial assemblage of the year, for
the annual R. M. A. convention, about 25,000 per-
sons interested in the manufacture and distribution of
radio products being expected at Chicago during the
week of June 3.
R. M. A. special trains from New York, New Eng-
land, Texas and the southwest and also from the
Pacific Coast will be run to Chicago.
SPECIAL TRAINS GALORE
TO RADIO GATHERING
Nineteen Cars in the Special From New York
—Observation Cars From New
England.
Railroad facilities and schedules will be taxed to
carry the 25,000 radio visitors expected at the annual
convention of the Radio Manufacturers' Association
and related industrial organizations at Chicago,
June 3-7.
From both the Atlantic and Pacific Coasts and
the south as well as from near-by .central and north-
ern cities, special de luxe trains are being organized
to carry throngs to the radio industrial events and
during the same week, June 3, the music industry will
hold its annual convention in Chicago.
The New England Special train starting at Boston
and picking up radio and tpusic industry travellers to
Chicago from Worcester, Springfield, Pittslield, Mas-
sachusetts and Albany, New York, is being organized
by C. C. Colby of Canton. Mass., former president
of the Radio Manufacturers' Association, and W. F.
Merrill, secretary of the New England. Trade Asso-
ciation.
This New England Special of the Boston and
Albany Railroad will have club, observation and pri-
vate dining cars with entertainment en route for
the radio and music travellers. It will leave Boston
Saturday, June 1, at 9:30 a. m. standard Eastern time,
arriving at Chicago at 9:00 a m. daylight saving time,
on Sunday, June 2.
The New England Special and also the R. M. A.
special train from New York on the New York Cen-
tral and another special train on the Pennsylvania
line, and other spec'al trains to the radio and music
center at Chicago, will be welcomed upon arrival by
the R. M. A. and other reception committees.
The R. M. A. Special from New York, in charge
of Leonard C. Welling and Dudley H. Cohen, is
expected to be the largest train, of nineteen cars, ever
run on the New York Central.
Other special trains to the R. M. A. and music in-
dustrial events at Chicago are being arranged at Los
Angeles. San Francisco, from the Pacific Northwest,
Denver and Texas.
A FRIENDLY INVITATION
STIMULATING PUBLIC
INTEREST IN MUSIC
ffi. Cable (Umnpaiitj
Sheet Music Dealers Also Hold Their Conven-
tion Next Week in Chicago and Are
Enthusiastic About It.
announce i\\t afjofcring of
The annual convention of the National Music In-
dustries during the week of June 3rd, at the Drake
Hotel, Chicago, will mark a departure from the old
method of procedure. This year all the branches of
the music industry will convene in a joint session.
Prominent speakers will outline the promotional
activities that are now in operation. New projects
will be considered with a view to further stimulating
the public interest in music. Jay Grinnell, of Grinnell
Brothers, Detroit, will give an illuminating summary
to demonstrate how these activities may be success-
fully turned into sales.
Superintendent William J. Bogan of the Chicago
Board of Education, and Joseph Maddy, chairman of
the Committee on Instrumental Music of the Music
Supervisors' National Conference, will deliver ad-
dresses on music in the public schools. Music is
coming into its own as a factor in education.
Louis A. Crittenton. a sales expert, will speak on
"The Sunny Side of Selling." Homer J. Buckley,
one of the country's greatest advertising men, will
speak on "What Must I Do to Stay in Business and
Meet the New Competition" There will be a gen-
eral open discussion on important trade topics.
The above-mentioned events are scheduled for
Tuesday and Wednesday. The Nat : onal Association
of Sheet Musx Dealers will open its convention on
Monday morning at 9 o'clock and will continue all
day. On Tuesday and Wednesday evenings there
will be meetings at which will be considered ways
and means whereby the fullest cooperation can be
rendered by the sheet music trade towards the pro-
motion of music in all its branches.
OLD NEW YORK STORE SOLD.
McCombcrs, Inc., Fulton, N. Y., has purchased the
Schilling Music Store at 158 West First Street,
Oswego, N. Y. The Schilling store is the oldest
music store in northern New York and has been in
the Schilling family for more than fifty years. It
was founded by the late Frank Schilling, in his day
a fine musician and leader of the famous Kingsfords
Band, the pride of Thomson Kingsford, the million-
aire starch manufacturer. It is understood that after
the present stock is auctioned off McCombers, Inc.,
will continue the store in Oswego.
And Another Small Grand
mnm
by a Real Sales Plan/
PIANO CLUB HEARS REPORTS.
Carl Weber, chairman of the banquet committee,
told the Piano Club of Chicago at its noonday lunch-
eon on May 20 of its plans. He said they had
secured Charles Milton Newcomb, a very humorous
speaker, for the occasion, who would interest the
women as well as the men on "The Psychology of
Laughter." Miss Nina Morgano of the Metropolitan
Opera Company, would sing, and through the cour-
tesy of the Steinways and Mr. Brownell they would
®Iieir Complete J^Iuc ^tbbmt Jihxt
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have Rudolf Ganz on the program. From 10:00 p. m.
until 2:00 a. m. the Victor Recording Orchestra
vocal numbers would be broadcasted. The dinner
would start promptly at 7:00 so as to be through
eating at 8:30 when the general program would be-
gin. This great banquet is to be served Thursday
night, June 6; price, $7.50 a plate. Henry Hewitt,
chairman of the reservation and display committee,
said the personal reservations were up to normal at the
Drake Hotel and arrangements had also been made
for the overflow at the Knickerbocker and the Pear-
son hotels, these three hostelries giving reasonable
rates to the conventioners.
NAME CHANGED AT GREEN BAY, WIS.
"Green Bay's Music Center," known as the Tem-
ple Music Company, Inc., since its foundation on
May 1, 1926, will be known in the future as "Vanden-
berg's Temple of Music." Frank A. Vandenberg is
president, Anton Stiller, Jr., treasurer, and A. Mai-
gatter general manager.
Style. R Grand—4 feet,
7 inches long. Popular
size, beautiful case.
Real Packard Quality.
Finished in mahogany.
AGAIN Packard points the way in increased volume in Grand Piano
•**. sales. The Style R Small Grand, at a particularly low price, offers
Packard dealers unusual sales advantages that can be used to develop
new business. It is in the extremely popular 4 foot 7 inch size but
with all the full rounded tone beauty and volume you expect of Packard
instruments. The mahogany case is splendidly built, beautifully finished.
Get Packard plan behind you~get Packard values on your floors. Write us.
THE PACKARD PIANO COMPANY
3335 Packard Avenue
govern
Fort Wayne, Indiana
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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