Presto

Issue: 1929 2233

14
August 15, 1929
PRESTO-TIMES
R A D I O
FOUR DISTRIBUTORS CONGRATULATE ZENITH
"We congratulate you, and so will
the entire radio world," declared four
of Zenith's leading d i s t r i b u t o r s ,
shown in the above photo, to Zenith's
four engineers whose achievements
made possible the new Zenith "50
J line" chassis which is said to embody
; features revolutionary in screen grid
design and performance. Zenith dis-
tributors who have enjoyed a pre-
liminary demonstration of the new
chassis declare it will mark an en-
tirely new epoch in radio reception
when it is introduced in the new
Zenith "50 line" models which vvil!
make their appearance to the radio
public this month.
Shown grouped around the chassis
I^AUD ZENITH ENGINEERS ON NEW "50 LINE' CHASSIS.
above is, left to right, Zenith engi-
ing & Montague, Philadelphia, and Dave Goldman, of
neers: Carl Hassell, who designed and built the first
Zenith receiver in Zenith's early history; C. E. Mar- the North American Radio Corp., New York city.
shall; Dr. F. A. Rafferty and H. A. Gates. Zenith
Zenith distributor-dealer shows, introducing the
distributors: L. T. Johnson of the Kimberly Radio new Zenith "50 line" and Zenith's sales and adver-
Corp, Chicago; Myron Craddick of the MacKenzie
tising plans for the coming season, are being held
Radio Corp., New York City; Dave Trilling of Trill- throughout the country, starting Aug. 12.
CROSSLEY JOINS HOWARD RADIO CO.
Alfred Crossley, one of the leading radio engineers
of the country, is now chief engineer of the Howard
Radio Company of Chicago. Mr. Crossley has been
continuously identified with radio for the past twenty
years. In the early days he was with the United
States Navy, operating both ship and shore stations.
Later he became research assistant at the University
of North Dakota under Dr. A. Hoyt Taylor. At
the outbreak of the war, he became a commissioned
officer in the navy, and later he was placed in charge
of the installation and development of all submarine
radio equipment, and finally had charge of all naval
radio research activities. To him goes the credit for
the development of the present standard of frequency
now used in this country.
RADIO-FREQUENCY AMPLIFICATION.
Allen B. DuMont, chief engineer for the DeForest
Radio Co., Jersey City, N. J., writes of a change that
has been made by the DeForest engineering staff in
the rating of the screen-grid audition. He says the
effects of this change will be enjoyed in the radio sets
of the very near future. Manufacturers can build
sets that will operate each stage of radio-frequency
amplifications at maximum efficiency, resulting in
greater sensitivity with greatly increased selectivity,
as no modulation of neighboring signals will take
place.
ZENITH CONNECTICUT DISTRIBUTOR.
The MacGregor Radio Corp., a newly appointed
distributor of Zenith radio for the State of Connecti-
cut, has opened up its headquarters in New Haven
at 120 Meadow street, under the vice-presidency and
general management of Charles Gomprecht, for the
past five years general manager of the well-known
radio wholesale firm of Trilling & Montague, dis-
tributors of Zenith radio in Philadelphia.
THE EYE OF RADIO.
So little is understood and so much is misunder-
stood regarding television that a booklet entitled
"Television—The Eye of Radio," is most welcome.
Under this title, the Jenkins Television Corporation
of Jersey City, N. J., has published a booklet of 32
SUMMER RADIO SALES "EXCELLENT."
pages and cover, which contains a conservative, in-
A
mid-summer survey of the radio industry, accord-
teresting, readily understood discussion of just what
television is, what has been done so far, what is being ing to President H. B. Richmond of the Radio Man-
done for the future, and why the television experi- ufacturers' Association, indicates another "excellent
ment is about to develop into the television industry. radio year. Summer sales, President Richmond
states, are in unusual volume, although the present
season lacks the stimulus of the presidential election
RADIO-VICTOR'S NEW RECEIVER.
campaign enjoyed last year.
A new receiver, employing an improved A.C. super-
heterodyne circuit, and enclosed in a console cabinet
KOLSTER IN GERMAN DEAL.
with an electro-dynamic loudspeaker, has been an-
Ellery W. Stone, president of the Kolster Radio
nounced by E. A. Nicholas, vice-president of the
Radio-Victor Corporation of America. The cabinet Corporation, has announced that an agreement has
is of attractive two-tone walnut veneer, with burled been signed in Berlin between Kolster-Brandes, Ltd.,
maple overlays. The loudspeaker opening and control and Telephonfabrik Berliner Aktiengesellschaft for
the manufacture and sale of Kolster and Brandes
panel are covered with cut velours. The pattern of
the material has been skillfully worked out so that models in Germany.
the controls appear to form a part of the design.
ZENITH PLANTS IN FULL SWING.
MAJESTIC'S HUGE PICNIC.
More than 30,000 persons on Saturday, August 3,
attended the annual employes' picnic of the Grigsby-
Grunow Co., radio manufacturers, which was held at
Fox River Grove, 111. Thirty special trains carried
part of the employes, with their families and friends,
while a convoy of 900 automobiles operated between
the company's plants in Chicago and the picnic
grounds. Prizes totalling $10,000 were awarded the
winners in the events.
UNION CARBIDE EARNINGS.
The Union Carbide and Carbon Company reported
net profits of $7,324,297 for the second quarter of
this year, which was equivalent to 88 cents a share
on 8,306,108 shares of stock. Net profits for the sec-
ond quarter of 1928 were $5,868,610, or 70 cents a
share on the present stock. Net profits for the first
half of this year were $14,528,243, or $1.74 a share,
compared with $11,872,742, or $1.42 a share, for the
first half of 1928.
The three mammoth Zenith plants in Chicago are
in full swing with a production program of 2,500 sets
daily. All Zenith cabinets are now manufactured in
Zenith's new cabinet plant, installed at a cost of more
than a quarter of a million dollars and equipped with
the most modern of woodworking machinery in exist-
RADIO IN THE SCHOOLS.
In the public schools of Oakland, Cal., experi-
ments have shown that it is possible to teach almost
"any subject by radio. With classes in various schools
listening in on the same lessons, good results have
been obtained in such diverse subjects as literature,
geography, arithmetic, penmanship, science, singing
and physical training. The classes experimented upon
ranged from the fifth to the tenth grades.
HUGE ORGAN FOR GERMAN BROADCASTS.
What is believed to be the biggest organ possessed
by a broadcasting station is located in Munich, Ger-
many. It has fifty stops and 3,183 pipes.
RADIO RECEIVING SETS
RADIO PARTS
RADIO—PHONOGRAPHS
RADIO AS EDUCATIONAL AID.
A committee has been appointed by Secretary Wil-
bur of the Department of the Interior to study edu-
cational broadcasting, both for adults and schools.
The radio men and the trade press have been asked
to cooperate. The committee consists of United
States Commissioner of Education, Wm. John Cooper,
chairman; Judge Ira E. Robinson, chairman of the
Federal Radio Commission; Dr. John L. Clifton,
Director of Education, Ohio Department of Educa-
tion; Dr. W. W. Charters, Bureau of Educational
Research, Ohio State University; Dr. H. Robinson
Shipherd, Business Training Corporation; Dr. Frank
Cody, superintendent of schools, Detroit; Merlin H.
Aylesworth, National Broadcasting Company; Dr.
John H. Finley, New York Times; Dr. Will G. Cham-
bers, School of Education, Pennsylvania State Col-
lege; William S. Paley, Columbia Broadcasting
System; Dr. Harold J. Stonier, American Institute
of Banking; James A. Moyer, division of University
Extension, Massachusetts Department of Education;
Dr. George B. Zehmer, University of Virginia; Mrs.
Howell Moorhead, Foreign Policy Association; Miss
Alice Keith, Radio Corporation of America.
EDISON INVENTIONS IN FORD MUSEUM.
Since Henry Ford proposed the establishment of
the Edison Institute of Technology at Dearborn,
Mich., in which will be a complete museum of Edi-
soniana, many workers have been busily engaged in
collecting the immense amount of original models,
machinery and apparatus, invented, devised and con-
structed by Thomas Alva Edison during his prolific
career. All of this material, so closely tied up with
the industrial development, the comfort and the hap-
piness of the world, will eventually be fittingly in-
stalled in the Ford Museum, where they will be on
display for all time.
GRIGSBY-GRUNOW IN CANADA.
Majestic radio distribution in Canada has enjoyed
tremendous expansion in the short period of one
year. Back of the Majestic radio is the Grigsby-
Grunow Company, of Chicago, which has grown to
be one of the largest institutions on the entire con-
tinent. Nine huge plants in Chicago are occupied and
the daily capacity has been brought up to the tremen-
dous figure of 4,500 complete radio receiving sets.
The Grigsby-Grunow Company will cooperate with
the enlarged organization in the manufacture and
marketing of the Majestic electric radios in Canada.
WILLIAM H. DEUTSCH JOINS EDISON.
Announcement has just been made from the office
of P. J. Burns, manager of the Orange Branch of
the Edison Distributing Corporation, that William
H. Deutsch has become associated with that com-
pany to handle the sales activities of Edison radios,
phonographs and records throughout the northeast-
ern section of Pennsylvania.
FINANCE PLAN FOR ZENITH DEALERS.
Hugh Robertson, treasurer and general sales man-
ager of the Zenith Radio Corporation of Chicago,
manufacturers of high grade radio, reports that an
exclusive contract has been executed for the financing
of Zenith dealer retail installment sales, between the
Zenith Corporation and the Commercial Investment
Trust Corporation of New York.
WOMEN'S INFLUENCE AS BUYERS.
Women have become vital influences in the selling
of radio receivers today in the opinion of R. W.
Jackson, general sales manager of the Brunswick-
Balke-Collender Company. In 95 per cent of all radio
sales women are the major influence, Mr. Jackson
states.
NEW YORK LEADS IN STATIONS.
With twenty-three radio stations, New York city
has more than ten states combined. The ten states
are Maine, Kentucky, Utah. New Mexico, Vermont,
New Hampshire, Delaware, South Carolina, Nevada
and Wyoming. Chicago is the closest rival of New
York city, with twenty-one stations.
SIAM RATIFIES AGREEMENT.
Siam has ratified the international radiotelegraphic
convention, according to announcement by the United
States Department of State.
The Great Lakes will have 43 per cent of the radio
beacons guarding the entire coast line of the country
when eight stations now being put up are com-
pleted.
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 15, 1929
15
P R E S T O-T I M E S
tubes. This feature minimizes alternating current
hum and makes the set more sensitive.
High and Low Switch.
Radio frequency amplifier employing the famous
Hazeltine Neutrodyne circuit, the inherent stability
of which eliminates all squeals or oscillation. Strictly
Big Manufacturing Concern at York, Pa., Will single dial tuning control. No auxiliary antennae de-
vice required, although the antennae circuit of the set
Produce Radio Sets in a Variety of
is tuned by the same gang condenser which tunes the
other circuits. Special audio frequency amplifier is
Styles of Company's Own
used in this set, incorporating the two 245 tube men-
Expert Designing.
tioned above. Phonograph jack is provided so that
the audio amplifier of the set can be used in con-
Sixty years in business, the Weaver Piano Com- junction with a phonograph pickup. A high and
pany, with factory at Broad and Walnut streets, York, low switch is provided to take care of AC line fluc-
Pa., and operating its stores in York, Lancaster, tuations. The on and off switch is directly mounted
Altoona, Hanover, Pa, and many other cities, will on the volume control device and operated by the
add radios to its output. The company is prepared same knob. The solidly built chassis is of cold rolled
to put a radio on the market on September 1 and it steel richly finished in silver. A beautiful escutcheon
will be given the trade name of "The Weaver."
plate is mounted in front of the illuminated dial bear-
The cabinets of a variety of styles were designed ing the name of the set.
by the company's own artists and are built in the
Both numeral and kilocycle calibrations are shown
York factory by piano craftsmen. The finest walnut
is the wood used in their construction. The mechan- on the dial. Wiring is reduced to a minimum by the
ical parts are manufactured in another city and scientific arrangements of the parts beneath the chas-
shipped to the York factory to be assembled and in- sis pan, thus obtaining a set of outstanding electrical
stalled. They are of careful selection, highest grade balance. All parts with the exception of the power
and thorough test. The cabinets have screen backs pack and the tuning condenser are mounted beneath
to finish appearance and act as inside aerial on local the pan. Provision is made for adjustment of the
neutralizing condensers from the top of the chassis,
and strong stations.
Tests were made in York factory for two years thus enabling easy naturalization of the radio circuit
before the company adopted a radio of a quality after the chassis has been placed in the cabinet.
deemed suitable for the company's trade.
How Hum Is Minimized.
Sensitive Sets.
Hum is minimized by means of a control placed
The mechanical features of the new radio to be put on the rear of the chassis. Special provision is made
on the market by the Weaver Piano Company as to care for varying lengths of antennae. Weaver
receiver is licensed under patents of the R. C. A.,
described by a technician of the company are:
Eight tubes, including rectifier tube. Of these, Westinghouse, General Electric, American Telephone
there are four 227 tubes, one 224 shielded grid, two & Telegraph, Hazeltine Neutrodine, LaTour and
245 tubes and one 280 rectifier tube. Four tuned cir- Lowell and Dunmore Power Pack patents.
The Weaver Piano Company has been manufac-
cuits with the four condensers accurately matched to
give maximum sensitivity and selectivity. All radio turing fine musical instruments for sixty years. The
frequency transformers carefully and scientifically business was developed by the men who are in the
shielded to insure greater selectivity. One shielded company and the plant in York has long been one
grid 224 tube so placed in the radio circuit as to pro- of York's leading industries, supplying a world-wide
duce sensitivity. Radio frequency amplifier and first market and giving employment to large numbers of
audio frequency amplifier employ 227 heater type workmen and salesmen.
WEAVER CO. ADDS
RADIOS TO OUTPUT
Choose Your Piano As The Artists Do
PERCENTAGE BASIS FOR
RADIO FIRM LEASE
Soundness of Radio Business Shown by a Transac-
in Chicago.
Negotiations between E. Howard Weast of Wesco
music houses, and Victor C. Carlson of the Howard-
Clark Building Corporation were completed last week
in which the former signed a ten-year lease for the
building at 1787-89 Howard street, Chicago.
Percentage bases are the terms agreed to. This
is, it is claimed, the first retail dealer to obtain such
a lease. Total consideration on a straight lease of the
building would amount to $96,000. It is expected that
the percentage lease will cost the music house con-
siderably more, but Mr. Weast, owner of the stores,
says it is sound business to pay on sale volume.
This deal has created considerable favorable com-
ment among radio wholesalers. They say this trans-
action acknowledges the soundness and permanency
of their customers—the retail radio stores. Only long
established chain stores selling marchandise necessary
to life have been accepted heretofore by building
developers on percentage leases.
NO CHANGE AT BUESCHER CO.
The local and some of the trade papers have been
making a mountain out of a molehill in regard to
the so-called reorganization of the Buescher Com-
pany, band instrument manufacturers of Elkhart, Ind.
It is merely a technical matter, complying with a new
corporation law recently passed by the State of
Indiana. Nearly all corporations organized under the
old law are reorganizing under the new law. There
will be no change of officials, management or policy
as a result of this reorganization, according to C. D.
Greenleaf, who is the controlling factor in the
Buescher Band Instrument Company.
ST. MARY'S PLANT SELLS OUT.
The St. Mary's Musical Instrument Company's
plant at Delphos, Ohio, has been sold to a Chicago
concern. Portable phonographs will be manufac-
tured. The instrument plant went into the hands of
the receiver on March 30.
Through Generations
Have Come Ludwig Ideals
T
HE Ludwigs, the Ericsson*
and the Perrys created,
nearly a century ago, the stand-
ards to which the Ludwig has
been built. Their ideas and ideals have been car-
ried forward by the pjesent generation and today
the direct descendants of those early builders of artis-
tic pianos are the men directing the destiny of the
Ludwig Piano.
THE BALDWIN PIANO COMPANY
Cincinnati
Chicago
New York
Indianapolis
San Francisco
WUlow Ave. and 136th St.
NEW YORK
St. Louis
Louisville
Dallas
Denver
The Famous
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JtiattJUSljeK W7777
Established 1M3
STEINERT PIANOS
CAROL ROBINSON
Write for catalogue
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H h "tafc— graat atidUnc— to make great p o f " . . . .tt catrtatoly tak—
a gnat piano to make great nutate. That ptano ti the STEINERT I
M. STEINERT & SONS
STUNKRT BALL
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BOSTON, MASS.
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MATHUSHEK PIANO MFC CO.
I32nd Street and Alexander Arenue
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NEW YORK
Presto Buyers' Guide Analyzes All Pianos
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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