Presto

Issue: 1929 2233

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
m
1
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JtiattJUSljeK W7777
Established 1M3
STEINERT PIANOS
CAROL ROBINSON
Write for catalogue
(ForamcMrt Aaiarieaa Pteatot) vritaai—
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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fhe distinctive features of • f t / / /
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Mathushek construction fur-
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nish selling points not found Wtr^^Yx
in other makes of pianos.
^•h^^S&jsg|
BOSTON, MASS.
^^^^^^^^B
MATHUSHEK PIANO MFC CO.
I32nd Street and Alexander Arenue
1
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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/
August 15, 1929
PRESTO-TIMES
LATE MUSIC TRADE NOTES
erates until 7 and 8 p. m., according to President
F. S. Smith. The company is now making fine radio
cabinets.
Addition of a new department has been announced
by Lammers Music House, 123 East Sixth street, Cin-
cinnati. This new division, a booking department,
operated under the management of Walter Marshall,
will provide music, orchestra, etc., for dances and
other occasions.
The Baldwin Piano Company, Galesburg, III., has
opened a factory branch store at 53 North Cherry
street under the management of J. R. Huckins.
Ray Winter has opened a music store on the west
side of the square in the Claypool building, Marshall,
111. He will handle Baldwin pianos, sheet music,
radios, and music rolls. Alfred Murphy and L.
Harris have started their work as solicitors for Mr.
Winter.
Lord & Thomas & Logan, noted advertising agency,
has taken three floors of the new Palmolive Building
in Chicago—the building with the Lindbergh beacon
on top.
Joseph C. Smith, piano dealer at La Porte, Ind.,
is looking for 50 boys who want to become members
of a drum and bugle corps. Their ages should be
Two broadsides were recently sent out by Thomas between 9 and 13 years, Mr. Smith says.
A. Edison, Inc., to the trade. They mention the
Henry H. Fry, of Vincennes, Ind., has opened a
new Edison needle records as a new profit-maker
from the Edison laboratories. Two Edison portables Baldwin piano store at Bloomington, Ind.
are also mentioned.
The 25th annual convention of the International
At the World's Advertising Congress in Berlin, Advertising Association will be held in Berlin in
Germany, last Saturday, Mr. Younggreen of Milwau- August. Albert Einstein, the scientist, will speak on
kee said: "The real object of advertising is to in- "The Ethics of Advertising."
crease the general prosperity of the world."
Austin Conradi, American pianist, was the featured
WORLD'S GREATEST MUSIC T E M P L E .
artist at the Baldwin piano on Sunday evening,
A special cable to the New York Times the other
Aug. 11.
day says that a gigantic temple of music to cost five
million dollars and which will not have an equal any-
In a signed article in the Chicago Evening Post of
Aug. 5, Harry Edward Freund says that "music has where else in the world has been offered to France
taken a most important place in the industrial and by Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Moulton of New York.
The proposed auditorium would seat 15,000 persons
business life of Chicago."
and be situated at one of the gates of Paris leading
Mrs. Charles A. Bent, widow of the late Charles A. to the Department of Seine et Oise, where the Moul-
Bent who was a well-known Chicago piano man, died
tons own a stately chateau near Saint Denis.
last week in her home at La Grange, 111., a Chicago
suburb.
A HEAD TONE.
The introduction of the little dollars caused a boom
in the wallet trade. About $6,000,000 in small bills
"That great lady singer put a rock in a note and
went into circulation in New York City the first dropped it on a man's head below her window."
week.
"I wonder what the note was?"
"Dunno. When it hit, the man said, "Gee!"—A.
The Perfection Furniture Co.'s factory, 2267-69
Clybourn avenue, Chicago, is so busy that it op- Lawton Atwood, in Chicago Daily News.
The Children's Civic Theater of Chicago, Inc.,
Margaret Pack acting director, celebrated Book Week
on Wednesday of this week, Aug. 14, with a pro-
gram written by Esther Olson, author and play-
wright.
Conductor Arthur Fiedler has been giving con-
certs at the Charles River Esplanade, Boston, to
audiences of between 5,000 and 8,000 nightly.
The Leedy Manufacturing Co., Palmer street and
Barth avenue, Indianapolis, Ind., has published a
folder telling all about the chimes it manufactures.
The Richardson Music Company, 730 West 7th
street; Los Angeles, Calif., W. H. Richardson, presi-
dent, is busy selling Charles M. Stieff pianos, Victor
and Brunswick products, as well as R. C. A. Radiolas.
Hinds, Hayden & Eldred, Inc., 59 Union Square,
New York, are issuing a book containing children's
piano pieces and violin pieces.
Orchestra Leader Robbed.
Carleton E. Coon, of the Coon-Sanders Orchestra,
was robbed of a $4,000 ring by a band of masked men
on August 5, while on his way home to Evanston,
111., from The Dells, Wis. The thieves also relieved
him of $450 cash.
" / / there'a no Harmony in the
Factory there will be None
in the Piano,"
The Harmony in the Pack*
*r«l is Reflected in the Har-
mony among the Dealers
who Sell them.
Profit-Producing Facts on Appli
cation. Make it your Leader.
Send for ow "Billetin."
THE PACKARD PIANO COMPANY, Fort Wayne, Ind.
no
,—,,—,
I II I
A Great Help in Closing Sales.
Fifty Cents a Copy.
J. S. Everett, of 212 Banks avenue, Knoxville,
Tenn., is anxious to learn where he can purchase
pearl key tops, and particularly who first manufac-
tured this kind of tops. He says there are only two
pianos in that part of Tennessee that contain that
kind of key tops, and the owners would not sell them
at any price.
There is an old lady nearly 90, of great intelligence
and a wonderful mind, living near his place who has
an old piano that has one of these pearl tops, and she
says that only one man in New York made them,
over 100 years ago, and so far as she knows, he made
only about four pianos of this kind, then died. So,
from what she says, the material or art of making
them seems to be a mystery.
SUIT ALLEGES I N F R I N G E M E N T .
Two Rochester and tw T o Buffalo, N. Y., concerns,
distributors of Atwater Kent radio receiving sets,
have been named defendants in a suit for alleged
infringement of patent, filed in United States District
Court in Rochester, on August 8, by the Hazeltine
Corporation, with headquarters in Jersey City, against
C. W. Ludwig & Sons, Inc., of 566 Clinton street
north, and C. L. Hartman Corporation of 18 North
Union street, Rochester, and the Kurtzmann Piano
Company and the Neal-Clark and Neal Company,
both of Buffalo, N. Y., according to D. Clyde Jones,
solicitor for the plaintiffs. The Hazeltine Corpora-
tion in its bill of complaint alleges that a patent it
has held since February 20, 1924, is encroached upon
in receiving sets manufactured by Atwater Kent and
distributed through the defendants.
The patent
broadly covers radio receivers which are supposed not
to develop unwanted noises in tuning operations.
F R E T T E D INSTRUMENT ORCHESTRAS.
The National Bureau for the Advancement of
Music, 45 West 45th street, New York, has recently
issued a 100-page book on "Fretted Instrument Or-
chestras." This volume, illustrated with fifteen pages
of photographs, is a guide to procedure on organ-
izing and maintaining ensembles of banjos, mando-
lins, guitars and other plectrum instruments. This
book is being used in an active summer campaign to
stir up interest in plectral playing.
Grand, Upright and Player-Pianos
Strictly High Grade. Many Exclusive Selling Points.
Attractive Proposition for Dealers. Send for Catalog.
R A . S t a t t k P i a n 0 ®n. Manufacturers, CHICAGO, ILL.
Dealers and Their Salesmen Find
PRESTO BUYERS' GUIDE
J. S. Everett, of Knoxville, Term., Making
Endeavors to Get Light on
This Subject.
r i r n
New York Warerooms: 112-114 West 42nd St.
I II I
99%
interested prospects become customers
n p p A wi ^j |j>
PERFECTION BENCHES
are ased by people who have good taste, appreciate fine rh^gs and know sound values.
De Luxe
Louis XV
Send for
Catalogue
2267-2269 Clybourne 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/
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