Presto

Issue: 1930 2242

39
P R E S T O-T I M E S
January, 1930
MAKES VIOLINS FROM
EXPLORER'S COFFIN
Dr. W. B. Hentz of Florida Uses Walnut That Had
Been Buried 350 Years.
The Associated Press recently sent out a story
from Winter Haven, Fla., saying that wood from the
coffin of Pedro Menendez de Aviles, Spanish explorer
and founder of St. Augustine, Fla., has been used by
Dr. W. B. Hentz in making two violins.
The explorer was buried in Aviles, Spain, in 1574,
nine years after he founded the ancient city. In 1924
the body was removed from its tomb to be placed
in a mausoleum. The casket, a remarkable piece of
workmanship in Spanish walnut, was presented St.
Augustine in memory of its founder.
The coffin lay in the city vaults of St. Augustine
four years and deteriorated. Then it was found by
Robert Ranson of the Florida Historical Society, who
rebuilt the top and restored the lettering of the
epitaph.
From the bottom enough wood was saved for a
memorial. This was turned over to Dr. Hentz, con-
noisseur of violins and musicians of note.
Dr. Hentz turned the wood into two violins, com-
bining the ancient and modern—strings and some
woods of the present with that which for 350 years
rested on a tomb in Spain.
Employing the arts of the Latins he had learned in
40 years' residence in Rio Janiero, Dr. Hentz brought
out the beauty of the wood and was rewarded by an
excellent tone quality.
SCHOOL BAND CONTESTS
The Year Book of state and national school band
contests for 1930 has just been published by the Na-
tional Bureau for the Advancement of Music, 45 West
45th street, New York. It contains the rules, con-
test lists and general information for 1930.
With its eighty pages, including the pictures of
sixty-six bands which won first place in the different
classes of the contest last spring, it is in marked con-
trast with the first of the series, issued in 1924, and
which contained but eight pages. The difference in
size is a reflection of the growth of the movement,
which has spread rapidly in all sections of the country
since the first five states were organized six years
ago. The 1929 contests were held in thirty-seven
states and had a total participation of 650 bands with
some 33,000 players. Present plans are developing so
well for next year's contests, according to C. M. Tre-
maine, director of the bureau, that it is probable that
nearly all the states in the Union will be organized for
the meets.
The contests will continue to be conducted as here-
tofore under the auspices of the Committee on In-
strumental Affairs of the Music Supervisors' National
Conference in cooperation with the National Bureau
for the Advancement of Music. Mr. Tremaine is
secretary of the committee and so is in a position to
render the contests distinctly helpful to the trade as
well as to the schools. The funds for prizes are fur-
nished by the school band contest supporting com-
mittee of the music industry, whose membership con-
sists of the following firms: C. G. Conn, Ltd.,
Ruescher Band Instrument Co., Ludwig & Ludwig,
Leedy Manufacturing Company, Pan-American Band
Instrument & Case Company, Elkhart Band Instru-
ment Company, Continental Music Company.
Dealers desiring the Year Book may obtain it free
in single copies by writing C. M. Tremaine, 45 West
45th street, New York.
and Young Women's Hebrew associations in Phila-
delphia, according to a special dispatch in the New
York Times. He said that in Moscow, for example,
there are 100 elementary music schools in which chil-
dren take their preliminary study in a two-year course.
SHEA OPENS NASHVILLE STORE.
FRANCIS VISITS THE SOUTHWEST.
The store at 242 Fifth avenue, North, Nashville
Tenn., formerly occupied by the Starr Piano Co., has
been taken over by M. F. Shea, who for forty years
past has been a musical instrument dealer of that
city and who more recently was located at 305 Fifth
avenue, North. The Shea opening occurred January
1 and was quite an interesting affair. The new store,
which contains four floors and a basement, is being
completely remodeled, the first floor to be used for
the display of pianos, radios and Victrolas, and the
other three as separate departments with separate
rooms on each floor in which instruments can be
tried out. A complete line of both grand and upright
pianos as well as popular makes of radios will be
carried.
Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Francis of Galesburg, 111., drove
to Oklahoma City, Okla., after New Year's Day.
After visiting there they go to Albuquerque, N. M.,
where they visit Mrs. Francis' uncle. In March they
will drive to the Grand Canyon, joining Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Apsey and the party, after visiting Los Angeles,
will return to Galesburg together. Mr. Francis' health
will not stand the cold weather in Galesburg. He will
open his piano store at Galesburg in the spring.
ARTISTS AT LAMBERT FUNERAL.
Many internationally known personages of the mu-
sical world attended the funeral of Alexander Lam-
bert, musician, in New York, on January 2. Mr.
Lambert died shortly after being run down by an
automobile. Walter Damrosch made a brief address
on behalf of Mr. Lambert's life-long associates.
Jascha Heifetz, the violinist, played Schubert's "Ave
Maria," accompanied by Josef Hofmann, and the
pianist also played Chopin's "Funeral March." Among
those at the services were Mines. Sembrich, Mat-
zenauer and Sophie Braslau. Acting as pallbearers
with Messrs. Damrosch, Hofmann and Heifetz were
Daniel Frohman, Serge Rachmaninoff, Arthur Bodanz-
ky, Efrem Zimbalist, Sigmund Herzog, W. J. Hen-
derson, Leonard Liebling. Hugo Greenwald and Wal-
ler Nanmberg.
MAHOGANY AT FIELD MUSEUM.
An exhibit showing mahogany tree branches with
their foliage and fruits and also the wood of three
species of American mahoganies has been placed on
view in Stanley Field Hall at Field Museum of Nat-
ural History, Chicago. The mahoganies shown are
the Cuban species, which was introduced into Europe
when Sir Walter Raleigh brought some from the new
world for Queen Elizabeth; the Mexican, known also
as Honduras or Central American mahogany, which
the Spanish explorer Cortez used to repair his fleet
while engaged in his conquest of the Mexicans, and
the Peruvian mahogany, the existence of which was
discovered only a few years ago.
RADIO THIEVES ARRESTED.
Michael Corsi and George A. Sutton were arrested
recently in their home at 1154 Highland avenue, Oak
Park. 111., as members of a radio theft ring which has
operated in two states. Corsi was held under $20,000
bonds on charges of larceny and receiving stolen prop-
erty, while Sutton was held in $5,000 bond on a charge
of receiving stolen property.
RUSSIA'S MUSIC SCHOOLS.
Soviet Russia
teaching music,
Symphony Club
said on January.
leads the world in its system of
Edwin A. Fleisher, founder of the
and collector of musical literature,
5 in an address to the Young Men's
Philip W. Oetting &
Son, Inc.
213 East 19th Street, New York
SOLE AGENTS FOR
Weickert Hammer
and Damper Felts
Grand and
Upright Hammers
Made of
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Christmas Customer Satisfaction,
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from the largest and most diversified
stock of piano benches in the world.
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Check through the 59 styles illustrated
in its pages.
Note that practically every regular and
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Count on us to make good right up to
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COMPRISING
CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY—A unique feature of this list is its specialized compilation of verified
and selected names and addresses of manufacturers and dealers at home and abroad.
YEAR BOOK—This section is characterized by its concentration on information of real value on
subjects needing continuous reference to by those interested in Music and Allied Industries.
DIARY—Spacious for notes, and in convenient arrangement of one week to the opening; also
memoranda space.
Paper Bound, Stiff Boards
PRICE—POST FREE ABROAD
2s. 6d.
Cloth Bound, Stiff Boards
3s. Od.
Published by
G. D . E R N E S T & C O . Ltd. 5 Duke Street, Adelphi, London, England
Proprietors of the "MUSIC TRADES REVIEW," the Most Influential Music Trade Journal in Great Britain.
TONK Mfg. Co.
1912 Lewis Street, Chicago
4627 E. 50th Street, Los Angeles
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/
January, 1930
P R E S T O-T I M E S
40
R A D I O
RADIO RECEIVING SETS
RADIO PARTS
RADIO-PHONOGRAPHS
FURTHER DEVELOPMENT
OF GRIGSBY-GRUNOW CO.
introduced at a meeting of the New Jersey State
Funeral Directors' Association, held two weeks ago
in Camden, by John S. Martin, mortician, delegate
from Elizabeth, N. J.
BRUNSWICK EXPANSION
IN RADIO MAKING
Additional Expansion Coming When Company Will
Manufacture Electric Refrigerators.
DEGENERATED RADIO PROGRAMS.
Company Adds to Its Forty Million Dollar Invest-
ment by Acquiring Bremer-Tully.
Great manufacturing corporations frequently do not
confine their production to the main product but go
in heavily for articles of commerce that their facilities
allow them to produce.
The Ford Motor Company makes many things that
are not autos at all. Thomas A. Edison, Inc , has
always manufactured a variety of useful devices,
nearly all related to electrical application. The Chase-
Emerson Company, New York and Norwalk, Ohio,
makes pianos and motor boats.
The National Carbon Company, New York, manu-
factures many other things beside in addition to radio;
The Q R S-DeVry Company has probably a half-
dozen lines of manufacture. The American Steel
& Wire Company has many lines of differentiated
manufacture and the Standard Oil Company makes
numerous articles, but nearly all related to oil as the
basic ingredient.
General Motors is in so many lines that they are
hard to enumerate. And now Grigsby-Grunow, hav-
ing grown very great in radio, is preparing for big
expansion by manufacturing electric refrigerators, be-
ginning this month.
RADIO MOVIES SHOWN IN NEW YORK.
Santa Claus gave a big treat to the radio trade and
general public on Christmas Eve. It was the first
public demonstration of radio talkies, or talking mo-
tion pictures, at the Lauter Piano Company's store
in Newark, N. J. According to D. W. May, well-
known radio distributor, who staged the demonstra-
tion in co-operation with the Jenkins Television Cor-
poration of Jersey City, N. J., this was the first
time that perfectly synchronized sight and sound
broadcasting had been shown to the public. It marks
the advent of everyday television, or radiovision. That
the demonstration was no mere laboratory experi-
ment is evident from the fact that the Jenkins radio-
visor, or simple home television device, the Jenkins
radiovision kit, or inexpensive assembly of parts for
those of an experimental turn of mind, and the spe-
cial Jenkins short-wave receiver, were shown in use.
HARTMAN CORP.'S BANNER YEAR.
C. L. Hartman Corp., Rochester, N. Y., Atwater
Kent radio distributor, celebrated a banner year of
business by holding a Christmas party in the display
room of the firm at 18 North Union street. A num-
ber of the members of the radio staff were present,
including Carl L. Hartman, president; Adolp Bastian,
vice-president and treasurer. Others present were
Alice Kliment, Madeline McMahon, Edith Karasick,
Erma Kliment, Harold H. Hosely, B. L. Peer, Frank
Stubbs, Howard L. Bancroft, Ray F. Prairie, Jack
Fisher and F. Douglas Spoor.
The voice of the disgusted public is not so weak
at the "rotten program" makers imagine it to be.
For one can hardly glance over a daily paper with-
out reading a communication, signed with a full name
or initials, proclaiming the writer's hostile disrelish
of "rotten" radio programs, nasty movies or lascivious
books. A musical program on the radio is very apt to
be spoiled by the insertion of yawping about Dr.
Pizen's sure hot corn cure. One writer at Macomb,
111., in a Chicago daily last week had this to say:
"Free, yes. But who wants such stuff because it is
free? What is the effect when a beautiful piece of
music, well rendered, is sandwiched with the sardine,
limburger cheese advertising stuff that comes be-
tween the parts of the program? For my part I
would rather pay a radio tax and have programs free
from junk."
ENGLAND'S RADIO CHRISTMAS.
"Large numbers of our readers have embraced
Radio, and from talks with reputable manufacturers,
the music trade is going to pull its weight in Radio
this Christmas," says the Music Seller and Small
Goods Dealer, of London. "The problem of store
and window space press closely at that time. This is
a season when it is essential to show a wide range of
musical merchandise; and when a wide note must be
struck."
BROADCAST STATIONS FAVOR TAX.
Although the members of the Federal Radio Com-
mission and the members of Congressional commit-
tees having to do with radio are not in accord over
the proposal to tax broadcasting and communication
stations, the broadcasters themselves are reported to
be favorable to such a scheme for financing govern-
ment control of radio.
The Brunswick-Balke-Collender Company of Chi-
cago recently added to its 40-million dollar invest-
ment in plant and equipment by purchase of the
Bremer-Tully Manufacturing Company, also of Chi-
cago, and one of the oldest manufacturers of radios
and parts in the United States. The purchase was
decided upon in order that every operation in the
manufacture of Brunswick radios might be conducted
in a Brunswick-Balke-Collender Company plant.
"Brunswick-Balke-Collender, with plants in Chi-
cago, Muskegon, Michigan and Dubuque, Iowa, owns
50,000 acres of timber lands, operates its own saw and
planing mills, dry kilns and veneer plants and car-
ries the manufacture of its radios from the growing
trees to the finished machine."
"Officials or the Brunswick company say that there
are today many cabinet makers in their plant who are
the grandsons of the cabinet-makers employed by
the company at its inception, 84 years ago.
"W. J. Baker, branch manager at Indianapolis,
says: In many cases, the second and third genera-
tion of these Swiss and German craftsmen are work-
ing in the Brunswick plant, having been raised vir-
tually in the plant and taught woodwork from the
time they were old enough to stand by their father's
desk.
"Radio has been seeing a big change mechanically
s : nce it first came on the market, and receiving
apparatus has been revolutionized since the introduc-
tion of the tube receiving sets, but the manufacturers
who have well-established and thoroughly trained men
in the furniture field, men that have been pleasing the
public taste for more than a half century, will be the
survivors in the radio field.
MORE AUTOS MADE THAN RADIOS SOLD.
UNIVERSAL HOLIDAY BY RADIO.
Dr. Alfred N. Goldsmith, vice-president of the
Radio Corporation, speaks for a universal language to
overcome the polyglot of different tongues as exempli-
fied by the recent holiday broadcast across the oceans.
He said in New York: "We need not adopt a new
speech, but an auxiliary one. Radio is making this
more important every day."
Trade estimates that have reached Presto-Times say
that there were more automobiles made in 1929 than
the number of radio sets sold. This sounds incredi-
ble, but the sources of our information stand by it as
a statement based upon actual figures from the book-
keeping and statistical departments of the respective
lines of manufacture. Piano manufacturers find in
these estimates an allayment of their fears that the
radio is going to supersede the piano. It surely can-
not, as the piano is an instrument that produces orig-
THE RCA RADIOLA.
Here is part of an advertisement by the RCA-Vic- inal music, while radio is merely a transmitter of that
tor Co., Inc.: "Ask your dealer to show you the music. The piano is an author; the radio is merely
Radiola 46, the instrument that gives you greater the reader of the book.
sensitivity and selectivity—power without distortion
and tonal realism of such exceptional beauty that it ZENITH PRESIDENT SAILS ON TRIP.
is a revelation to every music lover."
The yacht Mizpah, owned and operated by Eugene
F. McDonald, head of the Zenith Radio Corp.,
GENERAL COUNSEL FOR RADIO.
steamed out of Miami, Fla., on January 4 on a secret
Colonel Thad H. Brown of Ohio has been named
mission. Mr. McDonald admitted that stops would
general counsel of the Radio Commission, succeed- be made in Cuba, Porto Rico, Haiti and the Virgin
ing Bethuel M. Webster, Jr., whose resignation was Islands. Mr. McDonald has an archeologist aboard
accepted. Colonel Brown has been chief counsel of
and it was surmised that perhaps the yacht will head
the Federal Power Commission since July.
for the South American jungles on an exploring quest.
RADIO SALES OF $21,490,414.
A special dispatch from Washington, D. C , to the
Chicago Daily News said that retail sales of radio
equipment during the third quarter of 1929, reported
by 6,237 dealers to the Department of Commerce,
BURGLARS ROB RADIO COMPANY SAFE.
amounted to $21,490,414, or an average of $3,450 per
Burglars broke into the offices of the Western
dealer, an increase of 14 per cent over the third quar-
ter of 1928, when the average sales per dealer Radio Manufacturing Company, 128 West Lake street,
amounted to $3,030. The average number of A. C. Chicago, on the night of December 13, and, despite
sets sold per dealer increased 40 per cent during the the gushing of tear gas, escaped with $1,500, the con-
quarter, as compared with 1928, but the average value tents of the safe.
per set sold declined from $167 to $155.
INDIA HAS SIX STATIONS.
There are six broadcasting stations in India, oper-
MILLIONS OF SETS SOLD.
Maj. Robert M. Frost of the Radio Manufacturers' ated by various interests. A company which is to
Association, has estimated that between 3,000,000 and have a monopoly on broadcasting is, however, being
3,500,000 new radio sets went into American homes organized. Set owners are taxed about $3.65 a year.
last year. O. H. Caldwell, the former federal radio
FIRE DESTROYS RADIO STORE.
commissioner, now editor of a leading radio trade
journal, sets the figure at nearer 4,000,000 and reports
The S. D. Moran radio store and the Reliable Co.
that two out of every three homes in America are building, South Bend, Ind., were destroyed by fire on
still prospects for modern receivers. The public, he December 16. The fire chief, Roy A. Knoblock, was
says, spent $750,000,000 on radio equipment last year, hurled 20 feet by an explosion during the fire.
marking a record for the industry.
STEINITE'S 1930 MODELS.
RADIO FUNERAL SERVICES.
The Steinite Radio Co., Fort Wayne, Ind., an-
Mortuary music may be used soon to enhance ser- nounces that it has gone into production on the 1930
vices for the dead. The plan has been studied in New models, all of which are equipped with the new inter-
Jersey and those studying it thought that a fixed hour ference eliminator patented by Steinite.
might be set for the nationwide broadcasting of
Krebs Service has opened a radio store in Michi-
funeral music and nationwide funerals might be timed
accordingly. A resolution urging such procedure was gan City, Ind.
HOLLAND'S RADIO SYSTEM.
Broadcasting in Holland is carried on by five politi-
cal and religious societies through two privately
owned stations. A commission has been appointed
by the government to put broadcasting on a more
satisfactory basis, possibly through some sort of
government control. There is no license fee for lis-
teners.
SUSPENDS EARL TRADING.
The New York Curb exchange on December 19
suspended trading the capital stock of Earl Radio
Corporation, successor to the Charles Freshman Com-
pany. A permanent receiver for the corporation was
appointed recently after an involuntary bankruptcy
action had been filed in federal court.
RADIO COMMISSION'S LEASE OF LIFE.
President Hoover on December 19 signed the bill
extending the life of the Federal Radio Commission
indefinitely.
Frank W. McDonnell of Rossiter, Tyler & Mc-
Donnell, Inc., radio engineers, has leased for a term
of years the Colonial type residence of William Bu-
chanan on Wappanocca street, Rye, N. Y.
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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