Presto

Issue: 1930 2250

September, 1930
P R E S T O-T I M E S
R A D I O
HARRISON CO., EDISON DISTRIBUTORS
The H. O. Harrison Co. of San Francisco have been
appointed Edison radio distributors for that territory,
Horace H. Silliman, territorial supervisor of Thomas
A. Edison, Inc., announces. H. J. Zeusler is in charge.
"We are putting the same thought and effort behind
Edison radio as we are our automotive lines," declared
J. W. McAlister, vice-president and general manager
of the H. O. Harrison Co. H. O. Harrison, president
of the H. O. Harrison Co., is the well-known Pacific
coast capitalist and is also famous as a big game
hunter. Mr. Zeusler has engaged an experienced staff
to represent Edison radio in the field. It includes
E. J. Thompson, formerly retail manager of Capwell's
radio department, Oakland; H. J. Ralph and George
Von Blum, formerly with the San Francisco Edison
Distributing Corp., and A. E. Spencer, formerly with
the radio distributing firm of Waterhouse-Weinstock.
MAJESTIC PRODUCTION SPEEDED UP
President Grunow of the Grigsby-Grunow Co.,
manufacturers of the Majestic radio, known as "the
mighty monarch of the air." is speeding up production
to take care of extensive orders. The offices at 5801
Dickens avenue, Chicago, and the great factories
nearby are busy places these days in producing and
marketing the "quiet yet powerful Majestic radio."
CURRAN CHICAGO EDISON MANAGER
After completing negotiations with the Townley
Metal & Hardware Co. of Kansas City whereby this
concern assumes the distribution of Edison radios in
the Kansas City trading area, Howard H. Curran,
formerly manager at Kansas City for the Edison Dis-
tributing Corp., has moved to Chicago and has taken
up the managerial post in the Edison Distributing
Corp. offices there.
HOME RECORDING WITH VICTOR.
A new form of home entertainment that bids fair
to be "the life of the party" will soon be placed on
the market by the Victor division. Home recording
apparatus which will permit anyone to make his own
records is incorporated in the new Victor radio-elec-
trola instrument that will soon make its bow to the
public. Describing the new invention, a Victor execu-
tive said that home recording "w r ill immortalize the
life of the American family." With the records repro-
duced electrically "as easily as dictating a letter in
your own living room," he pointed out that through
home recording "the voices of the children, the family
reunions, the memories of aged parents and every
memorable event of the home can be retained and
cherished as a living album of memory. These
records can be mailed as verbal messages to relatives
and friends," he declared, "and supplement the so-
often unsatisfactory letter. It is the newest of the
many contributions which Victor has made to more
pleasure and entertainment in the home."
DEVELOPING RADIO EXPORT TRADE.
Exports of American radio products are constantly
expanding, particularly to Canada and the Latin-Ameri-
can countries; the exports to Canada having doubled
during the last fiscal year. Arthur Moss of Electrad,
Inc., New York city, has been appointed by President
Metcalf of the Radio Manufacturers' Association as
chairman of the association's foreign trade committee.
Other members are: J. M. Regottaz, RCA-Victor
Co.; Charles T. Lawson, General Motors Radio Corp.;
S. J. Spector, Insuline Corp. of America; K. Nielsen,
Belden Mfg. Co.; W. J. Barkley, De Forest Radio
Co.; J. Howard Haley, Colin B. Kennedy Corp.; and
C. J. Hopkins, Crosley Radio Corp.
CLARION MAN'S WORLD TOUR PLANS.
ZENITH NOW MAKING PROFITS
The daily papers report an interview with Paul B.
Klugh, vice-president and general manager of the
Zenith Radio Corp., Chicago, in which that gentleman
says that the corporation is now on a profitable basis
and that the current quarter, which began August 1st.
will probably show earnings considerably better than
in the preceding three months, when a net loss of
$6,092 was reported, against a loss of $281,931 in the
corresponding period last year. He added that the
profits in the next quarter, which includes the peak
months of the radio season, should be considerably
larger than in the current quarter.
CONSOLIDATION IN CAMDEN
The entire activities of the RCA-Victor Co. have
been consolidated in Camden, N. J., with the removal
from the Woolworth building, New York, of all the
sales activities of the Radiola division, the engineer-
ing products division and the RCA export department.
The offices of the Radio Corp. of America, the parent
holding corporation, will remain in the Woolworth
building.
SUIT VS. WARNER BROS. DISMISSED.
Justice James Penewill, of the Delaware Supreme
Court, sitting as chancellor at Dover last month, dis-
missed the receivership bill filed by Ira I. Nelson of
Boston against Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., and Ren-
war, Inc. H. M. Warner, president of Warner
Brothers Pictures, Inc., in a statement issued the day
Nelson's petition was filed, characterized the allega-
tions as "false and apparently maliciously made," and
said the "presumption is the petition was filed for the
purpose of injuriously affecting the price of the stock."
Arthur E. Maybrun, export manager of the Trans-
former Corp. of America, leaves Chicago headquarters
this month for South America, returning by way of
Europe a year later after accomplishing a survey of
foreign markets and appointing new distributors of
Clarion radios in foreign ports.
SALES LESS IN RADIO EQUIPMENT.
Radio equipment sales by retail dealers for the sec-
ond quarter of 1930, according to an estimate at Wash-
ington, totaled $87,000,000 as compared with $92,000,-
000 in the corresponding period in 1929.
MONTREAL HAS MORE SETS.
During the last year radio users in Montreal in-
creased 30,402 to 42,116, but in spite of Montreal's
larger population, it falls behind Toronto, which in-
creased its radio users from 44,172 to 58,324.
GENERAL ELECTRIC IN OHIO TOWNS.
The voice of the General Electric radio has been
heard throughout Ohio lately by means of the porta-
ble amplifying system, driven about the country by
the E. H. Gray Electric Co., distributors of the new
radio. The system is mounted on a lJ/2-ton Chevrolet
truck. It was at Ravenna, Ohio, at the middle of
last month.
NEW YORK RADIO WORLD'S FAIR.
The week of the annual Radio World's Fair at New
York city, beginning September 22, has been desig-
nated as "National Radio Week" by a joint commit-
tee of the Radio Manufacturers' Association and the
National Federation of Radio Associations.
ZENITH RADIO CORP.'S REPORT.
The Zenith Radio Corp., Chicago, made this report
for the quarter ended July 31: Net loss of $6,902,
after expenses, royalties, depreciation and other
charges, comparing with net loss of $281,931 in the
corresponding quarter of 1929.
DAILY OUTPUT OF 2,200 RADIOS.
Of the 16,000 employes of the RCA-Victor Co.,
about 13,000 are engaged in the manufacturing end of
the business. . The company is now turning out over
2,200 radio machines a day.
A FINE SETTING FOR THE SCHILLER.
RADIO NOTES
The Schiller piano agency in Los Angeles, Calif, is
held by the Eastern Outfitting Co., which has just
erected a beautiful and costly skyscraper building at
the corner of Broadway and 9th street, that metrop-
olis. Here the Schiller Super Grand pianos will have
the finest setting possible on the Pacific Coast, which
is their just due. The store is noted for furnishing
the best homes in Los Angeles and suburbs with su-
perior goods.
The "Routh Music & Radio Shop, Salem, Ind., has
moved back to its old locatfon on South Main street,
that town. It handles the Atwater Kent radio.
The annual meeting of the Wextark Radio Stores,
Inc;, will be held early in October at the general
offices of the Corporation, 1903 W r est Pershing road,
Chicago.
Walter G. Pierce of Evanston, 111., was elected as
17
RADIO RECEIVING SETS
RADIO PARTS
RADIO—PHONOGRAPHS
president of the Midwest Radio Trades Association in
Chicago last month.
Alexander J. Olson, 450 West Alain street, New
Britain, Conn., has been appointed representative in
that section for the General Motors radio.
The Transformer Corp. of America, Chicago, man-
ufacturer of the Clarion radio, has appointed the
Blackmail Distributing Co. of New York as metro-
politan distributor of Clarion receivers.
Ross D. Siragusa, president of the Transformer
Corp. of America, Chicago, manufacturers of the
Clarion Radio, in the last four months has closed fif-
teen export contracts by using the modern telephone
systems.
The Hub Radio and Music Shop, 2937 Hennepin
avenue, Minneapolis, is handling the Apex screen
grid radios. Mortimer N. Joseph is the owner of the
radio department.
The consolidated balance sheet of the Stewart-War-
ner Corp. as of June 30 shows current assets of $13,-
979,512 and current liabilities of $1,803,962.
Bensberg's Music Shop, Magnolia, Ark., furnished
the radio for the recent party given by the Banner-
News of that town.
H. E. Ashcraft, proprietor of the H. E. Ashcraft
Radio Shop, 117 East Second street, Seymour, Ind.,
has been given the agency for the Atwater Kent
radios in that territory. He also handles the Steinite
radio.
Samuel Howard of Chicago is ancillary receiver for
the Lmiversal Wireless Communications Co., which
controls 40 wave lengths allotted by the Federal
Radio Commission. The M. & T. Trust Co. is pri-
mary receiver, having received the appointment from
United States District Court Judge )ohn R. Hazel of
Buffalo.
The Brunswick Radio Corp. is using the Commer-
cial Investment Trust as the official financing organi-
zation for Brunswick dealers and distributors covering
radio sales made on the installment plan.
The Columbia Graphophone Co., Ltd., reports for
the year ended June 30, 1930, profits of £580,158 after
expenses, depreciation, etc., but subject to taxation,
against £505,121 in the preceding year.
Thieves broke into the store of Miller Bros. Radio
Co., 26 East 9th street, Erie, Pa., one night last
month and stole $30 which had been hidden in a radio.
The Silver-Marshall Radio Co., Inc., 6401 West
65th street, Chicago, announces the appointments of
Burton Brown as advertising manager and Howard
W. Sams as general sales manager.
More than 1,800 arrests have been made with radio-
equipped scout cars in Detroit since Detroit installed
its police radio station a little more than two years
ago.
Strings and pipes of musical instruments develop
"standing waves," due to sound vibration, according
to The Associated Press.
The Griffin-Smith Co., 1224 Wall street, Los Ange-
les, Calif., is handling the Royale Magnavox Dynamic
Mantel Model Portable radio.
The Auto-Craft Radio Co. has leased the one-story
building at the northwest corner of 28th street and
South Michigan avenue, Chicago, in which it has
started to manufacture radio sets for automobiles,
airplanes and boats.
Among the cities that are competing to get the
annual convention of the Radio Manufacturers' Asso-
ciation for next year are St. Louis, Chicago, Cleve-
land, Pittsburgh, Detroit and Atlantic City.
In radio the new Victor Chassis is a five-circuit
affair, making claims for unusual selectivity and sensi-
tivity. Each combination has a home recording at-
tachment and a proper microphone is distributed
with each instrument.
The new Victor Theremin was played before the
members of the Lowell Rotary Club, Lowell, Mass.,
last month by Micha Tulin, accompanied by William
Marr, a local pianist.
Charles Switzer, for some time in charge of the
radio service of the J. C. Ballard & Co. stores, New-
aygo, Mich., has purchased that department and is
conducting it under the name of the Switzer Radio
Laboratories, with headquarters in the Ballard store
at Sparta, Mich. He is devoting his time to serving
customers in Sparta, Newaygo, Casnovia, Kent City
and other points.
Fire destroyed tik establishment of the Reliable
Radio Co. at 2445 Eighteenth street, Washington, D.
C, last month, with a loss of thousands of dollars.
The Larson Radio & Music Shop. Clintonville,
Wis., Melvin Larson, proprietor, has the agency for
the Atwater Kent and Victor radios. Mr. Larson also
has a large stock of quality musical accessories.
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/
I 1 k liSTO-TIMES
18
September, 1930
PRESTO-TIMES WANT ADVS.
STORE FOR SALE
FOR SALE—A going music store in thriving Texas city
with best known agencies. Established 25 years. In
19£9 this business paid 16 per cent on investment.
Owner selling account
health.
Address
"Texas,"
care of PRESTO-TIMES, 417 S. Dearborn St., Chi-
cago, III.
PIANO MAN WANTS OUTSIDE WORK.
PERMANENT POSITION WANTED—By very capable
all around piano man for outside work, with reliable
house (prefer middle west); 25 years' experience
tuning and repairing pianos, players, pipe organs,
automatics. Will also do collecting and adjusting of
accounts and sell. If you would appreciate a reliable
man in this department who has excellent references,
please address "Permanent," care Presto-Times.
PIANO SALESMEN WANTED.
WANTED—Live wire piano salesmen, for Warren, Ohio.
Stare long established. Business gocd. Many pros-
pects. Liberal commission. Wire or write Waltham
Piano Co., Warren, Ohio.
SALESWOMAN WANTS POSITION.
By a ''wideawake" piano and radio saleswoman, a direct
factory to home proposition. 12 years' experience in
both wholesale and retail ends, New York, Boston
and Pittsburgh. Splendid refsrences. Open for an
immediate connection. Replies confidential. Address:
care PRESTO-TIMES.
W I L L SELL
New Music Store in garden spot of the northwest. All
standard musical and radio merchandise being sold
daily. Have proof a money maker. Owner must con-
fine interest elsewhere. If interested write "Store
Bargain," care PRESTO-TIMES.
FOR SALE—Central Illinois music store. No store within
25 miles. Good business if worked. Owner in busi-
ness 19 years. Well established. Address "Central I,"
care PRESTO-TIMES.
SALESMAN WANTED.
SALESMAN WANTED for up-to-date line commercial
grands and uprights. Eastern territory. Straight com-
mission only. Write fully to "Eastern," Box 21, %
PRESTO-TIMES.
WANTED—Financial backing to develop and perfect a
new method of constructing a sound board for pianos
and the like.
Address "Financial," % PRESTO-
TIMES.
TO WORK WITH DEALER.
Combination tuner, phonograph repairman and salesman
wants position or hook-up with dealer. Twelve years'
experience. Excellent reference. Address "Experi-
ence," PRESTO-TIMES, 417 S. Dearborn St., Chicago
H. W. WILLIAMS' VACATION
H. \V. Williams, president of the Williams Piano &
Organ Co., Chicago, a man of long- experience in the
piano business—wholesaler, retailer and manufacturer
—left Chicago last week for a two months' visit on
the Pacific coast. He will make his headquarters at
Pasadena, Calif., where several of his relatives reside.
After a long and successful career at Centerville, Iowa,
the father of H. W. Williams and of others of the
present Williamses, upon retiring from business went
to California and made his home there for ten years,
and now several members of the Williams families
live in that state.
PIANO TUNER WANTED.
POSITION WANTED—A1 piano tuner; player mechanic.
Experienced in all lines of tuning and repairing. Ad-
dress " A - 1 , " '•/<> PRESTO-TIMES.
OBITUARY
We can give you four grades of
key covering, four prices, write
for our Silent Salesman, (it's
free) that sells used pianos.
Also bushing, sharps, ivory
work. Used ivory heads bought
and sold, also manufacturers of
busts of famous musicians for
radio ornaments, big profits.
1719-21 Mondamin Ave.
Des Moines, la.
of De K&lb, Illinois
The Best for Automatic Playing Pianos
Organs and Orchestrions
Whether you sell automatic playing in-
struments or not, it will pay you to
handle and be able to furnish
CLARK ORCHESTRA ROLLS
Monthly bulletins of new records. Write
for lists, folders and FULL PARTICU-
LARS.
Clark Orchestra Roll Company
Manufacturers — Originators — Patentees
De Kalb, Illinois
C
HECKED VARNISH RESTORED TO ITS
ORIGINAL CONDITION WITH RE-FI-NIZE
No new varnish is necessary. You do not re-
move old varnish, apply until check disappears
or is partly filled, rub and you have a new fin-
ish. Absolutely guaranteed to do the work. Will
ship any reliable house on open account.
RE-FI-NIZE COMPANY
Columbus, Ga.
SOHMER & CO. TREASURER DIES.
Bernard Ziegler, treasurer of Sohmer & Co., piano
manufacturers, whose headquarters are in the Sohmer
Building at 31 West 57th street. New York, died at
the Polyclinic Hospital, New York, in August. Mr.
Ziegler, who lived in Weehawken, N. J., for many
years before moving to the Hotel Beacon, New York,
is survived by his widow, Mrs. Louise Kuder Ziegler,
and a son, Joseph Ziegler. Burial was in Woodlawn
cemetery, the Bronx.
REGRET DEMISE OF MR. BECKWITH.
Max B. Hayden, aged 55, piano dealer of Oshkosb,
Wis., died last week at his cottage at Doemel's Point,
Wisconsin.
The Starr P'ano Co., Richmond, hid., expects to
operate a broadcasting station.
GENERAL PIANO KEY
REPAIRING
24-HOUR
S ER VICE
RECOVERING
BUSHING
FRONTS
SHARPS
IVORY REPAIR WORK
PLAYER ACTIONS REPAIRED
STRIKING PNEUMATICS
Air Motors, Governors, Etc., Recovered
E. A. BOUSLOG, Inc.
2106 Boulevard Place
INDIANAPOLIS, IND.
The Piano Repair Shop
Pianos and Phonographs Rebuilt ky
Expert Workmen
Play ci -actions installed. Instruments
rehmshed or remodeled and actions and
keys repaired. Work guaranteed. Price?
reasonable.
Our-of-town dealers' repair work solic-
ited. Write tor details and terms.
THE PIANO REPAIR SHOP
331 South Wabash AT*.
Chicago
AMJSIC PRINTERS
ENGRAVERS AND LITHOGRAPHERS
PRINT ANYTHING IN MUSIC
BY ANY PROCESS
SEND FOR QUOTATION AND SAMPLES
NO ORDER TOO SMALL TO RECEIVE ATTENTION
THE LARGEST EXCLUSIVE MUSIC PRINTER VEST OF NEW YORK AND
THE LARGEST ENGRAVING DEPARTMENT IN THE UNITED STATES.
ESTABLISHED 1876
MCMACKIN PIANO SERVICE
CLARK
ORCHESTRA ROLLS
W. R. FARRAND, DETROIT, DIES.
.William R. Farrand, descendant of an old Detroit
family and member of the Michigan Legislature, died
in Harper Hospital, Detroit, in August. He was near-
in 77, having been born on September 9, 1853, on the
site of the present J. L. Hudson Co.'s store. At the
age of 17, he became collector for his father's drug
linn, Farrand, Sheley & Co., and later rose to the
position of traveling salesman. In 1893 Mr. Farrand,
then 30 years old, bought out the Whitney Organ Co.
and reorganized it as the Farrand & Votcy Organ Co.
Later, upon the retirement from the firm of Mr. Votey,
he assumed full control of the company, which then
became the Farrand Organ Co. Among the line in-
struments it made was that designed for the World's
Fair at Chicago, which is now installed in the Hill
Auditorium at Ann Arbor. The manufacture of the
Cecilian player-piano was carried on for several years
by Mr. Farrand and his partner, L. M. Ide, but the
Cecilian later became the property of the Bush &
Lane Piano Co., of Holland, Mich., by purchase. Soon
thereafter Mr. Farrand closed out his musical instru-
ment business. He decided, however, that 60 was too
green an age for retirement, so he entered the real
estate and insurance business, in which he continued
up to the time of his demise. In political life Mr.
Farrand served three terms as a member of the public
lighting commission (an appointee of Mayor Hazen
S. Pingree) and two- terms on the board of estimates
—one of them as chairman. He had served three
terms in the Legislature of Michigan and was one of
the trustees of Harper Hospital since 1891.
The death of James 1'. \V. Beckwith on Tuesday.
August 26, as a result of pneumonia with heart com-
plications, has caused the deepest regret at Jacob
Bros. Piano Co. and alsc wherever he was known.
Mr. Beckwith had been with Jacob Bros, continuously
for 43 years and occupied an unique position in the
THE REV. FATHER JOHN H. CROWE.
organization as general office manager and confiden-
There is sorrow in many circles over the death of
tial man. He was a schoolmate and boyhood chum
the Rev. Father John H. Crowe, pastor of St. Ita's of C. Albert Jacob, Sr., and a close friend of the en-
Catholic Church, Broadway and Catalpa avenue, Chi- tire Jacob family. His many sterling qualities made
cago, who was run down and killed by an auto last
him loved and respected by all connected with Jacob
month. He was struck while crossing Broadway in
Bros.' office and organization, and his loss is deeply
front of his church. Father Crowe was one of the felt. Through his associaetiou with Jacob Bros, he
invited speakers at the Piano Club of Chicago at
made many friends throughout the piano trade who
times and his addresses were always very interesting, will be equally grieved to learn of his death.
and he counted many piano men among his friends.
The funeral services were held in his church on Sep-
O. H. BOYD IS DEAD
tember 2 and the interment was at Calvary Cemetery.
O. H. Boyd, widely known music dealer and former
vice-president of the Ohio Retail Music Dealers' As-
sociation, died on August 22 at his home in Marion,
Ohio. Mr. Boyd, who was 49 years old, had been
HIGH GRADE
president and general manager of the Henry Acker-
man Piano Co. at Marion for manv vears.
PIANO
KEY RECOVERING
THE FAMOUS
THE OTTO
CINCINNATI,
REFERENCE ANY PUBLISHER
ZIMMERMAN
Sc S O N CO.jNC.
OHIO.
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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