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Presto

Issue: 1930 2247 - Page 21

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June, 1930
P R E S T O-T I M E S
etc.; $5,000 or 50 shares at $100 each. Wm. H. Thom-
men, H. W. Bolcns, Geo. Brickbauer, H. W. Bolens.
Ed. J. Cabana, radio and piano salesman, has
joined the staff of the Schmoller & Mueller Piano
Co at its Sioux City store.
The Abelowitz Phonograph Co., Inc., 1353 St.
Nicholas avenue, New York, has assigned to Nathaniel
Ottensoser, 350 West 88th street, that city.
Broadway Radio Shoppe, Inc., Louisville, Ky.;
$1,000; Louis Garon, Sidney Ran and Sidney D.
Handmaker.
The Midwest Music Corp., Milwaukee, Wis. Con-
duct a music mart; act as brokers in hiring orches-
tras, bands, singers, etc.; $2,000 or 20 shares at $100
each. Francis J., Chas. B. and Leona Nowak. Rud J.
Mudroch, attorney, 610 Empire Bldg., 106 West Water
street, Milwaukee.
Carre Musical College Inc.; Racine, Wis. Encour-
age and teach art and science of music. 100 shares
no par value. Jno. F. Carre, Margaret Carre and
Arthur J. Eaton. L. D. Potter, attorney, 422 Arcade
building, Racine, Wis.
Bush & Lane Piano Co.; Holland, Mich.; 133,000
shares no par value; pianos and radios.
Zenith Radio Distributing Corp., 120 S. La Salle
street, Chicago. Capital, $10,000. To manufacture
and deal in electric refrigerators and other electric
apparatus.
Tncorporators: Irving Herriott, Yera
Hammer and Allan A. Klove. Correspondent, Mont-
gomery, Hart, Pritchard & Herriott, 120 S. La Salle
street.
Wardle Radio Laboratories, Inc., 526 Duane street,
Glen Ellyn, 111. Capital, 50 shares non par value.
Deal in radios and furniture. Incorporators, G. K.
Wardle, H. J. Wettrou, Robert J. Scott.
FIRM NAME CHANGED.
The name of the Jesse French and Sons Piano Co.
of Alabama was changed to Jesse French Sons, Inc.,
in a charter amendment filed in the county probate
office at Montgomery, Ala., last month. An issue of
8,000 shares • of common capital stock, with a par
value of $25 was also authorized by the board of
directors.
ERIE CORP'S ELECTION.
The Erie Music Corp., Erie, Pa., has just elected
C. C. Felton, president and treasurer; F. L. Camp,
vice-president, and E. B. Felton, secretary. It has the
agency for the C. G. Conn, Ltd., line of band instru-
ments and the H. A. Selmer instruments. Its new
store is at 25 East 9th street and it has the distributing
agency for eight counties in Pennsylvania and two in
Ohio.
PROGRESS OF BUSH & LANE.
The Bush & Lane Piano Co., Holland, Mich., the
sale and reorganization of which was reported in the
last issue of Presto-Times, is continuing its business
actively under its new management. Arthur A.
Morris, who for many years was manager of the Bush
& Lane store in Detroit, is the new president of the
company and C. L. Beach is the secretary. Both men
are familiar with the Bush & Lane operations for
many years and therefore business with this old piano
house is going right along under their stimulation.
MONEY SPENT IN VACATIONS.
The vacation habit furnishes the basis for business
services that amount to three billion dollars a year in
the Limited States, according to Scrutator in the Chi-
cago Tribune. That figure was recently quoted as
reasonably authoritative by the assistant secretary of
commerce.
TWINS AND TONES.
The twins were very much alike, but their father,
a piano tuner, had an excellent method of identifying
them.
He explained he could tell the difference between
them even in the dark. The method was to pinch
them.
"But," cried his friend, "that would make them
cry."
"Precisely," replied the father; "that is the idea.
This one is evidently Billy; he cries in high C. While
this"—he pinches the other—"is James. He is always
a semitone lower."—Chicago Daily News.
Alexander McDonald has resigned as advertising
manager of Sohmer & Co., piano manufacturers at
31 West 57th street, New York. He expects to an-
nounce his plans for the future before long.
Fire caused a loss of $30,000 at the M. L. Price
Music Co.'s warehouse, 520 Tampa street, Baltimore,
Md., on May 1.
21
OBITUARY
To Repair Men,
Tuners, and Re-
pair Departments:
COMSTOCK-
CHENEY
Products
are Used by Piano
Manufacturers
Everywhere
W
HEN most conscientious
piano repair men and tun-
ers select parts with a view to
getting the best possible tonal
and mechanical results, they
turn very naturally to the house
of
THE COMSTOCK-CHENEY ii CO-
whose products have won a
reputation for excellence that
safeguards pianos in which
they are used. The quality line
comprises keys, actions and
hammers for all types of
pianos.
Since the early days of piano
manufacturing",
American
piano makers have made
the presence of Comstock-
Cheney parts in their products
a major selling point, and have
depended on them to retain
their beauty or utility. The
same high standards are em-
ployed in the production of
parts for repair work. Why not
get your repair supplies from a
house whose supremacy in its
line will enable you to achieve
uniformly good results and, in
addition, will reflect its excel-
lence and prestige on your
work?
Col. J. Gray Estey, aged 58 years, died last month
at his home in Brattlehoro, Vt. Col. Estey was the
president of the Estey Organ Co., known for many
years in the manufacture of pipe organs.
J. C. Sovey, aged 67, old-time minstrel and maker
of phonograph records, who had toured the country
with Lew Dockstader, Primrose and West, died last
month at home in Milford, Mass.
Quintard Leake, violinist, aged 25 years, whose
mother lives at 1165 Park avenue, New York, died in
Paris, France, last month as a result of injuries
received in an automobile accident in the French city.
Daniel Minor Lord, founder of the advertising firm
of Lord & Thomas and Logan, died in New York
on May 27. His house prepared many of the adver-
tisements that have appeared from time to time in
this publication.
Henry Albert Lang, aged 76, composer and piano
teacher, died at his home in Philadelphia on May 28.
John William Heins, aged 66, managing director
of the pipe organ department of The Aeolian Co. at
its plant in Cranford, N. J., until his retirement in
1924, died at Cranford on May 29.
George Myron Greene, aged 80, founder of the
Metropolitan College of Music, New York, and
founder of the American Guild of Organists, died last
month in New York.
Nahan Franko, orchestra leader, violinist and for-
merly for nearly twenty-live years concert master or
conductor of the Metropolitan Opera's orchestra, died
last w r eek at a sanitarium in Amityville, L. I. The
honorary pallbearers were Theodore Steinway, Ber-
thold Ncuer, Mr. Liebling, John Philip Sousa, Na-
than Burkan, former Police Commissioner Richard
E. Enright, Daniel Frohman, Carl Edouarde, Felix
Arnold, Hermann Irion, Alvin L. Schmoeger, Na-
thaniel Shilkret and Arthur Rergh.
Guenther Kiesewetter, aged 71, of 529 West 129th
street, New York, composer, conductor and music
teacher, died on May 31 in St. Luke's Hospital, that
city, after failing to rally from an operation.
Mme. Nineh Romaine. of Toledo, Ohio, interna-
tionally famous pianist, died on May 2 of smallpox
in Spinagar, Kasmir, India. She was on a world
tour.
'The Supreme
Authority"
WEBSTER'S NEW
INTERNATIONAL
DICTIONARY
the
EVIDENCE
The
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Ac Your
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send for free ilius-
iraicd booklet.
Keys, Actions and Hammers
Furnished Complete
Ivory Cutters Since 1834
THE COMSTOCK-
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The Government Print-
2,700 pages;
ing Office at Washington 452,000 entries,
uses the New Interna-
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tional as the standard au-
thousands oi
thority. High Officials in
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all branches of the Gov-
12,000 biograph-
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ical entries;
The Colleges voted
overwhelmingly in favor 32,000 geograph-
ic
subjects;
of Webster as standard of
over 6,000
pronunciation in answer
to questions submitted by
illustrations.
the Chicago Woman's America's Great
Club.
Question-
Answerer.
G. ft C. MERRIAM
COMPANY
Springfield, Mass.
Magnificent
LESTER
Small
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IVORYTON, CONN.
Taking up one's work or dropping one's work is not
as important as doing one's work.
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