Music Trade Review

Issue: 1919 Vol. 69 N. 12

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
REVLW
PUBLISHED BY EDWARD LYMAN BILL, Inc.
in these campaigns will continue to increase as their value is more
generally appreciated.
The appearance of the advertisements simultaneously in news-
papers throughout the country, in addition to the fact that they
indicate the solidity of the trade behind the cause of music, must
of necessity serve to impress the public most forcibly. The full co-
operation of dealers generally, however, is required to make these
campaigns worth while, and the trade knows by this time just
what they represent, and the final decision should be easy.
President and Treasurer, C. L. Jiill, 373 Fourth Ave., New York; Vice-President,
T. B. Spillane, 373 Fourth Ave., New York; Second Vice-President, Raymond Bill, 373
Fourth Ave., New York; Assistant Treasurer, Wm. A. Low.
J. B. SPILLANE, Editor
RAYMOND BILL, B. B. WILSON, Associate Editors
CARLETON CHACE, Business Manager
Executive and Reportorial Staff
WILSON D. BUSH, V. D. WALSH, WM. BRAID WHITE (Technical Editor), E. B. MUNCH,
L. M. ROBINSON, C. A. LEONARD, EDWARD LYMAN BILL, A. J. NICKLIN, L. E. BOWERS
BOSTON OFFICE:
JOHN H. WILSON, 324 Washington St.
CHICAGO OFFICE:
E. P. VAN HARLINGEN, Republic Building,
Telephone, Main 69S0.
209 So. State St. Telephone, Wabash 5774.
LONDON, ENGLAND: 1 Gresham Buildings, Basinghall St., D. C.
NEWS SERVICE IS SUPPLIED WEEKLY BY OUR CORRESPONDENTS
LOCATED IN THE LEADING CITIES THROUGHOUT AMERICA.
Published Every Saturday at 373 Fourth Avenue, New York
Entered as second-class matter September 10, 1892, at the post office at New York, N. Y.,
under the Act of March 3, 1879.
SUBSCRIPTION (including postage), United States and Mexico, $2.00 per year;
Canada, $3.50; all other countries, $5.00.
ADVERTISEMENTS, $4.50 per inch single column, per insertion. On quarterly or
yearly contracts a special discount is allowed. Advertising pages, $130.
REMITTANCES, in other than currency forms, should be made payable to Edward
Lyman Bill, Inc.
Dl «*«!*>«» Olg».n 4 n i l
Departments conducted by an expert wherein all ques-
rl3j"r~rl turns of a technical nature relating to the tuning,
I W h n f o f l l IW>nartmPIlt« regulating and repairing of pianos and player-pianos
I C U U l l l a l uKjpal UIICUIS are dealt with, will be found in another section of
this paper. We also publish a number of reliable technical works, information concerning
which will be cheerfully given upon request.
__^_
Exposition Honors Won by The Review
Grand Prix
Paris Exposition, 1900 Silver Medal Charleston Exposition, 1902
Diploma... .Pan-American Exposition, 1901 Gold Medal
St. Louis Exposition, 1904
Gold Medal—Lewis-Clark Exposition, 1905
LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONES—NUMBERS 5982—5983 MADISON SQ.
Connecting all Departments
Cable address: "Elbill, New York"
Vol. LXIX
NEW YORK, SEPTEMBER 20, 1919
No. 12
THE NATIONAL MUSIC FESTIVAL
ITH the National Music Festival and Exhibition over four
W
months off, there are abundant indications even now that so
far as the Exhibition itself goes the affair will prove an unqual-
ified success. As has already been announced by Manager Charles
H. Green, practically all the main floor spaces were disposed of
in less than a week after the prospectus had been mailed to the
trade, and the remaining spaces are being signed up rapidly.
The trade has had experience with exhibitions under Mr.
Green's management. They know in a general way what to ex-
pect and feel that with the Music Industries Chamber of Com-
merce, and the other trade organizations strongly behind the move-
ment, there is every reason to expect unusually satisfactory results.
The plans for the Exhibition do not end, however, with the
assignment of the display spaces, for there is much other important
work to be done before the fullest interest of the public can be
aroused. The Festival and Exhibition are primarily designed to
appeal to the public and interest in it should not be confined to the
trade in any sense. It is up to the members of the industry them-
selves to take far more than a passive interest in the affair, and to
lend their practical as well as their moral support to the venture.
The greater the success of the Show the more benefit will the in-
dustry as a whole derive therefrom.
FURTHERING THE CAUSE OF MUSIC
HE announcement of C. M. Tremaine, Director of the Na-
tional Bureau for the Advancement of Music, to the effect
that the copy for the third co-operating campaign under the aus-
pices of the Bureau is now ready, is to be received with par-
ticular interest, inasmuch as the co-operative advertising idea
is not in any sense a novelty, but has been tried out successfully
on two occasions and found to be distinctly practical. While
the two previous campaigns referred particularly to war and post-
war conditions respectively, the third campaign is along general
lines, although with special reference to the desirability of pro-
viding music for the children. It is to be hoped that the interest
T
SEPTEMBER 20, 1919
A RESULTFUL CONVENTION
if any, local conventions of piano men held in the country
F EW,
equal in importance for general interest the annual meeting of
the Piano Merchants' Association of Ohio, for that is an organiza-
tion that really does things. Though essentially a State body and
absolutely under the control of Ohio dealers, the annual sessions
take on the appearance of a meeting of national scope, through the
attendance of prominent members of the trade from all sections of
the country. Not only that, but the members themselves take the
affair seriously. The papers read at the convention last week, for
instance, as well as the addresses made, practically without excep-
tion, indicated that serious thought had been given to their prepara-
tion. The discussions, too, were calculated to give the piano
men something genuine to think about. It is a convention such as
that held by the Ohio men that serves to weld the piano men to-
gether, and helps to put and keep business on a higher plane.
|
PLAYING FAIR WITH THE MANUFACTURER
OR decades past there has existed in the trade the type of
F dealer
who made every effort to secure a representation of an
instrument of high standing, not so much for the purpose of selling
it, through special effort, as with the idea of using it as bait to at-
tract to his warerooms those who were seeking a piano of reputa-
tion and were familiar with the standing of the particular piano
he featured as his leader. Once in. the store it did not often prove
very difficult for a fast talking and not overscrupulous dealer to
convince the prospect of the desirability of some lesser known
piano, possibly bearing the dealer's own name, and upon which
there was a more than generous margin of profit.
The practice perhaps could not be condemned as strictly dis-
honest, although it sometimes happened that the piano eventually
sold did not offer the value the customer was led to expect. The
unfairness of the system lay in tying up a definite territory for a
certain make of piano, and then not giving it the attention it de-
served, or that it was implied would be given to it, when the agency
was first solicited.
If the offending concern had an established standing in its
own territory the manufacturer of a high-grade instrument, after
having the name of his product associated for years with that of
the local distributor, hesitated about making the change and possi-
bly causing harmful confusion thereby. The manufacturer nat-
urally kept after the retailer, but even through that method was
frequently unable to get the desired action. The manufacturer
felt that, with competition rife, to withdraw his agency simply
meant that some other manufacturer of instruments of correspond-
ing standing would move into the gap.
Just now things seem to be changing. With manufacturers
of high-grade piano's having on their books more orders than they
will be able to fill for months to come they are not inclined to be
patient with retailers who are not, or have not been, giving them
a square deal. While the manufacturers may not be able to take
care of the demands of their authorized representatives just now,
they realize that it is the. course of wisdom to keep local territories
well covered and thereby maintain the prestige of their product
until such time as conditions change and supplies are in excess of
demand.
While touring the country to keep in touch with retailers and
the trade situation generally, representatives of a number of lead-
ing houses have found time, with no selling to do, to look into the
sort of representation their houses are receiving at the hands of
various retailers. The result has been in some cases that valuable
agencies have been changed around entirely, for the good of the
cause, while in other cases territory has been redivided so that
neglected sections come under the control of energetic houses.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
SEPTEMBER 20, 1919
5
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
TRAVELS 200 MILES IN AIR TO CLOSE AMPICO SALE
MASON P. CURRIER WITH LANDAY
John E. Yuncker, Sales Manager of Fitzgerald Music Co., Los Angeles, Uses Airplane to Call
on and Sell Prospect in Santa Barbara During Recent Railroad Strike
Prominent Piano Man Made Manager of Piano
Department Conducted by Landay Bros.—E.
F. Harwood to Manage Sixth Ave. Store
Los ANGELES, CAL., September 12.—New uses
for the ajrplane in the business world are con-
stantly being found, but it is believed that John
E- Yuncker, sales manager of the Fitzgerald
Music Co., this city, is the first piano man to
use the airplane for carrying him to a prospect
Barbara in an airline is about 100 miles, yet
Mr. Yuncker made the round trip and sold a
piano in each city before noon. The successful
carrying out of the project was due to the en-
terprise and ingenuity of H. C. Braden, vice-
president and genera! manager of the Fitz-
gerald Music Co.
Not only did the unusual stunt serve to bring-
in the order for the Knabe Ampico, but it of-
fered the Fitzgerald Music Co. the opportunity
for some unusually striking publicity, of which
full advantage was taken. Full-page advertise-
ments were run in the local papers, showing pic-
tures of Mr. Yuncker about to start on his
unique trip and calling attention to the impor-
tance of the occasion through the medium of
well-conceived text.
Mason P. Currier, one of the best known
piano men in the East and formerly manager of
the warerooms of Chickering & Sons, Boston,
has been appointed general manager of the n«w
piano departments opened by Landay Bros, in
New York and Newark, N. J. Mr. Currier's
ADAMS=FLANNIGAN PIANO DEPT.
Doll & Sons to Have Exclusive Piano Ware-
rooms in New York Department Store—No
Manager Has Been Chosen at Present Time
Just Before the Trip Began
in order to close a sale. Incidentally Mr.
Yuncker's progressiveness won for him a
signed order for a $3,300 Knabe Ampico repro-
ducing piano.
During the recent railroad strike Mr. Yunck-
er received a request from Frank Tuhten, a
A new piano department is being installed in
the Adams-Flannigan department store, 149th
street and Third avenue, New York, by Doll &
Sons. Fred Doll, of the retail Doll store on
Forty-second street, is looking after the details
of the new department and hopes to have it in
running order by the first of next week. This
new piano section of the Adams-Flannigan store
is on the third floor adjacent to the furniture
section. The well-known Doll pianos will be
featured exclusively and the Doll & Sons, Wells-
more and Stodart pianos will be on display.
Up to the time of going to press no manager
for the new department had been chosen, but
it is expected that an announcement will be
made within a short time.
CALLERS ON P. G. MEHLIN & SONS
Braden Greeting Yuncker on His Return
wealthy real estate operator from Santa Bar-
bara, for some details regarding the Knabe
Ampico. Faced with the uncertainty of train
service and the necessity of taking as little time
Among the prominent dealers, all of whom
handle the Mehlin line in their territory, who
called at the offices of Paul G. Mehlin & Sons.
4 East Forty-third street, New York City, dur-
ing the past week were: Frank C. Clark, of
Clark & Jones, Knoxville and Chattanooga,
Tenn.; Leon N. Walthall, of the Walthall Co.,
San Antonio, Texas, accompanied by L. T.
Webb, manager of his piano department; L. S.
Jacobi, manager piano department, Kaufmann
Bros. Co., The Big Store, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Harry
Mason P. Currier
wide experience in the trade places him in an
excellent position to handle the many details
involved in the conduct of the Landay depart-
ments.
The new piano warerooms opened by Landay
Bros, on Sixth avenue, New York, have been
placed under the direct supervision of Edward
F. Harwood, who has been connected with
prominent piano concerns in the past, at one
time having been manager of the piano depart-
ment of the Kaufmann Bros, store in Pittsburgh.
As was announced some time ago, George En-
gelbrecht has been made manager of the Lan-
day piano warerooms in Newark, N. J.
H. C. BAY CO. TO BUILD OFFICES
BLUFKTON, IND., September 15.—The H. C. Bay
Piano Co., of this city, has purchased a location
at the corner of Main and Washington streets in
tliis city in the heart of the business district,
and announcement is made that the company
will erect a handsome office building and dis-
play room of two and three stories, although the
exact plans have not been adopted. The erec-
tion of the new building will replace the row
of old wooden structures that were among the
early business rooms in Bluffton.
STEINWAY OFFICIALS IN DAYTON
DAYTON, O., September 15.—Paul H. Schmidt,
secretary to Charles H. Steinway, of Steinway
& Sons, together with Theodore Steinway, Fred
Steinway and R. E. Wells, general manager of
the Western branch stores of Steinway & Sons,
with headquarters in Cincinnati, were in Dayton
on Friday of last week visiting the local store.
The quartet are on a tour of the branches for
the purpose of studying existing conditions.
JOINS LOESER & CO. STAFF
The Start of the Trip to Santa Barbara
as possible from his work at headquarters here Wunderlich, Wunderlich Piano Co., Kansas City,
Mr. Yuncker conceived the idea of traveling by Mo.; W. O. Black, manager piano department,
airplane, with the result that he was in Santa Hahne & Co., Newark, N. J.; Arthur Dunker-
Barbara and talking to the prospect before the ky, Dunkerley & Co., Passaic, N. J.; Chas. Hart,
first train had left Los Angeles.
Hart Bros., New Brunswick, N. J. Business with
The distance between Los Angeles and Santa the Mehlin house is very active.
Z77ie J>eit/cttou)M
mur/cal name
mfheWor/d.
Joseph F. Weil, a piano salesman well known
in the New York field, has joined the floor staff
of Loeser & Co., Brooklyn, N. Y. Mr. Weil
was formerly connected with the retail ware-
rooms of Krakauer Bros.
MOVING TO NEW STORE
The Phillips Piano Co., El Dorado, Kan., will
scon move into new and spacious quarters at
216 West Central avenue, that city.
t
PIANOS
ORGANS
EETEY PIAND CHMPANY • NEW YORK CITY
c7hepestpfvfrt
producer' '
dealer mtfie

Download Page 4: PDF File | Image

Download Page 5 PDF File | Image

Future scanning projects are planned by the International Arcade Museum Library (IAML).

Pro Tip: You can flip pages on the issue easily by using the left and right arrow keys on your keyboard.