Music Trade Review

Issue: 1920 Vol. 70 N. 18

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
MAY
1, 1920
THE
MUSIC
TRADE
REVIEW
47
TO HOLD SERIES OF MEETINGS
E. A. WIDMANN RETURNS
TO BEGIN BIG SUMMER CAMPAIGN
Columbia Graphophone Co. Officials Start on
Tour of Branches in Various Parts of the
, Country to Hold Trade Conferences
President of Pathe Freres Phonograph Co.
Back From European Trip—Tells of Condi-
tions in the Trade Throughout the Continent
Columbia Graphophone Co. Completes Plans for
Extensive Publicity During the Summer
Geo. W. Hopkins, general sales manager of
the Columbia Graphophone Co., accompanied by
W. A. Willson, manager of the company's edu-
cational department; H. L. Tuers, manager of
the Dealer Service department, and O. F. Benz,
of the general sales department, left Monday
for an extended trip to Columbia branches in
different parts of the country. According to
present plans, all four of these executives will
visit Philadelphia, Atlanta, Cincinnati, Detroit,
Chicago and Minneapolis. At the Columbia
branches in these cities dealer meetings will
be held, together with meetings of the branch
managers and the sales staffs of the branches
in nearby cities. A program similar to the one
adopted on previous trips will be followed at
these meetings.
Mr. Hopkins returns to New York from Min-
neapolis and the other three executives proceed
to a meeting in Winnipeg, Can. Mr. Tuers re-
turns to New York from Winnipeg, while Mr.
Benz proceeds to a meeting in New Orleans,
returning home from that branch. Mr. Willson,
who is making his first extensive tour to the
Western branches, will visit Spokane, Seattle,
Portland, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Salt Lake
City, Denver and Kansas City, Mo.
L. C. Ackley, who has just been appointed
manager of the Seattle branch, will accompany
the executives to the meetings in Philadelphia
and Cincinnati.
Eugene A. Widmann, president of the Pathe
Freres Phonograph Go., arrived home from his
trip abroad on Thursday, April 22, and received
a hearty and enthusiastic welcome from his
TALKING MACHINES FOR EMPLOYES
General Electric Co, Instals Outfits in Lamp
Plant in Cleveland for Entertainment of Em-
ployes During Hours of Recreation
CLEVELAND, O., April 26.—The National Lamp
Works of the General Electric Co., in the model
plant at Nela. Park, East Cleveland, has in-
stalled several talking machines to interest em-
ployes during recreation hours and the mid-day
luncheon period. In the cafeteria catchy fox-
trots from musical instruments whet the appe-
tites of employes, while in the bowling alleys a
phonograph beats the time to spares and strikes
of the men, and on the dance floor every noon
the girls find recreation and enjoyment sway-
ing rhythmically to the strains of some popular
dance number. Miss Crowley, head of the com-
pany's service department, says that no feature
has contributed so much to the efficiency and
happiness of the girl employes as has the noon-
day music, as the girls, she says, go back to
their duties refreshed, soothed and rested, and
their minds in "perfect tune with their work."
NEW POST FOR L. C. ACKLEY
Becomes Manager of Columbia Co.'s Seattle
Branch, Succeeding Frank Dorian
The general sales department of the Colum-
bia Graphophone Co. announced this week the
appointment of L. C. Ackley as manager of the
company's Seattle branch. Mr. Ackley, who
was formerly a member of the sales organiza-
tion at the Los Angeles branch, has been in
the service quite some time and his successful
achievements in the Columbia organization well
warrant his present promotion to the post of
manager.
Mr. Ackley succeeds Frank Dorian, who vol-
untarily resigns as manager of the Seattle
branch. Mr. Dorian, during his stay in Seattle,
accomplished excellent results and laid a strong
foundation for Air. Ackley's future development.
Eugene A. Widmann
many co-workers. The Pathe plant in Brooklyn
was festively decorated with banners, stream-
ers and flags, and each department vied with
the other in its efforts to provide the most at-
tractive decorations and hearty welcome. Mr.
Widmann was greatly pleased with this hearty
expression of good will and evidenced much
pleasure as he inspected the decorations pre-
pared in his honor. In speaking to The Re-
view, Mr. Widmann said: "We have a fine or-
ganization, everybody pulling together, and I
might best describe it as one large happy
family."
In outlining conditions in England, France
and Germany, which countries Mr. Widmann
had the opportunity to visit, he said in part:
"1 find conditions abroad very encouraging.
Labor conditions are no more serious than in
this country. In fact, I might say that they are
better. Everybody is working and I look for
a steady improvement in the European situa-
tion. I do not believe there is any militarism
left in Germany. I noted a food and coal short-
age in that country, but general conditions were
good. Phonograph records, in Germany, are
selling at thirty-five marks. In Paris, I spent
quite a little time at the offices of Pathe Freres,
and am pleased to report that conditions there
are exceptionally fine. There is a heavy demand
and good business. I took this trip primarily
in the interest of our London office. Our busi-
ness in this country has increased to very large
proportions and continues to expand rapidly.
We are building a large plant in England to
take care of this business."
Mr. Widmann touched momentarily on the
subject of the high price of shellac, and said: "I
attribute the high price of shellac entirely to
speculation, and believe that through concerted
action on the part of the record manufacturers
the price of this commodity could be brought
down to a reasonable price."
The annual meeting of the Pathe Freres Phon-
ograph Co. was held Tuesday of this week, at
the New York office of the company at 18 East
Forty-second street.
Consult the universal Want Directory of
The Review. In it advertisements are inserted
free of charge for men who desire positions.
The advertising department of the Columbia
Graphophone Co. has completed plans for one
of the most extensive Summer advertising cam-
paigns that have ever been introduced in the in-
dustry. The campaign will be started next
month and will include every conceivable form
of advertising literature.
A two-page trade paper announcement will
give the trade details regarding this campaign,
and this introductory advertising will be fol-
lowed by a full-page advertisement in the na-
tional magazines, the page being designed in
four colors and featuring vacation models of
Columbia Grafonolas. This type of instrument
is especially adapted to summertime use, and
its tonal qualities are emphasized in this adver-
tising.
Following the full page in the national maga-
zines there will be black and white pages in
the leading farm papers, and newspapers in all
parts of the country will carry a similar mes-
sage.
As a dealer tie-up to this mammoth cam-
paign, the same four color design that is used
in the national magazines forms the basis for
the cover of the June supplement. It is also
used on the supplement hanger and a similar
illustration in two colors is used on a booth
hanger. A special booklet in four colors, fea-
turing vacation models of Grafonolas, illus-
trates three popular Columbia Grafonolas of
the table type, and also calls attention to the
well-known Grafonola traveling kit. This
booklet is designed for envelope enclosure, and
is an important link in making the campaign
effective.
Columbia dealers everywhere will undoubt-
edly be interested in this campaign, for it rep-
resents a co-operative service that will assist
them materially in making the coming Summer
the best in their history.
EXTENSIVE EDISON PLANS FOR 1920
Dealers Enthusiastic Over Sales Promotion
Plans Outlined by the Advertising Depart-
ment of Thomas A. Edison, Inc.
The jobbers, dealers and travelers express
themselves as highly enthusiastic over the Edi-
son plans for 1920. Word to that effect comes
from all quarters. Only last week F. H. Silli-
raan, of Boston, Mass., the jobber, paid a visit
to the Edison laboratories and complimented
the personnel of the advertising and sales de-
partments on their work in getting out the Port-
folio and the Guy Wise Scrap Book.
"Your sales propositions," he said in the
course of conversation, "have been received by
the New England dealers with enthusiastic ap-
proval. The consensus of opinion seems to be
that these plans are the biggest and most am-
bitious ideas ever launched by any industrial
concern in the country. They promise to mark
an epoch in co-operative selling enterprise."
Another visitor at the Orange plant was W.
D. Wilmot, an Edison dealer of Fall River, Mass.
It will be recalled that Mr. Wilmot is a pioneer
Edison man, and that he presided at the Edison
convention of 1916. He expressed himself
strongly as an admirer of the new sales propo-
sition which, he thought, would infuse the
whole organization with a steadily mounting
enthusiasm.
Still a third caller was W. J. Hutton, of Kear-
ney, Neb., who dropped in to talk over many
things, and who joined in the chorus of praise
being showered upon the 1920 Edison sales
propositions.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
4S
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
EDISON'S NEW EDITORIAL DIRECTOR
VICTOR VS. WANAMAKER
D. E. Wheeler Is a Firm Believer in the Fact
That America Is Musical
Arguments to Be Heard in U. S. District Court
in New York on Monday, May 17
Leaving magazine fiction for phonograph
music is not such a radical change for D. E.
Wheeler, the recently appointed editorial di-
rector of Thomas A. Edison, Inc., as the casual
The hearing of the suit brought by the Victor
Talking Machine Co. against John Wanamaker
for alleged infringement of the Johnson patent
and on other claims, is scheduled for a hearing
in the U. S. District Court before Judge Hand
on Monday, May 17. The hearing, after several
postponements, owing to illness of counsel, was
*set for April 26, but all parties not being ready,
it was postponed until May 17 as stated.
MAY
1, 1920
How You Can
Safely Increase
Your Income
CHANGES AT EDISON LABORATORIES
H. R. Holmes, M. M. Kuhn and L. R. Geissen-
hainer to Assist in 1920 Sales Promotion Plans
Announcement has just been made of several
interesting and important changes in the sales
organization of Edison Laboratories. H. R.
Holmes, M. M. Kuihn and L. R. Geissenhainer,
formerly territorial supervisors, will assist in
directing the execution of the 1920 sales pro-
motion plans from the laboratories at Orange,
N. J. Each will concentrate his efforts upon
one of three groups, into which the jobbing
points in the United States and Canada have
been divided. As territorial supervisors these
men gained a practical knowledge of the prob-
lems dealers have to meet and the experience
thus acquired will be a valuable asset in their
new positions.
D. E. Wheeler
observer might think. Though Mr. Wheeler has
moved and has had his being in the New
York literary world, from boyhood the art of
music has exercised a dominant influence over
him.
For a long time Mr. Wheeler has contended
that America is musical and that the country
is developing its own particular musical cul-
ture, even as it has grown along native literary
lines. Our music is not, nor will it be, neces-
sarily the classic European variety, but some-
thing more individual and expressive of the
American idea. It is his opinion that superior
persons may smile at our popular songs, at our
rag-time, at our jazz, but in doing so they fail
to see deeper than the surface. He points out
that if such critics would only stop to compare
the quality of our home-made music of twenty
years ago, and take into consideration the
astonishing multiplication of our orchestras and
musical organizations and performers, they
would not miss the obvious object lesson of
our swift cultural development.
"Everything begins with the home," says Mr.
Wheeler, "and the fact that even the humblest
and poorest may have its music in the form
of a phonograph is profoundly significant of the
future of America as a musical factor in the
world, for it is the constant hearing of music
which develops appreciation, discrimination and
creation.
"The truth is that we Americans have been
so thoroughly prejudiced against ourselves as
creators of music that it has been taken for
granted that it was beyond our powers, meekly
accepting the theory of Europe that a country
without folk song had not the foundation for
composition or even true appreciation, which is
nonsense. This ignores the fact that a score
of nationalities have brought their melodic
idioms to this land and that in the fusion of
common life a cosmopolitan music might evolve,
just as social or political customs can merge
into a composite that is veritably a new order."
In taking up his duties with the Edison Co. it
is Mr. Wheeler's intention to spread the gospel
of American music and stimulate appreciation
of the marvelous art in general through every
channel of publicity that is possible to use.
Al Waltamath, overseas for fourteen months
with Uncle Sam's fighting forces, has returned
to Canton, O., and is again identified with the
phonograph department of the J. W. Brown
Piano Co., of that city.
THE VICTROLA IN AMERICANIZATION
An Elaborate Booklet on This Particularly
Timely Subject Just. Issued . by the Victor
Talking Machine Co;—Of Great Value
There has just been issued by the Victor
Talking Machine Co: a carefully compiled and
most valuable booklet covering the question of
"The Victrola in Americanization," a subject
that is of such vital and widespread interest
just now. The booklet, with a foreword by
Mrs. Frances E. Clark, director of the Educa-
tional Department of the Victor Co., was de-
signed especially for the guidance of those en-
gaged in Americanization work in community
centers, night schools, continuation schools,
Y. M. C. A.'s, Y. W. C. A.'s, social service, etc.,
and wherever the attempt is being made to
mold the foreign born into good citizens.
The booklet is divided into various sections,
the first being "The Victrola and Americaniza-
tion," wherein the subject is discussed at con-
siderable length, and the national and folk songs
of a score or more of the foreign nations listed.
Next comes "Community Singing in American-
ization," with special reference paid to what
may be described as the folk songs of America,
including "My Old Kentucky Home," "Old
Black Joe," "Battle Hymn of the Republic," etc.,
and then "Folk Dancing in Americanization."
A particularly interesting section is that de-
voted to "The Victrola in the Study of Amer-
ican History," with special reference to music
representative of the various stages of the coun-
try's development, from the landing of the
Norse about 900 years ago to the period of the
great World War, which is represented by the
two wonderfully popular numbers, "Keep the
Home Fires. Burning" and "There's a Long,
Long Trail."
This interesting booklet is copiously illus-
trated and should be in tremendous demand
with educators generally as soon as brought to
their attention by the Victor dealers.
Piano merchants, who have
not investigated the talking
machine field, will find that
the subject is one of deep
interest to them and they
will also learn that talking
machines constitute a line
which can be admirably
blended with piano selling.
The advance that has been
made in this special field
has been phenomenal and
every dealer who desires
specific information con-
cerning talking machines
should receive The Talking
Machine World regularly.
This is the oldest publica-
tion in America devoted
exclusively to the interests
of the talking machine, and
each issue contains a vast
fund of valuable informa-
tion which the talking
machine jobbers and dealers
say is worth ten times the
cost of the paper to them.
You can receive the paper
regularly at a cost of $2.00
a year and we know of no
manner in which $2.00 can
be expended which will
supply as much valuable
information.
QEO. W. HOPKINS RENOMINATED
Geo. W. Hopkins, general sales manager of
the Columbia Graphophone Co., has been nomi-
nated for the presidency of the New York Ad-
vertising Club. Mr. Hopkins is now president
of the club, and if re-elected, will hold office
for one year. The annual meeting of the club
will be held on May 11.
EDWARD LYMAN BILL, Inc.
Publiaher
373 Fourth Ave.
NEW YORK

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