Music Trade Review

Issue: 1920 Vol. 71 N. 23

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
DECEMBER 4, 1920
SHERMAN, CLAY WAREROOMS IN PORTLAND REMODELED
HUGHES & SON CO. MAKES CHANGE
Oregon Headquarters of Prominent Pacific Coast Music House Now Among the Most Attractive
in That Section of the Country—Good Business Reported by Local Dealers
Piano House to Cease Manufacturing End of
Business and Become Retailer Only
PORTLAND, ORE., November 27.—Sherman, Clay &
Co. have one of the handsomest music houses
on the Coast since the completion of alterations
in their building. Handsome furnishings are not
the only part of the establishment that appeals
to visitors. It is the excellent arrangements and
accommodations for all departments and for all
connected with the store that impress those
who have gone through this large and most
modern music store. The building is 70 by 100
feet, or 7,000 square feet on each floor, and
every bit of space has been utilized in such a
manner as to entirely modernize and facilitate
the business in each department. Plenty of
light, air and ventilation and conveniences not
usually found* in even more extensively adver-
tised music houses have been arranged for the
comfort and pleasure of the Sherman, Clay em-
ployes. The grand piano rooms, the player-piano
rooms and all the display rooms are furnished
in excellent taste. The Duo-Art room is a model
of quiet elegance. The large, beautifully lighted
halls, the complete offices and talking machine
departments are all examples of what is possible
in modern furnishings and equipment. A con-
cert hall is one of the features of the building
and is used by various societies for practicing
as well as for concerts given by the house. The
lobby, reception room and large display win-
dows at the entrance are among the interesting
details. J. H. Dundore, the manager, is the
recipient of congratulations from the many
friends and customers of the house for the good
taste in which the building has been furnished
and the rapidity with which the alterations were
made.
Ray R. Rugg, who has been with Sher-
man, Clay & Co., of San Francisco, for seventeen
years, is now with the Portland branch and has
charge of the Duo-Art and other player-piano
departments.
Business shows a gratifying increase over last
year, according to Frank M. Chase, of the Wiley
B. Allen Co. "We have to work harder, how-
ever," he said, "to get business, and those not
willing to do extra work will fall by the way-
side. No drop in prices will be made for some
time. The first indications of lower prices will
be in the factories, where eventually the num-
ber of workmen will be decreased, but there is
no probability of that being done for months."
The Wiley B. Allen Co. is taking on the Melo- •
dee rolls and has ordered a large shipment.
Jack Farrar, of San Francisco, visited Portland
and convinced the Wiley B. Allen people that a
player roll department without Melodee rolls
was poorly equipped, as these rolls are becoming
more and more popular. The Q R S and Im-
perial rolls are also found in this department.
The G. F. Johnson Piano Co. has purchased
a new piano-moving van, which facilitates the
delivery of goods. Business has been excellent,
considering the prevailing feeling of unrest and
indecision in regard to prices, but high-grade
instruments are being sold in about the usual
number, and a healthy holiday trade seems
assured.
There is always an appearance of good busi-
ness activity at the Bush & Lane store. H. Ben
Street, a salesman of this house, says that people
make a mistake in waiting for reductions in the
price of pianos and phonographs. It is hurting
trade and reasonable people should know that
a reduction before six months or a year would
OARDMAN
GRAY
Y
IAN0S
ESTABUSHED—IN--183/
ALBANY, N. Y.
bankrupt manufacturers. The advance in price
was comparatively small, but a sudden reduction
would be disastrous. Wages of skilled workmen
can not be reduced now.
J. R. Elliott, of Boosey & Co.'s music estab-
lishment of New York, was in Portland last week
visiting the dealers. Mr. Elliott is not a
stranger in Portland, having been at one time
with the Wiley B. Allen Co.
The Reed, French Co. reports business very
quiet, although there was a revival of trade on
Saturday, that being an unusually good day in
all departments. Harold Wormser, of New
York City, has joined the sales force.
NEW STORE FOR STARR CO.
Indianapolis Branch to Move to New Location
Early Next Year—Dealers Anticipate Good
Holiday Trade and Are Well Stocked
DOVER-Fox CROFT, ME., November 30.—The Hughes
& Son Piano Mfg. Co., which is closing up the
manufacturing part of its business and going
into the retail business entirely, will soon move
into its new store in Union Square. The
Roberts store, which it has purchased, is being
extensively repaired under direction of S. F.
Atwood. When completed, Dover-Foxcroft will
have one of the most attractive stores east of
Portland, and the only music store in Piscata-
quis county. In the rear of the store a hand-
some chimney has been built and a fireplace
faces the main entrance. On the right, further
back, are the main offices. A work-room for
repairing is at the back, and a wide doorway
opening into the salesroom makes an easy en-
trance for pianos. The company will carry a
line of its own pianos with those of other
makes, and the Brunswick phonograph.
ISSUE A BULKY VOLUME
November 30.—After being in
its present location at 138-140 North Pennsyl-
vania street since 1901, the Starr Piano Co. will
move the first of next year to 49-53 Monument
Place. The new store will be in a four-story
building leased for a period of ninety-nine years
from Edson T. Wood and others. The build-
ing fronts thirty feet on Monument Circle and
has a depth of 126 feet to an alley.
The Starr Piano Co. has only one floor at the
present quarters and the floor space will be
more than trebled by the change of location.
It is probable that the work of remodeling the
new building and of adding a fifth floor will be
started within the next year. The new location
will place the company next to the Circle Thea-
tre, the largest motion picture house in the city,
and will make it the only piano house in Monu-
ment Circle.
All the music dealers of the city are stocked
up for a brisk holiday trade and are confident
that business will hold up in good shape, al-
though there is no shouting from the housetops
about business never being better. As a matter
of fact the piano business is slow here now and
every dealer admits it. However, fewer sales
are not spelling pessimism. If they were stocks
would not be so large. The unusual and cheer-
ing aspect of the situation is that every dealer
is seeing in the slowed-up business an indication
of the readjustment that it is believed must
come if business generally is to approach the
stability of pre-war days.
"Business might be brisker," said William
Carlin, of the Carlin Music Co., in commenting
on the situation, "but prospects are good and
so far nothing unforeseen has happened. The
piano business, of course, is probably hit a
little harder than many other lines during this
period of readjustment because of difficulties
being encountered by the piano manufacturers.
As for the dealer, he need not be surprised by
conditions as they now are, for they are working
out just as was expected by all of us who have
given close attention to the trend of things in
the commercial world. It may be another year
at the most before farmers and others agree to
submit to the inevitable, but sooner or later
buying will begin again and we will rapidly build
up trade of a substantial sort."
INDIANAPOLIS, IND.,
INCORPORATED IN OGDEN
November 29.—Articles of incor-
poration have been filed by the Hudson-Meyer
Distributing Co. The purpose of the company
is to carry on the sale of musical instruments,
real estate sales and other activities. The capital
stock of the company is set forth as $50,000,
divided into 50,000 shares of the par value of
$1 per share. The officers of the company are
H. C. Hudson, president; Maude Meyer, vice-
president and treasurer, and E. H. Meyer, secre-
tary and manager.
OGDEN, UTAH,
The 1921 edition of Hendrick's Commercial
Register of the United States for buyers and
sellers is now out. It looks larger and better
than ever and several new features have been
added. The new edition contains over twenty-
five hundred pages of information.
American
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P
ipe Organ
Wire
Modern organ mechanism is of wire.
Round and flat wire; springs; wire
rope; reinforcing wire; electrical wires,
such as Americore rubber-covered for
conveyance of current; magnet wire,
silk-insulated, for releasing wind to
pipes; paraffined cotton-insulated, for
connecting keyboards with stop action;
console cables.
"American Piano Wire and Pipe Organ
News," "Wood and the Piano Build-
ers' Art," also "Piano Tone
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Services
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A merican Steel & Wire
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Acoustic Department
208 S. La Salle Street, Chicago
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
8
DECEMBER 4, 1920
ADVANCEMENT OF MUSIC POST-CARDS FOR DEALERS' USE
Attractive Series of Seven. Post-cards Prepared by the National Bureau for the Advancement of
Music for the Use of Retail Music Dealers Proves an Effective Sales Aid
The accompanying illustrations serve to give
some idea of the general character of the post-
cards, one of the reproductions being in full size
and the others reduced. The cards are printed
in black and the chief
WHAT THE GREAT MINDS OF AIL TIME SAY ABOUT MUSI
paragraphs brought out
strongly in red ink. Six
of the cards carry quota-
tions from noted state-
ments and publishers re-
n p H E value of music as an aid
garding the value of
music, without any hint
JL to efficiency, a source of plea-
as to the origin of the
cards themselves. The
sure, a means of rest and relax-
seventh card, winding up
ation and a stamp of culture has
the series, bears the
name and address of the
been conclusively demonstrated*
dealer and an invitation
to visit his store.
It is the belief of C.
M. Tremaine, director of
the Bureau, that the
cards should prove most
valuable just now, when
it is so necessary and
desirable to arouse the
interest of the buying
public in music and musi-
VISIT our warerooms and exam*
cal instruments.
ine our wide variety of pianos,
The cards may be ob-
tained from the National
player-pianos and phonographs.
Bureau for the Advance-
ment
of Music, 105 West
An instrument to fit any pocket-
Fortieth street, at the
book* Satisfactory terms can easily
price of $5 for 100 sets,
without the imprint of
be arranged You owe it to your
the dealer's name. With
the imprint the additional
family and yourself not to delay*
charge is $1.50 for the
first 100 cards and 25
cents for each additional
100.
It will be noticed that
the cards are so designed
(DEALER'S NAME)
as to arouse the curiosity
of the recipient as to the
identity of the sender,
whose name is not re-
vealed until the seventh
card in the series is re-
Full-size Reproduction of Last Card in the Series
ceived. The cards should
their prospects, has met with considerable favor be sent so that the last one is received on Fri-
and a goodly number of merchants have taken day, in order to give the dealer a chance to close
occasion to order complete sets of the post-cards, the sale of an instrument on Saturday.
T h e series of seven p o s t - c a r d s e m p h a s i z i n g t h e
cause of music a n d designed b y t h e N a t i o n a l
B u r e a u for t h e A d v a n c e m e n t of Music for t h e
use of music m e r c h a n t s , in k e e p i n g in touch with
Is your home provided
with ample means of
obtaining music?
WHAT THE GREAT MINDS OF A H TIME SAY ABOUT MUSI
WHAT THE GRFAT MINDS OP AIL TIME SAY ABOUT MUSIC
CHWAB attributes his success in
part to music.
S
I have always believed that it was
essential for successful business that
a man be possessed of sentiment,
love of music, and an appreciation
of the beautiful things of life.
—CHARLES M. SCHWAB
Music can unquestionably increase
your own efficiency through its rest-
ful and refreshing influence. It is an
essential part of the education of
your children.
THE PREPONDERANCE OF EVIDENCE AS TO
THE VALUE OF MUSIC IS OVERWHELMING
AU of the f o l l o w i n . and I
Aristolle
Henry Ward Beecher
Robert Browning
Luther Burbank
Robert Burr.
Lord Byron
Carlyle
Carnegie
Frick
Gladst
Goelb
Warre
ny other! have paid trihiite to mual
e
Robert Ingersoll
Prophet Isaiah
Thomas Jefferson
Otto H. Kahn
Keats
Abraham Lincoln
Lloyd George
Longfellow
Martin Luther
Napoleon
General Penning
Edgar Allan 1'oe
Theodore Roosevelt
James Whitcomb Riley
Bernard Shaw
Shelley
Herbert Spencer
Tennyson
Henry van Dyke
Isaac Walton
George Washington
Walt Whitman
Ella Wheeler Wilco.
Woodrow Wilson
Major-Gen. Leonard Wood
Wordsworth
Music Scries- No. 3
WHAT THE GREAT MINDS OF ALL TIME 5AY ABOUT MUSIC
if.
M
USIC has wonderful power to
refresh the spirit, the nerves
and even the tired muscles.
Take a music bath once or twice a week for
a few seasons. You will find it is to the soul
what a water bath is to the body. Music
elevates and tends to maintain the tone of
one's mind. Seek, therefore, every clean
opportunity for hearing it. Purchase some
kind of instrument for the home and see
that its beneficent harmonies areoften heard.
Let music be as much a part of a day's
routine as eating or reading or working.
—OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES
Bring music into your life and you
will bring sunshine and happiness.
THE PREPONDERANCE OF EVIDENCE AS TO
THE VALUE OF MUSIC IS OVERWHELMING
All of the fotlowini and many other! ha vt paid tribute t o mualc I
Aristotle
Henry Ward Beechet
Robert Browning
Luther Burbauk
Robert Bum*
Lord Byron
Carlyle
Carnegie
Cicero
Coniucius
James M. Co«
Frank Crane
Disraeli
Thomas A. Edison
Charles W. Eliot
Emerson
Euripides
Frick
Theodore Roosevelt
Gladstone
James Whitcomb Riley
Goethe
Ruskin
Warren G. Harding
Charles M. Schwab
Oliver Wendell Holmes Shakespeare
Bernard Shaw
Robert lngcrsoll
Prophet Isaiah
Shelley
Herbert Spencer
Thomas Jefferson
Tennyson
Otto H. Kahn
Keats
Henry van Dyke
Abraham Lincoln
Isaac Walton
Lloyd George
George Washington
Longfellow
Walt Whitman
Martin Luther
Ella Wheeler Wilcoi
Napoleon
Woodrow Wilson
General Penning
Major-Gen. Leonard Wood
Edgar Allan Poe
Wordsworth
Music Series—No. 4
WHAT THE CREW MINDS OF A l l TIME SAY ABOUT MUSI<
WHAT THE GREAT MINDS OF A l l TIME SAY AliOUT MUSH
R
OOSEVELT understood the needs
- of the people more than any man
since Lincoln. He also understood
the strain and tension of modern life.
Let the love for literature, painting,
sculpture, architecture, and, above
all, music enter into your lives.
— T H E O D O R E ROOSEVELT
YOU need music Your children
need it. Music can brighten your
life. Are you supplying it to your-
self and to your family?
M
USIC makes the home attractive
to the young people, the small
children, the middle aged and the
gray haired. It fits every occasion,
every mood, every taste.
If young men had music and pictures to in-
terest them, to engage them and satisfy many
of their impulses and to enliven their days,
they would not go to the low pleasures of
the streets; they would have an alternative
and would be too fastidious to do so.
Is music bringing sunshine into your
home and safe-guarding your family
as it should ?
THE PREPONDERANCE OF EVIDENCE AS TO
THE VALUE OF MUSIC IS OVERWHELMING
AU of the following and many other* save paid tribute to music t
AU of the followin, and many othert h ave paid tribute to mualct
Frick
Aristotle
Henry Ward Beech r Gladstone
Goethe
Robert Drowning
Lather Burbank
Warren G. Hardinic
Oliver Wendell Holmes
Robert Burns
Robert Insersoll
Lord Byron
Prophet Isaiah
Carlyle
Carnegie
Thomas Jefferson
Cicero
Otto H. Kahn
Keats
Confucius
James M. Con
Abraham Lincoln
Lloyd George
Frank Crane
Longfellow
Disraeli
Martin Luther
Thomas A. Edison
Napoleon
Charles W. Eliot
General Pershing
Emerson
Edgar Allan Poe
Euripides
Aristotle
Henry Ward Beecher
Robert Browning
Luther Burbank
Robert Burns
Lord Byron
Carlyle
Carnegie
Music Series—No. I
After the beginnings of reading,
writing, arithmetic and geometry,
'music has greater practical value than
any other subject taught in theschools.
— P. P . CLAXTON
U. S. Commissioner of Education
—BERNARD SHAW
THE PREPONDERANCE OF EVIDENCE AS TO
THE VALUE OF MUSIC IS OVERWHELMING
Theodore Roosevelt
James Whitcomb Riley
Ruskin
Charles NT Schwab
Shakespeare
Bernard Shaw
Shelley
Herbert Spencer
Tennyson
Henry van Dyke
Isaac Walton
George Washington
Walt Whitman
Ella Wheeler Wilcoi
Wood row Wilson
Major-Gen. Leonard Wood
Wordsworth
HIS is a remarkable statement
coming as it does from the head
of our educational system.
T
Confucius
James M. Cot
Frank Crane
Disraeli
Thomas A. Edison
Charles W. Eliot
Emerson
Euiipides
Frick
Gladstone
Goethe
W.rren G. Harding
Oliver Wendell Holme
Robert Insersoll
Prophet Isaiah
Thomas Jefferson
Otto H. Kahn
Keats
Abraham Lincoln
Lloyd George
Longfellow
Martin Luther
Napoleon
.
General Perching
Edgar Allan Poe
Theodore R<»sevelt
James Whitcomb Riley
Ruskin
Charles M. Schwab
Shakespeare
Bernard Shan
Shelley
Herbert Spencer
Tennyson
Henry van Dyke
Isaac Walton
George Washington
Walt Whitman
Ella Wheeler Wilcoi
Woodrow Wilson
Major Gen. Leonard Wood
Wordsworth
Music Series—No. 2
Five of the Post-cards in Series Prepared by Music Advancement Bureau
Are you planting the love of music
in your own children while their
minds are in the impressionable state
and their tastes are in the forming?
THE PREPONDERANCE OF EVIDENCE AS TO
THE VALUE OF MUSIC IS OVERWHELMING
All of the following and many other! h ve paid tribute to music •
Aristotle '
Henry Ward lleeche
Kolicrl Browning
Luther Hurbank
Robert Burns
Lord ByTon
Carlyle
Carnegie
Cicero
Confucius
James M. Cof
Frank Crane
Disraeli
Thomas A Edison
Charles W. Eliot
Emerson
Euripides
Frick
Gladstone
Goethe
Warren C. Harding
Oliver Wendell Holmes
Robert Ingerwll
Prophet Isaiab
Thomas Jefferson
Otto H. Kllin
Keats
Abraham Lincoln
Lloyd George
Longfellow
Martin Luther
Napoleon
General Penh ing
Edgar Allan Poe
Theodore Roosevelt
James Whllcomb Riley
Ruskin
Charles M. Schwab
Shakespeare
Bernard Shaw
Shelley
Herliert Spencer
Tennyson
Henry van Dyke
Isaac Walton
George Washington
Walt Whitman
Ella Wheeler Wilcoi
Woodrow Wilson
Major-Gen. Leonard Wood
Wordsworth
Music Series—No. j

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