Music Trade Review

Issue: 1923 Vol. 76 N. 24

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
8
MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
ST. LOUIS TRADE HINDERED BY PIANO MOVERS' STRIKE
That, With Many of the Leading Dealers Attending the Chicago Convention, Brings About a
Quiet Week—St. Louis Delegation to Gathering Unites in Declaring Meetings Best Ever
ST. LOUIS, MO., June 11.—With many of the
captains of the piano business attending the
Chicago convention and a strike of piano mov-
ers in effect the piano business of St. Louis
was operating under difficulties last week. That
is not to say that the salesmen did not do their
best while the bosses were away, but, with ten
or a dozen of the proprietors and executives out
of the city, it is not strange that business lagged
a little. It might seem, at first glance, that a
strike of movers would not immediately affect
sales, but that it apparently did so goes to show
now little it takes to give business a setback.
The fact is that salesmen who were trying to
close prospects reported that they gave the
movers' strike as an excuse for holding off, re-
minding the salesmen that, even if they bought,
delivery could not be made.
The movers walked out Friday, when the
heads of the moving companies refused to in-
crease their wages from $35 to $40 a week and
give them Saturday afternoon off. A compro-
mise offer of $37.50 was made by the employers,
but rejected by the men. It is expected that a
settlement will be reached in a day or two.
The St. Louis delegation to the Chicago con-
vention included P. E. Conroy, president of the
Conroy Piano Co.; E. A. Kieselhorst, president
of the Kieselhorst Piano Co.; W. P. Chrisler,
T. W. Hindley and R. L. Hallahan, of the Aeo-
lian Co. of Missouri; O. S. Boyd, of the Bald-
win Piano Co.; Val Reis, of the Smith-Reis
Piano Co.; Manager Elarn, of the Scruggs, Van-
dervoort & Barney piano department; Man-
ager Geissler, of the Famous & Barr Co.; Man-
ager Horning, of the Stix, Baer & Fuller piano
department, and A. F. Mengel, of the Mengel
Music Co.
Gustave Behning, of the Behning Piano Co.,
New York, after attending the convention, came
down to St. Louis before returning back East.
E. A. Kieselhorst was accompanied to the
convention by Mrs. Kieselhorst. They sepa-
rated in Chicago and she went to New Mexico
to attend the graduation of one of the Kiesel-
1923
horst boys, Mr. Kieselhorst returning to St.
Louis.
J. E. Rieger, formerly manager of the P. A.
Starck Piano Co., has taken a position with
the Conroy Piano Co.
G. R. Harris, formerly sales manager of the
Lehman Piano Co., now with the Griffith Music
Co., Newark, N. J., after attending the conven-
tion at Chicago, drove down here and is spend-
ing his vacation with St. Louis friends.
GRANDS AND PLAYER-PIANOS IN THE GREATEST DEMAND
Buffalo Dealers Report These Two Instruments Lead All the Rest—Victor Dealers' Association
Invites All Dealers in Western New York to Join—May Reported to Be a Very Good Month
BUFFALO, N. Y., June 12.—Buffalo music deal-
ers are enjoying an unusually good season for
grands and player-pianos. So far the Summer
season has been exceptionally favorable in all
lines handled by the music dealer, but pianos,
especially the players, have had the lead.
F. F. Barber, manager of the J. N. Adam Co.
music department, said May was a very good
month. June is keeping up with the record
made by May and every department is showing
up to great advantage. "Our player-pianos
have been moving in large volume," Mr. Bar-
ber said, "and we are not being overstocked
with used pianos, giving us room for good
fresh stock. Talking machines are steady, with
a good demand for the portable machines."
The record department of the Adam store
has been enlarged and Miss Dorothy Cleaver,
formerly with the Yahrling-Raynor Music Co.,
Youngstown, O., has been put in charge.
The Victor Dealers' Association, at its meet-
ing in the Statler Hotel, following a noon
luncheon, recently, drafted a letter in the form
of an invitation to dealers throughout the west-
ern New York territory, asking them to join
the organization. Under the new constitu-
tion the Association meets regularly at noon
luncheons, discusses topics of the trade and ex-
changes views, which have proven very valu-
The patent covering the use of heat and moisture for varnish
drying DECLARED INVALID by final decision of U. S.
Court of Appeals.
Present and future users of
able to those attending as well as enjoyable.
It will be made much more profitable and inter-
esting to the group to have included in their
membership dealers throughout the western
New York territory, members say.
The picnic committee was chosen as follows:
Frank E. Russell, chairman; Charles Heineke,
E. R. Burley and Karl.Berlin. The annual pic-
nic will be held some time the latter part of
July and, with the above-named committee in
charge, leaves no doubt as to what an enjoy-
able affair it will be.
Bob Hollinshead, who recently underwent an
operation in the Deaconess Hospital in Buffalo,
is reported as doing very well. He is man-
ager of the local distributing branch for Q R S
player rolls.
The general store conducted by Joseph An-
drews at Pendleton Center, N. Y., was broken
into and robbed recently. Victrolas and other
goods taken amounted to a loss of about $500.
The thieves used a very up-to-date method in
carrying away their loot, having broken open
the door and backing up a motor truck, so that
they could work with the least possible trou-
ble. No clue to the identity of the thieves could
be obtained. This is the third time in eighteen
months that this store has been robbed.
The William Hengerer Co. is conducting a
sales campaign for portable talking machines
and the Victor health records. A. H. Fleisch-
man, manager of the department, said results
of the campaign are very good and there is
every indication that it will end with the de-
sired results.
Speaking of trade conditions of his depart-
ment Mr. Fleischman said that May was a very
good month and indications point toward an
even better closing for June.
GRAND PRIZE j^OR THE AMPICO
Cutler
Dry Kilns
Better Drying in Half the Time
will be glad to know that the Grosvenor Process Patent has been
held invalid as to the use of heat and added moisture.
Cutler Dry Kilns are now the safest and best equipment for drying
all kinds of finishing materials. -
Cutler Desk Company
Dept. "J"
JUNE 16,
Buffalo, N. Y.
Chickering and Knabe Pianos Also Receive
Highest Honor at Brazilian Exposition—Gold
Medal for Marshall & Wendell Pianos
The American Piano Co. received a cable
from Rio de Janeiro, Rrazil, this week, announc-
ing that the Ampico, Knabe and Chickering pi-
anos had been awarded the Grand Prize at the
International Exposition held in that city re-
cently and that, at the same time, the Marshall
& Wendell piano was awarded the gold medal.
The Grand Prize is the highest award offered
at the exposition and the fact that it was grant-
ed to instruments of American manufacture is
a high tribute to this country's musical prod-
ucts.
The American Piano Co.'s exhibit was con-
sidered one of the most attractive there.
LEM KLINE WTH STERLING
DKKBV, CONN., June 12.—Lem Kline has joined
the wholesale selling forces of the Sterling
Piano Co. and will hereafter be its Western
representative. The arrangement was made
during the convention at Chicago.
E. J. Jordan has resigned from the sales force
of the Miessner Piano Co., Milwaukee, Wis.,
and has joined the^ wholesale selling forces of
the American Piano Co., for which he will cover
a portion of the Western territory,
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
JUNE 16, 1923
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
9
PITTSBURGH TRADE TO PAY HONOR TO STEPHEN FOSTER
Delegation to Attend Dedication of "Old Kentucky Home" as Memorial to American Composer
—Pittsburgh Dealers Praise Convention—Shirk Music Co. in Bankruptcy
PITTSBURGH, PA., June 12.—Music merchants,
musicians and music lovers, together with
prominent business men of Pittsburgh, mem-
bers of the Pittsburgh Chamber of Commerce,
as well as the Pittsburgh municipal govern-
ment, are planning for the participation of
Pittsburgh in the formal dedication of the "Old
Kentucky Home" at Federal Hill, near Bards-
town, Ky., where Stephen Collins Foster wrote
the famous song.
Foster was born in Pittsburgh and had his
home here and the Foster family still reside
in Pittsburgh, which preserves the old Foster
homestead on Penn avenue as a memorial. But
Foster wrote "My Old Kentucky Home" at
Bardstown in 1852 while there on a visit and
the State of Kentucky, which acquired the prop-
erty as a Foster memorial, has invited Pitts-
burgh to participate in the ceremonies signaliz-
ing its official opening.
The celebration will be held on Wednesday,
July 4. Title to the Bardstown Home is held
by a commission for and in behalf of the State
of Kentucky and an act of the Legislature pro-
vides for its maintenance. The State Commis-
sion comprises the following persons:
Governor Edwin P. Morrow, Mrs. A. T. Hert,
Young E. Allison, Mrs. Thurston Ballard, Judge
Robert W. Bingham, A. H. Pulliam, C. Lee
Cook, O. W. Stanley and Marvin H. Lewis.
The City of Pittsburgh is donating to the Ken-
tucky Commission a bronze plaque which has
been purchased by public funds and which will
be presented by the city's official representa-
tives.
The painting of Stephen Collins Foster, now
in the Carnegie Art Gallery, has been dupli-
cated by a Pittsburgh artist and will be present-
ed by the Chamber of Commerce to the Bards-
town Commission for the home. A special com-
mittee has been appointed by the Chamber of
Commerce and a suitable appropriation has
been made for participation in the dedication
program. The committee is composed of Wil-
liam H. Stevenson, Robert Garland, William H.
Davis, Thomas A. Dunn and General Albert J.
Logan, all of them directors of the Chamber
of Commerce.
A large party of Pittsburgh' citizens, includ-
ing representatives of the municipal govern-
ment, the Chamber of Commerce, the Foster
family, the Piano Merchants' Association of
Pittsburgh and others interested are expected
to go to Bardstown in special Pullman cars.
The several Pittsburgh music merchants who
attended the National Piano Merchants' Asso-
ciation convention at Chicago are back home
again and are high in their praise of the big
meeting. Theodore Hoffmann, an inveterate
convention-goer, said that "it was the best
meeting in years." Much pleasure was mani-
fested among the music trade here over the
choice of Wm. C. Hamilton, of the S. Hamilton
Co., and the former president of the Piano Mer-
chants' Association of Pittsburgh, as first vice-
president of the National Music Merchants' As-
sociation. Word from New York states that
Mr. Hamilton had left the hospital and was re-
cuperating at a quiet spot. He expects to re-
turn to Pittsburgh about the end of June and,
very likely, will sail for Europe in July for a
brief visit overseas and to obtain the benefit
of a long ocean voyage.
A voluntary petition in bankruptcy was filed
in the United States District Court here on
June 11 by J. D. Shirk, trading as the J. D.
Shirk Music Co., of New Castle, Pa. The state-
ment filed shows liabilities, $4,191.55; assets,
$1,400.
The J. M. Hoffmann Co. sold a handsome
Sohmer grand piano to the Wrights Methodist
Episcopal Church, at Venetia, Pa.
Burt Hengeveld, sales manager of the S.
Hamilton Co., in referring to piano business,
said; "If the piano business for the remain-
der of June keeps up as well as it has for the
first ten days of the month I will be more than
satisfied. Our sales of high-grade instruments
have been very satisfactory."
Paul S. Mechling, of the Dawson Bros. Piano
Co., said: "Business has been good in our re-
spective lines and, even though warm weather
is at hand, our sales of pianos have been much
larger than for the same period a year ago."
Fred H. Groves, of the Groves Piano Co., has
been elected president of the High-Noon Club,
a Masonic organization w T ith 5,000 members in
this city-
Arthur O. Lechner, of the Lechner & Schoen-
berger Co. and president of the Piano Mer-
chants' Association of Pittsburgh, with his
family, is spending his vacation at Northeast,
Pa., on Lake Erie.
KNABES FOR ST^LOUIS SCHOOLS
Two Concert Grands of That Make Just Placed
in High Schools by Conroy Piano Co.
ST. LOUIS, MO., June 12.—The Conroy Piano
Co., representative for the Knabe piano in this
city, reports the sale of Knabe concert grand
pianos to the Yateman High School and the
Soldan High School, this city, two of the most
important high schools in St. Louis. The Knabe
concert grands have for some time been used
regularly in a number of the leading institu-
tions in this city, all of them having been sup-
plied by the Conroy Piano Co.
T. W. TERWILLIGER DIES
Victrola No. 220
$200
Electric, $240
Mahogany or walnut
Victor supremacy
is the supremacy
of performance
O f performances p a s t
and present. Just as the
V i c t o r has occupied its
position of leadership for a
quarter-century, so it con-
tinues to lead the way in
the talking m a c h i ne in-
dustry.
The New York retail department of the Story
& Clark Piano Co. grieves the loss of Torrence
W. Terwilliger, one of the local salesmen, who
died recently at the home of his parents in
Troy, N. Y., as a result of a prolonged illness.
Deceased had been attached to the Story &
Clark sales force in New York City about a
year and was with the Knabe Warerooms in
Washington, D. C, prior to that time. Mr.
Terwilliger was a Mason and a member of Har-
mony Lodge No. 17, New York.
F. G. SMITH jNJHIDDLE WEST
F. G. Smith, of W. P. Haines & Co., New
York, has taken a roundabout route in return-
ing from the Chicago convention and is calling
on trade in the Middle West. While the execu-
tives of this company were out of town at the
convention recently a large boom in business
struck the factory office and the plant will be
required to take on extra help to turn out the
orders.
Victrola No. 300
$250
Electric, $290
Mahogany, oak or walnut
Other styles $25 to $1500
THE CHICKERINGJN PORTO RICO
The Checkering piano has been heard recent-
ly at a series of concerts in Porto Rico included
in the tour of Mine. Alma Simpson, soprano.
These concerts were broadcasted by radio and
were heard as far afield as Honolulu and Seat-
tle. In each of her concerts Mme. Simpson in-
troduced the Ampico as accompanist from
recordings played by Bozka Hejtmanek.
PIERCE OPENS IN NORTH ADAMS
June 13.—A branch pho-
nograph and piano store has just been opened
at 30 State street by the L. M. Pierce Co. This
firm has been in business several years at 305
Bridge street, Springfield. F. W. Edwards has
been made manager of the new North Adams
branch.
NORTH ADAMS, MASS.,
Consult the universal Want Directory of
The Review. In it advertisements are inserted
free of charge for men who desire positions.
*H!S MASTER'S VOICE"
Victrola
REG U.S.PAT OFF.
Look tinder the lid and on the labels
for these Victor trade -marks
Victor Talking
Machine Co.
Camden,N.J.

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