Music Trade Review

Issue: 1925 Vol. 80 N. 26

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE
JUNE 27, 1925
45
REVIEW
SUPPLY BRANCHES OF THE INDUSTRY
Peerless Exhibit Visited by
National Tuners' Ass'n
Officers and Leading Members Inspect Display
of That Company During Convention Week
his organization, which has done such wonder-
ful work in the West and Middle West. He
declared his company ready to give all possible
assistance to the piano tuners' body in carrying
out their work.
Census of Hardwood
Consumption Progressing
One of the attractive convention exhibits in
Chicago was the display room of the Peerless
Pneumatic Action Co., New York. The action
in the Mehlin grand left a deep impression on Large Amount of Valuable Information Regard-
ing Trade Requirements Being Compiled by
dealers and manufacturers, visiting the exhibit
in the Drake Hotel, on account of the sim- Association
plicity, durability and compactness of the ac-
Many hundred responses to the questionnaire
tion. Tolbert Cheek, president of the Peerless
Pneumatic Action Co., has always been a distributed to wood consumers by the Hard-
worker among player men and tuners and vva^ wood Manufacturers' Institute, of Memphis,
Birdsong was previously identified with the
Estey Piano Co., as traveling representative,
and has been made sales manager of the Peer-
less concern. Mr. Ewart is an electrical engi-
neer and will devote his time at present to ex-
perimental work in the Peerless plant on East
133rd street. Roy P. Cheek, vice-president and
general manager of the company, stated that
the factory is operating on a full-time program
and that there are good prospects that business
will continue strong all through the Summer.
Kiln Devices for Making
Rapid Air Circulation
Results of Experiments Conducted by the For-
est Products Laboratory at Madison, Wis.,
Present Solution for the Problem
In the experimental drying of lumber at the
Forest Products Laboratory, Madison, Wis.,
a number of devices for producing a positive,
rapid, and reversible circulation of the air in
compartment kilns have been tried out Of
these the most effective is a series of disk fans
mounted on a shaft running the full length of
the kiln.
"Fans of this type," says a technical note
prepared by the Forest Products Laboratory,
"are very efficient at the low pressures used.
No long air ducts are necessary, and large
= = =
amounts of air can be moved effectively with
a comparatively small expenditure of power.
The reversal of the direction of circulation can
be accomplished by merely reversing the direc-
tion of rotation of the shaft. This reversal
largely compensates for the normal difference
in the drying rate between the cntering-air
edge of the lumber and the leaving-air edge.
"The internal disk fan design may be adapted
to almost any type of compartment kiln, flat
Peerless Pneumatic Booth Visited by N. A. P. T.
piled or edge stacked, cross piled or end piled;
but it finds its most logical application in edge-
stacked kilns and in flat-stacked, end-piled kilns
in which a cross circulation is used.
"When the direction of air travel is upward
through the central flue, each fan draws air
greatly elated upon being visited by the heads Tenn., has been received in recent weeks, and from the suction box at its left, which is open
of the National Association of Piano Tuners. present indications point to this census being at the sides toward the heating coils, and dis-
Mr. Cheek addressing Charles Deutschmann, the most complete ever compiled. Executives charges it into the distributor at its right. This
national president of the N.A.P.T., and the of the institute are hoping to have the direc- air escapes through the slots in the top of the
other visiting executives, stated that the Peer- tory in shape for distribution not later than distributor, rises in the central flue, passes later-
less Pneumatic Action is heart and soul with July 1. This publication will give a fairly ac- ally outward through the lumber, falls in the
curate idea as to the normal consumption of all passages between the lumber and the side walls,
grades, thicknesses and species of hardwoods. goes over the heating coils, and comes back to
It will be of inestimable aid to the sawmill op- the suction boxes. After the air has been al-
erator as a guide in giving sawing orders as the lowed to circulate in this manner for some
census of consumption can be balanced against time, the direction of rotation of the fans is
stock on hand and the hardwood producer will reversed. The air then follows the same path
then be in a position to determine quicker than as before but in the opposite direction.
"The heating coils may be separated in two
ever before those items for which an antici-
groups,
and each group may be split up into
pated
demand
may
be
expected.
The man who uses Behlen's Varnish
several
units
so that any number of pipes may
Crack Eradicator can afford to figure
be used in accordance with the heat required.
lower, yet makes more profit on a re-
The humidity in the kiln may be increased
finishing job, than the man who does
by means of steam or reduced by ventilation.
not use i t
Steam jets and inlet exhaust flues are provided."
The reason—he saves the time, trouble
Joseph E. Birdsong Becomes Sales Manager of
and expense of scraping off the old var-
New York Concern, While Chas. C. Ewart
Our Grand
nish and shellac and the finished job is
Will Engage in. Experimental Work
Birdsong and Ewart Join
Peerless Pneumatic Co.
just as satisfactory, too—if not more so.
Send for a sample can today and
try it.
Recent additions to the executive staff of the
Peerless Pneumatic Action Co., New York, are
Joseph B. Birdsong and Charles C. Ewart. Mr.
H. BEHLEN & BRO.
PHILIP W. OETTING & SON, Inc.
Anilines
SbalUct
Stains
Filler*
10-12 Christopher St., New York
Near «tb AT*., and 8th I t .
213 East 19th Street, New York
Sole Atfenti for
WEICKERT HAMMER AND DAMPER FELTS
GRAND AND UPRIGHT HAMMERS
Made of Welckert Felt
n
BENCHES
Will Please
the Most
Exacting.
for Catalog.
STYLE Write
N O . 269
THE ART NOVELTY CO.
Goshen, Ind.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
46
THE MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
JUNE 27,
1925
IN THE WORLD OF MUSIC PUBLISHING
Conducted By V. D. Walsh
live here, might have justified the predictions
and given up," he said.
Mr. Philpitt's first establishment in Florida
was at Jacksonville, where he initiated a full-
fledged, complete musical business in Cohen's
Head of the Richmond Music Supply Corp., of New York, Leaves the Town a Booster for It— Department Store, on April 1, 1916, selling
Some of the Things He Saw There and Did There During His Stay
pianos, Victrolas and other musical instruments
and sheet music.
TV/IIAMI, FLORIDA, June 13.—Miami is the pitt, the business side and the personal. The
Thirty days later, on May 1, 1916, he shipped
tropical zone of Florida, where Winter is business aspect is marked by integrity and fixed three pianos to Miami by way of a trial. He
turned to Summer. Miami, the Magic City— policies applied unswervingly along the line of secured space down by the Fotosho, for ten
the city of adventure and tropical wonderland the highest principles in merchandising. The days, and at the end of that time rented half
where business cares personal side is one of warm and easy friend- of the store which was divided by a rail into
and worries vanish un- liness and courtesy that is an asset of no mean two sections.
der the spell of the value.
One year later Mr. Philpitt established a
glorious sunshine. It
He was born in Washington, D. C, in 1874 branch at Tampa and later still one at St.
is the most popular and has been "growing younger ever since he Petersburg and Orlando. He plans to open
Winter resort in Amer- came to Florida." He received his early educa- several more. With keen foresight, Mr. Philpitt
ica. The climate is su- tion in Washington public schools and later in realized that with the increasing number of
perb. Miami is the Sadler, Bryant & Stratton's business college in Northerners wintering in Miami and others in-
tourist's delight, the Washington and Baltimore. At the age of tending to spend their declining years here,
fisherman's paradise— thirteen, he started in the business world, as an Florida was a growing State and that, given
t h e golfist's wonder- errand boy, chief porter and making himself even the normal growth that appeared at thai
land, the surf-bather's generally useful for $1.50 per week, in the time, there would come a day when the bunga-
joy, the yachtsman's service of the R. M. Stultz Music Co. of Balti- lows then being erected would want more, than
Maurice Richmond
rendezvous, the horse- more. During the twenty-eight years in which the bare necessaries of life, and that as more
racing Utopia. It is truly the outdoor city. he worked for others, before entering into busi- pretentious homes were built, there would arise
Biscayne Bay, Miami's beautiful waterfront, is ness for himself in Florida in 1916, he was man- a demand for proper furnishings and for the
one of the world's most famous protected har- ager of the sheet music department and later better grade of musical instruments.
bors. Westward across the Fverglades, the buyer and manager for E. F. Droop & Sons Co.,
Being ever alert to create, publicity and instill
Tamiami trail extends now to the Dade county Washington, D. C. Later, he entered the serv- the interest of the public in music, in 1919,
line. This will eventually be a famous motor ice of M. D. Swisher of Philadelphia, and then Mr. Philpitt brought to Miami the first of the
highway connecting the Gulf with the ocean.
with John Wanamaker of that city, as buyer internationally known artists whose concerts
Miami has at least one hundred hotels con- of musical instruments and talking machines. have marked his greatest endeavors here. That
ducted on the American and European plans. Then Mr. Philpitt became general manager of season he 'presented Joseph Hofmann, pianist,
Some of the most popular in the country are the American Music Stores of New York, which and the distinguished violinist, Mischa ElmanJ
here. The Hotel Flamingo, the Pancoast and operated music stores and departments through- Since that time, S. Ernest Philpitt & Son have"
the Nautilus are famous for their pretentious out the country. When he assumed his posi- annually presented to the music-lovers of Miami
structures and most beautiful locations. There tion with that concern it had fourteen stores and district all of the better internationally
are more than one hundred and fifty apartment and increased under his management to twenty- known artists: Among these have been Rach-
buildings, all modern, housing as many as one eight in twenty-three cities and nineteen States. maninoff, Heifet,/, Flon/.aley Quartet, Anna
hundred families in a single apartment house. In making this business Mr. Philpitt had inter- Fitziu, Mana Ztfcca, Kreisler, New York Sym-
Miami is a city of homes, homes of taste and ests under his supervision from the Great Lakes phony Orchestra under Frank Damrosch, John
refinement. There is surf-bathing every day of to the Gulf of Mexico, and from the Rocky McCortnack, Werrenrath, Schumann-Heink,
the year. The warm Gulf Stream sweeps along Mountains to the coast of Maine.
John Philip Sousa, Rosa Ponselle, Frieda Hcm-
the Miami shore, regulating the temperature of
While with the American Music Stores he pel, derakline Farrar and numerous others.
the sea at this spot at an average of 72 degrees. made his first visit to Miami in 1912 and there- This coming Winter Mr. Philpitt hopes to
It is considered the liveliest Winter resort in after annual business visits until 1916, when he bring down Paderewski and Galli-Curci. In
America to-day. The population is 75,000, in thought that the time had arrived for him to creating this atmosphere, he has developed his
greater Miami, 102,000. During the past season embark in business for himself. His bankers business to the point where it is now recognized
there were from 350,000 to 400,000 tourists. advised him not to start in business in Florida, as the exclusive State agent and representative
The greatest number at one time was on March predicting failure and urging that no musical for the best in everything musical, Steinway,
1, when there were more than 100,000 visitors. business had succeeded in any tropical climate. Steinway Duo-Art, Francis Bacon, Briggs,
By aeroplane, it is forty-five minutes' ride to the For some time after he had started in business Kurtzmann, Ricca, Micssner and Premier pianos;
Bahama Islands and about three and a half for himself his losses indicated the possibility Aeolian Reproducing pipe organs, of which
hours to Havana, Cuba.
that his bankers had been right—but he w,\< $315,000 worth arc being built and installed in
determined to live here and he persevered. Florida this year; the Kstcy organ; Buescher
S. Ernest Philpitt & Son
No one has done more for musical Miami "Because I was determined to live in Florida band instruments, Vega banjos, guitars and uku-
than the man who banked on the city's love T persevered, and because of that my business leles. The Philpitt stores arc. known to carry
for music. There are two sides to Mr. Phil- lias succeeded where others, not determined to cverv model of the entire Victor line as well
Richmond Visits Miami, Fla., and Says
That It's All That Is Claimed for It
I t Was No
' Wonder They Could \
Dance With The Music)
ThatYfes Provided. It Kfes
Hard Tb I'
" " — "
las
uunci. »»i'£
LOVE WITH W -
. N Y EVENING POSTJ
Im In Love With Yo
ijoa d do.
o - H o d ij
u t u uou,
o u , v,r.n
o.
I k in Jove wi
wi tii
tii n no-Hod
ij b but
v,r.n •.".-- i-y-UiDi^ ^ ijou.
1
J jiev-er,
i e v - e r , n never
ever
K Knew
n e w a an n - (j
i j - 1 l KX!
w d - - IJ
The Big Song And Dance Hit From
^MERCENARY MARY*
L Lawrence Weberfe New Musical Comedy
Cyrics and Music h
William B. Fiiedlander a >,d Con Conrad
Other Songs From "Tfie Same Bi(£ Show Nit
©1915 UfO FEIST Ir
JUSTYOUANDIANDTHEBABY''-*MERCENARY MARY* - ^BEAUTIFUL BABY
Can't Go Wronjj "With Arnj FEIST Song'
wiio
i ft!
v_yA Musical
lece And A Lively
One.WithAiiONEl.
I'M W LOVE WITH YOU
Song Hit For The Town
k To Whistle. -
N.Y. TIMES

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