Music Trade Review

Issue: 1928 Vol. 86 N. 16

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
MUSICAL MERCHANDISE
Conducted By Thomas W. Bresnahan
Lyons Band Instrument Co. Opens
New Store and Salesrooms in Chicago
Firm Carries, Among Other Lines, Martin Band Instruments, Leedy Drums — Vega
and Bacon Banjos, Cundy-Bettoney, and Martin Instruments
/CHICAGO, ILL., April 16.—The latest addi-
^~' tion to Chicago's retail musical instrument
stores is the opening of the Lyons Band Instru-
ment Co. with offices and salesrooms in the
State-Lake Building, 17 East Lake street.
This company, while only recently organized,
Howard R. Lyons, vice-president, and John
Thomas, secretary, were also associated with
Mr. Lyons previously as retail sales manager
and assistant retail sales manager.
C. L. McCrerry, treasurer and studio man-
ager, is nationally known as a saxophone and
with automatic ventilation, are one of the main
features of this modern store. A great deal of
attention is given to group instruction, which is
included with the private lessons. Dance or-
chestra rehearsals are held every Monday eve-
ning, beginners' band rehearsals every Tuesday,
and banjo club rehearsals every Wednesday
evening.
Holton & Go. Pay in Silver
to Mark Anniversary
824 Pounds of Silver Dollars Required to Meet
Factory Payroll on Silver Anniversary of
Company's Business
ELK HORN, Wis., April 16.—Pockets are now
Wm. H.
Lyons
Officers of the Lyons Band Instru-
ment Co., Chicago
Howard R.
Lyons
C. L.
McCrerry
is already well and favorably known to Chicago
musicians, and, in catering to the professional
as well as the amateur, great care has been
taken in selecting the lines of merchandise. The
company represents Martin saxophones and
band instruments, Leedy drums, Vega and
Bacon banjos, Cundy-Bettoney, Wm. S. Haynes
and Buffet woodwinds and flutes, C. F. Martin
and National String instruments and a complete
stock of accessories.
Wm. H. Lyons, president of the new com-
pany, has had many years of experience in the
music industry. He has served for the past
five years as treasurer of one of Chicago's well-
known music houses, and for ten years previous
in the wholesale and retail phonograph business.
being reinforced in Elkhorn. The cause of this
movement is that in order to demonstrate what
the band instrument plant of the Frank Holton
& Co. means in Elkhorn, officials of the plant
observed the tenth anniversary of the com-
pa'ny's removal to Elkhorn by paying off the
employes in silver dollars.
A shipment of 824 pounds of silver dollars,
14,000 in all, was obtained from Chicago, and
as each employe stepped to the paymaster's
window he was handed a canvas sack containing
his pay in coin.
The face of the employes registered bewilder-
ment as they received the odd "pay envelope,"
and most of them opened the sack at once to
see if they were not victims of an April fool
joke. The sight of the silver caused many ob-
jections, but officials of the company had antic-
ipated this and were at hand to urge the men
to spend the dollars in Elkhorn and demon-
strate the value of the presence of the Holton
plant in that city.
The employes caught the spirit of the idea
and advanced on the business district with their
"ammunition." All day the clink of silver
dollars was heard in business houses, and cash
drawers were overflowing with the unusual
medium of exchange.
Holton & Co. moved into a plant at Elkhorn
on April 1, 1918. The plant had been built with
a $40,000 fund raised in Elkhorn by subscrip-
tion. The population of the town in 1918 was
1,750, while with the Holton plant located here
in has increased to 2,300.
clarinet soloist and instructor. He has had
wide experience in theatre and dance organiza-
tions and appeared recently with the Chicago
Symphony orchestra in John Alden Carpenter's
"Skyscrapers." Austin Edwards, nationally
known as a cornet soloist and a member of the
new WGN broadcasting orchestra, is in charge
of the brass instrument department. G. E. Van
Ness, saxophone and flute instructor, also has
had wide experience in theatre and dance or-
chestras. D. O. C. Pilsen, instructor of banjo,
was formerly with WBBM staff orchestra, and
Harold Beach, instructor on drums and tym-
The Associated Musical Instrument Dealers
panii, is at present with the Little Symphony of New York are now making arrangements to
Orchestra of Chicago.
take in the smaller dealers of the Metropolitan
Specially constructed sound-proof rooms, district and invitations for membership have
already been sent out. The smaller dealer
in the future will receive a poster every month
to display in his window, which will advertise
some particular musical instrument. This pos-
Trade
ter service is looked upon as being a very
Mark
unique and valuable piece of advertising.
New York Association
Invites Smaller Dealers
ERETSCH
$9*
MUSICAL MERCHANDISE
MUSICAL INSTRUMENT MAKEBS
SINCE 1883
The Fred Gretsch
6O Broadway Bi
20
Elkington Is Featuring
Elton Harmonica Holder
L A. Elkington, manufacturer of musical in-
strument hardware and accessories, 220 East
Thirty-fourth street, New York, is featuring
the Elton harmonica holder, which, he reports,
is enjoying an excellent demand right now in
most music stores. It is made of nickel-plated
brass and plated wire to fit the neck.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
APRIL 21, 1928
Fifty School Bands in
Wisconsin Tournament
Band Instrument Men Much Interested in
Event as Encouraging Increased Sales for
the Future
WAUPUN, WIS., April 16.—Fifty school bands
will compete in a State tournament which will
be held here on May 19. The event is already
attracting attention through all parts of the
State, and a good representation of music teach-
ers and dealers, as well as managers of band
instruments departments, are expected to attend
the event.
The department managers report that they
expect to make the trip to see the status of
band instrument business in the State, and to
find out new prospects for sales. Some bands
which have been organized for a few years, and
which started out with cheap instruments, will
be working into first-class bands and will be
ready to buy more expensive lines for their
developed players, and let beginners learn on
the old instruments, it is pointed out.
Dealers and band instrument department men
also point out that they are able to make a
number of fine contacts at these events, as they
have gained steadily in importance in the eyes
of State educators, and that with these school
superintendents and principals, and school mu-
sic directors on hand, they have an opportunity
to find out the standing of band work in schools
in the State, and to discover new sales pros-
pects.
Vega Co. Participating in
Radio Broadcast Concert
Well-known Company Provides Material for
Several Concerts Broadcast From Studio of
WNAC in Boston—Some Good Publicity
BOSTON, MASS., April 16.—The Vega Co. of this
city is figuring, though unofficially, in the
broadcasting of hourly concerts at the studio
of WNAC, and one, the first of the programs,
given on the evening of April 7 was filled with
interest for a large number of listeners-in. The
splendid introduction to the numbers—in fact it
was a running comment of the deepest interest
sandwiched in between the selections—was pre-
pared by the publicity department of the Vega
Co. The group that was heard in several num-
bers on this occasion consisted of sixteen boys
and girls banded together under the name of the
Silver Toned Banjo Band, and the letters that
have since poured in testify to the pleasure
that a large unseen audience received from this
music. The talk, meanwhile, was largely fo-
cused on the value of fretted instruments such
as the banjo, mandolin and guitar as producers
of good music, and such a statement as "There's
a time in the musical, social and emotional de-
velopment of a boy or girl which seems to
21.
The Music Trade Review
call loudly and persistently for an instrument
you can tuck under your arm when you go on a
picnic or out for a boat ride" are sure to
create a new desire on the part of a certain
class of people to possess just such instruments.
So that in the long run the Vega company is
sure to reap rich rewards.
Milwaukee Retailers Combat
Wholesaling to Consumers
Max Targ to Sail on
Extended European Trip
MILWAUKEE, WIS., April 16.—Milwaukee music
dialer members of the retail division of the
Association of Commerce have been asked to
co-operate in an effort to curb the evil of job-
bers and manufacturers selling direct to con-
sumers through representatives in local manu-
facturing plants, using the purchasing agents
or other employes of concerns to influence
their fellow employes to buy merchandise "di-
rect from the factory at wholesale price."
All retailers have been asked to give data
on this practice as they see it, as it is not known
to what extent this practice has tnken hold in
Milwaukee. However, members of the retail
division believe the evil to be somewhat ex-
tensive, and a letter is being sent out to sound
a warning on the practice and gather informa-
tion on it. The letter is signed by L. W.
McMeckin, sales manager of the Boston Store,
and head of the retail section.
Head of Targ & Dinner Music Co. With Mrs.
Targ to Visit Principal European Countries
and Study Markets
CHICAGO, lux., April 14.—Max Targ, head of the
Targ & Dinner Music Co., wholesale distribu-
tors of musical merchandise of this city, will
leave next week for New York, accompanied by
Mrs. Targ, where they will sail on the Levia-
than May 5 for an extended trip abroad.
A visit will be made to the music centers in
Germany, France, Austria, Czecho-Slovakia,
Poland, Switzerland and England, and it will
be a combination business and pleasure trip.
Mr. Targ reports that a great deal of time will
be spent in Saxony, the home of violins, and
that he will have something of interest to the
music merchant upon his return.
Tom Brown Music Co. Makes
Additions to Sales Force
The Tom Brown Music Co., which is moving
into its new quarters at 315 South Wabash
avenue May 1, announces several additions to
its sales force.
Harold Saxler, for the past fifteen years with
Lyon & Healy, has been appointed manager of
the band instrument department. J. M. Wolff,
formerly with the string instrument department
of the Conn Chicago ^ Co., will have charge of
the string instrument section. Mn Wolff is a
well-known banjo teacher and organizer of
string instrument orchestras, and has written a
number of instruction books on playing the
tenor banjo.
Fred Bacon in Akron
AKRON, O., April 14.—Fred Bacon, champion
banjo player, attracted hundreds to Rudick's
Music store, South Main street, recently,
when he appeared afternoon and evening
demonstrating banjos and other stringed instru-
ments. Much publicity was given the appear-
ance of Mr. Bacon, and fitting window displays
linked up with the event.
0
OLIVER DITSON CO
BOSTON. MASS
Q
MUSICAL
MERCHANDISE
BACON
Attractive Specialties
Madara Serviea
DURRO
STEWART
VIOLINS
BOWS
STRINGS
BANJOS
MANDOLINS
GUITARS
Largest Wholesale
Musical Merchandise
House in America
BACON BANJO CO., Inc.
GROTON, CONN.
Buegeleiten & Jacob son
g.r-0
Umi»« Srnm.rm
The name of the Slingerland Banjo Co. was
recently changed to Slingerland Banjo & Drum
Co. The company is now in full production on
Ihe new drum line, and a great deal of com-
mendation has been received from dealers and
musicians who have seen the new Slingerland
models. One of the features is a Slingerland
patented tone flange for snare drums, developed
by H. H. Slingerland, president of the company.
Consult the Universal Want Directory of
The Review. In it advertisements are inserted
free of charge for men who desire positions.
You have tried the rest
—Now use the BEST
Joseph Rogers' Son
•'XXX" and "STANDARD" Brand
Drum and Banjo Heads
Made from Genuine Calftkin
The Frederick Rogers Co.
17 Jack.on Are.
Middletown, N. Y.
Black Diamond
Strings
THE WORLD'S BEST
New Brunswick, N. J.
AND
Sold by Representative
Music Merchants
Slingerland Name Change
National Musical String Co.
IITABLIMIO 1M4
Played by Leading
Musicians and Orchestras
Association of Commerce Acts on Practice of
Jobbers and Manufacturers in Selling Prod-
ucts at Retail
NEW YORK
Banjo and Drum Heads
Genuine Rogers "Quality brands"
were given Medal and highest
awards over all others
Five grades to select from, cheapest
to the very best.
White calf in thin, medium and
heavy.
Joseph Rogers, Jr., & Son
Farmingdale, N. J.

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