Music Trade Review

Issue: 1928 Vol. 87 N. 1

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
JULY 7, 1928
The Music Trade Review
Gross Places Pianos in
Cincinnati Ideal Homes
Cincinnati Music House Places Chickering, Mason & Hamlin and
Marshall & Wendell in Ideal Houses—Canfield Piano
Co. Takes the A. B. Chase Line
yon, Ernest B. Daulton, who recently became
assistant musical director in the New York
recording laboratory of the Brunswick Co., was
in the city the past week, visiting his parents.
The company has just received three of the
new Exponential type Panatropes, which are
mechanically operated. It is also showing a
new table-model straight radio, and soon will
have on exhibition a console type of straight
radio which it is expected will sell very well.
New Balkite Distributor
MILWAUKEE, Wis., July 3.—The Morley-Murphy
Co., 454 Milwaukee street, has been named dis-
tributor for Balkite and Eveready radio receiv-
ers for the Milwaukee and Wisconsin State
territory.
INCINNATI, O., July 2.—For the sixth consecutive time the George P. Gross Piano Co.
has been chosen to place pianos in "ideal" homes that are thrown open to the public
by the builder each week.
Last Sunday the company had a piano in each of four of
these ideal homes, the instruments being two Chickerings, one Marshall & Wendell and one
Mason & Hamlin. On other occasions they showed the Fischer and the Straube.
M. E. Simms, formerly connected with the A
"Next Sunday we will have a piano in each of three of these new and completely furnished
T. Simms Piano Co., Charleston, W. Va., ha?
'ideal' homes, and this will make our sixth con-
joined the staff of the piano department of the
secutive exhibit in these places in as many mote culture, and that music is an essential of
weeks," explained Carl J. Rist, manager for the culture is a thing that they teach. Mr. Daulton's Galperin Music Co., that city.
Gross Co. "The homes are furnished with the
best of everything and in complete harmony, and
with a fine piano in a place where it is bound
to be seen this has proved to be good publicity
to us. Besides making several sales which we
can trace to the ideal home exhibits, we have
developed a large number of prospects." In
speaking of the business outlook, George P.
Gross, head of the company, said: "It seems
to me that the outlook is encouraging in every
way. Naturally, there will be a business lull
this Summer, but this does not mean that buy-
ing is going to cease altogether. At any rate
we shall not really lose any time, because we
will devote the time to developing prospects
and doing preliminary work for our Fall cam-
paign."
The Canfield Piano Co., of which Walter Can-
field is the head, has made arrangements to
handle the A. B. Chase line of pianos and is
now displaying some very handsome grands of
that make. The company also has recently re-
ceived a very large shipment of Cable-Nelson
pianos.
G. E. Hunt, retail manager of the local branch
of the Starr Piano Co., has just returned from a
fishing trip to Buckeye Lake, Ohio.
Dan F. Summey, who now is offering the
Cable line and the Hardman line at both whole-
sale and retail, has had his activities curtailed
very much the past two weeks because he has
been compelled to serve on a petit jury, listen-
Come to the Leipzig Trade Fair August 26
ing to damage suits and other civil cases.
The retail sales force of the local branch of
1770 American buyers visited the last trade exposition at Leipzig,
Steinway & Sons, of which firm R. E. Wells
Germany.
They found new ideas, and new business-building mer-
is district manager, has been increased by the
chandise. They made money. They made friends. They had a
addition of Seymour J. Whitney, who is well
known to the trade and in musical circles.
good time.
William Graul, head of the William R. Graul
More of them are coming for the Fall showing—August 26th
Piano Co., who was sent away about three
to September 1st. They will see the wares of the important music
weeks ago by his doctor, because of a threat-
ened nervous breakdown, is reported to be re-
manufacturers of Europe. Over 200 exhibitors will show all types
covering.
of instruments.
"We have had excellent results from the ex-
hibition of the Brunswick in the different 'ideal'
Plan now to come. Let us help you make your trip abroad
homes that various builders have been keeping
more profitable and pleasurable. Let us tell you about special
open to the public for inspection the past few
travel rates, air transportation, free visa, and special accommo-
weeks," said E. B. Daulton, manager of the
dations.
local branch of Brunswick-Balke-Collender.
"We showed the Panatrope Radiola combina-
Write us right away. Leipzig Trade Fair, Inc., 11 West 42nd
tion in four different 'dream' homes the past
Street,
New York.
week, and they certainly did catch the fancy of
visitors, as we know from inquiries received. A
point that should not be overlooked by dealers
. in talking machines, and also by dealers in
pianos, is the fact that the thousands of men
and women who visit these 'ideal' homes get
the idea these instruments are standard, or
necessary requirement, even though they
be something of a luxury. In other words, the
visitors see a talking machine in the home, and
therefore they regard it as a necessary adjunct,
if one is to be 'stylish' and 'up-to-date,' which
For 700 Years — T h e larket Place of Europe
is a thing that all women desire. These com-
pletely equipped homes are doing much to pro-
C
PROFITS
await you in Germany
LEIPZIG TRADE FAIR
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
The Music Trade Review
REVIEW
Out July 14
Monthly
Magazine Issue
of
THE
JULY 7, 1928
(Registered in the U. S. Patent Office)
Published Every Saturday by
Federated Business Publications, Inc.
•t 420 Lexington Avenue, New York
President, Raymond Bill; Vice-Presidents, J. B. Spillane, Randolph Brown; Secre-
tary and Treasurer, Edward Lyman Bill; Assistant Secretary, L. B. McDonald;
Assistant Treasurer, Win. A. Low.
B. BRITTAIN WILSON, Editor
CARLETON CHACE, Business Manager
W. H. MCCLEARY, Managing Editor
RAY BILL, Associate Editor
F. L. AVERY, Circulation Manager
E. B. MUNCH, Eastern Representative
WESTERN DIVISION:
FRANK W. KIRK, Manager
E. J. NKALV
BOSTON OFFICE:
JOHN H. WILSON, 324 Washington St.
Republic Bldg., 333 No. Michigan Ave.,
Chicago
Telephone: State 1266
Telephone: Lexington 1760-71
Does Group Instruction
Make Piano Sales?
The story of a Pacific Coast Music House and the
results in actual sales which this method of selling
has achieved.
More Salesmen Needed to
Sell Musical Instruments
In comparison with the automobile and the furni-
ture trades, retail music stores are understaffed
and have too great a labor cost.
How Grunewald's Wins the
Music Teacher
A story of co-operation between this well-known
New Orleans house and the local music teachers
that is successful.
Piano Class Teaching
in the Erie Schools
The teacher in charge of this work in Erie, Pa,,
tells how the dealer can co-operate with the
teacher to extend this work.
Brin£in& the Mandolin Back
in Portland
Re-creating the popularity of this instrument by
a little judicious sales work on the part of the
dealer.
Hi£h School Bands and
the Dealers
Joliet, 111., is the national center of high school
band music. A Joliet dealer tells of his experi-
ences with it.
IN ADDITION
Merchandising Articles on the Talking Machine, the
Radio Receiver, as well as the Monthly Technical
Department.
Out July 14
Vol. 87
A
Telephone: Main 6950
Cable: Elbill New York
July 7, 1928
No. 1
The Store of Home Entertainment
GENERAL survey of the retail music field now being
conducted by The Review shows that 98 per cent of
retail music stores carry additional lines of merchan-
dise besides pianos and talking machines. A surprisingly large
number have already entered the home moving picture field, being
convinced that this new development in home entertainment
logically falls within the scope of their own particular field.
Some, however, have ventured even further afield, carrying cer-
tain types of electrical goods and sewing machines.
As Philip T. Clay, the head of Sherman, Clay & Co., pointed
out before the National Association, of Music Merchants at its
recent convention in New York, the music store to be successful
at the present time must be essentially a merchandising center of
home entertainment. It is perhaps a difficult matter to draw a
strict line of demarkation between the lines a music store should
or should not logically carry, but The Review believes that it has
quite sufficient to attend to the entertainment and music require-
ments of a community without entering the realms of the iceless
refrigerator, the sewing machine or the vacuum cleaner.
There is an interdependence between all musical instruments,
both interpretative and reproducing, that is sufficient to prevent
them from being absolute competitors one of the other. In the
average home of ordinary means at the present time, the piano,
the talking machine and the radio are all frequently found, to
say nothing of members of the family who play other of the smaller
instruments. It is here that the general music store has the ad-
vantage of creating and catering to the repeat customer, the one
who buys more than once, so that the vital element of good will
in merchandising comes into full play and brings in its proper
dividends.
The growth in the fundamental idea of the general music
store during the past ten years has been steady and direct with
the result that today it is recognized as the most successful
method of retail musical instrument merchandising. The prob-
lems that remain are largely those of internal organization, due
to the fact that in many cases the general music store, like Topsy,
"just grew," department after department being added hap-
hazardly. That condition, however, is rapidly disappearing.
The general music store, as opposed to the store dealing in
one or at the most two lines of musical instruments, is the pre-
dominant element in the retail music trade at the present time, and
forecasts the rapid advent of the store of general home entertain-
ment. It is a move that is one in the proper direction.

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