Music Trade Review

Issue: 1928 Vol. 87 N. 7

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
AUGUST 18, 1928
The Music Trade Review
Cincinnati Dealers Find
Growing Piano Demand
General Consensus of Opinion Among Local Piano Merchants Is
That Summer Generally Has Been Good—Local Bruns-
wick Branch Demonstrating New Phonograph
soles and socket power sets, will be widely
exemplified in the exhibits. Inquiries received
by the show committee indicate that dealers
from all parts of California and from many
other Coast and Western States will attend the
show.
Hamilton Handling Baldwin
in Southern California
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL., August 9.—Earl Hamil-
ton, who has been connected with the Baldwin
organization here for a number of years, is
now in charge of the wholesale business of
the Baldwin Piano Co. in Southern California
and resides in Los Angeles. Morley P. Thomp-
son, Coast representative for the Baldwin Piano
Co., stated to-day that Mr. Hamilton's long
experience makes him especially well qualified
to serve the trade. Mr. Thompson also said
that the Baldwin organization on the Coast
is featuring the new Howard grand, recently
put out by the factories, which comes in period
models, William & Mary, Sheraton and Queen
Anne designs and the Pacific Coast is taking
very kindly to the Howard.
INCINNATI, August 11.—"Business has been astonishingly good the past few days," is
the cheerful report of George P. Gross, head of the George P. Gross Piano Co. "We
have sold a number of grands and also a number of players, and the Midsummer demand
has very agreeably surprised us. I suppose this is due to the fact that there has been no let-up
in our sales efforts, and especially to the fact that we have the entire American line, which offers
the prospect a large range of choice. Talking machines arc moving fairly well and there is a fine
demand for records." Due to the fact that


they are busy developing prospects for the Fall bungalows. In the Baldwin show window there
trade, neither Mr. Gross nor Carl J. Rist, man- is a piano that is attracting more than usual
attention, a Baldwin Model R reproducing in-
ager, will take a vacation until later.
That the Canfield Piano Co. is not having strument that is a duplicate of one which has
a Summer slump is shown by the fact that it just been placed in the seagoing yacht, "Cam-
just has received and, placed on display many argo," owned by Julius Fleischman, Jr., of this
Ampico Music for
new pianos, consisting of Cable-Nelson players, city.
William R. Graul, head of the piano company
A. B. Chase grands and Lindeman & Son
British Radio Programs
grands. "We have had a good Summer—the that bears his name, who has been on an en-
best we have had in years," stated Walter Can- forced vacation for several weeks, due to a
The British Broadcasting Corp. has decided
field, head of the company. "As a matter of threatened nervous breakdown, has fully re-
to
use the Ampico for a series of Musical In-
fact," he continued, "business has been good covered, it is reported, and will be back to busi-
terludes on three or four evenings each week
every month this year so far, and we expect ness in a very few days.
Charles J. Meinberg, manager, and G. E. from Station 2LO, London, England, between
to show a gain in the last half. We confine
our efforts largely to player-pianos, for several Hunt, retail manager, of the Starr Piano Co. the hours of 6 and 7.30 o'clock, British time.
reasons, and we devote the greater part of our Sales Corporation, will spend the week of News of this arrangement was received this
effort to persons of the 'well-to-do' class, by August 13 at the factory in Richmond, Ind., week by the Ampico Corp., New York, from
Ampico, Ltd., 233 Regent street, London. Due
which I mean persons who can afford to have in conference with other sales executives.
to
regulations governing broadcasting in Great
a good instrument."
Biddle Brothers, of Reading, a suburb, dealers
Britain the name of the instrument will not
Mr. Canfield's philosophy in regard to the in musical instruments, who also operate the
be announced at the recitals. The only an-
player-piano is something like this, and as he Biddle Brunswick and R. C. A. Shop in the
nouncement will be to the effect that the play-
is a man of broad experience it seems to be store of the Starr Piano Co., have a fine exhibit
ing
of Moiseiwitsch or another artist has just
worthy of consideration: "Let us take Mrs. of pianos, talking machines and radio in the
been heard through the medium of a reproduc-
Smith as an example. She cannot play a piano, Carthage Fair this week.
At the store of the E. M. Abbott Piano Co. ing piano.
but she bought a straight piano for the use of
her only daughter, who was about fifteen. In it was reported that this year the Summer
a few years the daughter was married, and then trade has held up better than usual, especially Louis F. Goelzlin on
there was a 'silent piano' in the Smith home. with the talking machine and the radio lines,
Visit to New York
For a while it remained there, merely as a use- to which it is paying special attention.
less piece of furniture, and then it was sold to
The local branch of the Brunswick-Balke-
Louis F. Goelzlin, of the Pacific Music Co,,
somebody, thus blocking the sale of a new Collender Co. is now demonstrating a very at-
San
Francisco, Pacific Coast distributors of the
instrument. Here is the point: If Mrs. Smith tractive new mechanical talking machine, known
had been sold a player-piano in the beginning, as No. 15-8 and retailing at $150. Other new De Luxe Reproducing Roll Corp., spent several
she would have formed the habit of using it, instruments that soon will be ready for deliv- days in New York last week and was enter-
and she would not have had a 'silent piano' ery are the new radio outfits, Console K. R. O. tained by Jack Gibson, of the De Luxe Co.
Mr. Goelzlin reported that there was every
when her daughter married and left home. A and Table Model K. R.
prospect on the Coast for a marked improve-
player-piano would have given Mrs. Smith last-
ment in business during the Fall.
ing satisfaction and pleasure, which the straight Will Show Interesting
piano did not."
W. F. Rossman Bankrupt
The Baldwin Piano Co. is now offering to
Trends in Radio Exhibits
all who may desire them free floor patterns, or
FRANKLIN, PA., August 13.—Following the fil-
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL., August 9.—Sherman, Clay
plans, showing how much space a small
Howard piano occupies. The floor patterns & Co. will have a booth, showing their leading- ing of a voluntary petition in bankruptcy in
show the manner in which the little piano can radio lines, at the Pacific Radio Exposition the United States District Court at Pittsburgh,
be fitted in with other furnishings in a har- which will open on Saturday, August 18, in the William F. Rossman, music dealer at Frank-
monious and convenient way, solving a problem Civic Auditorium. The show, which is being lin, was adjudicated a bankrupt. The schedules
that may be perplexing to those who want a given by the Pacific Radio Trade Association, filed show assets $55,840.68 and liabilities
piano but are not sure that they have room. is expected to present the most complete array $79,038.36.
They are especially helpful to persons who of radio equipment ever assembled by the in-
expect to move into homes with small rooms, dustry. Dynamic speakers, furnished with re-
Consult the Universal Want Directory of
such as efficiency apartments and compact ceivers, the combination of phonograph con- The Review.
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ince
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cAmaricsCs
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Fbremost
'Piano
^ S T I E F F PIANO
Will attract tkc attention of those
wko know and appreciate tone guality
CHAS.M.STIEFF Inc.
Stieff
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Baltimore
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Jhe oldest
Piano"fbrte in
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owned and con"
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Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
8
The Music Trade Review
REVIEW
(Registered in the U. S. Patent Office)
Published Every Saturday by
Federated Business Publications, Inc.
at 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, Wm. A. Low.
B.
BRITTAIN WILSON, Editor
CARLETOII CHACE, Business Manager
W. H. MCCLEARY, Managing Editor
RAY Bin., Associate Editor
F. L. AVERY, Circulation Manager
E. B. MUNCH, Eastern Representative
WESTERN DIVISION:
BOSTON OFFICE:
FRANK W. KIRK, Manager
JOHN H. WILSON, 324 Washington St.
E. J. NEALY
333 No. Michigan Ave., Chicago
Telephone: State 1266
Telephone: Main 6950
Telephone: Lexin gton 1760-71
August 18, 1928
Vol. 87
I
Cable: Elbill New York
l
No. 7
Ambassadors of Good Will
HE annual convention of the National Association of
. Piano Tuners was held in Cleveland this week, at which
the men who keep the tone in the piano discussed the
many problems they have to meet in their daily work as well as
ways and means for impressing the public with the importance of
regular tuning and of the value of the efficient tuner.
That prominent representatives of the manufacturing and re-
tail branches of the piano trade saw fit to take part in the ses-
sions is a matter for congratulation because they displayed a
proper sense of the importance of the tuner not alone as a crafts-
man but as a sort of a link between the manufacturing and dis-
tributing branches of the trade and the final purchaser of the in-
strument.
The tuner by his skill and his tact can become a genuine am-
bassador of good will for the industry. In his contact with the
piano owner he can keep alive interest and satisfaction in the in-
strument and thus hold that friendship which makes for future
business. Where the tuner is inefficient and careless he can, on
the other hand, wear down the confidence of the owner of even
a good instrument and do incalculable damage to the piano in-
Annual Golf Tournament
of Ohio Music Merchants
Arrangements Completed for Tournament to
Be Held at Highland Meadows Country Club,
Near Toledo, on Monday, September 10
TOLEDO, O., August 13.—Plans have been com-
pleted for the ninth annual golf tournament of
the Ohio Music Merchants' Golf Association
to be held at the Highland Meadows Country
Club, Sylvania, O., near Toledo, on Monday,
September 10. Wm. R. Graul is president of
the association, and arrangements for the
tournament are in the hands of Henry C.
Wildermuth, 703 Adams street, this city, to
whom arrangements for playing should be
made.
Contestants are limited to members and as-
sociate members of the Ohio association, or
those affiliated with the music trade, and the
very modest fee of $6 will cover green fees,
luncheon, and the annual dinner in the evening.
Busses run direct from Toledo to the golf club,
and transportation will be furnished by the golf
committee if notified before 9 p. m. on Sunday,
September 9.
AUGUST 18, 1928
dustry as a whole. It is for making better tuners, of the type
who create good will, that the National Association of Piano
Tuners is working.
There are those who insist that the trouble with the piano
business is that there is inadequate contact between retail piano
houses and the public, this, of course, referring to direct sales con-
tact. The tuner, however, who sells himself and at the same time
sells that industry of which he is so important a part is aiding im-
measurably in developing and maintaining contact. He offsets the
effect of the disinterestedness of all too many dealers who, when
a piano is sold and paid for, forget all about the customer. The
efforts of the tuners to better their own condition and to win a
full measure of public confidence and respect are worthy of gen-
eral support, for they will tend to benefit the industry as a whole.
I
The Radio and the Trade-in
H)E advent of the AC electric radio set has brought
in its train the problem of the radio trade-in with in-
creasing importance. What complicates this problem
for the music dealer who has a radio department, and wHat makes
it more important than the problem presented in the piano trade-
in, is the fact that a large percentage of the battery-operated sets
which are presented as trade-ins have been • purchased within a
comparatively recent time and represent an investment which, in
the eyes of their owners, has no relation at all to their resale value
to the merchant.
In meeting this problem and in successfully solving it with-
out loss the music merchant should remember one fundamental
fact, and that is, each transaction involving a trade-in is essen-
tially an individual deal and bears no relation to any other transac-
tion. In other words, the allowance made on the old set must
bear a proper relation to its resale value, whatever that may be,
and the transaction itself must not be considered complete until
the amount involved in the resale is in the dealer's till in cash.
To lose on a certain percentage of sales involving trade-ins in the
idea that this loss will be made up on sales which do not have
trade-ins means essentially a lower profit in the radio department,
and the margin of gross profit in the sale of that merchandise
is not sufficient to allow for such losses. Any effort to solve the
problem of the radio trade-in along this latter line is inevitably
doomed to failure, just as a similar method applied to the piano
trade-in problem resulted in a loss for the music dealer in the
long run.
The article in the last issue of The Review dealing with this
problem shows how many music merchants have already real-
ized this fact. All of them are considering each radio sale in-
volving a radio trade-in as a separate and distinct transaction, and
all of them are endeavoring to place their allowances for the old
receivers at such figures that they are able to escape losses.
There will be play both in the morning and
afternoon. Separate divisions for active and
associate members. A nine-hole medal play
in the morning will be followed by an 18-hole
match play in the afternoon, and a number of
handsome prizes have been provided to stimu-
late the contestants to put forth their best
efforts.
Another United Go. Store
Story & Clark Opening
New Philadelphia Store
PHILADELPHIA, PA., August 13.—The Story
& Clark Piano Co. has again entered the Phil-
adelphia trade with a newly leased store prop-
erty and basement located at 220 South
Eleventh street. The firm recently has been
conducting only offices in this city with a view
to winding up its retail accounts acquired when
it was engaged in the retail trade at Eleventh
and Chestnut streets. The new store property
will be given over to the sales and display of
the Story & Clark piano.
SOUTHBRIDGE, MASS., August 13.—The four-
teenth store of the United Music Co. chain
will be opened at 43 Hamilton street, this city,
about September 1. The arrangements for the
opening are being made by S. J. Smith, man-
ager of the Webster branch, who is a native
of Southbridge. The local manager will be
WATERLOO, IA., August 11.—C. R. Whaylen and
Richard Tych, who is well acquainted with this
Henry W. Dallman have formed a new partner-
territory. A complete line of pianos, phono-
ship to conduct a music store called the Whay-
graphs and radio will be handled.
len-Dallman Music Co., at 102^ Fourth street,
this city. Mr. Whaylen was formerly asso-
ciated with the Hartmann-Whaylen Music Co.,
which was dissolved recently with the purchase
Richard Ahlf, head of all the piano interests of Mr. Hartmann's interest by the former.
of Sherman, Clay & Co., on the Pacific Coast They plan to handle a general stock of music
is paying a brief business visit to New York.
goods.
Whaylen-Dallman Formed
Richard Ahlf in East

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