Music Trade Review

Issue: 1931 Vol. 90 N. 11

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE WORLD OF RADIO
NEXT RADIO TRADE SHOW
IN CHICAGO IN MAY, 1932
Chicago next May will again be host to
the Seventh Annual Convention and Trade
Show of the Radio Manufacturers' Associa-
tion, which attracted over 22,000 persons to
the same city last Jun«.
According to announcement by B. G.
Erskine of Emporium, Pa., Chairman of the
Show Committee of the Radio Manufac-
turers Association, the big annual Tadio
conclave at Chicago will be held during the
week of May 23, 1932, with headquarters
at Chicago hotels to be selected later, subject
to approval expected later by the RMA
Board of Directors. The RMA Show
Committee met at New York, October 13,
and decided unanimously upon Chicago and
the week of May 23 for the 1932 industry
events.
The RMA events for 1932 were advanced
to May for several reasons.
With the
national Republican and Democratic conven-
tions being scheduled in June and the na-
tional election campaign, expected to stimu-
late radio sales, in full swing, it was be-
lieved by the RMA Show Committee that
the earlier week of May 23 would give
manufacturers, jobbers and retailers more
opportunities to sell radio and also shorten
the period before the trade show in which
trade has sometimes been reduced.
Allied radio organizations, including the
Institute of Radio Engineers, the Radio
Wholesalers Association and the National
Federation of Radio Associations, are ex-
pected to cooperate with the Radio Manu-
facturers Association in "radio week," next
May. There will be reduced railroad fares
and manufacturers will be required to ex-
hibit current merchandise and permitted to
show other electrical products. Marked ad-
vances in television development also are in
prospect for the May, 1932, trade gathering.
E. J. DYKSTRA BACK WITH
TRANSFORMER CORP.
E. J. Dvkstra returned to the Transformer
Corp. of America as general sales manager
on October 1, after an absence of some
months, due to illness, at which time he had
resigned, but is now back in the harness at
work with great plans for the company's
future development.
President Siragusa said: "We are happy
to welcome Mr. Dykstra to his former posi-
tion, and if past records are any criterion,
we look forward to seeing a great deal of
activity in the sales department." The
Clarion plants are now shipping 19,000 re-
ceivers monthly, and the company estimates
that shipments for November will be ap-
proximately 25 per cent higher.
On October 1 R. E. Klank became ad-
vertising and sales promotion manager of
the Transformer Corp. He has been with
them for the past eighteen months, and his
success in publicity and sales promotion work
THE
MUSIC
TRADE
led to his promotion. Mr. Klank is well
known and liked in the industry, and has
successfully conducted a number of sales con-
tests among the Clarion distributor organiza-
tions which have been successful. He inti-
mated that the advertising program of the
company as now planned is intended to sup-
port in a generous manner the Clarion Radio's
1931 merchandising schedule.
TONK RADIO TABLE SET
PROVING VERY POPULAR
The recent, but already popular, addition
to the line of piano benches and small novel-
ty furniture made by the Tonk Manufac-
turing Co., of 1921 Lewis street, Chicago,
is what President Percy Tonk calls a Tonk
Radio Table Set. It is illustrated herewith.
TONK RADIO TABLE
This radio table, particularly for small type
receivers and bench, is built on the Over-
ton KD patents, is shipped in dust and mois-
ture proof cartons, and easily set up by any-
one. It is suitable not only for radio, but
for general use in the well-furnished home,
and the materials, construction, and finish
are of the same high standard that charac-
terizes all of the Tonk bench products.
55,000 PERSONS ATTEND
MILWAUKEE RADIO SHOW
More than 55,000 persons visited the ninth
annual radio-electrical exposition held in
Milwaukee, Wis., for a five-day period dur-
ing OctobeT. The total attendance last year
was 33,295.
Patronage of this year's show, according
to Walter Kluge, president of the Wiscon-
sin Radio Trade association, sponsor of the
show, has given the radio dealers and their
distributors new confidence in their business,
"and," he remarked, "the actual sales and
prospects gained were greater than at any
previous exposition."
Interest, too, he
pointed out, was manifest in models in
price range from $100 upward. "It all goes
to prove that there is business if it is gone
after," "Many retailers told me that they
felt highly repaid by taking part in the
exposition, for they made many valuable
contacts."
Addressing the Wisconsin radio dealers,
H. G. Erstrom, executive secretary of the
National Federation of Radio associations,
said that business in general and especi-
ally in the radio field, shows a decided
improvement,
"The buying public is get-
REVIEW,
N o v e m b e r , 1931
ting away from the midget price merchan-
dise," he said, "It wants quality, and is
willing to pay." He asserted that the pub-
lic is surfeited with merchandise of cheap
cost and similarly cheap quality, and the
trend in buying is for quality and good
value.
THIS MUSIC STORE MAKES
A GOOD PROFIT ON RADIO
Long recognized as successful merchan-
disers of pianos, and other musical instru-
ments, and sheet music, the Forbes-Meagher
Music Co., 27 West Main street, Madison,
Wis., also prides itself on its successful de-
velopment of radio business, thus rounding
out its merchandising service.
The company handles four lines of radios,
a number which gives the range of choice
necessary in a stone with their large trad-
ing territory, and yet small enough to allow
concentration and development of sales.
Radio set sales of the company increased
thirty-eight per cent in the past five months,
in comparison with the corresponding months
of 1930, according to J. E. Meagher.
"This gain is in spite of the drop in the
unit sales of radio," he said. "Sales of the
small mantel, or midget, type of radio has
been the chief cause. This meant that three
or four times as many people have bought
receivers during the past five months, than
for any other like period."
Mr. Meagher said that the public is
turning away from shops which are not
backed by a reliable reputation, and are
seeking out the reputable music house as a
source for their radio, just as they have been
turning to the strongest bank, and safest in-
vestments. Confidence which music dealers
have built up during years of merchandis-
ing musical instruments is now reaping its
reward, Mr. Meagher believes, since the
public more readily accepts the word of the
music dealer in favor of a certain brand of
radio, than any other concern selling radios.
During the summer the company's radio
department sold more small radio sets to
campers in and around Madison, and to
students attending the University of Wis-
consin, than in any previous season. This
additional development of their market
meant a good extra margin of business, and
they are going out after student business
again this fall.
The company handles its own financing
arrangements, for its merchandising, mak-
ing it possible for the customer to avail him-
self of its credit without negotiating with a
third party, of the payment of any financ-
ing charge except interest.
Elaborate Radio Department
In a new million-dollar store building, at
Twenty-first street and Broadway, Oakland,
Cal., recently occupied by the John Breuner
Co., dealers in housefurnishing goods, the
entire mezzanine floor is given over to an
elaborate radio department.
25
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
iddle
Chicasc
West
FRANK W . KIRK
Manager
333 NO. MICHIGAN
AVENUE
CHICAGO PIANO CLUB AFFILIATES
WITH PIANO AND ORGAN ASSOCIATION
O
CTOBER was a month of unusual
interest in Chicago trade organiza-
tion circles, and the Piano Club,
after seventeen years of useful life, now
becomes merged with the Chicago Piano and
Organ Association, which, by the way, is
the oldest trade organization in this indus-
try in the United States. Increased in mem-
bership and in financial assets, the Chicago
Piano and Organ Association has under
consideration matters of organized effort to
increase public interest in music throughout
this area.
In their regular order, the events leading
to this important change included the lunch
of October 5, at the Illinois Athletic Club,
which was a joint meeting of the member-
ship of the two bodies. Then the reports
of the committees to arrange for the con-
solidation were formally accepted, including
some minor changes in the by-laws of the
P. & O. Association, and an agreement plac-
ing all the funds of the Piano Club in the
treasury of the older organization.
The final luncheon meeting of the Piano
Club was held October 12, and it was de-
cided to merge as of that date. This obvi-
ated the necessity of holding the annual elec-
tion of the Piano Club for 1931-1932,
scheduled for that day. The annual election
of the Chicago Piano and Organ Association
is to be held early in November, and as the
by-laws now provide for two vice-presidents,
it seems probable that one of these officials
to be elected will become, so to speak, a rep-
resentative of the Piano Club membership.
Now the P. & O. has active and associate
memberships, each with voting rights, the
associate membership including those who
are not owners, managers or partners in
musical instrument establishments. The dues
in each class are to be $5.00 a year, and
while the matter is not settled as to how
often, or where, luncheon meetings are to
be held, the opinion was informally ex-
pressed that perhaps a luncheon meeting
every other week would be a good way to
maintain and increase trade interest.
The October 12 luncheon called out a
good attendance, and President B. F. Duvall
read his annual report for the closing year,
which coincided with the passing of that
26
organization into the Chicago Piano and
Organ Association.
Mr. Duvall reviewed briefly the activities
of the Piano Club during the past year, call-
ing attention to the number of prominent
people in and out of the trade who had
attended the regular luncheons and to the
contributions made by the club for the ad-
vancement of music, which included $300
to the piano-radio fund. However, there
was a very satisfactory balance still in the
treasury.
Regarding the merger of the two trade
bodies, Mr. Duvall said: "The Piano Club
of Chicago, which is merging with the Chi-
cago Piano & Organ Association as of this
date, faces many new opportunities for serv-
ice, inspired by past success. The combined
organizations will be a unit that has no
superior in the music trades in the country."
The Musical Merchandise Manufacturers'
Association resumed their monthly fall com-
bined dinners and business meetings on
October 5, and the Men's Sheet Music Club
of Chicago also resumed on October 8 their
fall gatherings. Details of these meetings
will be found in other columns.
space is excellently lighted, and the arrange-
ment of machinery permits manufacturing
processes to go on in economical sequence.
The new Cowen line of piano benches
includes a number of fancy models, all built
to the high manufacturing standards of the
Amco line, which this company puts out.
STARR PIANO CO. REPORTS
IMPROVED PIANO DEMAND
The Starr Piano Co., Richmond, Ind., re-
ports an increase in the demand for small
grands and uprights spread pretty well
throughout the country. It is reported, too,
that the company's refrigerator business is
holding its own very satisfactorily with the
commercial end showing a smart gain. The
company is about to issue a new catalog
and folder covering the Starr Freeze com-
mercial units.
COWEN FURNITURE CO.
OCCUPIES LARGER QUARTERS
The Cowen Furniture Co. is now located
in new and larger quarters at 1223-1225
West Lake street, Chicago. President L. D.
Cowen, of that company, leased the premises
for five years from November 1, and by that
date had completed moving from their for-
mer place in West Superior street.
In the new plant the Cowen Furniture
Co. will have a modern and economical
equipment for the manufacture of piano
benches, cabinets, novelty furniture, etc.
The building is of brick, two stories on the
street front and three on the back of the
lot, with a depth of about 188 feet and a
frontage of 37 feet. The basement also pro-
vides extra storage space in addition to a
floor area of about 18,000 square feet. The
machinery is all of the latest woodworking
and finishing type, each tool run by an in-
dividual electric motor. The entire floor
THE
MUSIC
TRADE
FROM TOP
TO CASTER
SCHULZ
COLONY
GRANDS
Are Better Designed
Better Built
Better Priced
We Will Send You
Actual Specifications
to Prove It
M. SCHULZ CO.
711 Milwaukee Ave.
CHICAGO, ILL.
REVIEW,
N o v e m b e r , 1931

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