Presto

Issue: 1920 1750

PRESTO
8
in time the results will be realized, and when the returns are all in
Presto will present them. Then, too, the question of future exposi-
tions, in connection with the conventions, may also be finally de-
termined.
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It was the first convention held in the winter season. The
beauty of summer was lacking, and the customary boat rides, and
things by which delight was insured in years past, were missing. But
there was enough else to make amends, and there are other summer
times ahead. Sell more pianos—if you can get them!
Another usually prominent figure at the conventions was con-
spicuous by absence in New York this week. Mr. Will L. Bush, the
eloquent, could not attend because of pressing duties of public nature
in Houston. His place on the program was taken by Mr. B. W.
Gratigny of the Bush & Gerts Piano Co. of Texas.
Some members present complained that it seemed colder than
ever, because of the lack of inward warmth. It was not a really "dry"
convention, however, notwithstanding that there was nothing upon
which to rest the tired soles. For music trade conventions need not
be "wet" in order to escape being "dry."
If you went to the convention and music show, Presto will be
glad to have you send in your brief opinion of things as they struck
you in New York this week. Say what you saw, and who, and tell
how the week may influence your business at home.
The great gain of the annual meetings of piano men is in the
thoughtful talks by leaders in the trade and industry. And, in re-
THE SCOPE OF THE
WELTE PATENTS
Important Arrangement in New York Defines
an Attitude of Strong Interests and Assures
Wider Uses for the Welte Library and
Well Known Player Actions.
An arrangement of vast importance to the entire
piano industry was consummated this week in New
York between George W. Gittins, president of the
Estey Piano Company and of M. Welte & Sons,
Inc., Frank E. Wade, president of the Amphion
Piano Player Company of Syracuse, N. Y., and
Richard W. Lawrence of the Kohler Industries. It
was completed after several months of negotiations
and investigations and after many conferences at-
tended by representatives and attorneys of the con-
cerns involved.
The arrangement is based upon the Welte pat-
ents on Reproducer Player Actions, which are be-
lieved to cover broadly every type of reproducing
player action now in use. The interests named will
stand hereafter as the controlling licensees under
the patents.
Cut from Welte Library.
The music rolls for the reproducing player pianos
and actions made by these parties will be cut from
the great Welte Library which includes thousands
of records niade from the playing of the world's
famous artists, such as Paderewski, Hofmann, Ganz,
Lhevinne, Busoni, Debussy.
The Auto Pneumatic Action Company, William
J. Keeley, president, which makes the reproducing
player action known as the "Auto de Luxe Welte
Mignon,'' comes into the arrangement on behalf of
the Kohler Industries. This company will shortly
greatly enlarge its facilities for manufacturing re-
producing player actions.
The Kohler Industries have acquired from M.
Welte & Sons a Welte Mignon Recorder, upon
which many of the greatest pianists of the world
have recorded their playing, and in addition, a com-
plete music cutting plant for the manufacture of
rolls to be played upon the Auto de Luxe Welte
Mignon player action. The Kohler Industries,
with accustomed energy, have leased an entirely
new plant for this branch of music roll manufac-
ture, which is located at Broadway, 75th Street and
Amsterdam Avenue, a remarkably convenient loca-
tion.
Arrangement with Amphion.
The Amphion Piano Player Company, under the
new arrangement, has ready for the market a re-
producing player action developed by its inventor,
Lewis B. Doman.
The American Piano Company has adjusted its
differences with M. Welte & Sons with respect to
February 5, 1920.
peating some of these talks, Presto is doing the greatest good possible
to the greatest number. We shall publish them in the customary
installment plan.
* * *
Mr. H. S. Newman, of Presto's staff, who attended every move-
ment and motion of this week's events in New York, writes that he
became so imbued with things musical that he can't distinguish any
sound but music, nor see any people that are not piano buyers, sellers
or advertisers.
* * *
Forty-second street, in the vicinity of Pershing Square, looked
more like Wabash avenue than any other place in the world. And
nothing but Chicago's Coliseum ever seemed so much like New York's
Grand Central Palace, notwithstanding the market construction dif-
ferences.
;J-
;•-
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New York responded nobly. The metropolitan newspapers pub-
lished liberal stories about Music Week, the Music Show and the con-
ventions. Reports to Presto from other cities and towns also proved
that the efforts of the National Bureau for Advancement of Music
equally produced results far and wide.
* * *
For the first time since the piano men's conventions were estab-
lished, neither of Presto's editors put in an appearance in New York
this week. But the paper was well represented and if we were only a
little bit missed we will be satisfied.
* * *
It isn't often that a piano dealer deserts the trade for some other
business. Ask a piano man what he'd rather do than sell pianos and
he'll answer, "sell more pianos."
the Ampico structure and admits the validity of the
Welte Bockisch patents.
The Rudolph Wurlitzer Mfg. Company of New
York has acknowledged the validity of the Welte
patents and has taken a license to use these im-
portant inventions in the particular combination
instruments made by it.
Backed by the millions of capital invested in the
companies going into this arrangement, it is be-
lieved that the Reproducing Player Piano will be
shortly placed on such a basis as will make the
same the standard of the industry. No effort will
be spared to make the reproducing player piano as
popular in homes as the phonograph is today.
Not only will this enterprise be backed by the
present great Welte Library of upwards of four
thousand master records of the playing of great
European and American pianists, but arrangements
have been and will be entered into with the great
artists of the day to produce further records.
Louis W. Southgate, patent counsel for the Kohler
Industries, has been retained to conserve and de-
fend the important patent rights involved in the ar-
rangement, which runs until 1938.
A MILWAUKEE CONSOLIDATION.
The Music Shop, which was established at 312
Grand avenue, Milwaukee, about four years ago as
a retail store of the Hoeffler Piano Mfg. Co., 304
West Water street, a large wholesale musical instru-
ment house, has been consolidated with the parent
house at the latter location. The Grand avenue store
building was leased recently for a long term by a
Milwaukee retail shoe concern, which took posses-
sion Feb. 1. The Music Shop devoted its activities
mainly to retailing phonographs and records, fea-
turing the Starr and the Columbia and the Gennett
and Columbia records. It also carried a stock of
Starr pianos, which the Hoeffler company handles
in a wholesale way in the Wisconsin territory.
IN SEARCH OF GRANDS.
D. J. Massey, piano merchant of Des Moines,
Iowa, arrived in Chicago on Friday of last week-
en route home from a buying trip to New York.
He had been away over two weeks and was hurry-
ing home because he had received word that three
of the employes of his store were down with in-
fluenza. "There is a shortage of high grade goods
at Des Moines, particularly grands." said Mr. Mas-
sey to a Presto representative. "Our line consists
of the Steinway, the A. B. Chase, the Lyon & Healy,
the Ivers & Pond, the Schaff Bros., and we also
carry the Mehlin." Mr. Massey went also to Boston
on this trip. At the factories he sought grands, but
with indifferent success at some of the places.
Erwin Bros., Hope, Ark., recently received 100
pianos from a single manufactory to meet the de-
mand for pianos there. The firm is a big distributor.
Q R S COMPANY TO
HAVE THIRD P U N T
President Pletcher on Present Trip Completes Ar-
rangements for Another Big Factory in
San Francisco.
The Q R S Company has decided to establish a
factory at San Francisco, for the manufacture of
music rolls
The plant will be thoroughly up to date, and will
be equipped with an eye to the future by allowing
for any expansion the constantly growing demand
for Q R S rolls necessitates.
This will make three factories the Q R S Company
has established within one year. With this latest
addition any point in the United States will be
within 24 hours of direct Q R S factory shipments.
When completed it will also mean a great deal to
export shipments to all parts of the world that can
be best served from Pacific ports.
The Pacific coast trade is expressing much satis-
faction over this recognition of their requirements
by the Q R S Company.
President T. M. Pletcher made all necessary ar-
rangements on his present Pacific Coast trip.
BALDWIN PIANO COMPANY
RE=ELECTS ALL OFFICERS
Following Election Over Thirty Representatives
Are Entertained at Dinner at Queen City Club.
All officers of the' Baldwin Piano Co. were re-
elected at the annual meeting of the stockholders
held last week in Cincinnati. The following are the
officers of the Baldwin Piano Company: G. W.
Armstrong, Jr., president; H. C. Dickinson, vice-
president; C. M. Robertson, treasurer and Lucien
Wilson, secretary.
Following the election a dinner was given at the
Queen City Club, at which more than thirty repre-
sentatives from various sections of the country were
present. Each guest was presented with a miniature
clay model of the new $1,000,000 factory which the
Baldwin Company is to build on Gilbert avenue,
Cincinnati. George W. Armstrong, Jr., president of
the company, presided at the meeting.
E. E. FORBES' DIVIDENDS.
The first dividends of the E. E. Forbes Piano
Company, bankrupt, Birmingham, Ala., were paid
the creditors on January 20 by J. H. Holcombe, trus-
tee, according to the information secured at the of-
fice of Judge E. H. Dryer, referee in bankruptcy
recently. The dividends approximated 10 per cent.
Enhanced content © 2008-2009 and presented by MBSI - The Musical Box Society International (www.mbsi.org) and the International Arcade Museum (www.arcade-museum.com).
All Rights Reserved. Digitized from the archives of the MBSI with support from NAMM - The International Music Products Association (www.namm.org).
Additional enhancement, optimization, and distribution by the International Arcade Museum. An extensive collection of Presto can be found online at http://www.arcade-museum.com/library/
February 5, 1920.
PRESTO
UNIQUE TESTIMONIAL TO A
GREAT PIANO INSTRUMENT
pianos, which are hard to get, was reported by Mr.
Gabriel. George Darrell, salesman, is recovering
from a severe cold, which kept him in bed for some
time.
PROMINENT DEALERS SEEN
IN CHICAGO DURING WEEK
Benno Moiseiwitsch, Distinguished Russian
Pianist, in a Letter of Peculiar Signifi-
cance, Calls Mason & Hamlin Piano a
Revelation and an Inspiration.
NEW COMPANY AT ARDMORE, OKLA.
Some Were En Route to Convention, But Others
Simply Bought Pianos.
Very unique, and of unusual interest, is a letter
recently written by the distinguished Russian pi-
anist, Moiseiwitsch, to the Mason & Hamlin Co.
The letter is not only one of great force, in its re-
lation to the quality of the famous Boston piano,
but it is equally unusual in its phraseology, and in
the use of adjectives seldom applied by great artists
even to the -instruments upon which they prove
their powers. Following is the Moiseiwitsch letter:
January 24, 1920.
Mason & Hamlin Co.
Gentlemen: The contribution you are making in
your peerless pianos to the cause of art—consti-
tuting at once an inspiration and a revelation to the
musician—marks an epoch, I believe, of deep sig-
nificance.
New and exquisite effects as to tonal color, qual-
ity, and dynamics are here made possible for com-
poser and interpreter.
I am convinced that the tonal gradations at one's
command as a result—from a virile bravura to a
uniquely delicate pianissimo, ever singing and warm
—complemented by a sensitiveness of mechanism,
not only render the Mason & Hamlin pianos in-
comparable among the instruments of their kind, but
also enhance the scope of music as an art.
With sincere congratulations to you on adhering
so unswervingly to your ideal, and with keen appre-
ciation of your inestimable service to Music, believe
me,
Very truly yours,
(Signed) BENNO MOISEIWITSCH.
The points brought out in that communication
are as forceful as they are unusual. It is the enthu-
siasm of an artist in the means of expressing his
art. And in the statement that the effects passible
to the Mason & Hamlin piano are "new," there is
a compliment exceeding anything that has appeared
in a very long time. It would be impossible, in
fact, for any compliment to go farther than the
words of the Russian artist, when he declares that
"because of the tonal gradations at one's command
in this instrument, the scope of music as an art is
increased and enhanced."
Those are points of peculiar force equalled, we
believe, by nothing that has come to notice of the
pianistic world in aoy testimonial from any other
artist. It is more than possible that the Moisei-
witsch letter, on the Mason & Hamlin piano, is
one that will find a permanent place in the annals
of the American piano.
Homer L. Boyd, of Ardmore, Okla., has organized
a stock company in that city for the sale of musical
goods and phonographs, etc.. to be known as Boyd
Phonograph & Music Co., Inc. The capital stock is
$10,000 and the officers are C. W. Rollins, president;
J. A. Bodovitz, vice-president; Homer L. Boyd, sec-
retary and treasurer. All the members are citizens
of Ardmore, the "gateway to the Healdton oil
fields." The company has not yet opened a store
because of the impossibility of finding a suitable
location but will maintain a wareroom, operate
trucks and carry instruments direct to the homes of
prospects and customers,
prospective customers.
C. M. RANDALL IN INSURANCE.
C. M- Randall, who for many years was a leading
retail piano salesman for Hallet & Davis instru-
ments in Chicago, returned some time ago to his
former business, insurance, and is now w r ith Joyce
& Company in the Rookery building, Chicago, in-
surance brokers. He has placed all the insurance
for .Wynian, Babb & Co., including that on their
five autos, their plate glass and on all the stock in
their several talking machine stores.
The Conley Company, Richmond, Va., is a whole-
sale and retail distributor for a line of band instru-
ments. A full line of string and orchestral instru-
ments is also carried.
Herman Mueller, head of the Mueller Music Com-
pany, Elkader, Iowa, was in Chicago Friday of last
week ordering pianos and playerpianos from manu-
facturers.
A. G. Ogrcn, piano dealer of Rockford, 111., was
in Chicago on Friday. He left substantial orders
for goods.
T. R. Griffith, of West Union, Iowa, was in Chi-
cago on Friday. He also ordered liberally of new
goods.
R. D. Gaston and Charles Gaston, of the Gaston
Music Company, Hastings, Neb., were in Chicago
Friday of last week en route to the piano dealers'
convention in New York.
Forest Trayler, manager of the Castner-Knott
Dry Goods Company, Nashville, Tenn., was in Chi-
cago on Friday last on his way to New York to at-
tend the piano merchants' convention this week.
W. H. McConnell, of Boggs & Buhl, Pittsburgh,
Pa., was in Chicago this week ordering pianos and
playerpianos for that great store.
C. S. Wolcott, of the Wolcott Music House, South
Bend, Ind., was in Chicago, Saturday. He left large
orders for goods.
W. F. Schwentker, piano merchant of Evansvilie,
Ind., was in Chicago Saturday and left orders for
a large number of playerpianos and pianos.
Glenn Oyloe, piano dealer, of Ossian, Iowa, was
in Chicago on Saturday last and ordered pianos for
his trade.
Q R S PATCHES
GOES AFTER AN APPLE
BUSH & LANE PIANO CO.'S
CHANGES IN PORTLAND, ORE.
Old Employes Shipped to New Positions in Other
Cities on the Pacific Coast.
There has been a decided shakeup in the local
Bush & Lane Piano Co.'s personnel.
Erwin
Erenyi, who has been with this company ever since
it has been in its new location and a considerable
time before that, has gone to Seattle where he will
have a similar position, that of sales manager in the
Bush & Lane house in that city. Herbert Smith of
Seattle takes Mr. Erenyi's place in Portland.
James L. Loder, manager of the talking machine
department, has gone to San Francisco as manager
of the Sonora phonograph shop of that city. E. C.
C. Johnston of the San Francisco house has Mr.
Loder's place in Portland. Both Mr. Erenyi and
Mr. Loder are well known and highly esteemed in
Portland and the best wishes of many friends go
with them to their new locations.
The Bush & Lane Piano Co. gave a banquet at
the Multnomah Hotel on the evening of December
27. About 45 people were present. Violin solos,
piano solos, songs and dancing contributed to the
pleasure of the evening. A delicious banquet was
served.
A handsome Bush & Lane Welte Mignon, style
18, has been purchased by a state institution at
Salem, Oregon, from the Portland branch of the
Bush & Lane Piano Co.
Too bad to have someone crazy for a Mason &
Hamlin concert grand and not to have one in stock,
but that is what happened to E. E. Gabriel of the
Wiley B. Allen Co. this week. Instead of lamenting
over it he sold a beautiful Mason & Hamlin parlor
grand for cash to the customer. Four Wellington
pianos were also sold this week by Mr. Gabriel and
a few more grands. A big demand for second hand
Here is Patches astride the orchard fence reach-
ing for a luscious apple. This Q R S Roll picture is
now a window decoration in the W. F. Frederick
Piano Company's window in Pittsburgh, Pa. All
day long the shifting crowds come and go despite
the wintry blasts to gaze into this beautiful win-
dow.
Knabe and Hardman pianos share in the adver-
tisement. The fence on which Patches is perched
is typical of many an orchard enclosure in the rural
districts of this or almost any other country—giv-
ing the scene a universal appeal in reviving memo-
ries of the days of real sport. The half-obliterated
bill announcing some "doings" at the Town Hall
at the left of the picture reminds the writer of the
outside condition of the courthouse at Lafayette,
Ind., as it appeared some twelve or fourteen years
ago.
Impressions like that will stick in the mem-
ory long after the appearance of the best hotel, the
best theater or the latest monument erected in a city
will be forgotten. Like Banquo's Ghost, they will
not down.
Patches, on the other hand,, leaves anything but
an unpleasant memory. Like Huckleberry Finn, he
is so natural that the whole world is refreshed by
his presence.
Enhanced content © 2008-2009 and presented by MBSI - The Musical Box Society International (www.mbsi.org) and the International Arcade Museum (www.arcade-museum.com).
All Rights Reserved. Digitized from the archives of the MBSI with support from NAMM - The International Music Products Association (www.namm.org).
Additional enhancement, optimization, and distribution by the International Arcade Museum. An extensive collection of Presto can be found online at http://www.arcade-museum.com/library/

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