Presto

Issue: 1920 1758

April 3, 1920.
ITEMS OF INTEREST
FROM CINCINNATI
News Mostly of a Personal Nature Which
Contains Some Important Piano Trade
and Industry Facts.
E. R. Loughead, traveling representative for the
Hallet & Davis Piano Company, Boston, was in Cin-
cinnati last week calling on the trade. During his
stay in Cincinnati Mr. Loughead made his head-
quarters at the office of the William R. Graul Piano
Company, which is the Cinc-nnati distrihutor of the
Hallet & Davis Company's pianos.
W. S. Jenkins, sales manager of the piano de-
partment of the John Church Company, was in Cin-
cinnati last week conferring with Roswell B.
Burchard, president of the company, regarding ship-
ments of pianos to the various branches.
Music business on the Pacific Coast is booming
according to Carl W. Yager, sheet music salesman
for the John Church Company, Cincinnati, who has
just completed a two months' business trip of that
section of the country. In a letter to Roswell B.
Burchard, president of the company, Yager said the
sheet music business has increased wonderfully, and
the volume of business he transacted surpasses all
previous records. Mr. Yager makes his headquar-
ters in New York City.
Lucien Wulsin, treasurer of the Baldwin Piano
Company, was in New York last week in conference
with Arnold Somolyo, manager of the branch in
that city, regarding the engagement of pianists for
the fall and winter months. Before leaving for
$50.00 Prize
for Best Display
For a picture of the most at-
tractive and artistic "Player-
piano Week" window display
in which the Standard Cut-
outs are used, we offer a prize
• of $50.00. The photographs
must be taken at night, and
should be mailed to us by the
25th of April. The winning
photograph shall be repro-
duced in the music trade
papers.
Attract attention to your
special "Playerpiano Week"
window display by using a
set of the window streamers
illustrated above.
The Standard window dis-
play £ut*outs will help to
make your " P l a y e r p i a n o
Week" window display a
success. Write today for a set
of the streamers and cut-outs.
KBSTO
Gotham, Mr. Wulsin said the company is short
7,000 pianos on orders right now.
The Rudolph Wurlitzer Company has leased two
store rooms at Peebles Corner which will be com-
bined and remodeled and opened as a music house.
S. L. Blankenship, advertising manager of the
Vocalstyle Music Roll Company, resigned that po-
sition last week and has takon a position as travel-
ing representative for the Q R S Music Roll Com-
pany. Mr. Blankenship had been with the Vocal-
style company for the past year.
H. F. PELTIER VISITS CHICAGO.
GEO. W. POUND APPEARS
BEFORE HOUSE COMMITTEE
General Council of Music Industries Chamber of
Commerce Argues for Barkley Bill.
George W. Pound, general counsel of the Music
Industries Chamber of Commerce, has been in
Washington, D. C, for more than a week on a
number of accumulated matters for the industry
before the Internal Revenue Department, various
committees and departments.
On Thursday of last week Mr. Pound presented
arguments before the House Committee on Inter-
state and Foreign Commerce in support of the
Barkley Bill, known as the Misbranding Act, a bill
to prevent fraudulent and untrue advertising, mis-
brandirtg of merchandise, etc., and in line with the
work of the Better Business Bureau. There is a
strong probability of the passage of this bill, ac-
cording to Mr. Pound. There is also another bill
known as the Rogers Bill, to the same import. No
changes in the War Revenue Taxation are at pres-
ent in contemplation.
Henry F, Peltier, who conducts a repair shop in
association with Kramer's Music House, 28 West
Fifth avenue, Gary Ind., was in Chicago Monday
morning of this week. Kramer's Music House sells
playerpianos, pianos, organs and phonographs, and
Mr. Kramer is a technical expert in tuning and re-
pairing instruments of music. Before going into
business on his own accouni, he was for several
years with Vose & Sons Piano Company. Mr.
Peltier has been an occasionai contributor to Presto,
writing on technical subject-., but treating them so
broadly that any salesman could understand what
he was driving at. Mr. Peltier says that all strikes
are now over at the steel mills in Gary, and pros-
perity seems to have come •:> the city to stay. The
greatest need of Gary, todav, he says, is homes for
the workingmen, the city being short about 2,500
houses. One large corporation that is settling there
does not know what to do to get living quarters Manager Frank M. Case Says Increase in Total of
Year's Business Is Assured.
for its workmen and their families.
At
the
Wiley
B. Allen house in Portland, Ore.,
Creation of the foreign-trade department by the there is a shortage
of Mason & Hamlin pianos, but
United States Chamber of Commerce is the first Frank M. Case, manager,
sa\s that in spite of the
step toward a reorganization of the chamber's ma- shortage they are able to get
goods than they
chinery designed to divide the work of the chamber got last year and that they more
sell
all
they get, and
lip along the lines of the great divisions of industry. this assures an increase in the total year's
business.
Mr. Case has just returned from a two weeks
visit in California, where in company with Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Anrys, Mr. James Black and Miss Mae
PLAYER-
Shintaffer, all of the Wiley B. Allen Co., they visited
PIANO
Los Angeles, Santa Barbara and other places in
Southern California. On their return they motored
WEEK from Los Angeles to San Francisco on the coast
road.
EVERY DEAL-
A representative of the Ampico departments of
the
American Piano Co. is in Portland this week.
ER, NO MAT- W. E.
Ash is the representative, who after visiting
TER W H A T Denver, Seattle and Tacomi has arrived in Port-
land and from there will g> to San Francisco and
LINE HE MAY then back to New York. Mr. Ash is well pleased
the success the local dealers have had in selling
SELL, IS IN- with
the Ampico and rinds business in the other cities
TERESTED IN visited excellent.
F. A. Taylor, who has been with the Reed-French
THE
A P - Co. for some time has resumed his former position
P R O ACHING as salesman in the piano c.tpartment of Lipman,
Wolfe & Co.
The Pacific Accessory & Supply Co., Portland,
PLAYER-
Ore., C. D. Wood, manager, is doing such a big busi-
PIANO WEEK. ness that the company has been recapitalized and
is now about double what .'t was at starting. Mr.
Wood has just returned from an eastern trip where
TRIM
he established some good connections in accessories
YOUR
Band instruments and all kinds of music carried
by small goods houses will he added to its present
WINDOW stock in the near future.
PORTLAND, ORE., DEALERS SEE
IMPROVEMENT IN SHIPMENTS
HAVE IT PHO-
AMERICAN PIANO CO. DIVIDENDS.
TOGRAPHED.
The American Piano Company, New York, has
declared a stock dividend of 5 per cent and a cash
dividend of 1V£ per cent on the common stock and
the regular quarterly dividend of 1% per cent on the
preferred stock, all payable April 1 to stock of
record March 4. This is the same amount paid on
the common on January 1.
WIN
THE
FIFTY!
TRADE W I L L
BE B E T T E R
FOR A LONG
TIME
TO
C O M E , BE-
CAUSE
OF
THE PLAYER-
PIANO WEEK,
W H I C H THE
S T A N D ARD
P N E UMATIC
ACTION COM-
PANY
HAS
INAUGURAT-
ED.
FINISHING AT GULBRANSEN'S.
Ray Gronier, who has just completed a course at
the Danquard Player Action School, New York, is
now taking a post-graduate course at the Gulbran-
sen-Dickinson Company's factory, Chicago. When
he finishes this topping-out course he will again be
associated with his uncle, Lambert Gronier, piano
dealer of Lancaster, Wis.
SPECIAL SALE IN MISSOURI.
The Taylor Music Company, of Columbia, Mo.,
has just closed a special sale at Mexico, Mo., with
the Schiller, the Schaff Bros, and the Milton lines
of instruments. It was in charge of W. L. Dorgman,
with E. M. Finley and E. W. Parker, the Bruns-
wick, Mo., dealer, assisting. The sale was a great
success.
The Standard Oil Co. in Alton, 111., has four bids
in now for the 35 instruments for a new band being
organized at that place. This band will be com-
posed of the old band members, with an additional
number, enough to make 35 members. The com-
pany will also order new uniforms and have an ef-
ficient band instructor.
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/
10
PRESTO
WHERE DOUBTS ARE DISPELLED
Under This Head Presto Will Answer Any Question Pertaining to Pianos, or
Other Subjects of Direct Interest to the Trade and Musical Public
and its harps have attained to world-wide distinction.
We suggest that you write to Lyon & Healy on the
subject and we are sure they will send you catalogue,
and other matter of interest to you and your cus-
tomer.
About the Werner Industries Co.; there is no
LETTERS WAITING.
reason to question its reliability from a business
There are letters at the offices of this paper waiting point of view. The industry is a large one and suc-
for A. Harnoif (6) "G. N. P." (3), and "Foreman A." ceeded the Krell Piano Co., which was established
All of these advertisers have heretofore called for their a good many years ago. The instruments produced
mail. If they will notify Presto of present addresses
by the Cincinnati industry are of the popular char-
their letters will be forwarded.
acter.
* * *
STUDIO PUBLISHERS.
"WESSELL"
PIANO
AND "LARKIN."
Zumbrota, Minn., March 15, 1920.
Columbus, Ohio, March 26, 1920.
Editor Presto: Can you give me any information
Editor Presto: I wish to draw your attention to
in regard to the reliability of the following firms?
Thomas Merlin, Reaper Block, Chicago, music com- the Wessell piano which is listed in your Presto
poser; the Lenox Company, music publishers, 101 Buyer's Guide as being a piano of unknown origin.
West 42d street, New York; Knickerbocker Har- I wish to state that this instrument is made by the
Wessell Piano Co., of New York, N. Y. As I am a
mony Studios, 1547 Broadway, New York.
Any information you can supply will be greatly tuner and repair man, have tuned this piano and
upon the plate found this company's name. Ac-
appreciated. Yours respectfully,
cording to my judgment, this piano is of high quality.
D. R. WINSLOW.
Also I wish to draw your attention to the
Thomas Merlin has an office in the Reaper Block, Symphonic pianos, players and grands. These
this city, where he has been located for several pianos are not listed with you, and will say that
years. His business is arranging songs and other they are made by The Larkin Co., of Buffalo, N. Y.
popular music for "composers" and local publishers. The company also have branches at Chicago, Peoria
He is, we understand, associated with one or two of and Philadelphia.. They also make a talking ma-
the publishing concerns which are located in the chine called the Symphonola. I am in receipt of
vicinity of his own offices.
their catalogs and they informed me of these facts.
About the concerns in New York City we have
I am mentioning these facts to you that they may
no information. These publishing enterprises spring be listed in Presto Buyers' Guide which will make it
up so fast and usually die out so suddenly that it is more complete for the next publication. I also think
impossible to keep track of them.
that Presto Buyer's Guide is a great book for tuners
If you have been a reader of this paper you know and repair men, as well as dealers, and will recom-
our opinion of the so-called "song wanted" enter- mend it to anyone. I have been using it for the
prises The better way is, if you have written any past four years.
music, to submit your manuscript to a regularly
Yours very truly,
established publishing house. It depends largely
A. L. STEUHER.
upon the "contract" with the publisher as to whether
A good many years ago Chas. A. Wessell estab-
you are getting the best of it, or the contrary. If lished a piano factory in the Bronx, New York.
you care to submit the proposition of any of these After a few years the patterns, trade name and
office "publishers" to us we will be glad to pass upon good will were sold to Jacob Bros., a* large and
them.
thoroughly reliable industry. Probably Wessell
* * *
pianos are still being made by the latter industry, and
if so, they are perfectly safe instruments to buy.
THE "SCHROEDER" PIANO.
About The Larkin Co., Buffalo; it is our under-
Denver, Colo., March 15, 1920.
Editor Presto: Find enclosed check for $2 for standing that the large mail order and soap industry
year's subscription to Presto. Also, please send is not making its own pianos. There have been
latest edition of "Buyers' Guide." Let me know if vast numbers of instruments produced by special
the "Schroeder, New York," is a standard make of contract for The Larkin Co., but if there is such an
industry we would be glad to know it.
piano. What is a "false plate"?
Very Truly,
The Symphonola Talking Machine has, we under-
N. A. MURRAY.
stand, been discontinued because the name "Sympho-
"Schroeder, New York," we can only surmise, is nola" is the trademark property of the Price &
one of the extensive stencil family. It is probably Teeple Piano Co., Chicago. Of course, you cannot
a trademark instrument. The name has been used always depend upon catalogues of mail order houses
in connection with the piano trade for a great many in point of source of production. They all produce
years. The only record we have of it apears on very handsome publications, giving descriptions of
page 129 of Presto Buyers' Guide. For some time, various wares, and all of them—or nearly all—list
also, there was a Schroeder Bros, piano advertised pianos and other musical instruments whether they
actually manufacture them or not.
and sold by a retail house in Milwaukee.
* * *
It is very seldom nowadays that we hear any talk
about "false plates." The term was always a mis-
RUSSELL-LANE PIANOS.
r.omer, and it has reference to a small or metal plate
Carroll, la., March 24, 1920.
which extended from the line of tuning pins, in the
Editor Presto: I want to get a new action for a
upright piano, to the top of the instrument. It was Russell-Lane piano, and find that the Russell-Lane
customary also to insert these plates upon which Co. is not listed in your 1920 Buyers' Guide. Can
were cast the names, or trademarks, of stencil pianos. you tell me if they are out of business and who are
The term has little significance and the top plate is their successors?
seldom used for any purpose of misleading the retail
Yours truly,
HOLLEY MUSIC HOUSE.
buyers.
The Russell-Lane Piano Co. has been out of busi-
* * *
ness for about fifteen years, but Mr. Walter Lane,
ITALIAN HARP.
who was a member of that corporation, is president
Osawatomie, Kansas, March 26, 1920.
of the Bush & Lane Piano Co., Holland, Mich. The
Editor Presto: We have a cash buyer for a double old Russell-Lane Piano Co. factory was purchased
action Italian Harp, and so far have been unable to by the Price & Teeple Piano Co., Chicago.
find one; will you please advise as to where we may
We suggest that if you write to either of the two
find one for our customer?
industries just named they may advise you, although
Since talking with you last fall I have located it is probable that the scale, which was applied to
at this place and have been doing a splendid busi- the instrument concerning which you write, is not
ness, considering the time I have been here, and on now in use. In that event the only way to secure
account of not having the goods I would like to an action would be to have one especially adapted.
have had.
* * *
I would like a little advice in regard to the reli-
UKELELE ATTACHMENTS.
ability of the Werner Industries Co., of Cincinnati,
Comstock, Neb., March 21, 1920.
Ohio, from a purely business standpoint—that is,
Editor Presto: Would you kindly tell me where
are they reliable in their business transactions.
I can buy the ukelele attachment that can be put in
Yours truly,
a common piano? Also give me the address of
LANNING MUSIC CO.,
some good concern that teaches piano by mail.
By PAUL L. LANNING.
Respectfully,
About double action Italian harps; we suggest Thanking you, I am,
W. BROWN.
that while there are several industries producing
A few years ago there were quite a number of so-
good ones in this country, the great house of Lyon
& Healy has made a specialty of that instrument, called mandolin and other attachments for upright
Inquiries must bear the signature and address of
writer in order to receive attention. Answers thought
to be of general trade interest will be published. If an
answer is not of general interest it will be mailed pro-
vided stamp is inclosed.
April 3, 1920.
pianos. At the present time the Price & Teeple
Piano Co., Chicago, build a ukulele attachment for
some of the instruments of that industry, but we do
not know of any concern that is making a spe-
cialty of these attachments, and certainly none that
is producing anything suitable for adaptation to any
or all pianos.
• I #^|
Any manufacturer who would attempt to supply
you with a special attachment for any particular
piano would have either to have the instrument at
hand or have the specifications of the piano's scale.
About piano teaching by mail, we do not know
of any institution that we can recommend. There
was for a long time a Siegel School of Music here
in Chicago, which made a feature of mail order
music teaching, but we do not believe that any mail
order system of music teaching can be made suc-
cessful. The better way is *:o find a local teacher.
UP GOES THE PRICE FOR
MOVING THE FAMILY PIANO
Strike of Chicago Van Drivers Follows Flat Rejec-
tion of Union's Ultimatum.
Fifteen hundred Chicago moving van men went
on strike last week demanding $10 more a week.
The existing rate of wages at the time of the strike
ran from $28 to $34 a week. The walkout followed
the flat rejection of the union's ultimatum by the
Furniture, Piano Movers and Expressmen's Associa-
tion, representing the big express and transporta-
tion companies of the city.
John Riley, business ageni of the Van Drivers,
Chauffeurs, Piano and Furniture Movers' Union No.
711, said the men would stay cut until their demands
were granted.
Albert H. Hollander, president of the employers'
association, insisted the warehouse men will not
give in. "We would have to charge $7 an hour if
we met their demands," he stated. "It is our judg-
ment that there will not be a stick of furniture
moved until after May 15."
But by a vote of 3 to 1, 1,300 out of the 1,500 strik-
ing van and furniture movers ended their strike
Wednesday of this week.
The men will receive an increase of $6 a week
and be paid time and a half after 7 o'clock at night.
They will be paid double time Sundays. "There will
be a slight raise in moving prices, probably not
more than 50 cents an hour over the present scale
of $3.50 an hour," said Mr. Hollander, president of
the Furniture Movers' Association.
BOYS' BAND GOOD ANGEL
IS CABLE PIANO CO. MANAGER
William M. Brownlee Gives $500 at Atlanta, and
Boys to Ride in Pullmans.
The Rotary Club's boys' band, of Atlanta, Ga.,
known as ''Bill Brownlee's Boys Brass Band", so
named for its founder and organizer, will have
brand new instruments soon.
The band committee told how the band was ex-
pected to be more than a mere musical organiza-
tion, for the boy members are to be sent to school,
given instruction in good citizenship, and become
the wards of Rotary. Band instruments have been
ordered, the work is under way, and the sub-
scribers would have to come across for $15 each
to pay the bills.
The band idea was born at the luncheon given
by the Rotary Club in Atlanta several months ago,
when William M. Brownlee, president of the Cable
Piano Company, of Atlanta, offered $500 as a nucleus
for the fund.
Plans for the trip to the international convention
at Atlantic City in June were discussed and it was
announced that a special train of six Pullmans and
an observation car had been contracted for.
FOLLOW THE CROWD!
That is pays to follow the crowd is the belief
laid down for shoppers by the St. Joseph, Mo.,
branch of the J. W. Jenkins Sons' Music Co. this
week. This is said: "When people patronize a
certain concern to a marked degree there is always
a reason. For over forty years the J. W. Jenkins
Sons' Music Company has sold pianos and musical
instruments to the people of the Southwest, and
the people now go to Jenkins". The Jenkins Sons'
Music Company has only one price on an article.
When you buy a piano from Jenkins' you can know
that no one is being paid a commission on the sale.
The J. W. Jenkins Sons' Music Company buys in
quantity for thirteen stores and pays instant cash
for the goods. Consequently they can sell better
goods for less money."
H. M. Hulme, Packard Piano Company traveler
was in Chicago from Omaha, Neb., this week.
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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