Presto

Issue: 1920 1768

FkESTO
14
NEW SMITH & NIXON GRAND
WINNING A LARGE TRADE
B. C. Waters of the Cincinnati Piano Industry, Ex-
presses Enthusiasm in Beautiful Instrument.
B. C. Waters, secretary and treasurer of the
Morrison-Waters Piano Co., of Cincinnati, was in
Chicago two days this week and expressed great
enthusiasm in the new Smith & Nixon small grand,
recently produced by his house. The new instru-
ment is of remarkable beauty of design. It had not
been ready for delivery a week before some of the
most prominent dealers in the country had ordered
samples and most of them have called for quan-
tities as fast as they can be delivered.
"Our business has been so good that the only
trouble is to get the new grand ready nearly as
fast as the trade wants it. The new small grand
has created a real interest among a lot of high-
grade houses, and the orders will keep us busy for
a long time to come."
Mr. Waters says that supplies are not nearly as
hard to get as formerly, and he has a large num-
ber of instruments going through the factory. The
Morrison-Waters Piano Co. is well equipped, the
factory is strong in its working forces and the fu-
ture could scarcely look brighter for the Cincinnati
industry.
MRS. WEGMAN WINS CASE
AGAINST AUBURN BANKERS
Suit to Recover for Wrecking the Old Piano Indus-
try Promises to Restore Fortune.
June 12, 1920.
will be rendered by which the Wegman family will
come into the fortune lost, as has been contended,
by collusion and overreaching. Mr. Wegman ex-
pects that the court records in the case will soon
be completed.
NEW REPUBLIC STAR
IN NEW YORK INDUSTRY
For a
er and Better
Business
Adrian Rollini Joins Recording Staff of Re-
public Player Roll Corporation and His
First Numbers Will Soon Be Ready.
There is nothing to compare
with the complete line of
Announcement is made this week that Adrian
Rollini has become a member of the recording start
of the Republic Player Roll Corporation. He is at
present working on several numbers of the popular
variety which will be presented to player roll buyers
in the July bulletin of this corporation.
Mr. Rollini is one of the youngest musicians en-
gaged in player roll recording. He is quite young
but has displayed a variety of talent which has given
him immediate success and predicts an exceptional
future. He has a remarkable understanding of music
and harmony, having devoted his entire life to the
study of these subjects. His concert work began
when he was five years of age and has continued un-
broken until his advent with the Republic Player
Corporation.
In addition to his activities as a concert star, Mr.
Rollini conducted an orchestra with headquarters at
Larchmont. He is recognized in that vicinity as a
musical genius, both as an artist and as a director ol
his organization of musicians.
M. SCHULZ CO.
The Players are RIGHT in
everything that means
money to the dealers and
satisfaction to the public.
You will never do anything better
than when you get in touch with
M. SCHULZ CO.
711 Milwaukee Avenue
CHICAGO
1OUTHERN BRANCH: 730 Candler Bldg., ATLANTA, CA.
CARLOS J . MELENDEZ, OF
MEXICO CITY VISITS CHICAGO
An item in last week's Presto told of the change
in the affairs of Henry Wegman who for several
years has been with a prominent piano industry in
Chicago. Mr. Wegman has associated himself with
the White Sewing Machine Co., in Cleveland. But
He Says Revolutions Are Over in the Southern
he does not expect to sell sewing machines, but
Republic and Business Grows.
will eventually assume special responsibilities in the
phonograph department of the great
industry
Carlos J. Melendez, who sells Price & Teeple
named.
Symphonolas in Mexico City, Mexico, was in Chi-
It will interest the trade everywhere to know that
cago on Thursday of this week. A Presto repre-
there is a good possibility of the old Wegman piano
sentative met him Thursday morning in the office
returning to the market. Particulars of the law-
of W. B. Price, president of the Price & Teeple
suit which has been dragging along in the courts
Piano Company. He said he was proud to represent
of Central New York have appeared in Presto.
the Symphonola instruments, particularly the elec-
The latest decision, in Rochester, was favorable
tric player-pianos of that line.
to Mrs. Wegman and the other heirs of the founder
Mr. Melendez's card reads: "Carlos J. Melendez,
of the old industry at Auburn, N. Y. The sum
representante
de
manufactueros
Americanos.
involved runs well up toward a million dpllars, and,
Apartado 248. Residencia: Edificio Condesa D.7.
unless something unforeseen happens, the judgment
Tel. Ericsson: Condesa 29. Mexico. D. F."
"Peace now reigns in Mexico," said Mr. Melen-
dez, in answer to the Presto man's inquiry about
conditions there. "The new government seems to
be able to unify all discontented elements.
"As you know, we are now living under a pro-
visional government, which is to run until the end
of Carranza's term in December, 1920. The pro-
visional president, De La Huerta, is governing wise-
ly. An election will be held to choose a president
to serve us under a permanent form of government.
"Business is going on right along. We are sell-
ing lots of instruments. The people seem to have
money, and they buy freely. There is much pros-
Dealers* Attention Solicited.
perity in Mexico. Established businesses are run-
ning right along smoothly, despite the headlines
in some of the American newspapers that things are
chaotic with us. The outlook grows brighter
215 West 6Zd Place, CHICAGO, ILL.
every day, too."
•1,:
HIGH GRADE
Folding Organs
School Organs
Ax
ARTISTIC
IN EVERT
DETAIL
Practice Keyboards
A. L. WHITE MFG. CO.
iiMiOiil:-
PERFECT PUNCHINQS
AT
C E GOEPEUCO
137 E A S T I3i£ ST.
N E.W YORK
HADDOKFF PIANO CO.
ROCKFOKD,ILL.
WILLIAMS
The Grand Is a Revelation
PIANOS
No Skilled Pianist Will Challenge
Tli* Supremacy of
The policy of the Williams House is and always
has been to depend upon excellence of product
bestead of alluring price. Such a policy does not
attract bargain hunters. It does, however, win the
hearty approval and support of a very desirable
and substantial patronage.
WH
I IAMS M
« ker » °* P Williams Piano*.
WILLIAMS
Epworth
Piano, and Organ.
PATENTS
TRADE
MARKS
DESIGN PATENTS, COPYRIGHTS, ETC.
CORRESPONDENCE J O H N A
SOLICITED
SAUL
HBRADBURY
It Has Been the Lead-
ing American Piano
for Sixty-five Years.
It Is More Artistic Today
Than Ever
Make the BRADBURY Your Leader
Manufactured Only By
F. G. SMITH, Inc.
450 Fifth Ave., NEW YORK CITY
FENDALL BLDG., WASHINGTON, D. C.
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/
PRESTO
June 12. 1920.
THE TEST FOR
PIANO SALESMEN
Will I. Wood, Pacific Coast Piano Traveler,
Discourses on the Prevailing or
Played-Out Methods of Catch-
ing Good Ones.
"The salesman thou hast in thine adoption tried,
bind him to the firm with a good salary or gener-
ous commissions or both," said Will I. Wood, para-
phrasing Shakespeare. It was enunciated in a pleas-
ant conversation recently in the Seattle, Wash., head-
quarters of Mr. Wood, who is Pacific Coast repre-
sentative of the Price & Teeple Piano Co., Chicago.
Among-those present were a dealer from an Oregon
town, a sales manager of a music house in a lively
Washington city and a trade paper man with an ear
for shop talk. The scarcity of real salesmen, the
kind that can open the deal, nurse 'em and close 'em,
was a grave topic discussed by three participants
with the scribe a good listener.
"The piano dealer is fortunate when he has an
efficient staff of salesmen and it is a wise dealer
who knows when he has the good ones and appre-
ciates them accordingly," continued Mr. Wood.
"There are dealers who never seem to be able to find
or keep an efficient salesman and there are dealers
who are never without them. It is unfortunately
true that some dealers will kill initiative in a man. It
is equally true that other dealers will develop a
promising salesman to the highest degree.
"Sometimes a dealer misses a find by mistaken
methods of testing the applicant. It is a mistake to
shoo an applicant out of the store because he seems
to lack the expected requirements in the once-over.
What is technically known as 'front,' a good appear-
ance, is an important requirement in a salesman. It
isn't so much how a man is tailored as how he is
valeted, especially in those days of eighty-five-dollar
hand-me-downs.
"I knew a lady sales manager once who in her
early days of manageressing applied what you might
call the comeliness test to applicants for a salesman's
job. That way, essential with the movie director
seeking film star material, was a mistake in selecting
piano salesmen. She got together a flock of pretty
boys, perfect thirty-sixes, but all but one were beau-
tiful dubs. She had fired all the pretty ones but the
fair to middling one on a certain distressing day when
an old-timer from Kansas City stomped into the
store looking for a job. He was so homely that he
was interesting, but she forgot her ideals, closed her
eyes and employed. He sold more pianos the first
week than the pulchritudinous bunch did in a month.
Of course he stuck. He's manager in that house
now and his name is in the corporate title.
The Wise One.
"I know a dealer who always M has an efficient staff
cf salesmen. When one drops out to better himself
this dealer soon replaces him with another good one.
There arc no details in his tests. When the applicant
presents himself the dealer is governed by his first
impression of the man. It is what you call instinct
in women. I don't believe that dealer ever made a
mistake in a man.
"One of the most unfortunate dealers in the mat-
ter of help was a man I had occasion to know in my
THE BRAMBACH PIANO CO'S FACTORY
15
early days in the piano business. He never could
succeed in tying up to a good salesman. He had
his theories about what constituted a good salesman,
which were right in the main, but ne had a crazy
method of guessing his man. He believed if a man
had general intelligence he would prove a good man
for his job, even if he didn't know very much about
the intricacies of the piano game.
'So when a man presented himself for a job this
dealer applied his infallible intelligence test. He
drew the applicant into a discussion on some sub-
ject, usually one on which the dealer felt genuinely
warm. If the man agreed with him he considered
him sensible and hired him right away. There was
a sad succession of salesman failures in that store."
PLAYERPIANO BLESSINGS
ARE FOR EVERYBODY
Drost Brothers, Medford, Wis., Sing the Praises of
These Instruments.
Drost Brothers Music House, of Medford, Wis.,
sells the. instruments of the Cable-Nelson Piano
Company, the Apollo Piano Company and others.
Of the playerpiano the Medford house says in its
latest advertisement:
Who lives with heart so void of sentiment that
does not love music? Who lives whose soul has not
been stirred by the sweet melodies of selections that
raise the mind to higher thoughts and purer, better
efforts?
And how many of us men and women with souls
have regretted that our finger tips have not had the
training to make us capable of bringing out the in-
spiring music of the masters as played by them?
What a blessing it is then that the master minds
of men has created a means for our untrained fingers
to reproduce these wonderful melodies accurately on
the playerpiano.
Our rich heritage from the masters who spoke in
music is no longer hidden in printed notes. You
may enjoy them in your home always when you
have a playerpiano.
NEW EXPORT MANAGER FOR
THE KOHLER INDUSTRIES
Joseph B. Schwarcz Appointed Manager of the Ex-
port Division of Great New York Industry.
Announcement has been made that Joseph B.
Schwarcz has recently joined the Kohler Industries
force and has assumed his duties as manager of
their export sales department.
Mr. Schwarcz is an experienced piano man who
has made a special study of the export field. Dur-
ing the last four years he has developed the export
business of Ricca & Company, New York. Previous
to that he was, for eight years, with the Aeolian
Company, spending part of his time in their foreign
department.
Mr. Schwarcz, therefore, brings to the Kohler In-
dustries a comprehensive knowledge of general for-
eign trade conditions. He is familiar not only with
the markets of Europe, but also that fast developing
continent, South America. Mr. Schwarcz has a
keen business faculty and is decidedly optimistic re-
garding future trade relations between domestic
manufacturers and foreign markets.
ALEDO, ILL., HAS A NEW,
AMBITIOUS MUSIC HOUSE
The Brambach Piano Co., New York, whose im-
mense factory on West 49th street is devoted exclu-
sively to the production of grand pianos, has found
it necessary to acquire additional floor space for
increased production.
The factory, previous to this latest addition, was
the largest exclusive producer of grand instruments
in the country, and the direct result of a remarkable
development in the demand for the popular Bram-
bach baby grand. Aside from increasing the Bram-
bach manufacturing space to over 120,000 square
feet, the new property offers the company consid-
erable additional yard space for the storage and sea-
soning of lumber.
The new building immediately adjoins the main
factory and is conveniently connected by bridges at
the second and third floors. The acquisition will do
much toward increasing Brambach production so
that it may supply the demands made by the in-
creasing popularity of this instrument.
Will Shaw, Having Deserted Journalism, Returns
to the Trade He Likes Best.
Aledo is one of the live cities in Central Illinois.
It is west of Chicago just about far enough to not
be bothered by the big city competition, and the
people there like music. And Aledo has a new
music house which will succeed. It is the Shaw
Music Company, of which Will Shaw is the pro-
prietor.
Mr. Shaw first entered the talking machine busi-
ness in Aledo in 1904, in a small way, later adding
pianos, sheet music and small instruments to the
line. He conducted the business, with a steady
growth, until July 1, 1915, when he purchased an
interest in one of the newspapers in his city and
became editor and manager of it. This position he
held until October, 1919, when he sold his interest
in the
paper.
W r ith his wife, Mr. Shaw spent the winter in San
Diego, California, and he has now re-entered the ^
music business in Aledo under the firm name of
Shaw Music Co. He will again represent the Stein-
way, Lyon & Healy and Washburn pianos—the
same line he sold before. The Aeolian-Vocalion
is the phonograph he will sell and he will also han-
dle sheet music and small instruments.
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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