Presto

Issue: 1920 1794

FkESTO
14
PIANO TRAVELERS
SEEN HERE AND THERE
Energetic Missionaries in the Cause of Sales
Are Encountered on the Joyous
Job in Many Places.
Hugh A. Stewart, of the Gulbransen-Dickinson
Company, Chicago, is on a trip for that house in
Kansas at the present time.
Fred Gennett, secretary, and Harry Gennett, vice-
president of the Starr Piano Company, Richmond,
Ind., were in Chicago on a business trip last week.
H. H. Bradley, Chicago and western manager for
the Chase-Hackley Piano Company, returned on
Thursday of last week from a two months' trip in
the states of the Pacific Coast. He was in the land
of apples, grapes, prunes, oranges, cattle, sheep, min-
ing and lumber. But, in spite of the temperance
laws, the best paying product this year on the Pa-
cific Coast was the grape crop. When the temper-
ance law went into effect some foolish grape raisers
plowed up their grape plantations; the wiser ones
did not. and sold their grapes for $240 a ton. One
man sold his crop for $47,000. Mr. Bradley had a
good business during his trip.
I. S. Purcell, sales manager for the H. C. Bay
Company, Chicago, has returned from a trip to the
East. He made calls at New York, Pittsburgh and
Cleveland.
Ashley B. Cone, vice-president of Hardman, Peck
& Company, New York, was at Detroit and Chi-
cago last week on a western trip.
E. M. Prinz, Wisconsin traveler for the M. Schulz
Company, was at the company's headquarters in
Chicago on Saturday. He reports conditions in the
piano and playerpiano trade very good in his ter-
ritory,
A. B. Gustafson, superintendent of the player ac-
tion department of the M. Schulz Company, Chi-
cago, went to Milwaukee last week for a week-end
trip.
Harold S. Morse, traveler for F. G. Smith, Inc.,
New York, now has a residence in Roslindale,
Mass., having recently sold his home in Leominster.
H. H. McDonald, traveling representative for the
Hallet & Davis Piano Co., Boston, reports his re-
cent trip through Pennsylvania as very satisfactory.
Fred R. Gorham, general traveler for the De
Rivas & Harris Mfg. Co., New York, is now call-
ing on the trade in New York state. He has just
completed a successful round of calls on trade in
New England.
Gust Ad. Anderson, who is now traveling for the
H. C. Bay Company, Chicago, is now at New York.
Fred Grebe, traveling representative for Kranich
& Bach, New York, was a visitor to Cincinnati re-
cently.
Excellent reports have been received from W. S.
Lanz, traveler for the Brinkerhoff Piano Co., Chi-
cago, who is now in the East.
E. M. Love, secretary of the Story & Clark Piano
Co., Chicago, is now visiting dealers on the Pacific
Coast.
Roger Brown, representative in New England
teiritory for the Estey Piano Co., New York, was
a visitor to headquarters last week.
Charles Eyles, traveler for the Behning Co., New
York, called on St. Louis, Mo., dealers recently.
D. E. Fabyan and D. L. Sterling, travelers for the
Poole Piano Co., Boston, will make occasional short
trips in nearby territory until after the holidays,
when they will have more extended journeys.
Roy A. Rose, who has renewed his connection
with the Q R S Music Co., Chicago, was congratu-
lated by many old friends encountered this week.
Among recent visitors to dealers in Buffalo, N. Y.,
was Curtis S. Miller, vice-president of the Schaff
Bros. Piano Co., Huntington, Ind.
Henry P. Veatch, Chicago manager of the Pack-
ard Piano Company, was at Decatur, 111., on a busi-
ness trip on Thursday of this week.
C. E. Jackson, wholesale manager of The Cable
Company, has just returned to Chicago from an
interesting trip to the East.
Earl Achenbach, advertising manager of the
Packard Company, Fort Wayne, Ind., was "in Chi-
cago on Thursday morning.
CLAUSE ON CANCELLATIONS.
While New York manufacturers and wholesalers
in various lines have been, for several months, seek-
ing for effective means to prevent cancellations of
orders by their customers, a simple remedy for the
evil has been in reach all the time. It is the incor-
poration in all contracts or orders of a clause pro-
viding for arbitration of all disputes arising from
them. Ever since the Walton act was passed in New
York State last April the manufacturer or jobber
has had the protection provided for by a clause of
this kind, for the law in question makes it binding
upon the losing party to the transaction to accept
finally the rulings of the arbitrators.
December 11, 1920.
MAKER OF THE SIMPLEX
SEES GOOD YEAR AHEAD
Theodore P. Brown, President of the Famous
Player Action Industry at Worcester, Mass.,
Believes that Trade Promises Well.
Theodore P. Brown, of the Simplex Player Ac-
tion Company, Worcester, Mass., was in Chicago
last week on a business trip. The president and
treasurer of the great player action industry is not
very susceptible to the blandishments of the inter-
viewer, but what he did say to those who met him
was that there is every reason to look for a sub-
stantial year just ahead.
As with most progressive manufacturers, Mr.
Brown is a believer in the theory that the world
gives to any man about what he makes a strong
bid for. He thinks that the piano business is about
what the manufacturers, and especially the dealers,
make it. In other words, he believes that the re-
tailers may make business by "going out after it"
anywhere.
The Simplex Factory, at Worcester, Mass., is one
of the real institutions of the East. It has beer,
created largely by the energies and resourcefulness
of Mr. Brown. It is now vastly larger and more
active than ever before in its history. Mr. Brown,
having been a piano manufacturer, and inventor of
of one of the important features of the instrument,
had intimate understanding of the requirements of
the trade before he established the "Simplex", and
he has made no retrogressive motions.
He said, in Chicago, that the demand for "Sim-
plex" actions had been in excess of the possibili-
ties of production. Of course that condition is now
somewhat modified, because of the slowing down
of all industries, which has also affected the piano
trade to a marked degree. But if all manufacturer?
possessed the same sense of optimism and determi-
nation as Mr. Brown, there Avould be no dark
shadows "cast before" the year of 1921.
Q R S IN BROOKLYN.
Schiff's Music Shop, Brooklyn, N. Y., is doing
some notable featuring for the Q R S rolls. The
store is at 1103 Broadway and admirably located
in the center of the Eastern District. It is con-
sidered a music roll headquarters for a wide area.
George Levi is manager of the store.
BETTER THAN EVER
THE NEW EDITION
of
-» a
-
•';
PRESTO BUYERS' GUIDE
NOW IN PREPARATION
Orders for quantities of 100 or more copies must be placed at once or
we cannot guarantee deliveries.
Single Copy 50 Cents, Post Paid
No Dealer or Salesman Can Afford to Be Without It
PRESTO PUBLISHING CO., 407 So. Dearborn St., Chicago
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).
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December 11, 1920.
FINE TRAITS OF WM.
DALLIBA DUTTON
Late New York Piano Manufacturer, and
Treasurer of Hardman, Peck & Co., Left
Fine Record for Others and Younger
Men to Follow.
To understand the promptings of the courtesy
which marked William DalHba Dutton, whose death
was announced last week one should read about the
line of ancestor? to whom he was indebted for
many of his admirable characteristics. It is a coin-
cidence that in this issue of Presto a history of the
old Utica. N. Y., house of Buckingham & Moak also
contains interesting facts about Mr. Dutton's for-
bears.
George Dutton, his grandfather, who opened the
first music store in Utica in 1821, was noted for his
graciousness. This early Utica piano man was also
distinguished by the same cultural tastes which
made the personality of the late treasurer of Hard-
man, Peck & Co., so attractive. Before he founded
the old Utica piano house, George Dutton (accord-
ine: to Dr. Bagg's "Pioneers of Utica") was a pro-
fessor of English in Philadelphia schools.
A Lover of Art.
Mr. Dutton's interest in literature and art and
the experiences of his wide travels made him a
most delightful companion. He brought to the
problems of business a point of view made more
wise by his experiences.
While living in Philadel-
phia before joining 1 Hardman, Peck & Co., he
founded the Philadelphia Art Club. He was a rec-
ognized authority on art matters. He was ap-
pointed by the state of Pennsylvania as advisory
chairman of the state committee on fine arts for
the Columbian Exposition in Chicago.
Mr. Dutton's death removed another of the former
presidents of the National Piano Manufacturers' As-
sociation. He held the office for the term 1902-3.
He was a member of the Society of Colonial Wars,
Sons of the Revolution, Society of Mayflower De-
scendants and the Huguenot Society of America.
A Comprehensive Sketch.
Perhaps no member of the piano industry outside
the house of Hardman, Peck & Co., had a closer
acquaintance with Mr. Dutton than Alfred Dolge,
from whose "Pianos and Their Makers" the follow-
ing sketch is taken.
William Dalliba Dutton, a scion of one of our
oldest families, who can trace its genealogy back to
William Brewster, chaplain of the Mayflower, joined
Hardman, Peck & Company, in 1884. Born at Utica,
N. Y., on 1847, he was educated at the Utica Acade-
my, after which he spent some time traveling in
Europe. Upon his return he joined his father in the
piano business in Philadelphia. The original busi-
ness had been established by his grandfather, George
Dutton, in 1821, at Utica, N. Y. W. D. Dutton's
father removed the business, in 1865, from Utica to
Philadelphia. The firm was changed in 1868 to Dut-
ton and Son, when William Dalliba became a
partner.
The new firm featured the Hardman piano with
such success that Leopold Peck found it to his in-
terest to induce W. D. Dutton to leave Philadelphia
and take charge of the retail department of Hardman,
Peck & Co., in New York, in which he was engaged
for four years. Mr. Dutton's fine presence and en-
gaging manners, backed up by a well-founded en-
thusiasm for the Hardman piano, and a thorough
knowledge of the piano business, wholesale as well
as retail, made themselves strongly felt in the general
development of the business. Always ready to do his
full share towards the welfare of the piano industry,
Mr. Dutton was honored by successive election to
every office of the National Association of Piano
Manufacturers, and in 1901 he was elected president
of that Association.
MUSIC WEEK IN LITTLE ROCK
PROVED A GREAT SUCCESS
By Initiative of Col. Hollenberg, Arkansas City
Was Stirred to Enthusiasm.
Clark Orchestra Rolls
Are Easy to Sell—
Not only because they contain
good music, but because they
are part of the stock in trade of
amusement house proprietors.
What dealers with faith in the universality of
music can accomplish, at a comparatively small
money outlay, for the industry generally, is illus-
trated by the five weeks' campaign of community
singing conducted in Little Rock by Robert Law-
rence, of the National Bureau for the Advancement
of Music under the auspices of the Little Rock
Music Commission, of which Colonel F. B. T. Hol-
lenberg, is president. The campaign closed last
Saturday, December 4.
Among the benefits resulting from the campaign
was the appointment by the mayor of a Music Com-
mission of nine members with Colonel Hollenberg
as president. While the commission was appointed
for the immediate purpose of conducting this cam-
paign, it is a permanent organization and it will
continue to function in all matters pertaining to the
spread of the rriusic spirit in Little Rock.
JOE HACKER IS DEAD.
Their sale is based
upon a business appeal
Write for supplements
of latest music and for
our dealers* sales outline
DE KALB, ILLINOIS
15
R £ S 1 O
Joe Hacker, who had been millwright foreman
for the M. Schulz Company, Chicago, for the last
48 years, died suddenly last Friday night, and his
funeral was held on Monday of this week. Mr.
Hacker was a contented workman, a man who did
his own work right and insisted that those in his
department also should do their best at whatever
task he set them.
STARR PIANO MAKER DIES.
John A. Huber, 67 years old, died last week at
his home in Richmond, Ind., after a brief illness.
He was born in Boston, Mass., but had been a resi-
dent of Richmond for about 44 years. Mr. Huber
was a piano maker and had been engaged by the
Starr Piano Company since its organization. He
is survived by his widow, two sons and six daugh-
ters.
For a
Bigger and Better
Business
There is nothing to compare
with the complete line of
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
SOUTHERN BRANCH: 730 Candler Bldg.. ATLANTA. GA.
L/Xe
As
ARTISTIC
IN EVERT
DETAIL
HADDOKFF PIANO CO.
ROCKFORD,ILL.
The Grand Is a Revelation
No Skilled Pianist Will ChalUnf.
The Supremacy of
8BRADBURY
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
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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