Presto

Issue: 1922 1901

December 30, 1922.
PRESTO
GREAT DEVELOPMENTS BY
WESSELL, NICKEL & GROSS
Wisdom of Progressive Piano Action Manufacturers Seen in Series of
Acquisitions in Famous Hardwood Lumber Section of Vermont
The entire piano indu-
stry and trade are inter-
ested in the extensive de-
velopment and expansion
in the great plant of Wes-
sell, Nickel & Gross, the
prominent New York pi-
ano action makers, at Par-
ton, Orleans County, Ver-
mont. The location is
one of the most desirable
for the purposes of the
company. In December,
1919, after personal exam-
ination and inspection by
the directors of many
sites offered, W e s s e 1 1,
Nickel & Gross decided to
locate at Barton, which is
situated some 16 miles
from the Canadian bor-
der, in the northeastern
section of Vermont, which
is the hard maple region
of the state. Barton is on
the main line of the Bos-
EVIDENCES OF WESSELL, NICKEL & GROSS ACTIVITY AT BARTON.
ton & Maine Railroad; it lies about 32 miles north of
St. Johnsbury and about 16 miles south of Newport. or into by-products or to be shipped in the rough
lumber, whatever the case may be.
With the acquisition of the Barton site, Wessell,
Great Lumber Interests.
Nickel & Gross formulated plans to manufacture the
Thus Wessell, Nickel & Gross has branched out
mouldings for piano actions there and ship the fin-
ished mouldings to New York instead of the rough into a lumber proposition and has not only safe-
lumber. The economies thus possible effected not guarded the supply of rock maple for several genera-
only a great saving on prevailing high freight r.ites, tions, but has a very extensive amount of lumber to
but eliminated high-priced lumber storage yards in market not used in its own manufacturing opera-
tions. The company cuts up eleven different varie-
New York, as well as distinct saving in the cost of
power and fuel, etc., are clearly apparent. The New ties of logs: Birch, beech, maple, white ash, brown
York yards are now in the market for sale. With ash, basswood, spruce, fir, hemlock, white cedar and
the Barton site, Wessell, Nickel & Gross acquired a butternut. The company manufactures the cedar
into shingles, spruce into sounding board stock, r.lap-
large two-story frame building in which is located
a board sawmill and box shook department operated boards, spruce dimension stock, matched siding and
box shooks; hardwoods into dowels and dimension
by a splendid water power.
stock, and it sells its high-grade lumber on grade.
The Development Series.
Evidences of Wisdom.
Shortly after the purchase of the Barton site in
January, 1920, Wessell, Nickel & Gross acquired a
The
developments
in Vermont are plain evidences
second saw mill located at West Glover, about A l / 2
of the foresightedness of F. A. and A. L. Wessell,
miles in a northwesterly direction from Barton, with and the business which they so ably direct is now
the water rights to Parker Pond, which in reality showing the results of the//-great advantages of
is a good-sized lake, together with extensive standing selection and development in ;a region where the
timber rights.
company has control of the lumber from the stump
In the summer of 1921 they purchased their third to the finished product, where excellent power and
saw mill, located at Glover, Vt., near the Greensboro labor conditions prevail in a model, thriving town
line, situated some nine miles in a southwesterly direc- where the help can reap the benefit of excellent edu-
tion from Barton, with the water rights to Stone cational facilities for their children and enjoy good
Pond and Daniels Pond, both good-sized lakes, form- town diversions.
,
"'"•'.'
ing natural basins or reservoirs for the surrounding
Most Desirable Town.
mountains. The latter pond lies some thirty feet
Barton is an incorporated township of some 2,500
higher than Stone Pond, into which it drains, and
inhabitants, owning its; own hydro-electric plant,
the two combined make a splendid water power
which was described by an eminent hydro-electric supplying light and power, not only for Barton itself,
engineer as constituting one of the prettiest small but to nine other surrounding towns and villages.
power sites in the entire state of Vermont. In this It has a good water system, with fire protection with
region, which lies in a densely wooded section, Wes- a natural pressure of 90 pounds to the square inch.
sell, Nickel & Gross own outright close to 5,000 acres The progressive town has three churches, a Masonic
of practically virgin timber, both hard and softwood. lodge, a legionary, a big golf course, fine bathing
Late this fall a fourth mill (a steam mill) was beach on Crystal Lake right within the town limits,
purchased at Albany, Vt., located in the Black River and all manner of winter sports are indulged in.
The piano action moulding departments are now
Valley, some 14 miles west of Barton, in one of the
functioning at Barton and will be added to from
finest timber regions of northern Vermont.
month to month until the entire, mill departments
The Latest Acquisition.
have been transferred from New York.
It no doubt will prove a distinct revelation to
many of the friends of the old established action
GOOD WESTERN REPORT.
house of Wessell, Nickel & Gross to hear for the
An'encouraging
report on the improvement in busi-
first time of these developments, as well as the activi-
ness in the Rocky Mountain region was male recently
ties in a new two-story brick building 40x90 in
by Alvin A. Beesley, president of the Beesley Music
Barton, started in the fall of 1920 and completed in
Co., Salt Lake City, Utah. Utah and Idaho were
the spring of 1921. In this new building are housed
the saw mill and moulding mill departments, where closely examined by the well known piano man who
is made the piano action mouldings for the famous is usually conservative in his estimates. Business is
Wessell, Nickel & Gross grand and upright actions. increasing and collections are becoming easier with
Directly connected with this new brick building the passing of every week, he said, arid his words are
(whose walls are sufficiently strong to carry two considered significant when it is remembered that his
additional stories when the need for additional floor investigations were made in a region of farmer
space arises) are two Grand Rapid Vapor Dry Kilns customrs.
of the compartment type, with dry storage shed and
loading platform.
PHONOGRAPH FAILURE.
The shipping point for all these mills is at Barton.
Garvin & Gless, phonographs, at 52 Fordham Road,
The logs are drawn to the respective mills located in New York, filed a petition in bankruptcy, listing lia-
the region where the timber is cut, sawn into lumber bilities of $3,412 and assets of $1,332. The members
and air dried, transported to Barton to the main of the firm are Charles J. Garvin and Richafd H.
plant, to be manufactured into piano action mouldings Gless.
THE PUBLIC NEEDS MORE
PLAYERPIANO KNOWLEDGE
That Is the Opinion of a Veteran Piano Mer-
chant Who Intends to Inaugurate a Cam-
paign of Instructive Advertising.
As a result of an educational campaign setting forth
the many desirable features of a playerpiano as a
Christmas present, the retail store of the Straubc
Piano Company, Hammond, Ind., did the largest
player business this year it has ever done during a
holiday season. C. W. Smith, manager of the store,
and a veteran music merchant, is of the opinion that
the public at large have not yet been sufficiently in-
formed of- the merits of the playerpiano, and that
greater educational publicity is necessary.
"Those of us in the industry," Mr. Smith said to
Presto, "are so thoroughly in sympathy with the
p'.ayerpiano- that we naturally assume the public has
a great deal of knowledge which it hasn't got. Day
after day I come in contact with people who have no
idea of the practicability of the playerpiano. Some-
time or other they have heard that a playerpiano is
merely mechanical—that it is not possible to get ex-
pression with it. I think we can understand this at-
titude, too; it is a holdover from several years ago
when the playerpiano didn't possess the many de-
pendable features of today. And, naturally, when
you come in contact with a customer with this idea,
you have to do a great deal of educational "work,
either in a sales talk or through the medium of pub-
licity.
"Beginning with the new year, we are going to say
something in all our newspaper publicity about
playerpianos; day after day we are going to state
player facts, with the idea of correcting that false
impression which I just mentioned. I have had
customers who actually gasped in astonishment when
T demonstrated our players to them; they didn't know
that the art of player piano construction had pro-
gressed so far. And I have sold players after a dem-
onstration in cases where I had been told in the
beginning that my customer wouldn't have a player
in the house on a bet.
"I believe that this lack of understanding as to
the playerpiano should have the immediate attention
of piano manufacturers and merchants. I am sure
that we have overestimated the public's knowledge
of the playerpiano. Things which have become com-
monplace with us come as revelations to many cus-
tomers. We think of the playerpiano as a compara-
tively old instrument, yet it is surprising how many
people know practically nothing about it; a good per-
centage have never even heard a player. The results
of our recent campaign, short as it was, convinced
us that we have discovered something which is going
to be worth while in a business way."
ANDREWS MUSIC HOUSE
BANGOR, ME., IS BURNED
Defective Wiring in Adjacent Building Causes De-
struction of Entire Block.
The Andrews Music House, Bangor, Me., was one
of the companies which suffered from the fire which
destroyed the Freese Block in that city last week.
The fire swept from the Freese department store,
which was badly damaged, into the Andrews Music
House building, which extends from the Freese store
to Water street. The two upper floors and attic of
this building were destroyed and the lower floors
damaged by smoke and water.
The Andrews Music House building is owned by
Harry French of Bangor, and was occupied by the
music concern, with the exception of the third floor
and the Water street corner of the second floor.
PADEREWSKI AND MUNZ.
Ignace Paderewski gave a dinner last week at
the Hotel Gotham, New York, in honor of Mieczys-
law Munz, the young Polish pianist, who made his
American debut this season under the most brilliant
circumstances. Munz, like Paderewski, is a Pole, and
Paderewski was among the listeners at Munz's second
New York recital, a fortnight ago. The guests at
the dinner included many of the best known musical
figures in New York.
IN FOR CHRISTMAS.
Several representatives of the Gulbransen-Dickin-
son Company, Chicago, were at the general offices
over the Christmas holiday. They are H. C. Din-
more, representative in New England and New York;
J. J. Healy, in Minnesota, Wrsctmsin -and Iowa; T.
W,-Perkins, in Illinois and Michigan, and W. S. Kar-
mann, from the southwest territory.
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
THOMPSON PIANOS
MUCH USED IN SCHOOLS
Big List of Users Supplemented by Special
Messages Testifying to the Admirable
Character of Instruments.
The character for fine tone and remarkable dura-
bility is one that make the Thompson piano particu-
larly attractive to school heads and boards of educa-
tion. Here are a few schools and institutions that
have recently purchased Thompson pianos:
West Parks System (22 instruments), Chicago;
public schools, St. Paul, Minn.; public schools, Akron,
Ohio; St. Mary's Convent, Aurora, 111.; Weston In-
dependent Schools, Amherst, S. D.; Turner School,
Del Carbon, Colo.; St. John's School, Whiting, Ind.;
Bethel School, Carthage, Mo.; Perrydale School,
Perrydale, Ore.; Sisters of Providence, Chicago, 111.;
School District No. 40, Portland, Ore.; St. John's
Orphan Asylum, Utica, N. Y.; Maupin School, Mau-
pin, Ore.; St. Catherine's School, Oak Park, 111.; Mc-
Kinley School, Clay Center, Kan.; Custer Independ-
ent School District, Custer, S. D.; St. James' School,
Jackson, Mo.; Larimore High School, Larimore,
N. D.
Thompson pianos and playerpianos made at the
"Piano City," Steger, 111., bear the Steger guarantee
and are backed by the same extensive resources and
manufacturing facilitis as Steger pianos and player-
pianos, made by the Steger & Sons Piano Mfg. Co.,
Chicago.
The immense Steger factories, located at Steger,
111. (where the "Lincoln" and "Dixie" highways
meet), are equipped with every machine or device
which will assist in turning out better work, at the
same time minimizing production costs. If the size
of its plant were the only measure of its greatness,
the Steger institution would still hold a commanding
position in the piano-world; its factories including
lumber yards, occupying over 32 acres.
Among the testimonials from people who have
bought Thompson pianos and proved their suitability
for school purposes, is the following from Dr. J.
Lewis Browne, distinguished member of the Royal
Philharmonic Society, Rome; of the faculty, Univer-
sity of Notre Dame, and Musical Art Conservatory,
Chicago:
"For school work I consider the Thompson 219-T
an ideal instrument. It has beauty and depth of tone,
a light, responsive action and notable durability of
construction—essential qualities which should interest
the progressive educator."
Other pleased users of the Thompson pianos have
testified as follows:
Piano received in good condition. Is proving very
satisfactory.—F. D. McElroy, Ass't. Supt. of Schools,
Akron, Ohio.
Everybody in the country is coining to the school-
house to see our new piano. We have a new school
building, finished in mahogany, and the design of the
piano fits perfectly. The style, its size, and the lines
are very pleasing. The wcjodwork and finish are
beautiful. Everyone in the community is well
pleased.—E. W. Chattin, Principal, Weston Inde-
pendent Consolidated Schools, Amherst, S. D.
We are pleased to tell you that this little instru-
ment surely is all you have claimed for it. Local
folks, capable of intelligenut criticisms, who have had
an opportunity to examine the piano, are very much
pleased with it indeed.—Arthur E. Eggert, Deputy
Commissioner, Department of Education, St. Paul,
Minn.
and Pianos
rhe Line That Sells Easily and Satisfies Always
B8INKEBH0FF PIANO CO. "™££!fi&£"
CHICAGO
STULTZ & BAUER
Grand—Upright—Player Pianos
A WORLD'S CHOICE PIANO
338-340 East 31st S reet
-
-
DALY MUSIC COMPANY
ERECTS NEW BUILDING
Structure In Wisconsin Rapids Monument to Per-
severance of Widow of Founder of Store.
From Wisconsin Rapids, Wis., comes the story of
the opening of the new two-story home of the Daly
Music Company, a building which would do credit
to a much larger town, and which has been made
possible and necessary by the zeal of Mrs. Frank P.
Daly, widow of the man who started the store thirty-
six years ago.
In 1886 Frank Daly opened a business in that city
which he called the Centralia Jewelry & Music Com-
pany, dividing his time between the two lines to
make the enterprise pay. For fourteen years the
SHORTAGE IN SKILLED LABOR.
business remained at the original location; then the
The manufacturing states, almost without excep- jewelry business was dropped, music was given undi-
tion, reported shortages of skilled mechanics. But vided attention, and the location was changed. In
according to government reports, the employment 1903 Mr. Daly died, leaving the business in the hands
situation generally is encouraging and prospects are of his wife, who had two small sons to care for.
bright for the remainder of the winter, according to
In the last nineteen years Mrs. Daly has educated
a survey just completed by the employment service her sons, built up the business to one of the most
of the Department of Labor. Nearly all states re- flourishing in that section of the state, and now has
ported a condition much better than at this time a new store building of beauty and utility, with her
last year, and the situation was described as fair to two sons* as assistants in the trade. The building is
good in most sections. The piano industries, which modern in every detail, and has a complete set of
have complained of lack of help, is now finding more arrangements and fixtures, according to the visitors
men steadilv.
who attended the opening of Saturday, Dec. 16. The
elder son, Francis J. Daly, is head of the phonograph
OLD HAZELTON FACTORY SOLD.
department, while the younger, Glenn W. Daly,
Brown, Wheelock, Harris, Vought & Co., New assists the capable Mrs. Daly in the piano depart-
York, last week sold the six-story, Nos. 66-68 Uni- ment.
versity place, 43.5x105, between 10th and 11th streets,
Among the Chicago men who attended the opening
for Gertrude Hazelton, Louise H. and Mary H. were George J. Dowling, president of the Cable Com-
Conger. It was built for Hazelton Bros., piano pany, and George M. Slawson, salesman for the same
manufacturers, which used it up to five years ago, concern, who thirty-six years ago, when the first
and has been in the same ownership since 1891.
store was founded, sold Mr. Daly his first consign-
ment of pianos from the Cable factories. Since that
time, the Daly company has been exclusively a Cable
IMPROVED FREIGHT SITUATION.
Locomotive and freight car conditions throughout dealer.
The Wisconsin Rapids Daily Tribune at the time
the country are reported markedly improved in re-
ports this week by the American Railway Association. of the opening issued a special section devoted to the
From December 1 to December 8 a decrease of 21,825 Daly Music Company's opening. In addition to the
in freight car shortage was reported, the total short- numerous articles, there were some splendid adver-
tisements on the goods carried by the company.
age on December 8 being 111,061 cars.
These were for Edison, Brunswick and Columbia
phonographs, Lyon & Healy band and orchestra in-
BUSH & LANE CARTOONS.
struments, and Cable pianos. About these pianos the
The Bush & Lane Piano Company had a cartoon- Daly Music Company says in the ad: "Cable Pianos,
ist drawing pictures of "Music in the Home" in their the pianos of world-wide fame, in all models, with
main display window in Portland, Oregon, during inner-players and without. These master instruments
Christmas holidays and drew great crowds to their are a specialty with our company, and our display
is most complete."
store.
BRINKERHOFF
Player-Pianos
December 30, 1922.
NEW YORK
When In Doubt See Presto Buyers* Guide
Quick Sales and
Satisfied Customers
That's what you want and that's what you get when you self Straube-
made players and pianos.
The constant and growing demand for Stratibe-made instruments is
due to their high quality which is indicated by the kind of people
who buy them. You can see that they are being selected by those
who choose most carefully.
As a dealer you know the advantage of selling a line of instruments
with a standing of this sort. Let u> toll you about our interesting
dealer proposition.
STRAUBE PIANO CO., Hammond, Ind.
For QUALITY, SATISFACTION and PROFIT
NEWMAN BROTHERS PIANOS
NEWMAN BROS. CO.
Factories, 816 DIX ST., Chicago, II
Established 1870
Leins Piano Co mpany
Makers of Pianos That Are Leaders
in Any Reliable Store
NEW FACTORY, ( 304 W. 42nd St.. NEW YORK
BAUER PIANOS
JULIUS BAUER © COMPANY
Office and Waxerooma
Old Number. 244 W&bash An
New Number. 305 S. Wabaah A«
Factory
1553 Altgeld Street, CHICAGO
KROEGER
(Established I S3 2)
.
v
'
The name alone is enough to suggest to dealers the Best
Artistic and Commercial Values.
The New Styl« Players Are Finest Yet. If you can
get the Agency you ought to 1 ?.ve it.
KROEGER P 4NO CO.
HEW YORK. N. Y.
and
STAMFORD. CONK
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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