Presto

Issue: 1923 1921

PRESTO
UNUSUAL IN PIANO
MAN'S TRAVELS
Strange Places Where Pianos Are Sold, and
How a Christening Inspired a Sale
Twenty Years After That
Interesting Event.
By J. P. SIMMONS.
Apropos of the peculiar conditions under which
the traveler sometimes finds pianos being sold, I re-
cently "made" several southern states, and in one
thriving town down there I asked the town marshal,
whom I found "ineetin' " the trains, where the music
store was. I le said :
"Go right up the street and stop at the first butcher
shop on the left."
I asked: "Is it right next to the meat shop? 1 '
He replied: "Hell, no! It's right in the meat
shop!"
1 followed directions and went to the meat shop.
There 1 made my little talk and sold my line. After
momentous question by calling the little one Ger-
trude. As time passed the truth that is stranger than,
fiction developed.
Almost a Romance.
The day I was in Winston-Salem recently, a beau-
tiful young lady of twenty summers and as many win-
ters came into the Bowen store and asked for Mr.
Hampton. He was called to the front and this is
what took place: The young lady said: "Mr.
Hampton, you don't know me and I don't remember
you. But you are the one, my mother tells me, who
named me and I like your selection so much that I
am going to ask you to select a playerpiano for me
and send it out home right away. 1 know I will be
pleased with your choice, for you certainly gave me
the prettiest name of any girl in our neighborhood."
That was the sequel of an incident which started
twenty years before and, I might add, a profitable
one for our good friend Hampton and his enter-
prising company. It was not just what a short story
writer or a movie picture creator might have made
of it, but it serves to show that human nature, is
appreciative. After all and that, like the good seed
told of in Scripture, what is planted right may bear
fruit at a later day. And, to return to my original
observation about blind piano men, it has seemed to
me that this business fits the ambitious and intelligent
members of the brotherhood who can see only with
the inner eye.
NEW NELSON =WIGGEN
INSTRUMENT FOR CONVENTION
New Model of Style 3, Fitted With Pipes and Banjo
Attachment Ready for Big Show.
.). P. SIMMONS.
"signing up" the dealer, 1 asked him what his idea
was in running a butcher shop in his piano store.
"Well," he replied, "you know the meat brings in
the farmers and 1 sell them meat for their stomach's
sake and music for their souls!"
This true story may give the trade some idea as
to how, in some sections in this good old U. S. A.,
the farmers have not all learned to diversify their
crops, and possibly also where the department store
idea originated!
Good P'ano Salesmen.
Another thing which struck me very forcibly was
the remarkable success that blind men are having in
piano selling in some sections.
At Chattanooga there is the Chattanooga Music
Co., composed of Dan Coleman and Frank Costello,
both blind. Both own beautiful homes and are very
successful. Costello is the active manager and Cole-
man, who, by the way, was on the road twenty-five
years ago for the old Jesse French Piano & Organ
Co., traveling out of Nashville, when the writer was
in charge of the floor and city sales department for
that company there. He puts in his spare time help-
ing to run the business of the State, as he is a mem-
ber of the legislature and a special commissioner for
the blind institutions of Tennessee.
Down in Tampa, Fla., Mr. Hamilton, a prosperous
piano dealer, also is blind. He has been one of the
most prominent piano dealers in that section.
Over at St. Augustine I met R. L. Parks, who has
the oldest and largest music business in that section
of the East Coast. At Greenwood, S. C, I called on
Jno. A. Holland, who, while he is not totally blind, is
so nearly so that he is unable to read with ease. But
he gets around all over the adjoining country, and
I'd wager he sells more pianos than any other dealer
within fifty miles of his store.
At Wiuston-Salem, N. C, 1 saw a most happy con-
clusion of a Christening which took place some
twenty years ago. J. L. Hampton, of that city, is a
very successful blind piano salesman, connected with
the well-known firm of Jesse G. Bowen & Co. He
has sustained that connection for many years. Some
twenty years ago he was called out into the country
to name a new-born babe. It appeared that the
father and mother could not agree on a name. So
they called in their blind friend, and he decided this
A banjo attachment and pipes distinguishes the
new model, Style 3 of the Nelson-Wiggen Piano Co.,
Chicago. The new electric piano will be one of the
attractive features in exhibits at the annual conven-
tion in Chicago from June 4 to 7. The beauty of
the case design of Style 3 and the originality in the
use of the art glass on the front panel gives the
new model distinction among instruments of that kind.
A two-tone mahogany effect in the case harmonizes
well with the added art effects. Style 3 is modeled
after the style of a cathedral organ with miniature
pipes in relief on the sides. The art glass arrange-
ment in the front panel is very unique. The use of
shades of gray, green and brown glass adds to the
harmoniousness of the whole.
The company has in preparation a new art glass
design for the Pian-O-Grand which also will be
shown at the convention exhibit. This model is an
acknowledged money maker for dealers and admit-
tedly a most effective coin control instrument. The
instrument plays 65 note rolls and whether for public-
places, theaters or private parlors it is all that its
name suggests—Pian-O-Grand.
MUSIC TRADE NEWS FROM
PORTLAND, OREGON, FIELD
Bush & Lane Piano Co. Receives Shipment of Goods
by Panama Canal Route.
The Bush & Lane Piano Co. of Portland, Ore.,
placed three carloads of pianos on their floor this
week, which were received by rail and the Panama
canal route. The shipment consisted of grands,
players and uprights, and give the display floor the
appearance of a warehouse. But from the way pianos
are moving it will not be long before this condition
will be removed by the sale of the instruments.
The piano department of Lipman, Wolfe & Co. of
Portland, Ore., according to Warren Erwin, has
closed many sales of Baldwin pianos due largely to
the advertising of the Baldwin in connection with
the coming of Chaliapin, the great Russian singer,
who will appear in concert in Portland the last of
this month and who uses the Baldwin exclusively in
all his concerts.
The Reed, French Piano Co. of Portland, Ore.,
have established a branch at Tillamook, Ore., placing
their line of pianos with J. E. Berry of the Berry
Music Co. of that place. Mr. Berry has a complete
up-to-date music store and as Tillamook is located
in the largest timber belt in the world and the mills
are now working day and night shifts to keep up
\vith the demand, the Reed French company feel
that they have made no mistake in branching out in
this direction.
DINNER TO PADEREWSKI.
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Steinway gave a dinner
of twenty covers for Mr. and Mrs. Ignace Paderewski
in the Louis XVI suite at the St. Regis, New York,
last week Thursday night. A number of prominent
musical people were present.
May 19, 1923
SEND IN APPLICATION
FOR GOLF TOURNAMENT
A Day of Rare Sport Is Planned for June 8th of the
Convention Week.
Following is the application form for entries in
the Golf Tournament that is being arranged for Fri-
day, June 8th, during Convention Week, open to all
visiting members of the music industry. The idea is
for prospective contestants to clip this item, fill in
the application and forward to K. W. Curtis, chair-
man of the Handicap Committee, 1222 Kimball Hall
building, Chicago.
The Chicago Golf Association is officered by E. P.
Lapham, president; R. E. Davis, vice-president; Jas.
T. Bristol, secretary.
Olympia Field has been secured for the day, which
will be one of the big ones of the Convention week.
This Tournament is winning much advance attention,
and the Convention Committee is making plans which
must insure a day of delight for the golfers. Here
is the application to be filled in and sent to Mr.
Curtis:
Kenneth W. Curtis,
Chairman Handicap Committee,
Prosperity Convention Music Trades Golf
Tournament,
1222 Kimball Building.
Chicago, Illinois.
Please accept my entry in the Prosperity
Convention Music Trade Golf Tournament to
be held under the auspices of the Chicago Piano
Golf Association at the Olympia Fields Coun-
try Club on Friday, June 8th, 1923.
My club handicap is
; or my five best
scores for 18 holes during the last year's play
are
Entrance fee (to cover ground fees, lunch and
Special Golfers' Dinner, also transportation
from Chicago and return) os $10.00 is enclosed.
Signed
'
Address
Players will be divided into many flights. Two
handsome prizes have been donated for winners in
each flight. Many other special prizes offered. This
tournament is open to any member of the music
industry. Entries close June 4th. Mail application
early.
PIANO STYLES FOLLOW
THOSE OF FURNITURE
And the Trend of Furniture Fancies Interests Piano
Case Designer.
It is generally admitted that marked preferences
for particular styles in furniture affect the piano in-
dustry. The fact is more noticeable in the finer kinds
of pianos and players. But the vagaries of furniture
styles do not distress the piano manufacturers. The
styles in piano cases number too many staple models
to cause worry to the case departinents when a
novelty agitates the furniture men.
The styles which seem to hold first place in public
approval at present are the English periods, princi-
pally, Queen Anne, Charles II and Chippendale.
Italian Renaissance is also in vogue, walnut and
mahogany being the prevailing woods. But, accord-
ing to Adolph Karpen, of S. Karpen & Brothers, Chi-
cago, the new designs brought out are many. The
furniture man's comments on the distinctive features
of various styles are interesting to the piano trade:
"The Queen Anne is perhaps the simplest of these
styles, depending for its beauty on its rounded, com-
fortable looking contour. Another attractive feature
is the curved splat in the chair bacjes, often called
'riddle back' because it is shaped like that instrument.
The Italian Renaissance, on the other hand, is rich in
carved detail, polychrome coloring. One's first im-
pression is its imposing appearance. There is no
richer ornamentation than can be found in this style."
GETS "ADAPTO"IN CHICAGO.
The Lindenberg Piano Co., of Columbus, Ohio,
has appointed Sidney W. Sachs Chicago agent for
the "Adapto" player action. The ease with which
Adapto may be installed in any used piano has given
it a good start toward popularity, and Mr. Sachs is
quite enthusiastic, on the subject of its possibilities.
His territory is all of Chicago, and the number of
"dead" pianos is so large that he expects to have a
business in installing the action beyond his capacity
to satisfy. Mr. Sachs is at 425 South Wabash ave-
nue, Chicago.
The offer of a refund on railroad fare to piano pur-
chasers is made to out-of-town customers by the
Foster Music House, Marshalltown, la.
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/
P R E S T O
May 19, 1923
CHRISTMAN
REPRODUCING GRANDS
3 Great Pianos
with 3 sounding boards
in each (patented) have
• the greatest talking
points in the trade.
Christman
Pianos
have scales that
insure tone qual-
ity of remarkable
purity, sweetness
a n d of g r e a t
volume.
Enhance Your future Prosper-
ity By Investigating
the
Irresistible Appeal of
CHRISTMAN
GRANDS, UPRIGHTS
PLAYERS
and
REPRODUCING PIANOS
"The First Touch Tells 9 9
Reg. U. S. Pat. Off.
Christman Piano Co.
597 East 137th St.
New York
NEW CATALOG DESCRIBES
THE ACOUSTIGRANDE
Chickering Bros., Chicago, Issues Highly Ar-
tistic Booklet Telling About the Distinctive
Merits of a Fine Product.
which numerous honorable firms have met their obli-
gations dating prior to the crisis of 1920-21. And in
every instance this reassuring credit experience was
based upon co-operation between the credit grantor!
and the customer and upon a thorough mutual under-
standing growing out of personal acquaintance.
PHILIP WERLEIN, LTD., IS
EIGHTY=0NE YEARS YOUNG
A new catalog of the Acoustigrande, made by
Chickering Brothers, Chicago, has appeared and it New Orleans Honors Old Music House Remarkable
for Its Show of Progressiveness.
is an unusual setting forth on an artistic instrument.
It is, too, an unusually masterly bit of printing. The
The progressiveness of the old firm of Philip
company has produced something pleasing to the eye, VVerlein, Ltd., New Orleans, was the most apparent
convincingly clear to the prospective piano buyer and fact in the recent anniversary celebration of the firm.
appropriate to the place held by the makers of the That it is eighty-one years young, with the experi-
Acoustigrande. The whole appearance of the new ence of years and the virility of youth is evident to
catalog is suggestive of the fine instrument it repre- everybody in the Louisiana city and in a wide section
sents. Beginning at the cover, which is a harmony of the south. In the formal celebration recently its
in cream tints relieved by a medallion in azure blue own anniversary was made a joint one with that of
setting, the catalog is interesting to the last page the Chickering Centennial.
where is shown the modern factory at South Park
The closing of the eighty-first anniversary sale was
avenue and East Twenty-third street, Chicago.
another event that revived the memories of oldtimers
Naturally an artistic catalog is to- be expected for and aroused the attention of the generation of today.
an essentially artistic instrument. As the foreword The sale was an epitome of effort that called attetv '
forcibly says: "'The Acoustigrande was conceived and tion to the vast scope of the business of Philip Wer-
created as the ideal instrument in tone, touch and lein, Ltd., today. It was a triumph in music goods
design, for those discriminating music lovers who merchandising. The house of Werlein has expanded
are satisfied with nothing less than the highest ex- with the growth of the music business and the greater
pression of the art of the piano craftsman."
interest in music affairs. The house is an expression
A piano like the Acoustigrande, which lends dis- of the fact that^ a business managed by owners of
tinction to the finest home, requires a distinctive book vision and discernment renews its youth every year.
to tell about it. The manufacturers have provided The Werlein house is one of proud traditions which
that in the catalog just issued. But'the Acoustigrande, give it dignity but do not retard its aspirations to
like other fine pianos, is not manufactured in the keep abreast of the times, all the time.
ordinary sense. The precision of fine machines is
valuable only up to a certain point. Beyond that it is
the skillful personal attention of the piano craftsman,
the artist of the piano plant, which evolves the in-
strument of fine tone demanded by critical people.
The personal part of C. C. Chickering in the de-
signing and creating of the Acoustigrande is told in Mew and Old Concerns Secure Charters in Various
the booklet. His fundamental knowledge, his imag-
Places.
ination and experience, insure the steady maintenance
The Vitalitone, Inc., New Haven; music dealers;
of the characteristics which have won for the Acous-
capital, $100,000; to begin with $51,000; incorporators,
tigrande the place it occupies in the piano world.
Vitalis Himmer, John Duncan, William F. Alcorn.
The new Acoustigrande catalog gives the piano
The Oberlin Music Co., Oberlin, O.; to publish
buyer an instructive insight of the fine pianomaker's
music; $1,000; Ian M. Ross, Donald Morrison, L. F.
problems, and there is a semi-technical description of
the Acoustigrande construction which is fascinating Wharton, Ruth S. Morrison and C. R. Williams.
National Record Resurfacing Co., Montgomery,
to the possible buyer. It in a measure explains the
secret of the large tone in the instrument and the Ala.; $100,000; Edward Hails.
E. & O. Mari, New York; music strings; $20,000;
Acoustigrande scale is described and illustrated in a
• way which must prove helpful to the dealers and S. M. and B. II. and J. Schwartz.
Columbus Music Shop, Inc., Trenton, N. J.; $100,-
salesmen.
The Acoustigrande Reproducing Piano, the Acous- 000; to take over business of Charles E. Smith, 902
Mark Purcell, Alex. Nemeth and
tigrande playerpiano, the Vertical Acoustigrande, are S. Broad street.
George A. Cella.
each described in the clear manner that convinces
Howell Talking Machine Co., Inc., Boston; J.
the prospective buyer of the distinctive qualities of
the instruments. Seven styles are printed, with de- Howell, Wm. C. Free and Henry Gorshell.
Howell Talking Machine Co., Inc., Boston; talk-
scriptions on loose sheets placed in a pocket at the
ing machines and phonographs; H. Howell, William
back of the catalog.
C. Pree and Henry Gorshell, all of Boston.
Burgman
Hemmer,
Brooklyn;
phonographs;
$35,000; M. Burgman, F. Hemmer, W. M. Wheatley.
Attorney, J. F. Dwyer, 350 Broadway.
The Barbourville Music Co., Barbourville, Ky.;
$3,000; T. Gillis, Mrs. H. C. Creekmore and L. L.
Ingenious Ways to Effect Credit Rating Shown at Blankenship.
The Progressive Musical Instrument Corp.. Man-
Recent Meeting of Credit Men.
hattan; $100,000; T. F. Thornton, E. S. Wolbrost
There is all the difference in the world between and J. P. H. Rieper.
The Nelson-Dever Music Co., Steubenville, O.; in-
filling foreign orders and doing an export business,
says "Commerce Reports." Not long ago a success- crease of capitalization from $35,000 to $100,000.
The Vitalitone, Inc.. New Haven, Conn., to sell
ful export manager related his experiences to a body
musical instruments; $100,000; Vitalis Himmer, John
of credit men which met to discuss the problems of
export credits. The burden of his speech was the Duncan and William F. Alcorn.
Greeley Music Shops, New York; $10,000; M. and
need of getting acquainted with the foreign cus-
E. H. Horowitz and M. Udkowitz.
tomers.
A rather novel though surprisingly simple device is
STRAUBE IN MINNEAPOLIS.
employed by this intelligent sales director to bring
the customer closer to the sales office. Every sales-
The pianos and playerpianos of the Straube Piano
man calling on foreign business men for this firm is Co.. of Hammond, Tnd., recently added to the lines
required to send in, with each order, photographs of
of the Peyer Music Co., Minneapolis, and the window
the exterior of the purchaser's store and of two or displays of the instruments attracted great attention.
three of its departments.
The interest of. prospective playerpiano buyers is par-
The results of this practice have been, in the main, ticularly aroused by the merits of the Artronome
to increase the line of credit extended to the cus- player action installed in the Straube piano. The
tomer. In one of these photographs a packing case character of dependability in the Straube playerpiano
is stated in a forceful way by the Peyer Music Co.
showed that the customer was purchasing certain
goods in England. The name of the English supplier J. L. Pofahl, manager of the piano department, talks
had not been furnished by the customer in opening enthusiastically about the Straube piano merits.
business relations. The sales director communicated
with the English house and found that it extended a
GRANDS IN LOUISVILLE.
very liberal credit, and was most satisfied w 7 ith this
According to H. J. Kartheiser, manager of the
trade.
Baldwin Piano Company's store, Louisville, Ky., the
The sales director looked up his record and found
trade in grands was never better. Wilford E. Tuell,
that he was extending, say, $5,000 credit. The next
manager of the piano department, said to a Presto
step was, not to increase the limit of credit extended, representative: "Trade has been good since the be-
but to realize that the shipper was not getting enough ginning of the new year. We have sold a very large
business out of this customer.
number of grands, and have calls for more every
At this same meeting of credit men a series of inci- day—some of the best homes in Louisville are being
dents was related illustrating the gratifying manner in
furnished with Baldwin grands."
NEW INCORPORATIONS
IN MUSIC GOODS TRADE
GETTING ACQUAINTED WITH
THE FOREIGN CUSTOMER
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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