Presto

Issue: 1923 1926

PRESTO
June 23, 1923
HENRY Q. JOHNSON'S
SECOND PIANO FACTORY
NOTABLE M. SCHULZ EXHIBIT
New Company to Manufacture Pianos With
$500,000 Formed in Ottumwa, Iowa, With
Local Men Interested.
Convincing Evidence of Extent and Admirable Selling Qualities of a
Great Line Presented in Convention Display
Incorporation papers for the Johnson & Sons Piano
Manufacturing Company at Ottumwa, la., were
tiled last week with the county recorder, a temporary
set of officers selected, downtown headquarters opened
and Ottumwa's newest and one of its largest manu-
facturing industries set on its way.
The capital stock is $500,000. The incorporators
are Carl T. Haw, W. R. Daggett, J. F. Powell, E. H.
Emery and E. C. Manning. All stock is to be com-
mon. The minimum number of directors is five, the
maximum, ten. Until the annual meeting, the follow-
ing will serve: Henry G. Johnson, president; W. R.
Daggett, vice-president; E. C. Manning, secretary
and treasurer.
The directors are Henry G. Johnson, J. F. Powell,
Carl T. Haw, E. H. Emery and W. R. Daggett.
These men were delegated to sign the original
papers out of a list of twenty-eight of the original
subscribers, which follows: Charles E. Fahrney, G.
B. Baker, J. H. Anderson, Charles Hallberg, O. H.
Michael, Phillip P. Phillips,. Walter H. McElroy, G. F.
Spry, C. L. Graham, T. J. Madden, Horace A. Brown,
C. D. Evans, John Wormhoudt, Giltnore and Moon,
James C. Taylor, E. H. Emery, P. J. Donelan, C. G.
Merrill, Frank von Schrader, Homer H. Harris, R. W.
Harper, E. C. Manning, H. W. Merrill, James F.
Powell, W. R. Daggett, C. S. Harper, Carl T. Haw
and W. I. Gladish.
Temporary offices have been secured at 117-119
East Second street, Ottumwa, in charge of Leo S.
McDonald and S. W. Storey.
NEW NELSON=WIGGEN CO.
MODELS SCORE SUCCESS
New Automatics and Orchestrions Exhibited at the
Recent Convention Gain New Dealers.
The new models of automatic pianos and orches-
trions exhibited at the Drake Hotel during the con-
vention by the Nelson-Wiggen Piano Co., of 224 N.
Sheldon street, Chicago, made a remarkable success
and secured many new dealers to represent the Nel-
son-Wiggen line, reports O. Nelson, president of the
firm.
Three new automatic pianos are especially being
featured by the Nelson-Wiggen Co. They are the
Pian-O-Grand, style 2, with pipe and mandolin at-
tachment; the Pian-O-Grand, style 3, with xylophone
or bells and banjo attachment; and the Banj-O-Grand,
a small, keyless automatic finished in the popular
two-tone effect. The last instrument is only 50
inches high, 35 inches wide, and 19 inches deep. It
is fitted with an attachment which produces a' sound
similar to a banjo, hence the name—Banj-O-Grand.
The four-way pump, new model spool frame and
rewind system, and the location of the rolls at the
top of the instrument are other features of all Nelson-
Wiggen pianos.
The accompanying cut
commemorates the suc-
cessful exhibit made at
the recent convention by
the M. Schulz Co., at the
Drake Hotel, Chicago. It
shows Room M 15, on the
mezzanine floor, the same
suite occupied by the
company in t h e trade
convention at the Drake
in 1920. The room was
found so desirable on the
first occasion of its use
that it was then engaged
in advance by the com-
pany. It was another in-
stance of an admirable
habit of looking ahead
which is one of the rea-
sons for the progressive
growth of the M. Schulz
Co.
The exhibit of the M.
Schulz Co. was as pleas-
ant a place to be as it
was advantageous to the
piano man to visit. The
extent of the line shown
was suggestive of business and profit opportunities
to the observant dealers not previously familiar with
the products of the big Chicago industry. The pleas-
urable opportunities included a greeting from Fred-
erick P. Bassett, the genial vice-president; Henry D.
Hewitt, general traveling representative, or Otto M.
Heinzmann, eastern representative.
The exhibit was one of the most attractive in the
convention headquarters. It attracted all the M.
dustries of America, Silk Association, Fifth Avenue
Association, Merchants'
Protective
Association,
American Association of Woolen and Worsted Man-
ufacturers, National Association of Worsted and
Woolen Spinners, American Clothing Manufacturers,
Inc., National Association of Clothiers Credit Bureau
Association, Woolen and Dress Goods Merchants'
Association, Wholesale Merchants' Association, Cot-
ton Garment Manufacturers of New York, Wholesale
Coal Trade Association, National Jew r elers Board of
Trade, Paper Trade and Pulp Association, Paper
Trade Association, Rubber Association of America,
Tobacco Merchants' Association of the United States,
Toy Manufacturers of the United States, Fur Mer-
chants' Credit Association, Associated Dress Indus-
tries of America, and many more. The music indus-
tries do not seem to have been considered.
The Federal judges, it is said, are greatly interested
in the meeting and will assist in every way to solve
problems incidental to the administration of bank-
ruptcy, which has been so much criticized.
FOR BETTER POSTAL SERVICE.
TO CONSIDER CHANGE IN
THE BANKRUPTCY LAW
Credit Men Would Bar Counsel for Creditors from
Representing Trustees and Receivers.
Many lawyers, representatives of. trade organiza-
tions, and merchants, will attend a hearing in the Fed-
eral Court building, in New York City, at 10 o'clock
on June 30 to consider changes in court rules govern-
ing the administration of bankruptcy. A suggestion
made recently in a report by the Committee on Bank-
ruptcy of the New York Credit Men's Association
that a rule be adopted preventing receivers and trus-
tees from retaining as counsel the attorneys for peti-
tioning creditors in bankruptcy proceedings, will be
considered at the meeting and other suggestions made
by various interests for the betterment of bankruptcy
practice will also be discussed.
Formal notice of the hearing, issued by Alexander
Gilchrist, Jr., clerk of the Federal Court, contains an
invitation to everybody to attend and present his
views. Notices of the meeting are being forwarded
to a number of commercial credit and legal organiza-
tions including the following:
The Merchants' Association of New York, Ameri-
can Bankers Association, Alphabet Association,
Chamber of Commerce of the State of New York,
New York Credit Men's Association, Wholesale Shoe
League, New York Bar Association, New York
County Lawyers' Association, Associated Dress In-
The dissatisfaction of business firms with the
United States postal service may possibly be re-
moved following the meeting in Chicago last week
of the joint congressional postal commission, which
listened to the results of a three-year investigation of
post office methods. The commission said its goal is
to transform the services from an out-of-date, cum-
bersome, wasteful and inefficient system into an up-
to-date, efficient, economic business organization. The
investigation has found it to be in "bad straits," the
commission reported.
HARDMAN, PECK & CO. PATENT.
A patent issued recently by the Patent Office,
Washington, to Reinhold Bukow, Astoria, Long
Island, N. Y., for a tracking device, has been assigned
to Hardman, Peck & Co., New York. The patent,
which is numbered 1,454,621, covers improvements
for tracking devices for player pianos and by its
means the tracking mechanism not only retains the
correct register between the music sheet and the
tracker, but also accommodates itself to variations in
the width of the music rolls.
ASSETS, TWENTY-FIVE.
A voluntary assignment for creditors has been made
by Arthur M. Lawson, salesman, 462 Mott avenue,
New York; liabilities, $67,315; assets, $25. Principal
creditors are Manufacturers Trust Co., $19,216; Jacob
Bros., $14,191; Alice F. Worden, $15,562. His lia-
bilities were incurred as indorser on paper for the
Lawson Piano & Phonograph Co.
Schulz dealers, of course, but it also brought crowds
of other dealers who had heard of the highly organ-
ized and extensive Chicago industry and desired to
view the grouped products that had gained such an
enviable name for quality of tone and beauty of de-
sign in its instruments. The complete line of pianos,
players and electric expression playerpianos was
shown and the distinctive merits of each instrument
of the M. Schulz Co. were convincingly pointed out.
B. H. BALENSIEFER'S DEATH
SHOCK TO HIS FRIENDS
Assistant to Ernest Urchs, of Steinway & Sons,
Taken 111 on Train, Succumbs in Cleveland.
The news of the death last week of Benjamin H.
Balensiefer, assistant to Ernest Urchs, of the whole-
sale department of Steinway & Sons, New York,
came as a shock to his associates in business and to
his many friends among Steinway dealers in all parts
of the country. When he had become sick on the
train returning from the trade convention in Chicago
he w r as removed to a hotel in Cleveland where his
condition grew worse despite the best efforts to
help him on the part of the physicians.
Henry Dreher, of the Dreher Piano Co., did
everything possible to aid Mr. Balensiefer and to
make him comfortable, but he died late Wednesday
afternoon. Mr. Dreher apprised Steinway Hall of his
death by telephone.
Mr. Balensiefer, who was about forty years of age,
began work with Steinway & Sons in a clerical ca-
pacity as a boy. He was later assigned to the sales
forces in the retail department at Steinway Hall where
he achieved marked success. It led to his appoint-
ment as assistant to Ernest Urchs in the wholesale
department and he soon began road trips, visiting
Steinway dealers. He was very well liked and in
two years had made a host of friends. He is sur-
vived by his widow and two children, a boy and a
girl.
ILLINOIS STATE TAX KILLED.
The proposed state income tax bill was defeated
last week in the Illinois Legislature. The bill pro-
posed a tax of 1 per cent on incomes not exceeding
$10,000, "1 per cent on incomes of from $10,000 to
$50,000 and 3 per cent on incomes above $50,000. It
would allow exemptions of $1,000 for unmarried per-
sons and $2,500 for heads of families. It was charged
that if the bill was passed and the larger industries
moved to states less tax greedy, the tax burden
would have to be borne by the small home owner and
toiler.
MOTORED FROM MANISTEE.
Thor Anderson and Mr. Bestor, of Thor's Music
Shop of Manistee, Mich., motored to Chicago a few
days ago and visited the Culbransen-Dickinson fac-
tory at Kedzie and Chicago avenues. They made the
trip in their machine overnight. The Thor Music
Shop represents the Gulbransen in Manistee.
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 23, 1923
CONSERVATORY DEGREE
FOR W. OTTO MIESSNER
Milwaukee Piano Manufacturer One of Sixty
Receiving Honors From Cincinnati
Conservatory.
Sixty students were graduated at the commence-
ment exercises of the Cincinnati Conservatory of
Music last week, and among three presented with a
degree of doctor of pedagogy was W. Otto Meissner,
president of the Meissner Piano Co., Milwaukee. Of
the sixty that were graduated fourteen received col-
legiate diplomas, thirty-two academic diplomas and
thirteen received supervisors' certificates for public
school music.
Mr. Meissner has long been prominent in educa-
CHRISTMAN
Grand
when embodied with
W. OTTO MIESSNER.
tional affairs and he has been the recipient of many
honors from associations of school heads and musi-
cal bodies. His name has been a powerful aid to sales
of the Miessner pianos, "The Little Piano With the
Big Tone," to schools, colleges and music conserva-
tories. The piano is understood to include all the
realized thoughts for an ideal school piano.
Mr. Miessner attended the annual reception of the
Alumnae Association on the evening of commence-
ment day. This was the occasion of welcoming the
graduating class into the ranks of the association.
The Rev. J. W. Christie, rector of the Mt. Auburn
Presbyterian Church, conducted the services.
SHOULD TELL CUSTOMER
ABOUT REPRODUCER GRAND
SEEING IS BELIEVING
tt
The First Touch Tells"
Reg. U. S. Pat. Off.
Christman Piano Co.
597 East 137th St.
New York
President Bristol at Weekly Luncheon Urges Every
Member to Do His Duty.
W. A. Stapleton was program chairman of the day
for the Monday luncheon of the Piano Club of Chi-
cago this week. "Now that we have attended to our
duties as convention's hosts we can give ear to things
outside of the trade," said Mr. Stapleton, so he pro-
vided Wells M. Cook, judge of the Municipal Court,
to give a talk.
An especially good musical number was also pro-
vided. George Plane, a fine tenor, sang some ballads,
accompanied by Ferol Bradford.
"The Membership drive closes June 25. Don't let
it end without bringing one more member into the
fellowship of the Club," was the warning of J. T.
Bristol, the president. "Every man in any way con-
nected with the music trade of Chicago ought to be a
member of The Piano Club. You know one or more
music men who are not members. Get to them and
see how quickly they will show their willingness to
be one of us. All they are waiting for is to be asked.
You ask them."
Knabe-Edison Manager to Spend Summer in Europe
With His Family.
CHRISTMAN
A WONDERFUL SMALL GRAND
only five feet long which embodies all
the advantages of the larger grands
and possessing a tone volumn and
range of expression surprisingly broad.
Musicians quickly recognize the
characteristic tone qualities of the
CHRISTMAN GRAND
THE CHICAGO PIANO CLUB
MEMBERSHIP DRIVE CLOSES
RAY HEALY GOES ABROAD
ON LEVIATHAN JULY 4
Player Action Makes It One of the
HIGHEST ART PRODUCTION
of Reproducing- Grand Pianos in the
Trade.
Famous
Studio Grand
stock. They can, however, keep an upright repro-
ducer in stock, and show his prospects that, and then
sell them to the idea of a reproducer in a grand
piano. The reproducing grands can be ordered only
when a customer wants one. In that way, the
dealer can educate his community to the possibilities
of the reproducing grand piano.
J. V. Sill of W. W. Kimball Co., Says Average
Dealer Does Not Try to Talk About It.
Most dealers do not appreciate the possibilities for
selling the reproducing grand piano, declared J. V.
Sill, wholesale manager of the W. W. Kimball Co.,
Chicago. It is quite possible to sell a reproducing
grand to people who come into the store with the
purpose of buying a straight playerpiano, he states.
Very few dealers, however, seem to realize this
fact, and very few ever try it. If the customer wants
a straight playerpiano, the average dealer proceeds
to sell him a straight playerpiano. They never think
of showing him the reproducing grand.
Just because a prospective customer says he wants
a straight playerpiano is no reason to suppose that
he would not be interested in the reproducing grand,
says Mr. Sill, if he is shown the reproducer. Many
people have never heard of the reproducer, so natur-
ally they will not ask for it. They must be told
about it.
One Kimball dealer in Illinois reports that he sold
reproducing grands to three of his prospects who
came to his store with the intention of buying player-
pianos. Two of them had never heard of the re-
producer. But when it was shown and explained
Co them, they bought.
Many of the smaller dealers, Mr. Sill admits, are
unable to afford to keep reproducing grand pianos in
Ray Healy, of the Knabe-Edison Warerooms, 229
South Wabash avenue, Chicago, will sail on the steam-
ship Leviathan when the great new American liner
starts on her maiden voyage, July 4. Mr. and Mrs.
Healy with their son Kay, Jr., and daughter, Grace,
go to London, and from there will make an extended
pleasure tour of the continent. Mr. Healy expects
to be abroad for several months.
Many notables will sail on the Leviathan's first
voyage under the American flag. Mrs. Percy M.
Elliot of the Ambassador Hotel, Chicago, will be a
member of the Healy party. Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Powers, of Powers Theatre, will also make the trip.
CREDIT SITUATION SOUND.
The credit situation in the United States is abso-
lutely sound, and there is justification for nothing but
optimism as to the future of business, according to
the June monthly letter of Secretary-Treasurer J. H.
Tregoe, now on its way to above 30,000 commercial
and banking credit managers, who represent their
concerns in the National Association of Credit Men.
This observer says that a sifting process is going on,
a separating of the sheep from the goats. Skillful
business administration is meeting present emer-
gencies, while enterprises unskillfully administered are
finding it extremely difficult to make a profit. The
lesson in this is that slipshod methods are certain to
pull a business down, that business must be organ-
ized and conducted with a fearless demand for good
system.
TEXAS DEALER HOMEWARD BOUND.
Henry P. Mayer, owner of a large piano store in
Paris, Texas, handling the line of pianos of the
Bush & Gerts Piano Co., Chicago, returned hqme on
June 18 after a prolonged stay in Chicago. Mr.
Mayer was present at the convention, and remained
in Chicago "as long as the cool weather lasted."
Monday, June 18, the temperature leaped upward
and Mr. Mayer departed. He will return to Texas
by way of St. Louis, where he will tarry a day or
two for the convention of Rotary International.
PORTLAND DEALER IN CHICAGO.
Lucas of Seiberling, Lucas Piano Company, Port-
land, Oregon, visited Chicago on June 16. He vis-
ited the Gulbransen-Dickinson Co., whose playerpiano
he represents in Portland. Mr. Lucas also journeyed
to Elkhart, Ind., to visit the Buescher band instru-
ment factory.
WIFE OF SALEM DEALER DIES.
Alice H. Pace, wife of H. T. Pace, of Pace's Piano
Parlors, Salem, 111., died June 14, at the age of 69
years. The funeral was held Sunday, June 17. Mr.
Pace is dealer for the Gulbransen playerpiano.
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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