Presto

Issue: 1923 1940

PRESTO
September 29, 1923
SOME EXCUSES FOR
CHRISTMAN THE SPECIAL SALES
Reproducing Grand
Equipped with the
Action
The most famous of all Electrically
operated reproducing Grands, exempli-
fying the highest achievement in the
piano maker's Art.
Its touch, tone, and artistic qualities
are superlative and will surely appeal
to the true Musician, claims which can
be verified by a personal trial.
CHRISTMAN
Studio Grand
Only 5 Feet Long
It was the CHRISTMAN GRAND that
first demonstrated the truth that size has
nothing to do with the depth and resonance
of a Grand Piano's tone.
Built with a careful eye to the exacting
requirements of the space at the command
of city dwellers and owners of small houses,
the CHRISTMAN GRAND combines every
essential that wins for the grand piano first
consideration in the mind of the artist.
HEARING IS BELIEVING
It lacks nothing save bulk, and in this
saving of valuable space, it places within
reach of every true musician, however lim-
ited his room, an instrument that measures
up to the most exacting requirements as to
range, richness and tonal qualities.
'The First Touch Tells"
Reg. U. S. Pat. Off.
Christ man Piano Co,
597 East 137th St.
New York
Many Not Plausible Enough to Warrant the
Blatant Announcements of Amazing
Bargains Made in Pages of Local
Newspapers.
tion toward putting music in Dallas homes and sun-
shine in Dallas hearts. Give the children the oppor-
tunity for music they deserve. No other branch of
education is more refined or elevating, and there is no
excuse for not having the piano you want when Bush
& Gerts is offering such wonderful bargains."
The figures in the window were cut-outs, realis-
tically colored, and the piano was a Matchless Mil-
ton, the Milton line being featured by the Bush &
Gerts Piano Co. of Texas.
VALUE OF REAL REASONS
PIANO FACTORY EMPLOYES
INAUGURATE BOWLING GAMES
Sales With Apparent Excuses for Their Inauguration
Usually Satisfactory in Sales and Profits.
Eight Teams in Gulbransen-Dickinson Co.'s Plant
Start Games for Cup and Prizes.
Experienced piano dealers know that the "clearance
sale" for cause has the best chance of success in
sales. That is to say the given reason for the sale
should be an obvious thing. Every week in every
city the announcements of special sales of pianos
appear in the local newspapers. But in many cases
the excuse for their occurrence is very slim.
The announcement of a remodeling sale previous
to the annual spring cleaning is one of the piano ad-
vertising jokes that evokes no laugh from serious
piano men. The advertised "bargains" may be hon-
est enough although the observant public sees noth-
ing in the cleaning incident to warrant abnormal re-
ductions in the piano prices. It is pretty difficult
today to convince the piano prospects of the reality
of piano bargains.
To be effective any piano bargain sale must have
a plausible excuse for taking place. The annual
cleaning up of stock is different from the annual
tinting of the walls and varnishing of the woodwork.
Actual remodeling plans, moving to new quarters
or a real fire belong to the plausible excuses for the
big featured clearance sale. The public sees the evi-
dent facts given as reasons. In theme are a suffi-
ciency of talking points to interest the public in the
opportunity. With the prospect convinced that the
reason for holding the sale is a real one, the quoted
bargain prices are powerful enough to do the rest.
The Grim Joke.
The practice of holding bargain sales without ap-
parent excuse is like the drug habit. The longer you
are a victim the greater the dose you require and
the shorter must be the intervening intervals. The
piano bargain sale as a serial is obviously silly. In
conservative dealers it evokes a smile that is some-
times grim because the continuous bargain sale is
hurtful to the trade generally. In the general public
it soon evokes little interest, when week after week
and month after month the bargains and sacrifices
and slaughtering prices assail the eyes of newspaper
readers.
Soon Wears Thin.
In time the continuous sale without legitimate ex-
cuse is not hurtful to the occasional sale with legiti-
mate excuse for its inauguration. The piano pros-
pect worth appealing to and going after is a discrim-
inative person who readily sees the difference between
the plausible reason for the piano sale and the rea-
sonless reason. The manager of the conservative
house believes in the intelligence of the piano buyiing
public. He knows that the publicity methods of a
house are creative of impressions. He knows that
the piano bargain sale played to death is usually
taken as an evidence of desperation.
But the wise piano house manager also knows the
value of a real opportunity to hold a sale. His wis-
dom, too, shows him the necessity of first of all im-
pressing the piano buying public with the plausibil-
ity of his reasons for holding the special sale. And
usually the facts he states in his newspaper adver-
tising are apparent to the readers of the newspapers.
Important remodeling plans or removal to another
location are important incidents sure to be recorded
by the editors. And a fire that destroys or partially
damages the stock of a music store is widely made
known. In fact his reason for holding the sale is a
talking point in every detail.
SCHOOL=ROOM IN SHOW
WINDOW FEATURES PIANO
Bush & Gerts Piano Co., Dallas, Adopt Attractive
Way to Display Milton.
The Bush & Gerts Piano Co., of Texas, with head-
quarters in Dallas, which handles the Milton piano,
employed a striking and timely idea in window dis-
play for the first week in September. The window
was arranged like a school-room with the flag and
picture of Washington giving a real school atmo-
sphere to the scene.
The selling message, written on the blackboard,
reads as follows: "This is Bush & Gerts' contribu-
The "Gulbransen Registering Piano Bowling
League," among employes of the Gulbransen-Dickin-
son Co., Chicago, inaugurated its 1923-1924 season at
Madison-Kedzie Arcade, 3127 West Madison street
last week. The eight participating teams are the
Regulators, Key-Fitters, Tuners, Action Finishers,
Finishers, Stringers, Foremen and Office. Prizes are
offered to all teams according to standing at the end
of the season, to the two teams having the highest
three-game averages, to the two-highest game teams,
fifteen individual prizes, the two highest individual
games, and the first and second weekly high games.
A loving cup will also be donated by the Gulbran-
sen-Dickinson Co. to the leading team, to be held by
that team for one year. In last week's opening games
G. Methling took high score prize, with 279, and he
also made the highest,three-game average, 218.
G. H. Hansen is president of the League; A. J.
Gerlack, secretary, and W. G. Schwan, treasurer.
The team captains are: Office, Gerlack; Regulators,
Methling; Finishers, Story; Key Fitters, Hansen;
Stringers, Kelly; Tuners, Lorenz; Foremen, Witt,
and Action Finishers, Sidlo.
NEW INCORPORATIONS
IN MUSIC GOODS TRADE
New and Old Concerns Secure Charters in Various
Places.
Gaiety Talking Machine Co., Manhattan; $5,000;
A. Markowitz, H. Gellman, W. Haines.
Eastern Kentucky Music Co., Pikeville, Ky.;
$25,000.
The American Talking Machine Co., Brooklyn,
N. Y., recently increased its capital stock from $10,000
to $515,000.
E. Blout, New York City; $100,000; E. and E. R.
Blout and E. R. Rye.
Equitable Music Co., Wilmington, Del.; $1,000,000;
to do a general music business.
St. Louis Music Co., 1083 Taylor street, St. Louis,
Mo.; $30,000.
Leader's Music Store, Liberty, N. Y.; $20,000; H.
Cohen and H. J. Steinbrink.
G. Geblane; to make orchestra instruments, in
New York City; $1,000; E. L. Unger and J. C.
Me Go wan.
Edward Strauss, pianos, Brooklyn, N. Y.; $50,000;
E. Strauss, E. Satlien and C. Cartoon.
Gaiety Talking Machine Co., 196 East Houston
street, New York City; $5,000.
SOME VERY LATE OPENINGS
IN THE RETAIL MUSIC TRADE
A Few of the New Ventures in the Best Business in
the World.
E. C. Sheets, Auburn, Jnd., opened his new piano
sales room in the Hotel Auburn building last week.
The new salesroom is in the store facing on South
Main street.
The Morgan Music Co., of 119 West Cherry street,
Herrin, 111., will move soon to the Raddle building,
at North Fifteenth street.
The Sager Music Shop was opened last week at
1539 Broadway, Detroit.
The Lazarus Music Shoppe will be opened next
week at 207 Market building, on Woodland avenue,
Cleveland, Ohio. The firm will carry a complete line
of musical instruments.
Dolman & Portz succeed C. F. Rockier in a music
business in San Rafael, Cal.
E. Seidel has opened a music store at 644 Indiana
avenue, Indianapolis, Ind., which will be known as the
Indiana Avenue Blues Shop.
The Rialto Music Shop was opened recently in the
Koutsky-Vana building in Omaha, Neb.
The Christona Teague Piano Co. recently opened
an attractive store at 237 North Pennsylvania avenue,
Indianapolis, Ind.
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
PLATT MUSIC COMPANY
CELEBRATES BIG EVENT
Eighteenth Anniversary of Founding of the
Business in Los Angeles, Cal., Com-
memorated in Novel Way.
SIX STORES PARTICIPATED
Beginning as Sewing Machine Salesman, Mr. Platt
Has Built One of Largest Establishments in West.
The Platt Music Co., of Los Angeles, recently
celebrated its eighteenth anniversary with two events
of interest and importance. One was a house boat
and beach festival for employees and friends of the
firm; the other was a great sale in which sweeping
reductions were made amounting to a total mark
down of $50,000.
The six stores of the Platt Music Co. closed their
doors early in the afternoon and the employees went
down to San Pedro, where the center of festivities
was the houseboat of Marco Hellman, president of
the Merchants' National and Hellman Banks. Over
two hundred people were present, among them a few
special guests, including Mr. Hellman, Beeman P.
Sibley, western representative of the Kohler Indus-
tries; Herbert L. Clarke, well-known cornet player;
A. S. Farquharson, secretary of the Music Trades
Association of Southern California.
L. A. Fleischmann acted as master of ceremonies,
calling on every department and branch of the or-
ganization for a musical number. Unsuspected tal-
ent was discovered and rewarded when Robert
Turner, a messenger boy at the main store, made a
great impression in a piano solo. He will become a
demonstrator on the main floor as a result of not
"hiding his light under a bushel." Miss Katherine
Mason also played the piano. Eddie Klein, of the
Long Beach branch, rendered several effective saxo-
phone numbers, and Edwin Lester, manager of the
Western Avenue branch, made the hit of the eve-
ning with a "Mr. Gallagher and Mr. Shean" parody
concerning Mr. Epstein and Mr. Platt. Mr. Platt
made a friendly and moving speech in which he
praised the loyalty and enthusiasm of his employees.
This impressive celebration of a great organization
of six stores and over two hundred employees brought
to mind the beginnings of the Platt Music Co. eigh-
teen years ago. At that time Ben Platt was in Los
Angeles as a representative for the Singer Sewing
Machine Co., and who told him that his next jump
would take him to Mexico. Mr. Platt liked Los
Angeles better than he liked the idea of Mexico. He
resigned.
He met a friend who was a dealer in second-hand
pianos, formed a partnership and opened a store to
sell second-hand pianos and sewing machines. His
initial stock of instruments was one used piano. They
sold it for enough money to buy two more used
pianos and the business was established. Building up
sale by sale, Ben Platt developed his business
through eighteen years until today he puts over in
his six beautiful stores a quarter-of-a-million-dollar
sale.
WORE THEIR WAR BONNETS
TO BUY THEIR PIANOS
Indians Were First Customers of Pioneer Music
House at Sioux City, Iowa.
There are few who remember the battleworn coun-
try of the northwest when there were but few white
settlements and when Indians in war paint and
feathers trooped through the country for long dis-
tances. There are a few people yet who remember
when the Schmoller & Mueller Piano Company was
organized in Iowa.
It was in 1859, two years before the Civil war, a
year before the telegraph, ten years before the Union
Pacific wended its way through Council Bluffs, two
years before Omaha got its charter. And at this late
day a good story of the pioneer days comes from
the old music house about the time when Indian
fighters made the first telegraph connections at
Omaha. This was a year after Schmoller & Mueller
Piano Company was organized to supply the new
country with music.
Among the early patrons of the house of Schmoller
& Mueller, goes the story, were Indian warriors, who
trooped into the tiny store and offered their drums
and head-gear in payment for musical instruments.
Among the first customers of the house were mem-
bers of the early Mormon settlement at Council
Bluffs.
When Omaha began to make rapid strides, the
September 29, 1923
Schmoller & Mueller house moved their main head-
quarters across the river and began to see visions of
future possibilities. The influence that music has
had on the enlightenment of the settlers of this
country would be difficult to estimate.
As the country grew in wealth and prosperity
Schmoller & Mueller enlarged their business to
take care of the growing trade until today their busi-
ness reaches more than a million dollars a year. They
have held exclusive agencies for some of the highest
grade pianos for more than a generation.
And it was sixty-four years after the first Indians
trooped into the Schmoller & Mueller store that
Charlie Thompson, the Smith, Barnes & Strohber
traveler, discovered oxoline and let Mr. Schmoller
into the secret of it. Mr. Thompson presented the
first sample to the Council Bluffs piano man less
than a year ago.
•=•=•:•=•:•:•:•=•=•:•=•::•:•:•:•:•:»
CASE OF DANZ PIANO CO.
AGAINST THE WURLITZER CO.
IN EVERT
DETAIL
Reflections Upon the Attitude of the Defendants as
Published Were Not Justified.
In an item which appeared in Presto of August
8th, concerning a charge brought by the Danz Piano
Co., of. Anaheim, Cal., vs. the Rudolph Wurlitzer Co.,
in which officials of the latter were said to have tried
to "force" the former concern to "sell its stock,"
there were unfair statements. Presto regrets this,
and does not hesitate to apologize to the Wurlitzer
Company, and particularly to Howard Wurlitzer,
whose name appeared in the article as published.
The report of the Anaheim case, as printed in
Presto was an extract from a local newspaper, in
which "coercion and threats'' were charged against
the Cincinnati house and its head. No one who read
the item could have believed that other than fair
methods on the part of Mr.. Wurlitzer were em-
ployed in the case. Presto knows nothing of the
case except the publication in the local paper and
regrets that the item was inadvertently republished
in these columns.
As
ARTISTIC
HADDORFF PIANO CO,
ROCKFORD.ILL.
Wholcaal* Office*:
N*w T«rk Cftf
13tW.«ndSt.
CUca*
. Micfc%«i At*.
S*n
:•=•=•=•=•=•:•:•=•:•:•=•»:•=•=•:
NELSON-HOLZER PIANO MFG.
CO. IN HANDS OF A RECEIVER
Latest Industry Started by H. P. Nelson Fails
Because of Lack of Capital.
To follow the trail of piano-maker H. P. Nelson
from his first success to his latest financial failure
would be like witnessing one of "Bill" Hart's movie
picture thrillers. For Mr. Nelson has been so long
conspicuous that he would be missed even to drop
out wholly and completely. His latest was the Nel-
son-Holzer Piano Mfg. Co., which was thrown into
a receivership last week with liabilities of $20,000 and
assets of less than one-fourth that amount. The
newspapers printed an unfair statement that the lia-
bilities were $66,000 with no assets.
Mr. Nelson's financial backer in his latest industry,
with factory at 832 North Wells street, Chicago, is a
member of the realty and bond firm of Leight &
Holzer, Chicago. Mr. Holzer declined to make any
statement further than that, aside from the failure,
"everything was all right."
H. P. Nelson has tried hard to recover from his
business failure of years ago. He is an energetic
piano maker of unquestioned ability, but fortune has
seemed against him. His last industry was devoted
to the manufacture of grand pianos exclusively.
STORY & CLARK ACTIVITIES.
E. M. Love, secretary of the Story & Clark Piano
Company, Chicago, is this week on a business trip
through the South, covering the states of Tennessee,
Kentucky, Alabama, Georgia, and Arkansas. E. H.
Story, president of the Story & Clark Piano Com-
pany, has just returned to headquarters in Chicago,
from a visit to the factory in Grand Haven, Michi-
gan.
R. A. Burke has returned from a short business
trip to Indianapolis, where he spent the latter part
of last week.
MAY ERECT SIGN.
When the board of public works of Goshen, Ind.,
held its regular session at the city hall last week the
petition of Wilbur Templin of Wilbur Templin's
Music Stores, for permission to erect a sign in front
of the new music store, 206 South Main street, was
granted.
Rogers & Wilson, Goshen, Ind., has made extensive
interior improvements in its store. The firm was
established in 1871 by Elias C. Wilson and Charles
B. Rogers.
C ncinnati Factor.es of The Baldwin Piano Company
SUCCESS
is assured the dealer who takes advantage of
THE BALDWIN CO-OPERATION PLAN
which offers every opportunity to represent
under the mos favorable conditions a com-
plete 1'ne of high grade pianos, players and
reproducers
For tnjormailon Wrilt
in $iano Companp
Incorporated
CHICAGO
ST. LOUIS
DALLAS
CINCINNATI
INDIANAPOLIS
LOUISVILLI
New YORK
DENVIB
SAN FRANCISCO
H
t
The Heppe, Mar cellus and Edouard Jules PlftOO
m anufactured by the
HEPPE PIANO COMPANY
are the on' y pianos In the world with
Thre e Sounding Boards.
Pacented in the United States, Great Britain,
Prance Germany and Canada,
Liberal arrangerr lents to responsible agents only.
MainO ffice ,1117 Chestnut St.
PH [LADELPHIA. PA.
When in doubt refer to
PRESTO BUYERS GUIDE
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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