Presto

Issue: 1923 1947

Presto Buyers' Guide
Analyzes and Classifies
All American Pianos
and in Detail Tells of
Their Makers.
PRESTO
THE AMERICAN MUSIC TRADE WEEKLY
Presto Trade Lists
Three Uniform Book-
lets, the Only Complete
Directories of the Music
Industries.
f c.n», « . w > « i w
CHICAGO, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1923
and strictly informal. Invitations and guest tickets
will be mailed this week. "Bring your lady and in-
vite a friend and his lady. If he is in the trade and
not a member of the club, so much the better. Make
no other plans for the evening of November 21," is
the advice of President John McKenna.
WORK PROCEEDS IN
NEW VOSE PLANT
CORRESPONDENCE COURSE FOR
RETAIL MUSIC SALESMEN
Completion of Big Factory of Vose & Sons
Piano Co. Highly Significant of Great
Advantages for All Representatives
of Company.
CHEERFUL PLACE TO GO
IS C. KURTZMANN & CO.
Fine Old Industry at Buffalo Was Never Be-
fore So Active, and Output Is
Surprisingly Large.
ONE THIRD GRANDS
This Seventy-fifth Anniversary Year Is One of the
Most Prosperous in Long Career.
Buffalo is a piano center because the C. Kurtzmann
& Co. is located there, with factories so active and
producing such instruments that the piano world
recognize and piano dealers throughout the country
know and commend without exception. It doesn't
matter whether a dealer handles the Kurtzmann or
not, he will not deny to that instrument the credit
that belongs*to it, as a representative piano and the
creation of one of the strongest and most enterprising
industries associated with music the world over.
Some other pianos are in the same happy condition.
They bear names which in themselves are an impreg-
nable armor against the onslaughts of competition,
for Kurtzmann quality is absolutely fixed and beyond
criticism.
A visit at the Kurtzmann offices this week afforded
the encouragement that a piano man needs at this
time. The activities of the Buffalo industry are of a
kind to disarm pessimism, and to present proof that
the trade is demanding fine instruments in the pur-
chase of which the public is sustaining the better class
of trade.
It may surprise some even well-posted
members of the trade to know that the C. Kurtzmann
& Co. factories are producing in excess of 6,000 com-
pleted instruments annually, and the factory capacity
is such that this large productiveness of standard in-
struments can be increased at any time—and no doubt
will be before the next year gets far along. About
one-third the pianos from the Kurtzmann factories
are grands, and the ratio is growing fast.
The Buffalo industry is now in its 75th year. This
is the anniversary year, and Buffalo has been largely
the gainer by reason of the Kurtzmann piano, for,
from the first, the aim has been to sustain the name
as one symbolizing artistic merit and dependability in
all things. It would be easy to fill a page on the
subject of C. Kurtzmann & Co. of Buffalo. But the
trade is as familiar with its traditions, and the Kurtz-
mann pianos are as firmly fixed among dealers of
ambition as the stars in the firmament. Nor is it the
least interesting consideration, at this time, that it
was said in the offices of the Buffalo industry that the
proportion of "straight" uprights produced is about
one-third of the total output. That looks like a re-
vival of the hand-played piano. It would do any
grouchy piano man good to visit C. Kurtzmann &
Co. at this time.
PIANO CLUB OF CHICAGO
HEARS MISS VAUGHN DE LEATH
"Original
Radio Girl" Enjoys Return Event at
Luncheon This Week.
Miss Vaughn De Leath, the "Original Radio Girl/'
was a luncheon guest of the Piano Club of Chicago on
Monday of this week and brought her clever songs,
stories and pianologues. She was a guest previously
on her return from Australia. Miss De Leath
is the managing director of Station W D T, Ship-
owners' Radio Service, New York City; she is a
record artist of note and she is now appearing in
an important part in the supporting cast of Lionel
Barrymore in "Laugh, Clown, Laugh," at Powers
Theatre. She is a busy young lady but she's strong
for the Piano Club of Chicago.
The annual musicale, reception and dance of the
club will be held on November 21 in the Florentine
Room at the Congress Hotel.
This will be the biggest event of the year, and
will be complimentary to members and their guests,
Richard W. Lawrence Names Committee to Carry
Out Purposes Started.
Richard W. Lawrence, president of the Music In-
dustries Chamber of Commerce, has appointed the
following committee of New York piano men to de-
velop a correspondence course for salesmen in retail
music stores:
E. Paul Hamilton, Chickering warerooms; James
F. Ryan, Rudolph Wurlitzer Company; C. T. Purdy,
Hardman Peck & Company; William H. Alfring,
Aeolian Company; William J. Haussler, C. Bruno &
Sons, and George Schofield, Pease-Behning Com-
pany.
The appointment of the committee is the outcome
of a proposal made by Mr. Hamilton, and it is ex-
pected that through its activities, results of great
value will be accomplished in the matter of raising
the standards of retail salesmanship in music stores.
NEW INCORPORATIONS
IN MUSIC GOODS TRADE
New and Old Concerns Secure Charters in Various
Places.
Max Friedman Music Publishing Co., Buffalo,
N. Y.; $25,000; M. Friedman, and P. and H. R.
Shapiro.
The Esenbe Co., Pittsburgh, Pa.; $5,000; Harry M.
Swartz, Lebanon, Pa., and others.
Austin-Klinger Piano Co., Toledo, O.; $10,000; Ed-
ward J. Austin and others.
The Grimes-Lawing Piano Co., Fort Worth, Tex.;
$5,000; B. A. Grimes, J. D. Lawing and Mrs. W. J.
Lawing.
The Cathedral Pipe Organ Co., 810 Broad street,
Newark, N. J.; $125,000; to manufacture pipe organs.
Paul Specht, Manhattan; theater proprietors; $10,-
000; P. Specht, W. G. Lovatt, S. Schwartzman. At-
torney, H. S. Hechheimer, 1450 Broadway.
R. K. MAYNARD IN CHICAGO.
The Pacific Coast manager for the M. Schulz Co.,
Chicago, is at headquarters this week. Mr. Maynard
reports trade as being active in his section, with prom-
ise of being still better. A. M. Prinz, the Northwest
representative of the M. Schulz Co., is also in Chicago
this week. Mr. Prinz covers Wisconsin, Minnesota,
Iowa and the Dakotas for the M. Schulz lines.
G. L. MANSFIELD WILL SPEAK.
G. L. Mansfield, general traveler for C. Kurtzmann
& Co., of Buffalo, has accepted the invitation to speak
at the annual dinner of the sales force of the Pear-
son Music House at Indianapolis, on January 6th.
He will deliver an address on "Salesmanship." No
one who knows Mr. Mansfield will doubt that it
will be worth going a long way to hear.
BACK HOME AND OPTIMISTIC.
Stil Harcourt, of the Story & Clark Piano Co., Chi-
cago, has just returned from a three weeks' trip
through the eastern states. The Repro-Phraso de-
mand is big and growing rapidly, according to Mr.
Harcourt, who returned by the way of Springfield,
Columbus and Cincinnati in a very enthusiastic frame
of mind.
NEW YORK FAILURE.
Louis Hammerschlag, doing business as Louis
Hammerschlag Company, dealing in music, at 41
Union square, has been put into bankruptcy by Jacob
Zattlin, a creditor to extent of $400; A. M. Friedland,
$100; Sol. Glasberg, $100.
BEAUTY AND UTILITY
Dual Features in Great Modern Manufacturing Struc-
ture in Watertown, Matters of Local Pride and
Piano Trade Advantages at All Points.
Work is now proceeding in all departments of the
new factory of the Vose & Sons Piano Co., in Water-
town, Greater Boston, about twenty minutes' ride
from the center of the city. The new building not
only provides accommodation for present require-
ments, but insures provision for facilities for the
natural growth of the Vose output.
The exterior of the new structure suggests the
greatly increased facilities of the Vose & Sons Piano
Co. But in the architectural design beauty is com-
bined with utility. It is an appropriate housing of a
great and ambitious industry, and is another cause for
Boston's pride in the architectural attractiveness of its
industrial plants.
Everything Modern.
But above all the new Vose factory is truly modern
and efficiency is the slogan that animates every phase
of the activities. It is a fact that many months were
devoted to research before even a tentative plan of
construction was drafted. The final accepted plans
were an assurance of the ideals of the Vose family to
have the latest and best and most approved structure
to house the latest equipments in piano making ma-
chinery and scientific devices used in the manufactur-
ing processes.
To provide for the rapidly increasing demand for
instruments bearing the name ''Vose & Sons," it was
considered imperative to plan for facilities for the
future. The great growth in the demand for the Vose
grands was in itself a reason for providing for great
floor space. It is a well known fact with manufac-
turers that a factory eighty feet wide is far more
admirably adapted to the building of grand pianos
than the more congested buildings of less modern
type.
Beauty and Utility.
The new factory of the Vose & Sons Piano Co. is
wide and spacious, constructed of reinforced concrete
faced with a rich colored red brick which makes it
highly attractive from an architectural standpoint. In
the new factory much attention has been given to
light, both daylight and artificial light. In fact, every
foot of space in the entire structure affords an abund-
ance of light and illumination. The ventilating sys-
tem is another splendid feature that renders the new
factory healthful and a pleasant place to work.
Advantages for Dealers.
Of course all these modern improvements result in
the efficiency of employes as well as in economies in
manufacture in which the dealer who buys the Vose
instruments is a sharer. Every phase in the mod-
ernity of the factory of the Vose & Sons Piano Co. is
reflected in the quality and price of the Vose instru-
ments. The busy floors within the walls and the lum-
ber yards, drying kilns, railroad transportation facili-
ties without, are all part of the accommodations which
permit the company to make more pianos today and
insure a future product surpassing in quality and mod-
erate price any effort of the company in the past.
The representatives of the Vose & Sons Piano Co.
are quick to appreciate this fact for the Vose & Sons
pianos have always been big values with the strength
of appeal and unfailing selling power. In the new
structure it is the aim of the Vose & Sons Piano Co.
to give more value and quality than ever before, and
the new factory with its ample floor space and splen-
did facilities augurs well for the Vose dealers.
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
radio. However, music still reigns supreme among
our people as the great source of entertainment and
education, particularly in the home. As a matter of
fact, the movie and the radio have themselves con-
tributed in many ways to an increased appreciation
of and demand for music, as music has been in-
separably connected with the development of the
Manager of Music Industries Chamber of Com- motion picture and radio industries.
During the past few years there has been a very
merce Points Out to Newspaper Editor
apparent wave of musical appreciation in this coun-
Erroneous Thought Created by Head-
try, which, has necessarily had quite the opposite
lines of News Story
effect on the music, business from that which is indi-
cated in your story about the Alphonso Smith Piano
House failure.
FACTS TOLD HERALD EDITOR
People Desire Music.
By this, I do not refer so much to increased at-
Mr. Smith Conclusively Proves Condition of Retail tendance at the opera and concerts, which has been
Music Trade Directly Contrary to View Sug-
great, as to the fact that music has become a more
initial factor in the lives of the rank and file of our
gested by Foolish Head Statements.
people as shown by the increased use of pianos and
Alfred L. Smith, general manager of the Music phonographs in the home, the greater number of
Industries Chamber of Commerce, in a letter of No- children learning to play band and orchestral instru-
vember 7 to the editor of the New York Herald, ments, the increased study of music by children both
in the home and in the school, group singing and
takes excepton to the reasons given by the Herald
for the failure of the Alphonso Smith Piano House, band concerts in industrial plants and the practical
and states facts which prove the healthy condition of
use of music as a therapeutic agent, especially in
the retail music business today. Mr. Smith's letter institutions for delinquents and the insane.
follows:
Very truly yours,
Dear Sir: My attention has been called to an ar-
ALFRED L. SMITH
ticle in the New York Herald on Sunday, November
4, about the insolvency and receivership of the Al-
phonso Smith Piano House, in which the headlines
state that "Jazz knocks out old piano house," "Radio
completes insolvency of Alphonso Smith firm" and
"Flivver and movie do their part." What would
otherwise be a commonplace news account of a pe-
Nashua Country Club Scene of Contest in Which
tition in bankruptcy has been made an important
New England Dealers Were Victors.
story and given news interest by describing as a
reason for the failure "the hopelessness of the strug-
Harry Holmes and Billy Bowles, travelers for the
gle against an era of jazz and speed and joys less
Kohler Industries, New York, recently had the hardi-
subtle" than those of music.
hood to challenge W. L. Nutting and R. G. Knuepfer,
Headlines Are Surprising.
the well-known New England music dealers, to a
Knowing the interest of your paper in music, as round of golf.
Mr. Nutting selected his home grounds, the links
evidenced by its treatment of musical topics in your
of the Nashua Country Club, for the match. It was
news columns and by frequent editorial comment on
musical development, and likewise knowing of the a merry party that teed off, and Messrs. Holmes and
Bowles were the merriest members. What happened
reliability of your paper in the matter of stories and
on the links no one who was there will tell. The
editorial comments relating to business conditions, I
victors merely smile and the vanquished become in-
venture to call your attention to the inaccurate im-
articulate and red in the face when asked. Even the
pression of conditions in the music industry which
score is withheld. Suffice it to say that the team of
the ordinary reader would get from this story.
Holmes and Bowles is not issuing any more chal-
Newspaper Corrected.
lenges.
I am not personally familiar with the circumstances
After the match, Mr. Nutting entertained the party
surrounding the failure of the Alphonso Smith Piano
at
dinner at the Nashua Country Club.
House, but I know from close contact with condi-
tions in the music business that it cannot have been
due to competition from such industries as automo-
MOVES IN WASHINGTON, D. C.
biles, movies, and radio. Of course, failure to under-
Loenberger's Music Shop, for many years located
stand and master new conditions brought about by
automobiles, movies, and radio may possibly have at 3329 Fourteenth street northwest, Washington,
D. C , was recently removed to a new location at 926
played a part, although this is doubtful.
New York avenue. The new store occupies a space
The retail branch of the music business today is
twenty-five
by ninety feet on the ground floor, and
in a very sound condition. Retail sales of musical
has an exceptionally large showcase at the front of
instruments of all kinds during the past summer
the store. Starr pianos and phonographs are car-
have been far ahead of records for several years.
ried, and an extensive piano repair department is also
Fall retail sales are heavy, and the outlook for holi-
maintained in charge of Fred Loenberger, owner of
day business is exceedingly good. The demand for
the establishment. A complete line of sheet music
band and orchestral instruments has taxed manu-
and teachers' supplies is also carried.
facturing capacity for several years. There were
probably as many pianos made and shipped to re-
tailers during the month of October as in any month
F. J. RAGATZ, SECRETARY.
in the history of the industry, which reflects the good
Fred J. Ragatz of Bellevue, la., formerly a resident
piano business which retailers are enjoying.
of Dubuque, la., has been named secretary of the
Music Always Wanted.
Henry G. Johnson Piano Manufacturing Company,
located in the former town. Mr. Ragatz, who also
It is trne that people of this country have new
has been selected as a director, succeeds E. E. Dona-
forms of education and amusement which were hither-
hue, resigned.
to unknown, such as the movie, automobiles, and
A. L. SMITH CORRECTS
WRONG IMPRESSION
November 17, 1923
THE
W. P. HAINES & COMPANY
PIANOS
THE PIANOS OF QUALITY
Three Generations of Piano Makers
All Styles—Ready Sellers
Attractive Prices
GRANDS
REPRODUCING GRANDS
UPRIGHTS and PLAYERS
AVAILABLE TERRITORY OPEN
W. P. HAINES & CO., Inc.
138th St. and Walton Ave.
New York City
KOHLER TRAVELERS LOSE
TO NUTTING AND KNUEPFER
WESER
Pianos and Players
Sell readily—Stay sold
Great profit possibilities
Style E (shown below) our latest 4'6"
Order a sample to-day.
Liberal advertising and
cooperative arrangements
Write for catalogue
and price list
Weser Bros., Inc.
Manufacturer!
520 to 528 West 43rd St.
New York
ELLINGTONS FOR BAYLOR COLLEGE
The Lyon & Healy
Reproducing Piano
Baylor College, at Belton, Texas, is the third larg-
est college for women, and the largest denomina-
tional school for women, in the world.
Recently an order was placed with the Baldwin
factories in Cincinnati for four of the new Style 391
Ellington grand pianos, which are to be used exclu-
sively in the instruction and education of advanced
pupils.
A moderate priced reproducing piano,
beautiful in design and rich in tone.
Write for our new explanatory Chart,
the most complete and simple treat-
ment of the reproducing action.
Wabash at Jackson - - - 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).
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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