Presto

Issue: 1924 1996

PRESTO
NEARLY A HALF MILLION
FOR OLD STEINWAY HALL
Famous Building on Fourteenth Street, New
York, Will Soon Pass to Other Purposes
than Pianos.
The splendid new Steinway Hall, on West Fifty-
seventh street, New York, is well along toward com-
pletion, but Steinway & Sons do not expect to become
settled there before next Spring. The removal of the
general offices and salesrooms to the new building
presents something of a feat. The old headquarters
have been so long occupied that things arc so rooted
there as to present a formidable task in the change.
Deeds in the sale of the old Steinway Hall prop-
erty at 107 and 109 East Fourteenth street and 108
to 114 East Fifteenth street by Steinway & Sons to
the S. Klein Union Square Realty Corporation placed
on record reveal a stated consideration of $475,000.
It is a four-story structure fronting seventy-one
feet on Fourteenth street and one hundred feet on
Fifteenth street, and was purchased by the new own-
ers in May, 1923.
PERHAPS THIS IS A CASE
OF "BEG YOUR PARDON'
But as Offending Letter Was Signed by Member of
Firm, Where Shall We Bow.
A few weeks back an article appeared in which
credit was given to a member of a firm of piano
dealers at Akron, Ohio, for expert salesmanship,
shown in the disposition of a number of Francis
Bacon pianos. When the article appeared the partner
of the expert salesman wrote a letter asking that
correction be made, inasmuch as, he said, others had
shared in the expert salesmanship.
The letter of one partner referring to the other part-
ner appeared. And it bore the signature of the part-
ner who had written it. And now comes a letter
from the other partner, who seems to think that
Presto is to blame for responding to the seemingly
reasonable request of his partner.
In a partnership both members arc equally respon-
sible. Presto is in no way to blame for anything but
trying to do everything possible to help both partners
be happy. Here is the latest—and last—letter on the
subject of the Akron salesmanship, which carries
with it the customary "beg your pardon," to which
every partner in the firm of Smith & Mitten may
cither deserve it or lay claim to it:
Editor Presto: I just note an article printed in
your paper under date of October 11th, page 7, every Resold by Recent Buyers at a Profit Said to
Be at Least $1,000,000 Over the Figure
word of which Is a falsehood, and I will hold your
company responsible.
Paid for It Three Months
I am entitled to damages and shall expect it. The
Ago.
original of this was furnished you by the Bacon
Piano Co., New York, and had you asked them
about it they would have corrected the error for
you, I am sure.
Akron, Ohio, October 21, 1924.
ERNEST E. SMITH.
Famous Home of the "Pianola" and the "Weber"
Piano Proved a Big Money-Maker for "Real-
tors" of Manhattan.
SECOND SALE OF
AEOLIAN BUILDING
BETTER THAN CAR=L0AD LOTS
OLD MUSKEGON INDUSTRY
IS FINANCIALLY SOUND
Report that the Chase-Hackley Piano Co. was
in Hands of a Creditors' Committee
Unfounded.
Within the past three weeks there has been talk
in the trade about the condition of the Chase-Hackley
Piano Co., of Muskegon, Mich. The representative
of a large financing company which makes a business
of handling piano ''paper" was quoted as having said
that the old Michigan factory was in the hands of
a creditors' committee, for the purpose of liquidation.
The Chase-Hackley Piano Co. has been recognized
as one of the strongest in the industry. For several
years past it has not been as active as formerly,
because of discontent among the stockholders as to
the best policy to pursue. But, aside from that,
conditions at Muskegon are as solid as ever. When
the reports, on false gossip, alluded to, reached the
management at Muskegon the following telegram was
dispatched to Presto—one day this week:
"Chase-Hackley Piano Co. has assets of six hun-
dred thousand and liabilities of about one-tenth of
that amount, or sixty thousand outside of the capital
stock. We trust you will deny emphatically any
rumors."
SPECIAL ATTRACTION AT
CHICAGO PIANO CLUB MEETING
Monday's Session Will Be One of Unusual Interest,
with "Deep Stuff" Included.
Miss Grace Wilson, of vaudeville and radio fame,
will be the guest of honor of the Piano Club of Chi-
cago Monday, October 27th, at the Illinois Athletic
Club. Miss Wilson is nationally known as the "girl
with a million friends."
At the first two meetings of the present year the
Piano Club has broken attendance records and mem-
bers are urged to be on hand early to get good seats.
The meeting last Monday adjourned at 1:40. Presi-
dent Schoenwald is faithfully keeping his promise of
closing on time. This arrangement seems to meet
the wishes of most of the members as they are
anxious to get back to business. "Deep stuff will
positively appear next week," adds Secretary Gordon
Laughead.
The ^J-/ardman Jzine
is a complete line
It comprises a range of artisti-
cally w o r t h y instruments to
please practically every purse:
The Hardman, official piano of
the Metropolitan Opera House;
the Harrington and the Hensel
Pianos in which is found that in-
built durability thatcharacterizes
all Hardman-made instruments;
the wonderful Hardman Repro-
ducing Piano; the Hardman
Autotone (the perfect player-
piano); and the popular Playo-
tone.
October 25, 1924.
AN IOWA CAMPAIGN.
A strong campaign for music in the home is being
operated by the Schmoller & Mueller Piano Co.,
Council Bluffs, Iowa, in which free piano or vocal
lessons with every piano sold during the campaign is
featured. A choice of prominent instructors with
every piano sold during the campaign is offered.
Steinway, Hardman, Emerson, McPhail, Steger &
Sons, Lindeman & Sons, Story & Clark, Behr Bros.,
Premier pianos and others are carried by the
company.
ADVERTISING THE LEADERS.
Attractive blotters have been distributed by the
Flanner-Hafsoos Music House, Inc., Milwaukee,
which give details of the attractions in the depart-
ments of the store. Below the firm name and the
slogan "Everything Musical" there are three
silhouettes, illustrating a Kurtzmann grand, a Conn
saxophone and an Edison phonograph, accompanied
bv the name of the instrument.
CARL E. PECK RETURNS.
Carl E. Peck, president of Hardman, Peck & Co.,
New York, returned recently from Europe on the
liner Reliance. Mr. Peck, who was accompanied
abroad by Mrs. Peck and their daughter Marjorie,
spent three months on the trip during which they
visited France, England, Switzerland and Italy.
Aeolian Hall, on Forty-Second street, New York,
has been sold again. The home of the Weber piano
and the Pianola, has become a center of interest in
Manhattan real estate transactions.
The latest
amounts almost to a sensation in the fact that the
"'realtors" realized a profit, estimated at a full mil-
lion, by the purchase of the famous building and
selling it again within a few weeks. It was better
than selling pianos—even.
The Aeolian Building is an eighteen-story structure
on West Forty-second street, opposite Bryant Park.
It was resold last week Friday by the Schulte Retail
Stores Corporation at a profit of close to $1,000,000
after an ownership of less than three months.
The buyer is Samuel Keller Jacobs, one of the
largest real estate operators in New York City, and,
according to the Charles F. Noyes Company, which
represented him, the transaction involved about
$7,000,000.
Runs Through Block.
The Aeolian Building, which is known as 29 and
33 West Forty-second street, runs through the block
to 32, 34 and 36 West Forty-third street, occupying
a plot front of 78 feet on both streets and having a
depth of 200 feet through the block.
It was sold about three months ago by The Aeolian
Company to the Schulte Retail Stores Corporation,
controlled by D. A. Schulte and the Schulte Cigar
Stores interests.
In selling the property the Aeolian Company took
back a lease for at least five years on the space which
it now occupies in the building.
Made Big Lease.
Following close upon the sale of the property came
the announcement that the Schulte interests had
leased the entire building to the F. W. Woolworth
Company as a location for a new five and ten cent
store.
This lease, which is one of the largest and most
important of the year involving Forty-second street
property, is for a period of sixty-three years at $400,-
000 a year for the first twenty-one years and $450,000
a year for the balance of the lease, forty-two years.
The aggregate rental runs into many millions of
dollars, not including taxes or operating charges.
The street floor of the building will be occupied
by the Woolworth Company as a branch store as
soon as the Aeolian Company vacates the premises,
which it may not do for several years to come.
New Sites for Aeolian.
The Aeolian Company is reported to have several
new sites under consideration in the new music centre
on Fifty-seventh street adjacent to Carnegie Hall.
Samuel Keller Jacobs, the new owner of the Aeo-
lian Building, who is one of New York's largest and
most active real estate operators, recently leased
three floors to Gimbel Brothers for executive offices
in his Cuyler Building, 116 West Thirty-second
street, running through to Thirty-first street, and re-
cently purchased the new Vantine Building-on Thirty-
ninth street, adjoining the northeast corner of Fifth
avenue.
This corner for years has been the site of the Wen-
del home and the Wendel estate has refus|d to either
sell or lease the corner property. It was this cor-
ner that the late Jacob Wendel refused to sell a few
years ago, saying that the family's pet dog needed it
for a playground.
SCHOOL PIANOS DEMOLISHED.
The Harper School, Sixty-fifth and Wood streets,
Chicago, was entered one night this week and its
equipment damaged $4,000. Clocks were torn from
the walls, desks wrecked, papers scattered about and
two new pianos had been demolished with axes. Every
room had been entered. The school has been the cen-
ter of a controversy between parents of pupils and
the Board of Education,, because of its conversion
from an ordinary grade school into a junior high.
W. A. Erwin and, J. J. Collins, are partners in an
upstairs piano wareroom in Portland, Ore.
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
October 25, 1924.
CHRISTMAN
"The First Touch Tells
WHERE DOUBTS ARE DISPELLED
Under This Head Presto Will Answer Any Question Pertaining to Pianos, or
Other Subjects of Direct Interest to the Trade and Musical Public
Inquiries must bear the signature and address of
writer in order to receive attention. Answers thought
to be of general trade interest will be Published. If an
answer is not of general interest it will be mailed pro-
vided stamp is inclosed.
The
CHRISTMAN
Reproducing Grand
has attained to a place preeminent be-
cause of its absolute dependability,
precise reproduction of the playing of
the world's artists and beauty of con-
struction.
(only 5 ft. long)
In All the List of Fine, Small Grands
There Is None That Stands
Higher Than
The Famous
Studio Grand
This dainty little instrument is pre-
ferred by many of the foremost piano
houses and by its remarkable beauty
of design and tone quality it remains
the favorite w i t h discriminating
customers.
GRANDS, UPRIGHTS
PLAYERS
"The First Touch Tells"
Reg. U S. P»t. OS.
Christman Piano Co.
597 East 137th St.
New York
ELECTRIC ORGAN REPAIRS.
Danville, 111., Oct. 11, 1924.
Editor Presto: We are about to repair a pipe
organ furnished with electrical action, parts of which
have to be renewed.
Kindly help us by giving the address, or addresses,
of firms making, or dealers in, all such furnishings,
as we do not know the make of said organ, as it has
no name or make of builder upon it.
C. E. WEST.
The Piano Repair Shop, 339 South Wabash avenue,
Chicago, makes a business of repairing all manner of
mechanical instruments. It is possible, however, that
you might be able to get electrical parts by applying
to any of the following:
Operators' Piano Co., 715 North Kedzie avenue,
Chicago; Nelson-Wiggen Piano Co., 224 North Shel-
don street, Chicago; Motor Player Corporation, 340
West Huron street, Chicago.
All of those concerns are in the electrical player
action industry.
* * *
VIOLIN MAKERS' SUPPLIES.
Ft. Wayne, Ind., Oct. 7, 1924.
Editor Presto: Would you kindly advise where
I can secure material for violins, such as maple,
spruce and purfling; also stain and varnish? I am
making a few violins for my own amusement and
would only require a small supply, say for two or
three instruments.
J O H N NORTON.
We suggest that you can get what you want here
in Chicago by addressing either of the following
concerns:
William Lewis & Son, 225 South Wabash avenue;
Lyon & Healy, Wabash avenue and Jackson boule-
vard; C. H. Taylor & Co., 218 South Wabash avenue;
J. N. Copland & Co., 63 East Adams street, or of
August Gemunder, 141 West Forty-second street,
New York.
While there are a number of others the ones we
have named are reliable and no doubt can furnish
you with whatever you may want.
* * *
WANTS USED PIANOS.
Ardmore, Okla., October 16, 1924.
Editor Presto: Will you kindly give me the
address of those in Chicago who make a business of
wholesaling used pianos?
E. B. LUKE.
E. E. Blake, care P. A. Starck Piano Co., Chicago,
has made a specialty of this line of business. So,
we understand, has Lem Kline, East End Park Hotel,
Chicago.
Of course, as a rule, you can get quantities of
used pianos of all grades by writing such houses
as Lyon & Healy or The Cable Co. Both of those
concerns very frequently have large supplies of sec-
ond-hand pianos in their warehouses. The firm of
Hill & Son, 1365 Myrtle street, Brooklyn, N. Y., also
makes a specialty of wholesaling used instruments.
* * *
A "MASON" GRAND PIANO.
Seattle, Wash., Oct. 10, 1924.
Editor Presto: Have been offered a new "Mason"
Grand Piano. Kindly let me know if it is a standard
make and the manufacturer of same, through your
"Where Doubts Are Dispelled" column in Presto, as
I read same every week.
MRS. FREDERICK B. WILSON.
We have no record of a "Mason" Grand Piano,
though the distinguished Mason & Hamlin instru-
ments are known the world over and stand at the
forefront among artistic instruments. If it is a
Mason & Hamlin Grand to which you refer, as hav-
ing been offered to you, we can assure you that it is
an instrument which you may buy with the utmost
confidence.
If it is merely a '"Mason" instrument, then we can-
not tell you from what factory it comes, and that is a
bit of information which we would ourselves be very
glad to have. The salesman who offers you a
"Mason" piano should be willing to tell you some-
thing of its manufacture.
* * *
BUSH & GERTS PIANOS.
Appleton, Wis., Oct. 13, 1924.
Editor Presto: Will you kindly give us the full
particulars regarding the Bush & Gerts Piano Co.
as to their going out of business?
F I S H E R BROS.
You will find full particulars of the reorganization
of the Bush & Gerts Piano Co. on another page in
this issue of Presto. There will be.no change in the
character of the Bush & Gerts pianos. They will
continue, under the reorganization, to be the same
artistic instruments, and we understand that the
grands will be made even more of a feature of the
industry than before. The famous little "Midgette"
grand will also have special attention. Mr. Johnson,
who heads the new organization, is so well known
for his adherence to correct principles that nothing
more need be said on the subject than appears in the
article to which reference has been made.
* * *
WRONG STREET ADDRESS.
Cambridge, Md, October 14, 1924.
Editor Presto: In a recent issue of Presto we no-
ticed the address of Hill & Son, 909 Hart street,
Brooklyn, New York, as a dealer of second hand
pianos in a wholesale way. W r e have written these
folks and the letter was returned to us. Will you tell
us by return mail exactly how to reach this firm?
"M. NATHAN ESTATE.
It is evident that the cause of your letters addressed
to Hill & Son being returned was that the concern
has moved and the Brooklyn postoffice has not found
it out.
If you will write to Hill & Son, 1365-1375 Myrtle
avenue, Brooklyn, New York, we believe that you
will have a response. The house is an old one in
the handling of used pianos, and advertises to sell in
carload lots of twelve or more.
SEASONED TRAVELER
SAYS TRADE IS FINE
R. K. Maynard, in Spokane, Reverts to His
Beginning in the Trade Forty-four
Years Ago.
R. K. Maynard, Pacific Coast representative of the
M. Schulz Company, Chicago, who left his home at
South Pasadena, California, two weeks ago for an
extensive trip through the Northwest, was at the
Davenport Hotel, Spokane, Washington, a day or
two last week, where he was met by a Presto cor-
respondent.
Mr. Maynard said he found his own trade, as well
as business in general, in Oregon and Washington
better than he had hoped for or expected, ''and," he
added, "I am told conditions are good in Idaho,
Montana and Wyoming, where I am now headed for.
If all reports are correct," Mr. Maynard said, "busi-
ness generally is booming in Texas, and I intend to
go to that field as soon as I can get this northern
territory properly gone over."
Mr. Maynard expressed regret that he could not
have been present at the Chicago Piano Club's annual
meeting, as that meeting occurred on the day of the
forty-fourth anniversary of his entry into the piano
business, in October, 1880, when he went to work as
city collector for Story & Camp, then located at 188-
190 State street, Chicago, at about in the center of
the present State street frontage of the Fair. Mr.
Maynard said he is in fine trim for business and that
"it's fun selling M. Schulz and Werner pianos."
LOOKING FORWARD IN ST, LOUIS.
Holiday business is being anticipated in the adver-
tising of the St. Louis music merchants and all the
sales managers are confident the sales for the festive
period will be good. For the past two weeks there
lias been a consistent toning up of the situation, with
increased sales of satisfactory volume. Stocks are
being replenished in expectation of a large movement
between now and Christmas.
NAME A MOUTHFUL.
The Musikwissenschaftlicher Kongress is the title
of an assembly which recently met in Leipzig, Ger-
many. It ceased to function during the late war and
had not met in convention since the war. This con-
gress is broad in its scope and embraces the theory
and practice of music as well as displays in the de-
velopment of musical instrument making and displays
of manufactured musical goods in all branches of the
industry.
E. H. STORY RETURNS HOME.
President E. H. Story, of the Story & Clark Piano
Co.. returned to his home in Pasadena, Cal., early
this week; Mr. Story put in six solid weeks visiting
the headquarters in Chicago and the several branch
houses in the East. He returned home perfectly sat-
isfied with the progress which is everywhere evident
in the affairs of the Story & Clark Piano Company.
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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