Presto

Issue: 1925 2009

16
January 24, 1925.
PRESTO
PIANO IMPORTS NOT
PERMITTED IN AUSTRIA
Small Market for American Musical Instru-
ments in the Republic Confined to Possibly
Phonograph Sales.
Consul C. H. Foster, Vienna, in "Commerce Re-
ports," says that although there is a nominal import
prohibition on all foreign musical instruments, certain
classes are admitted into Austria when the needs of
the country require. Expensive, high quality foreign
goods could hardly find sales in this district, for the
Austrian industry is composed of master craftsmen
who are peculiarly cognizant of home requirements.
The Austrian piano industry is highly developed
in regard to quality, but it is not large. It employs
about 1,000 hands and comprises 34 establishments.
There is no market for foreign pianos in Austria,
since the inland demand is covered almost entirely
by domestic production. Importation is prohibited,
and import permits are only granted in exceptional
cases. Almost all other musical instruments are pro-
duced in Austria and are made by skilled craftsmen.
Factories have not developed on account of lack of
capital.
There is practically.no production of phonographs
and records in this republic. Austria's total annual
requirement is estimated at about 4,000 to 5,000
phonographs and 200,000 to 300,000 records. Nearly
all kinds of phonographs should find satisfactory
sales in Austria. The favorite records are those that
reproduce artists, classical music, dance melodies,
"jazz" or "hits," and couplets from modern operettas.
members regarding the adoption of these forms indi-
cates that definite advantages are found in their use.
Among the national organizations which have been
active in promoting the use of standard invoice forms
among their members are:
American Walnut Manufacturers' Association,
Plywood Manufacturers' Association, Piano Bench
Manufacturers' Association and Veneer Manufactur-
ers' Association.
INTERESTING YEAR BOOK
OF BRITISH MUSIC TRADE
G. D. Ernest & Co., London, Is Publisher of Use-
ful Annual Filled with Interesting Information.
The Music Trades Diary, Year Book and Direc-
tory for Great Britain and the British Possessions
for 1925, has been issued by G. D. Ernest & Co.,
publishers, Bessemer House, Duke street, Adelphi,
London, W. C. 2. In addition to the valuable in-
formation for the trade, directory feature and inter-
esting advertisements the book is completed with a
memoranda section and diary blank pages for every
day of 1925.
The book contains an interesting article on patents,
trade-marks and designs; "Hints on Wireless for
Music Dealers"; specifications of pianos patented in
1924; law of copyright; a dictionary of technical
terms used in the piano trade; exports and imports
of music goods for 1924; duties on musical instru-
ments; inland and foreign postal and telegraph regu-
lations.
Of course the directory of the trade and industry
and the roster of members in the trade associations
of England, Scotland and overseas possessions are
of the greatest interest. In addition to that informa-
tion are lists of music schools and music societies.
PURCHASING AGENTS
MEET IN WASHINGTON DEALER OPENS WITH
Forty-one National Trade Associations Represented
at Conference in Washington.
Forty-one national trade associations have been
giving considerable thought and attention recently
to the National Standard Invoice, Purchase Order and
Inquiry Forms of the National Association of Pur-
chasing Agents, has pointed out one element of sav-
ing to the seller which appeals to all who now find
it necessary to bill their goods to customers on in-
voice blanks provided by the customers. This grow-
ing tendency of the customers is the result of their
determination to effect the great savings in clerical
help made possible by invoices standardized as to size
and form. If the customers can save fifteen million
dollars by the use of standard invoices, the sellers can
save at least an additional ten per cent of that amount.
The National Standard Invoice Form will do away
with the need for customers' private forms.
The conference was held under the auspices of
this Division of the Department of Commerce,
Wednesday, January 14, 1925, 10 a. m., Eastern stand-
ard time, at the Commerce Building, Room 709, 19th
and Pennsylvania avenue, N. W., Washington, D. C."
A circular distributed told the history of this
movement, and showed the proposed standard forms.
, - The fact that 34 trade associations, other than the
i; four primarily interested, have circularized their
ESTABLISHED 1*54
THE
BRADBURY PIANO
FOR ITS
ARTISTIC EXCELLENCE
FOR ITS
INESTIMABLE AGENCY VALUE
THE CHOICE OF
Representative Dealers the World Over
Now Produced in Several
New Models
WRITE FOR TERRITORY
Factory
Leominstar,
Mass.
Executir* Offices
138th St. and Walton Av«.
N«w York
Division W. P. HAINES & CO., Inc.
ADAM SCHAFF LINE
J. F. Gill Creates Enthusiasm for Pianos and Players
in New Store in Fairbury, 111.
The line of pianos, players and reproducing pianos
made by Adam Schaaf, Inc., Chicago, has been
selected by J. T. Gill, Fairbury, 111., who recently
opened a music store on West Locust street. The fine
instruments are admirably displayed in windows and
warerooms and strongly featured in the local news-
papers.
Mr. Gill has had previous experience in selling the
Adam Schaaf instruments. In a report of the open-
ing the Fairbury Blade this week says:
"There have been one hundred twenty-six of these
high grade Adam Schaaf pianos sold from a former
piano store of J. T. Gill in the past few years, which
is good evidence of the splendid satisfaction of having
an Adam Schaaf piano in your home."
"The Adam Schaaf piano represents the fulfillment
of an ideal created by the founder of the company,"
said Mr. Gill. "His aims and ambitions have been
well carried out by the present management of the
company. I am enthusiastic about the Adam Schaaf
pianos and players because they have the merit of
dependability together with great musical qualities.
Whenever I have sold an Adam Schaaf piano or
player I have made friends of the purchaser and his
family. The pianos not only please the purchasers
but at the same time build up an asset of good will
for the dealer who sells them."
ED. BALLIFF'S CHANGE.
One of the veterans in the Chicago music trade is
Ed. Bailiff, for years with Lyon & Healy. Mr. Bailiff
has left Chicago for the Golden West and has asso-
ciated himself with the house of Sherman, Clay &
Co., of San Francisco. Countless friends in the Chi-
cago trade regret to lose their old comrade, but
wish him even greater success in the West than he
easily won in the city which has been his home for
the span of some years.
CALIFORNIA FIRM EXPANDS.
The Alhambra Music House, Alhambra, Cal., has
taken new quarters at 18 East Main street, a few
doors from the former location. J. D. Coops, pro-
prietor and manager, selected the new location, as it
affords larger floor space and other display facilities.
Mr. Coops carries radio and handles a full line of
phonographs and pianos as well.
BRADBURY IS FEATURED.
Hugo Worch, 110 G street, N. W., Washington, is
now featuring the Bradbury piano, made by the Brad-
bury Piano Co., Leominster, Mass., to his lines. The
Bradbury is well known in the national capital, hav-
ing been sold here for many years by the Van Wickle
Piano Co., now retired from business.-
ARTISTIC
IN EVERY
DETAIL
HADDORFF PIANO CO.
ROCKFORD,ILL.
Wholesale
1XV.1WS*
CUCM
4<0 S. MMfan A»«.
SMI fWncMq
II1 Ckffiamia » .
Schaff Bros.
Players a ad Pianos have won their stand-
ing with trade and public by 54 years of
steadfast striving to excel. They repre-
sent the
LARGEST COMPETITIVE VALUE
because of their beauty, reliability, tone
and modcirate price. They are profitable
to sell and satisfactory when sold.
Brighten Your Line with the
SCHAFF BROS.
The Schaff Bros. Co.
Established 1868
Huntington, Ind.
GRAND PIANOS
EXCLUSIVELY
One Style—One Quality
giving you the
Unequaled Grand
Unequaled Price
at
Already being sold by leading dealers
throughout the country
Write today—tell us your next yeax's re-
quirements and we will meet your demands
with prompt and efficient service.
Columbian Grand Piano Mfg. Co.
400 W. Erie St
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/
CHICAGO
January 24, 1925.
PRESTO
only optimistic, but are making definite plans for the
big increase in business.
ADVICE FOR DEALERS OF
"He who sows his seeds of selling effort now will
reap his golden harvest as he sows and in pro-
WEAVER PIANO CO., INC. portion
as he sows. There is going to be strong
Progressive York, Pa., Industry Impresses
Need of Consistent Pursuit of the
Prospective Buyer.
In one of its admirable series of letters to dealers
mailed recently the Weaver Piano Co., Inc., York,
Pa., says:
"Tucked away in tht wealth of wisdom found in
Franklin's 'Poor Richard's Almanack' you will find
a proverb fitting to this season and time. It reads
'The sleeping fox catches no poultry.'
"The suspense of the presidential election is over.
Industrial stocks are going skyward in value, all
based upon . developing business. The day after
election Judge Gary said, 'The turning point has been
passed. Our country is on the eve of tremendous
prosperity.'
"Six mail-order houses report a gain of from 16
to 34 per cent in business. One of the largest auto-
mobile concerns shows an increase of 12^ per cent.
Twelve department stores report an improvement of
9 per cent, while three chain store systems indicate
11 per cent more business than a year ago. The
executive heads of Bethlehem Steel, General Motors,
Studebaker Corporation, Fayette Plumb, Armstrong
Cork, Westing-house, National City Bank. Bell Tele-
phone, Goodrich Rubber and many others are not
competition but it will be a competition of energy
and brains applied to selling rather than a competi-
tion of price.
"The plan is simplicity itself. Keep canvassing
your territory and recanvassing it to find those who
are thinking of buying. Follow the prospects so
found very closely. Send the names and addresses
of your prospects to our trade promotion department.
Let our Mr. Wantz help convince these prospects
by mail. Tell which kind of piano they are most
interested in. Give him particulars about the family.
Let him help break down their resistance.
"Whether you will allow these opportunities put
profit in your bank account depends upon how eager
you are to go after them.
" 'The sleeping fox catches no poultry.' "
PIANO SECTION FOR
BIG DETROIT STORE
Baldwin Line of Pianos and Players Selected byj
People's Outfitting Company.
The accompanying cut was made from an archi-
tect's drawing of the new store of the People's Out-
fitting Company, of Detroit. It is interesting to the
17
HISTORY OF BENT'S LIFE
SUBJECT OF PRESS COMMENT
The Autobiography of Piano Manufacturer Meets
with Complimentary Notice in Big Newspapers.
Many prominent newspapers have spoken in com-
plimentary terms of the handsome volume in which
Geo. C. Bent, of "Crown" piano fame, tells the story
of his life. The following is from the Los Angeles,
Cal., Times:
An autobiography of George P. Bent, piano manu-
facturer and one of the pioneers of Los Angeles in-
dustry, has come from the presses of the Times-
Mirror Printing and Binding House in time for
Christmas distribution to his friends. It is entitled
"Tales of Travel, Life and Love." The volume is a
beautiful example of the printer's and binder's art,
bound in half Russia leather, with text and illustra-
tions done in olive ink, and is of 362 pages.
The illustrations are very numerous and in them-
selves form a valuable historical record, not only of
the Bent family, but of the development of piano
manufacture in America.
One of the interesting
chapters tells of the manufacturer's fight in Chicago
against union domination, a struggle that drew Bent
and Gen. Harrison Gray Otis together in Los An-
geles and made close friends of them. A consider-
able portion of the chapter contains high praise for
Gen. Otis's struggle for industrial freedom.
The chapter headings give an excellent idea of the
contents of the volume: The Bent Family; George
Bent and Mary Payne Bent; Winneshiek County,
Iowa; George Payne- Bent, Burr Oak; Byron D.
Blackmarr; Silas C. Brace, Albert Lincoln; Frank
Nelson Robinson; George Dallas Taylor; George
Edgar and Pliny W. McAllister; Early Burr Oak
Schools and Teachers; Other Burr Oakers; The
Burr Oak of More Recent Years; George Payne
Bent, Wheaton and Chicago; Old Piano Friends and
Stories; Banking, Advertising and Kansas City;
Various Voyages (1897-1912); My Second Trip
Around the World (1920-1921); George Payne Bent,
Chicago and Los Angeles; Retrospective; Miscel-
laneous Matters and Memories; More Matters and
Memories. A genealogical table tracing his family
back to 1519 concludes the volume.
NEW SYRACUSE MANAGER.
GRAND PIANO
Morris B. Lamb, the new manager of the piano de-
partment of the Clark Music Co., Syracuse, N. Y.,
who formerly was manager of the piano department
of the New York store of John Wanamaker, has
really returned to his home town. Syracuse is adja-
cent to Mr. Lamb's native place and it delighted him
to return to that section of the state in which his
boyhood days were spent. His position in the Clark
Music Co. will afford Mr. Lamb a large opportunity
for the exercise of his abilities in the sales field.
58 Inches Lonft
The best exponent of the present Baby Grand Age.
Ii» tone — It* lines — its restricted space requirement and
attractive price—
MAKE IT THE PREMIER AGENCY
Get full details of this valuable selling franchise NOW.
Premier Grand Piano Corporation
Largest Institution in the World Building Grand
Pianos Exclusively
WALTER C HBPPERLA
PraiMaal
JUSTUS BATTBMBB
Vtn-PrMi&at
510-532 West £$td Street
NEW DETROIT BUILDING.
NEW YORK
For a
Bigger and Better
Business
There is nothing to compare
with the complete line of
music trade in that in addition to the many other
activities of the company, it makes quite a specialty
of selling pianos and playerpianos of the Baldwin
Piano Company, Cincinnati.
This company has just announced plans to build
two 12-story units adjoining its present establishment,
with the expectation that Detroit will be a city of
2,000,000 inhabitants in 1935.
The Best Yet
Graceful lines, rugged construc-
tion, moderately priced. It's the
very best commercial piano from
every standpoint.
ROY O. BURGESS IN CHICAGO.
Roy O. Burgess, Kimball representative in the
Southwest, and widely known in the music trade, is
visiting his many friends in the Chicago trade this
week. Mr. Burgess has a good connection among the
progressive music merchants of Oklahoma, Texas,
New Mexico, Arizona, Colorado and Utah.
VINCENT HEALY MARRIED.
M. SCHULZ CO.
The Players are RIGHT in
everything t h a t means
money to the dealers and
satisfaction to the public
You will never do anything better
than when you get in touch with
M. SCHULZ CO.
711 Milwaukee Avenue
CHICAGO
OUTHRRN BRANCH: 730 Gandler Bid*. ATLANTA, GA
Vincent Healy, youngest son of the late P. J.
Healy, one of the founders of Lyon & Healy, Chi-
cago, was married last week in Highland Park, 111.,
to Miss Helen Hoyne, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Frank G. Hoyne, of Highland Park.
Style 32-4 ft. 4 in.
WESER
WEBSTER PIANOS
Pianos and Players
Noted for Their Musical Beauty
of Tone and Artistic Style
Sell Readily—Stay Sold
ATTRACTIVE
PRICES
Factory
Exacutir* (MECM
Leominstar,
Mass.
138th St. and Walton Are.
N«w York
DWuion W. P. HA1NES & CO., Inc.
Send to-day for catalogue, prices and
details of our liberal financing plan
Weser Bros., Inc.
520 to 528 W . 43rd St., New York
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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