Presto

Issue: 1925 2011

PRESTO
February 7, 1925.
QEO. P. BENT IN CHICAGO
MENTIONS HIS BOOK
With production going forward steadily on these
units, the management expects to be able to fill
orders for any type of organ almost as fast as they
are received.
TRADE STIMULATOR
FOR PIANO DEALERS
If Any Friends of the Author of "Tales of
Travel, Life and Love" Have Been Missed
They Should Write.
M. P. THOMPSON STOPS OFF
ENROUTE TO FRISCO
Charles Clinton Firkens, Head of Story &
Clark Dealers' Service Department, Will
Clear Up Your Accumulated Stock.
Early on Tuesday of this week George P. Bent,
bearing new honors as the maker of the best book
on men of music thus far produced, arrived in Chi-
cago from his home in Los Angeles. Mr. Bent is a
commuter between California and Chicago. He
thinks no more of making the trip than any Chi-
cagoan does of his twice-a-day trip from and to Hyde
Park, or Austin, or Evanston. And it agrees with
the ex-piano manufacturer.
"I have had many compliments on the appearance
of my book," said Mr. Bent with characteristic
humor. "All of my friends say that the printing and
binding of my. 'Tales of Travel, Life and Love' are
fine—and especially the handsome pictures of my
friends in and outside the piano business. Modesty,
no doubt, keeps them from saying much about the
literary part of it, but I suspect they think that's
fine, too.
You remember Elbert Hubbard's 'New
Bible,' which was splendidly bound in limp morocco
with georgeously illuminated title page. Inside was
a nice assortment of blank pages for use as a diary.
My book might, perhaps, have been improved in
some such way, but I wanted to have my say and I
'went and done it' and thank my friends for its kind
reception."
Mr. Bent asked Presto to say that, should there be
any of his friends who have not received a copy of
his book he will be glad to have them drop him a
line, care of Illinois Athletic Club, Chicago. The
book is not sold, but he wants his friends to have it
—and the edition is limited.
Manager of Baldwin Piano Co., San Francisco, Visits
New York and Chicago Houses.
The dealer sales service department of the Story &
Clark Piano Co., Chicago, will be even of greater in-
fluence and value from this time forward than before.
Under the experienced head of Charles Clinton Fir-
kens dealers will continue to find the blood pressure
of business constantly growing firmer, and in the
event of its becoming sub-normal "Doctor" Firkens
may be depended upon to bring it quickly back to
a healthy condition. Putting the busy into business
is Mr. Firkens' specialty, and his remedies for the
''dulls'" have not yet been known to fail in their en-
livening effects.
There are times when the most promising of pros-
pects seem inclined to lose interest. They need the
injection of pep, and wait for business to come when
they should go after it. At such times the services
of Mr. Firkens are just what is needed. It is forth-
coming to Story & Clark dealers, and in it the deal-
ers find the optimistic punch that moves things and
GULBRANSEN PUBLICITY
METHODS THEME OF AD
Agricultural Publishers' Association Makes Enlight-
ening Statement in Printer's Ink.
An interesting two page advertisement appeared
in Printer's Ink of January 22 in which a fact in the
Gulbransen Company's publicity is commented upon.
Printer's Ink is the leading publication in its field.
It will be noticed that the Gulbransen Registering
Piano has been exclusively picked as a product the
success of which has been notable in the farm field.
Copy, illustration and publication of same were all
arranged for by the Agricultural Publishers' Asso-
ciation. This is said in the display by the Agricul-
tural Publishers' Association:
Long farm evenings demand recreation and music
has the call in many a farm home.
Gulbransen Company sensed this demand. In
1917, when it started advertising the Gulbransen Reg-
istering- Piano, farm papers were at once put on the
list. This concern has been a continuous farm paper
advertiser.
The company today has a production of 100 regis-
tering pianos a day. The majority of these are sold
through dealers in the rural field—where farmers
dominate a dealer's trade.
If you doubt whether farm papers can help you
sell your product, rememher this,..4ait of Gulbransen
history. This office or anyfar-tfi 'paper wnT gt&dly
give you further information.
£•
'• * . <:
PAGE ORGAN CO. MOVES
OFFICES TO^ DEFIANCE, 0 .
>.
:
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- --"'-f-
ChangeMn Production System of Factory Told by
D. M. Lamson, Superintendent.
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The Page Organ Company, of Tiefvance;*"O., is
moving its officte to that city from Ljrna. "Tb^e Gofri-
pany has severed all connections with the Maus Piano
Company, of Lima, and the organ busings as well as*
the manufacturing end will be taken caje'of at,*De-
fiance. The company is at present installing a radio
broadcasting station at the plant and will be ready
for the engineers to install the iipparatus* next week. ,
Changes in the production system at the Page.
Organ company .will be completed within, a'" woek
and will increase tfre production oi the'plant, e,conq-
mize in the use" of floor space, and permit fast,er de-
livery than "in the past, according to a statement by
D. M. Lamson, superintendent.
The new method to be employed in organ manu-
facture according to officials of the Page company,
involves the unit system, by which instruments will
be built in separate chests instead of on individual
orders. These chests will be assembled in groups,
like a sectional bookcase, making it possible for one
who purchases a small organ to enlarge it at will.
Morley P. Thompson, manager of the Baldwin
Piano Co., San Francisco, Cal , made a brief stop-
over in Chicago en route to San Francisco from New
York. Mr. Thompson is very enthusiastic over the
prospects of the piano trade on the Pacific Coast.
"The outlook of the farmers in that territory is very
bright and has resulted in dealers making prepara-
tions for increased buying," said Mr. Thompson when
interviewed by a Presto representative this week.
The states of Oregon, Washington, Idaho and
Montana which are supplied from the San Francisco
store will be accorded a material benefit by the recent
jump in wheat prices. Many farmers in these states
have held their wheat until the recent high prices
appeared and are now in a position to make pur-
chases. As the farmers constitute the greatest pur-
chasing body in the Northwest it is evident that the
piano trade will be affected.
In other parts of the Pacific Coast section the trade
is in fair condition and with every possibility of im-
proving at an early date, continued Mr. Thompson.
BUSY STRAUBE PRESIDENT.
E. R. Jacobson, president of the Straube Piano
Company, president of the National Association of
Piano Manufacturers, president of the Hammond
Manufacturers' Association, and officially interested
in a dozen other enterprises of varying magnitude,
was elected first vice-president of the Northern States
Life Insurance Company at a meeting of the board
of directors held last week. With his various con-
nections in addition to actively managing the Straube
Company, Mr. Jacobson is an extremely busy man
and is one of the outstanding individuals in the in-
dustry.
BEN WITLIN'S PLANS.
Ben Witlin, formerly associated with the Witlin
Musical Instrument Co., Philadelphia, will continue
to represent the Starr under his own name and will
also add a line of musical instruments, representing
several factories in the territory to be included under
the newest plans. The business will be conducted as
Ben Witlin and the territory to be included under
the Philadelphia office distribution covers eastern
Pennsylvania, southern New Jersey, Delaware,
Maryland and Virginia.
CHARLES CLINTON PIRKENS.
the new ideas that awaken new impulses to buy.
And that is what the slothful piano prospects most
need, and it may henceforth be administered by a
specialist who knows how.
Mr. Firkens is alive. He takes right hold of the
HEADS PIANO DEPARTMENT.
The piano departments in the chain of Lcvis Music dealers' difficulties and pulls them out straight, mak-
Stores recently consolidated with the Balcom Music ing the road smooth and the selling easy. He has
Co., in Rochester, N. Y., have been placed under the left nothing unlearned in the art of salesmanship, and
management of Howard J. Bailey. Mr. Bailey, who that means also the study of people as related to
has been identified with the music business about music and the piano. He knows the instrument and
he knows the ones who should play upon it. He
twenty years, was formerly a partner in the firm of
has had factory experience and wareroom experience
Griffin & Bailey. He was also at one time manager
running back through twenty-four years. And it is
of the Mackie Music Co. located in Rochester.
all at the disposal of the dealers, wherever they be
located between the Atlantic and the Pacific, or even
~
SHdW NEW STARR STYLE.
beyond, for Mr. Firkens has sold pianos in every
,*Phe new Sta'rr upright model "Minum D'' is being part of the continent.
pro'nniienfly displayed .iff the windows- of the Chicago
There are a good many angles to expert piano
branch of the Starr Piano Co., Richmond, Ind. The
selling. They include the right kind of advertising;
instrument characteristically represents the Starr scale the faculty to assimilate with other local salesmen;
and workmanship,, with the new fallboard and auto- an intimate knowledge of pianos in general; and he
matic panel feature. It is made in'walnut, mahogany
has energy to put the varied elements into compre-
hensive use. Mr. Firkens has been with the Story &
Clark Piano Co. for eleven years. He knows as
much about the pianos as the men who make them,
MANAGES PIANO SECTION.
*4. sitobeft Smitf^3fp.rrqe.rly connected with the Horton and he likes the Story & Clark pianos so well that he
can make any prospect like them equally. But he
,r&^ v .Sm?trf Pj&no Co., Houston, •S'ex,., has just been
ap|rorntcd'i&anag'er ojT .'ttoe new piarro department of knows other pianos also, and he doesn't confine
himself to selling the Story & Clark when others are
the .Hav%|y Furniture Co., in the same city. Mr. also
on the floor to be sold. He co-operates, and
Smitri has been identified with the 'piano business for
he does the work completely. That is his specialty,
"many years, and was foremost in establishing the and his business is to help the dealers, and to per-
-Woodward Piano Co.
manently increase the business of the store. He has
started 1925 with results so convincing as to assure
:-V pRUNDY LEAVES "PREMIER."
the dealers of the kind of help they want in days
•''"(flias. Grufidy, "one of the popular veterans in of doubt as well as in times of activity.
wholesale piano selling, has left the Premier Grand
Another important matter, in connection with Mr.
Piano Co , of New York, for which concern he had Firkens' work with the dealers. He is thoroughly
been traveling for several years. Mr. Grundy has "up" in all departments of the business. He covers
friends in the trade throughout the entire West and
it all, from the latest selling systems, the simplest
he will be missed in the stores until he makes a new bookkeeping methods, collecting systems, helping
connection—which will probably be soon.
salesmen, financing, to follow-up plans that win. In
short, the Story & Clark company has arranged to
The G. F. Johnson Piano Co., Portland, Ore., still further increase the activities of Mr. Firkens,
moved February 1 to new and larger quarters at 408- and to give the results of his skill and experience
410 Morrison street. For the past eight years the wherever they may be wanted in the promotion of not
company was located at 149 Sixth street.
only a larger but a better piano business.
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/
February 7, 1925.
PRESTO
PROBLEMS OF THE
SUBURBAN DEALER
They Are Similar to Those of Music Merchant
in Outlying Districts of Big City and
Differ from Those of Country
Dealer.
PUBLICITY WAYS FEW
every dealer
knew what
successful
SEEBURG
dealers know
about conduct-
ing and oper-
ating auto-
matic piano
businesses,
every dealer
would be en-
gaged in the
business!
J. P. SEEBURG
PIANO CO.
CHICAGO
"Leaders in the
Automatic Line"
General Offices: 1510 Dayton St.
Factory 1508-16 Dayton St.
Local Weeklies Not Much Use So Business Is
Achieved Mostly by Personal Solicita-
tion.
The music merchant in the big city and his brother
in the country town have each their problems but
they are different from those of the dealer in the out-
lying districts or suburbs of the big city. In fact,
the conditions surrounding all three make them like
three separate trades as far as methods are con-
cerned. But the difficulties of the first two are com-
paratively easy compared with those of the last men-
tioned.
The neighborhood dealer has his publicity troubles
and they are mostly in the scarcity of advertising
media. He is in competition with the dealers within
the city and in a measure with the dealers in the
live country towns nearest to his own suburban field.
The suburban papers are mostly social and church
registers and conveyors of realtor's opportunities.
Any attempt to direct attention to a piano, for in-
stance, is rendered abortive by the inducements of
the city dealers in the big dailies. And another of
his complaints is that piano manufacturers, usually
generous to the city and the country town merchant,
have developed no co-operative means to suit his
particular requirements.
Business Big in Aggregate.
The music business of the suburban merchant
may seem small to the person taking a hasty glance
at the situation but the keen men in some of the
wholesale and jobbing houses in the musical mer-
chandise trade hold a different opinion. A vast
amount of musical instruments and accessories is
handled by the dealers in the outskirts of big cities.
The number of legitimate dealers within a radius of
the city limits of the important cities would amaze
the analysts of the music trade. The number of
stores within the fifty mile radius of Chicago, for in-
stance, exceeds that of all the rest of the state. And
drug stores carrying counter cases and sheet music
racks are not included in the count.
His Publicity Problem.
As far as publicity is concerned the dealer of that
class must necessarily be a law unto himself. And
to apply the law he must have brains, horse sense
and initiative. Prohibitive rates cut him off the use
of the big city's dailies. Advertising in the suburban
tea table weekly is usually futile and when he uses
the big city dailies it is always to advertise used
piano bargains. For printed aids his mainstay is the
handbill but this fails of its object when too often re-
peated. He can use the mails but this is expensive
when done continuously.
When everything is said and done the dealer in
the outlying districts of the big city must rely on a
few aids for interesting the music goods buyer. The
window display is a reliable and cheap way to tell
his story. His store necessarily being in a business
center of a residential section, it is available to local
shoppers and the women of the families who are the
people the suburban music dealer is after, pass in
front of his windows several times every week, in
doing their household shopping.
Doorbell Ringing.
Then there is the old reliable activity of doorbell
ringing. And in presenting his card the local dealer
begins with the advantage of "belonging." The local
dealer is the taxpayer and the more of his kind there
are to share the burden the better for all. In the
outlying districts or the suburbs, the householders
are more ready to listen to the opening spiel of the
doorbell ringers than those of the city.
Of course the dealer of that kind has not provided
his first aid to prospect-finding until he has made a
thorough canvass of his field and made a proper cen-
sus. -The bright active dealers who have made a suc-
cess of outside stores have made census compiling a
part of the first thorough chase for prospects. Tak-
ing census is not as easy as it sounds. The people
as a rule resent blunt questioning and diplomatic
treatment is a requirement. The manner of the cen-
sus takers should not offend anybody. Every family
is a possible prospect for a piano or some article of
music goods.
A General Store.
The handling of small goods has become an impor-
tant thing in the stores on the outskirts of the big
cities and now radio is adding to the attractive force
of the stores. As a rule small goods and sheet music
have been sold in connection with pianos and talking
machines. In every branch of the business he has
the advantage of not carrying a large stock. In fact
his stock may be little more than a line of samples
and still he may do a good business. Supplies are
always available in the nearby big centers. A great
number of the music dealers in this category are
tuners and in building up a clientele for a tuning
business they also increase a music goods business.
The sane man who makes a start in the outlying
district or the suburb never is tempted to increase his
overhead by making a show, such as taking a larger
store than required or one in a more expensive build-
ing in order to impress the neighbors. As a rule, the
trade built up is of the friendly kind and the cus-
tomers consider the goods and the man rather than
the showiness of the store.
DIVIDEND OF 20%
ON GULBRANSEN STOCK
Directors at Annual Meeting Also Declare
Two Per Cent on Common Stock and
Re-elect All Officers.
At the annual meeting of the Gulbransen Co., Chi-
cago, last week. A. G. Gulbransen was re-elected
president and treasurer. C. Gulbransen was also re-
elected vice-president, and Edward B. Healy, secre-
tary.
The following comprise the board of directors also
named at the meeting: A. G. Gulbransen, G. Gul-
bransen, Edward B. Healy, L. W. Peterson, A. H.
Boettcher, George McDermott and C. H. Berggren.
The directors declared' a stock dividend of 20%
and a cash dividend of 2% on outstanding common
stock.
There are probably few concerns the size of the
Gulbransen Company—a $5,000,000 corporation—that
have been built up within themselves as has this
Company. A restricted group of stockholders are
on the books, most of them having been with the
company practically since its inception. These men
have grown with the company, investing compara-
tively small amounts and seeing their holdings in-
crease in value year after year, out of the earnings.
There has been no stock manipulation in the Gul-
bransen Company, no "schemes" whereby any indi-
viduals or organizations have put in large sums and
thus earned any undue advantages for themselves.
All the stockholders have grown with the Company,
prospering as it has prospered out of its own
earnings.
This 20% stock dividend and the 50% stock divi-
dend declared last year give some idea of how the
men who have stock in the Gulbransen company
have seen their holdings pyramid year after year
until their initial investment became a very small
item.
The bulk of Gulbransen stock is held by officers,
department heads and other employes of the com-
pany, and the financial returns on their stock in-
vestment have been a factor in keeping them ever-
lasting "on their toes" and mindful of the best in-
terests and progress of their company.
No other piano manufacturing institution has any
stock interest in the Gulbransen company, there are
no subsidiary companies and all instruments pro-
duced bear the one name, "Gulbransen."
DALLAS ASSOCIATION MEETS.
The first luncheon for 1925 of the Dallas Music
Industries Association was made the occasion of the
annual election of officers when the following were
chosen: President, William Howard Beasley, of the
D. L. Whittle Music Co.; vice-president, W. H. Hum-
phries of the Brunswick, Balke-Collender district
office, and Jules H. Corder of Sanger Bros., secre-
tary-treasurer. The directors for the ensuing year
are:
Paul E.. Burling, Robert N. Watkin, C. L.
Mahaney, J. J. Clegg and E. G. Council. Interesting
plans for the coming year were discussed and a ten-
tative program laid out.
BOSTON STORE ADDS MUSIC.
A varied line of musical instruments has just been
added to the stock of the phonograph department of
The Shepard Stores, Winter street, Boston, Mass.
At present it ranges from harmonicas to excellent
violins, and will be added to from time to time. In
between are to be found ukuleles, banjos, mandolins
and other instruments. The store stands ready to
take care of all customers in the matter of service,
and will order any instrument not in stock, for a
patron.
Cortese Bros, owns the Central Musical Bureau,
with offices at the O. K. Houck Piano Co., Mem-
phis, Tenn.
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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