Presto

Issue: 1925 2053

November 28, 1925:
NEW STRAUBE BOOKLET
IMPRESSES PROSPECTS
Straube Piano Company, Hammond, Ind.,
Issues Artistic Catalog, Which Assures
Help to Dealers in Making Sales.
Straube grands, players and uprights are described
and pictured in a handsome booklet just issued by
the Straube Piano Co., Hammond, Ind. It is de-
signed for distribution by dealers and is filled with
facts that impress the reader and evoke the buying
desire. This paragraph in the foreword is addressed
to the prospective customer:
"Straube instruments are sold at uniform national
prices, the only variation being the freight charge
from the factory to the dealer's store. The prices
quoted in this catalog and advertised nationally are
'value received' when you invest in a Straube."
Since the Straube Piano Co. was founded in 1878
by William Straube it has unswervingly held to the
policy of producing instruments of outstanding and
enduring quality, is a bit of history and a statement
of policy in the booklet. Today the company is
owned, controlled, and actively managed by experi-
enced piano men, assuring a continuance of the policy
and ideals which have prevailed from the very
beginning.
The enduring quality which is such a matter of
pride to the company is in part due to the heavy plate
of the Straube piano. It is an evidence of skill and
thoroughness clearly pointed out to readers. The
luminal construction of the piano back is also shown
in a picture and its merits briefly described.
The description of the Straube player is the tell-
ing of alluring facts about the mechanism and what
technical equipment it provides. The remarkable
ease of pedalling is impressed and the delightful vari-
ation of tone color assured by the Melo-Harp device
is an assurance of pleasure well set forth in the type.
"The qualities we have suggested are the qualities
of no ordinary playerpiano, you readily recognize,"
says the booklet. "The secret lies in the exclusive
Artronome action, a player mechanism designed and
built complete in the Straube factories, and installed
only in Straube-made instruments.
"Here, again, the skill, the care, the expertness and
the ideals which have created the Straube piano, are
evidenced in the creation of a playing mechanism
which should be worthy of the musical instrument.
"Chief among the features of the Artronome action
is the Patented Pendulum Valve. There are 88 such
valves in every Straube player, one for each note.
The distinctive construction of the Pendulum Valve
The Best Yet
Graceful lines, rugged construc-
tion, moderately priced. It's the
very best commercial piano from
every standpoint.
17
PRESTO
makes it non-corrosive and frictionless, thereby assur-
ing dependable service year in and year out to the
owner of a Straube player."
The following nationally priced Straube upright
pianos and players are shown in artistic half-tones
and fully described for the benefit of the prospective
buyer: Players—Arcadian, Imperial, Colonial, Puri-
tan and Dominion. Pianos—Style F, Style G, and
Style H.
The Straube grands and reproducing pianos, being
commodities of pride to the company, are described
and pictured in interesting detail. A halftone shows
the laminal construction of the keyboard and the
braces employed exclusively in the Straube grand.
This is said:
"Certain individual features of construction are to
be found only in the Straube grand. Chief among
these is the laminal construction of the key-bed and
the posts, or braces. This exclusive type of construc-
tion upon which patents are pending, is illustrated on
the following page.
"This great construction feature represents a
marked advance in grand piano building. The lam-
inal construction imparts a staunchness which adds
materially to the quality and the life of the instru-
ment.
It prevents the slightest variation in the
sounding board and is a vital factor in the preserva-
tion of the exquisite tone of the instrument."
The Conservatory model piano, Artist model grand
and Model C reproducing piano are pictured. Of the
latter this is said:
"An instrument which recreates with absolute
fidelity the playing of the world's master pianists, a
combination of the superb Straube Conservatory
model grand with the famous Welte Mignon
(Licensee) reproducing action. Its amazing range of
expression imparts a realism which makes it impos-
sible to distinguish the reproduction from the per-
sonal playing of the artist. A library of more than
4,000 rolls puts the world's greatest music at the
disposal of the owner of a Straube Model C. R."
The great modern plant of the Straube Piano Co.
at Hammond, Ind., is shown in a reproduction from
a photograph.
NEW STORE FOR AMBITIOUS
TACOMA MUSIC DEALER
Eyer Piano Company Leases Salesrooms in New
Building on Thirty-eighth Street.
The Eyer Piano Company, Tacoma, Wash., J. B.
Eyer, manager, moved last week to the modern brick
business property just completed at 765 South 38th
street. The American School of Music, directed by
L. C. Potter, will be associated with the piano com-
pany in the new building. Mr. Potter is also music
director of the public schools.
The piano concern had been located at 756 South
38th street since July, 1924. The need for expansion
into larger quarters on account of rapidly growing
business was responsible for the removal to the new
location, according to Mr. Eyer.
The proprietor has been in the piano tuning busi-
ness for twenty-six years, fifteen of which have
been spent in Tacoma. The new building is one of
the most modern of community structures in the
city. The interior is finished in gray and white.
Special attention has been paid to demonstration
rooms in enclosed panel glass. The size of the
building is twenty-six by fifty feet.
TEACHING TINY TOTS
TO PLAY THE PIANO
Denver Music Teachers Apply the "Melody
System" to the Very Young Pupils with
Astonishingly Good Results.
By J. W. DILLON.
How good to my ears
Is the grand old piano,
The sweet toned piano
I've loved all these years.
You would have said that, or something better, if
you had seen the class of tiny tots, boys and girls,
fifty or more, at the Knight-Campbell Music Com-
pany auditorium, Denver, Colorado. The little musi-
cians are members of Miss Cora Myers Dumbauld's
and Miss Edna Jones' class of the Cheltenham
School, and they are being tought "The Melody
Way."
Some who have been practicing longer than the
others, played on an instrument, while others had
before them just a keyboard so that they might learn
the keys ere they used the instruments. It is some-
thing like teaching the touch system of typewriting.
And they were all so earnest and desirous of sitting-
in at the real keyboard and playing for Mama and
Papa their old-time favorite. They will be able to
do so ere long.
Yet some folks are so unwise as to think that the
radio will put a "crimp" into the desire of folks to be-
come musicians! Might as well say that the air-
planes will cause the young eagles to fail to learn
to fly. Explaining the occasion, Miss Dumbauld
said:
"What we are doing is to teach the piano to chil-
dren in classes rather than individually. The general
use of the class system would mean that music will
be made more democratic. Pupils who do not even
have a piano in their homes, but use a soundless key-
board, are able to take lessons and to learn to play
by our system. It means that children who cannot
afford to study under a private teacher, at $1 or more
a lesson, can have the same advantage at a fourth
or less cost."
Miss Dumbauld believes that time alone will de-
velop technique, and "we teach that real technique
comes from relaxation."
Exactly! Everybody cannot be a Paderewski, nor
is that necessary to get much joy out of the instru-
ment, that will last as long as the world lasts. And
that instrument is a piano.
BUYS ILLINOIS BUSINESS.
D. A. Holmes, of Stillwater, Okla., has purchased
the entire stock of the A. C. Landis music store, in
Paris, 111., and took possession this week, naming the
concern the Holmes Music Shop. Mr. Holmes has
owned a music shop in Stillwater for 20 years. Mr.
and Mrs. Holmes will conduct the store until spring,
when they will go back to the old shop in Oklahoma,
and their son will take charge of the Paris
establishment.
QUALITY FIRST and FIRST QUALITY
FROM PIANOS TO REAL ESTATE.
Style 32—4 ft. 4 in.
WESER
Pianos and Players
Sell Readily—Stay Sold
Send to-day for catalogue, prices and
details of our liberal financing plan
Weser Bros., Inc.
520 to 528 W. 43rd St., New York
James T. Ennis, who for many years was a piano
retail man in Chicago and also in California, is now
selling real estate for W. Koch & Son, suite 414, No.
105 North Clark street, Chicago. His employers
are builders who have erected some apartment houses
in Chicago's north side, with from four to eight
apartments in each building. Mr. Ennis is remem-
bered in the trade also as a champion roque player.
He was with F. S. Spofford in the Republic Build-
ing for a time, but his last connection with the piano
trade was with the William Schultz Piano Company
on West Madison Street, Chicago. Another man who
recently left the piano business to sell real estate is
Fred Firestone, who is reported to be doing well at
his new line in western Florida.
COMMISSION PLAN OF SELLING.
Men who can sell pianos at wholesale, if they read
Presto's want ads., can hear of an opportunity to sell
good ones in some of the best piano states in the
Union. The plan of the manufacturing concern re-
ferred to is on a straight commission basis. The men
will have territorial rights, exclusive of a few of the
largest cities, and orders taken in by the company in
their territory will also be credited to their commis-
sions the same as though they had written the orders.
It's a good time of year to start, and the men who go
out ought to make money the very first week.
JESSE FRENCH & SONS
JESSE
FRENCH
AND
SONS
PIANO
CO.
NEWCASTLE
INDIANA
"A name well known since 1875'
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/
18
PRESTO
November 28, 1925.
The Buyer's Guide to Greater Music Trade
A List of the Foremost Manufacturers of Musical Instruments and Supplies whose Advertisements
appear in this Issue of Presto, and whose Announcements are Guaranteed by this Publication.
PIANOS and PLAYERS
Baldwin Piano Co., The
Bauer & Co., Julius
Bay Company, H. C
Becker Bros
Bond Piano
Brinkerhoff Piano Co
Bradbury Piano
Bush & Lane Piano Co
Bush & Gerts Piano Co
Cable Company, The
Celco Reproducing Medium
Chase, A. B
Christman Piano Co
Churchill Piano
Conover Piano
Continental Piano Co
De Luxe Player Action
Decker & Son
Doll & Sons, Inc., Jacob
Emerson Piano
Euphona Inner Player
Expression Player Action
Florey Bros
French & Sons Piano Co., Jesse
Goldsmith Piano Co
Haddorff Piano Co
Haines & Co., W. P
Hallet & Davis Co
Hardman, Peck & Co
Hartford Piano
Hoffman Piano
Homer Pianos
Heppe Piano Co
James & Holmstrom Piano Co
Kingsbury Piano
Kindler & Collins
Kohler Industries
Kreiter Mfg. Co
Krakauer Bros
Kurtzmann & Co., C.
Leins, E., Piano
Lindeman & Sons
Lester Piano Co
Cincinnati
Chicago
Chicago
New York
Fort Wayne, Ind.
Chicago
New York
Holland, Mich.
Rockford, 111.
Chicago
Norwalk, O.
Norwalk, O.
New York
Chicago
Chicago
Boston
New York
New York
New York
Norwalk, O.
Chicago
New York
Washington, N. J.
New Castle
Chicago
Rockford, 111.
New York
Boston
New York
Chicago
Chicago
New York
Philadelphia
New York
Chicago
New York
New York
Milwaukee
New York
Buffalo, N. Y.
New York
Norwalk, O.
Philadelphia
Lessing Piano
Ludwig & Co
Lyon & Healy
Mason & Hamlin Co
Mathushek Piano Mfg. Co
Miessner Piano Co
Miller, Henry F., Piano
Newman Bros. Co
Nelson-Wiggen Piano Co
Operator's Piano Co., The
Packard Piano Co., The
Poole Piano Co
Price & Teeple Piano Co
Radle, Inc., F
Schaeffer Piano Mfg. Co
Schaff Bros. Co., The
Schaaf, Adam
Schiller Piano Co
Schulz Co., M
Schumann Piano Co
Seeburg Piano Co., J. P
Settergren Co., B. K
Spencer Piano Co., Inc
Smith & Nixon Piano Co
Starck Piano Co., P. A
Starr Piano Co
Steinway & Sons
Stodart Piano
Steinert & Sons, M
Strich & Zeidler
Strohber Piano
Stultz & Bauer
Tonk & Bro., Inc., William
United Piano Corp
Vose & Sons Piano Co
Weaver Piano Co., Inc
Webster Piano
Wellington Piano
Wellsmore Piano
Werner Piano Co
Weser Bros., Inc
Willard Piano
Williams Piano Co
Boston
New York
Chicago
Boston
New York
Milwaukee
Boston
Chicago
Chicago
Chicago
Fort Wayne, Ind.
Boston
Chicago
New York
Chicago
Huntington
Chicago
Oregon, 111.
Chicago
Rockford, 111.
Chicago
Bluffton, Ind.
New York
Chicago
Chicago
Richmond, Ind.
New York
New York
Boston
New York
Boston
New York
New York
Norwalk, O.
Boston
York, Pa.
,
New York
Chicago
New York
Chicago
.New York
Boston
Chicago
SMALL INSTRUMENTS and SUPPLIES
BANJOS:
Slingerland Banjo Co
Chicago
BAND INSTRUMENTS:
Buescher Band Instrument Co
Elkhart, Ind.
Conn, C. C, Ltd
Elkhart, Ind.
BENCHES AND CABINETS:
Elgin Phonograph & Cabinet Co
Elgin, 111.
Perfection Piano Bench Co
Chicago
Overton Company, S. E
South Haven, Mich.
Tonk Manufacturing Co
Chicago
ENGRAVERS & PUBLISHERS:
Illinois State Register (Song Books)
Springfield, 111.
Remick & Co., J. H
Chicago
Rayner, Dalheim & Co
Chicago
Presto Buyers' Guide
Chicago
MUSIC ROLLS:
Capitol Roll & Record Co
Chicago
U. S. Music Company
Chicago
Q R S Company
Chicago
MAILING LISTS:
Polk & Co., R. L.
Detroit, Mich.
Ross, Gould Co
St. Louis, Mo.
PIANO ACTIONS:
Comstock, Cheney & Co
Ivoryton, Conn.
Peerless Pneumatic Piano Action Co
.New York
Strauch Bros., Inc
New York
Wessell, Nickel & Gross
New York
PIANO LOADERS & MOVERS:
Bowen Piano Loader Co
Winston-Salem, N. C.
Piano Movers Supply Co
Harrisonburg, Va.
Self Lifting Piano Truck Co
Findlay, O.
PIANO PLATES:
Fairbanks Co., The
Springfield, O.
Kelly Co., The, O. S
Springfield, O.
Superior Foundry Co
Cleveland, O.
PIANO STRINGS:
Schaff Piano String Co
Chicago
Trefz, Otto R., Jr
Philadelphia
PIANO REPAIRS:
American Piano Supply Co
New York
Frield Miller & Co
Indianapolis
Leins Piano Co. (Fine Pianos Rebuilt)
New York
Piano Repair Co., The
Chicago
Trefz, Jr., Otto R
Philadelphia
United Specialty Co
Monticello, Ind.
ALL SUPPLIES & MISCELLANEOUS:
American Piano Supply Co
New York
Breckwoldt & Son, Inc., J
Dolgeville, N. Y.
Hammacher, Schlemmer & Co
New York
Lutkins, T. L., Inc. (Leathers)
New York
Polk's School of Piano Tuning
La Porte, Ind.
Schulz & Moennig (Musical Merchandice)
Chicago
Simon, S. (Small Instrument Strings)
Chicago
White Mfg. Co., A. L. (Portable Organs)
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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