September 3, 1927
E. E. SHUMAKER REVIVES
VICTOR IMPORTANCE
President of Victor Talking Machine Company
Displayed Vision Which Changed a
Catastrophe Into a Victory.
The story of how the talking machine industry
has come back is told in an article in the Ameri-
can Magazine for September which tells of the
part taken in the process by Edward K. Shu-
PRESTO-TIMES
millions for research had been spent m the company's
laboratories. Rut Mr. Shumaker had looked with-
out, he told the directors. He said he had learned
that experts in one particular telephone laboratory
"had made discoveries in sound reproductions of
which we do not dream. If we utilize those dis-
coveries we can revolutionize the talking machine."
It was the beginning of events that in a night
changed methods that had stood for twenty years.
A fortune was expended on the heels of a fortune
lost, alL because of the courage, faith and vision
of a single man. In November, 1925, the resultant
product was announced—a talking machine that was
radically improved—that was different.
Two weeks after the first announcement of its new
instrument, the Victor Talking Machine Company
had $20,000,000 in orders on its books and 8,000 work-
ers on its payrolls. Mr. Shumaker had revived not a
company but an industry.
KINQSBURY STYLE R
FOR WOMANS' COLLEGE
Instrument Purchased from the Wiley B.
Allen Co. for Scripps College for Women
Has Wide Sale.
A Kingsbury piano made by The Cable Company,
Chicago, has just been purchased from the Wiley B.
Alien Company of Pomona, Calif., western repre-
sentative of The Cable Company, for the Eleanor Joy
Toll Hall, the first unit of a dormitory group to be
erected at Scripps College for Women, Claremont,
Calf.
The Kingsbury upright. Style R, purchased, is a
special Cable model which lias attained a wide popu-
larity as rin instrument for school and institutional
A. L. BRETZFELDER MADE
PRESIDENT OF KRAKAUER BROS.
BDWARD E. SHUMAKER AND HIS SON.
Mr. Shumaker, president of the Victor Talking Machine
Company, was born on a mountain farm in Somerset
County, Pa., forty-five years ago, and at various times
has taught school, worked in a istone quarry, sold bibles,
farmed, mined coal and earned a living as a detective.
"I can't say that I ever had a definite goal," says Mr.
Shumaker. "Work was work, and 1 was ready to follow
wherever it led. The same fundamentals that make for
advancement in one line make for it in another." Pic-
ture and accompanying article are from the American
Magazine.
maker, new president of the Victor Talking
Machine Company. When dull days reached the
phonograph plant and the machine was voted "dead"
by many; "doomed by the radio as surely as the
horse-drawn vehicle was doomed by the automobile,"
Mr. Shumaker voiced a different opinion in the plant
of the Victor Talking Machine Co.
"The talking machine is not doomed by the radio,"
he kept on insisting. "The market is not saturated.
Conditions are not bad. What we need is a better
product. It is we ourselves who are at fault."
"The public is not tired of the talking machine
as an instrument," he went on before a directors'
meeting. "But it is tired of the talking machine
we are offering it. It wants a radically better instru-
ment and better records. Produce such an instru-
ment and records and we will be swamped with
orders."
No important improvements had been made in the
Victor talking machine for years, although several
Former Treasurer Succeeds His Brother as Head of
Progressive Plar.o Manufacturing Company.
A. L. Bretzfelder, elected president of Krakaner
Bros., New York, at a recent meeting of the board of
directors, is a brother of the former president, T. E.
Bretzfelder, and previously filled the office of treas-
urer of the company. Other officers are: H. K.
Bretzfelder, first vice-president; M. K. Bretzfelder,
second vice-president; C. S. Bretzfelder, third vice-
president; Arthur Hahn, treasurer, and S. C. Lubin,
secretary.
The new president has been associated with the
practical operation of the company for a good many
years and thoroughly understands every phase of the
business. He is equally familiar with manufacturing
as he is with merchandising and his wide acquain-
tance among the dealers is an advantage of great
value. He is enthusiastic in the scheme to make the
Krakauer even more prominent than it is in the world
of music. Forceful and dignified methods of public-
ity will be continued to maintain the Krakauer pianos
as splendid specimens of piano design and tone qual-
ity to evoke the praise of the most critical purchaser.
KIXCSIU'KY, STYI.K It. MKLECTKn FOR VSK IN
SCKIIM'S COLLKCI0 FOK WOMKN.
The Leipzig Fair, at which musical instruments are
important exhibits, is one of the oldest trade fixtures
in the world—so old, indeed, that its origins are quite
lost in far-off centuries. It is now held every spring
and autumn, under the title of The Leipzig Interna-
tional Industries Fair, and the 1927 autumn session
lasts from August 2? to September 3. The figures
of the 1927 spring session are eloquent of the Fair's
economic importance. There were 9,258 exhibitors,
655 of whom w T ere non-Germans. The total number
of business visitors (exhibitors and buyers) was
155,000, 23,130 being foreigners.
use. It has proved a great favorite in music schools
and conservatories all over the country, and Cab]-'
dealers also report that Kingsbury Style R is much
in demand for home use.
Work on the Eleanor Joy Toll Hall is being rushed
to completion in order that it may be ready for resi-
dence by the beginning of the college year. This
unit is of Spanish design adapted to California condi-
tions. The colors are a light terra cotta and pale
emerald trim on cream colored stucco. Placed with
the mountains as a background, it will make a beau-
tiful and picturesque group. The dormitories are to
be arranged around open courts or patios which
can be used, when it is desired, for open air dining
room and for recreational purposes.
This unit, which is to cost $172,000, together with
a second unit to be built next year, was provided for
by Miss Ellen Browning Scripps of La Jolla, who
endowed Scripps College for Women.
MICHIGAN FIRM CLOSES OUT.
NEW WURLITZER BRANCH.
THE LEIPZIG FAIR.
A Wurlitzer Music House branch, established in
The A. L. & R. Piano Co., Bellevue, O., is going
Redford, Mich., was opened last week at 17626 Lasher
out of business, according to an announcement in
the newspapers. "Every piano, player-piano, phono- avenue. This branch house, the fourth to be opened
graph and every piece of office furniture must go by in the Detroit Metropolitan district by the Wurlitzer
September 1. • Don't miss this great opportunity to Co., will be under the management of Charles Clever,
president of the Redford Conservatory, and R. C.
share in this great money-saving event."
Morse. This store handles everything in the line of
The Music Center, Olney, 111., was opened recently musical instruments and music. On the opening day,
the management featured a special concert program.
by Van de Voorde.
BOWEN PIANO LOADER HELPS SALESMEN
Outside Salesmen must be equipped so as to "show the goods." The season for country piano selling is approaching. Help your sales-
men by furnishing them with the New Bowen Piano Loader, which serves as a wareroom far from the store. It is the only safe
delivery system for dealers, either in city or country. It costs little. Write for particulars.
BOWEN PIANO LOADER CO.,
Winston-Salem, N. C
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