Presto

Issue: 1928 2176

April 14, 1928
PRESTO-TIMES
AMERICAN PIANO CO'S PLANS
PLACING THE AGENCY
IN INDIANAPOLIS
Christena-Teague Fiano Company Made Ex-
clusive Representative in That City and
Fifty Counties in State.
Announcement has been
made by William Chris-
tena of the Christena-
Teague Piano Company,
Indianapolis, t h a t h i s
company will be the ex-
clusive representative of
the American Piano Com-
pany in Indianapolis, and
practically fifty counties
in the state of Indiana.
The spacious building
n o w occupied by the
company in north Penn-
sylvania street will be re-
modeled and redecorated
immediately, a n d t h e
complete line will be fea-
tured within the next
thirty days.
The building now occu-
pied by the company was
originally built to meet
the needs of the Aeolian
Company in 1909, and
w a s constructed espe-
cially for a piano sales
purpose. The upper floors
will need some slight
alterations, in order to ac-
commodate the extensive
line of pianos to be car-
ried in stock. In addition
to the present sound-
proof parlors an addi-
tional one will be con-
structed to accommodate
the Mason & Hamlin
line. The building, while
apparently
narrow, is
very deep, well lighted,
and has excellent facili-
ties, including electric ele-
v a t o r s, many private
rooms with sound-proof
walls, and an excellent
CHRISTEXA-T HAGUE
recital hall on the top
BUILDING.
floor. The basement is equipped to house the radio
and talking machine units, with booths, and all mod-
ern equipment.
It was announced also that the company will seek
THE LATEST JESSE
FRENCH PRODUCTIONS
''Jesse
TrerrchB'ei
J
f//emeU)//%f
f//rce
FOLLOW THE TRADITION OF
UNQUESTIONABLE QUALITY
sub-agencies in all the smaller towns within their
jurisdiction, which will be in charge of a very capable
salesman. In the past several sub-agents have sold
the dickering & Sons, who will be retained with the
full line at their disposal. Mr. Christena will seek
the services of only the very best salesmen, and as
many as it might require to put the instruments over.
At present there will be no reductions on any of
the instruments and present prices will be maintained.
The new quarters will give the American Piano
Co.'s line the best equipped building for piano sales
purposes in Tndianapolis.
Elsewhere in Indiana.
While the situation of the American Fiano Com-
pany in Indianapolis has been settled, the situation
in the state becomes more complex. In cities like
Fort Wayne, Marion, Terre Haute, South Bend,
Evansville and Crawfordsville, Ind., where one of
the instruments of the company is now being sold,
the question arises, how long will the dealer continue
to have a leader, or will it be necessary to seek an-
other high grade instrument to take the place of the
present one in question? Reports come from these
places to the effect that some of the dealers arc
already seeking instruments to till their places. Noth-
ing has been done, it appears, to insure the small town
dealer that he will be retained as the representative
of the company in his territory. Many vital ques-
tions are being asked. Prospective buyers are anx-
iously awaiting the new prices on the line, and it
naturally affects competitive makes of pianos.
W. C. HEAT0N HEADS
WELTE=MIGNON SALES
Experienced Man in the Music Trade Has
Thorough Knowledge of Product and Wide
Acquaintance in the Trade.
William C. Heaton, who recently resigned as presi-
dent of the Auto Pneumatic Action Co., New York, is
now wholesale piano department manager and gen-
eral traveler for the Cnitcd States for the new Welte-
Mignon Corporation, 665 Fifth avenue, Xcw York.
Working directly with Robert T. Lytle, the general
manager.
At a recent meeting of the Welte-Mignon Corp.,
following its incorporation under the laws of Dela-
ware March 31, the following officers were elected:
W. E. Fletcher, president; Robert T. Lytle, vice-
president; W. F. Webster, treasurer. W. J. Webster
is chairman of the board of directors.
W. C. Heaton has been appointed general manager
of wholesale sales, and George E. Toepfer will act
in the capacity of retail sales manager in the Metro-
politan district.
"Mr. Heaton will travel all over the country," said
Mr. Lytle. "He is our wholesale manager."
Mr. Lytle and the entire Welte organization is to
be congratulated upon getting hold of so thoroughly-
experienced and earnest a man as Mr. Heaton.
Mr. Heaton is widely known in the music trade and
is thoroughly familiar with the Wclte-Mignon. Last
week he took hold of the wholesale sales department
at the headquarters.
The Welte-Mignon Corp. will manufacture Welte-
Mignon reproducing pianos, Welte straight pianos,
Welte organs for manual playing, Welte reproducing
organs, multi controls, etc., and music rolls for both
No definite statement is forthcoming from the organs and reproducing pianos. The line of Welte
American Piano Co. about the leasing or buying of
straight pianos and Welte reproducing pianos com-
a building for use in Chicago by the company, prises a large variety of grands both in conventional
although it is understood that the building one door and period models. The organ line comprises instru-
north of the Steger Building has been secured by the ments for church, theater and homes, thereby placing
real estate firm acting for the company. And the at the disposal of the dealer a most valuable franchise.
headquarters of the company in Xew York has yet no
statement to make on the subject.
On Monday of this week the Rissell-Weisert Co.,
26 South Michigan avenue, began its "'Chickering
Clearance Sale of a quarter of a million dollars' worth
Scruggs- \' an dcrvoort -Barney's Department Store,
of pianos at 20 per cent to 50 per cent off." The
St.
Louis, has been appointed distributors in St. Louis
sale was announced in a strong display in all the
for the C. Kurtzmann Co.'s line of pianos, it was
Sunday newspapers.
In a classified ad in the Chicago Tribune of Thurs- announced by A. W. Hosier, manager of the music
department of the big department store after closing
day of this week this is said:
negotiations with Sales Manager Becker of the C.
"Attend Bissell-Weisert's Chickering clearance sale. Kurtzmann Co. The addition of the Kurtzmann lines
< Jreat reductions on new Chickering grands, Ampico will give Scruggs control of three of leading lines
grands, Marshall & Wendell grands, and Brewster of pianos—Sohmer. Brambach and Kurtzmann.
grands. Entire stock offered from 20 per cent to 50
per cent off. Ten per cent down—balance monthly.
Open evenings."
IN CHICAGO
C. KURTZMANN IN ST. LOUIS
H. C. DICKINSON RETURNS
FROM ENJOYABLE TRIP
Vice-President of Baldwin Piano Company
Seen at Company's Offices in Chicago
Tells Incidents of Important Trip.
H. C. Dickinson, vice-president of the Baldwin
Piano Co., Cincinnati, Ohio, with offices at 323 South
\\ abash avenue, Chicago, returned this week from a
two months' trip, first to Florida and then to Cali-
fornia. Mr. Dickinson, when seen by a Presto-Times
representative this week, expressed himself as feeling
line and much rested after his visit to the warm cli-
mates, but was glad to be back in Chicago.
Mr. Dickinson, who was accompanied by Mrs.
Dickinson, spent two weeks in Florida before leav-
ing for California. Palm Beach and other famous
resorts were visited, as well as many friends and
dealers who sell the Baldwin line.
Of the six weeks in California, two were spent in
San Francisco, where progressive dealers of the Ba'd-
win instruments were visited. However, the head-
quarters of Mr. Dickinson were at Pasadena and Los
Angeles.
In the latter city the Southern California Music Co.,
of which Edward H. Uhl is president, recently secured
the agency of the Baldwin line in the Southern Cali-
fornia territory. In fact, it was through the activity
of Mr. Dickinson that the negotiations with the
Southern California Music Company were begun and
favorably completed. The Baldwin line will be more
prominently displayed than ever before. The pres-
tige it has attained in the musical world and the high
standing of the Southern California Music Co. will
give it new force in this territory. Mr. Dickinson
is elated over the fact that the Baldwin line w T ill be
exploited to the music-loving public in an intelligent
and forceful manner.
E. Leins Piano Co.
Makers of Pianos and
Player Pianos That Are
Established L e a d e r s .
Correspondence from Reliable
Dealers Invited
Factory and Offices, 304 W. 42nd Si
NEW YORK
The Heppe, Marcellus and Edouard Julea Piano
manufactured by the
HEPPE PIANO COMPANY
are the only pianos in the world with
Three Sounding Boards.
Patented in the United States, Great Britain,
France, Germany and Canada.
Liberal arrangements to responsible agents only.
Main Office, 1117 Chestnut St.
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
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/
April 14, 1928
P R E S T 0-T 1 M E S
The American Music Trade Weekly
Published Every Saturday at 417 South Dearborn
Street, Chicago, Illinois.
PRESTO P U B L I S H I N G CO., Publishers.
F R A N K D. A B B O T T - - - - - - - - - -
Editor
(C. A. DANIELL—1904-1927.)
J. FERGUS O'RYAN
- - - - -
Managing Editor
Telephones, Local and Long Distance, Harrison 0234.
Private Phones to all Departments. Cable Address (Com-
mercial Cable Co.'s Code), " P R E S T O , " Chicago.
Entered as second-class matter Jan. 29, 1896, at the
l'ost Office, Chicago, Til., under Act of March 3, 1879.
Subscription, $2 a year; 6 months, $1.25; Foreign, $4.
Payable in advance. No extra charge in United States
possessions, Cuba and Mexico. Kates for advertising on
application.
Items of news and other matter are solicited and if of
general interest to the music trade will be paid for at
space rates. Usually piano merchants or salesmen in the
smaller cities are the best occasional correspondents, and
their assistance is invited.
Payment is not accepted for matter printed in the edi-
torial or news columns of Presto-Times.
Where half-tones are made the actual cost of produc-
tion will be charged if of commercial character of other
than strictly news interest.
When electrotypes are sent for publication it is re-
quested that their subjects and senders be carefully indi-
cated.
Forms close at noon on Thursday. Late news matter
should be in not later than 11 o'clock on that day. Ad-
vertising" copy should be in hand before Tuesday, 5 p. m.,
to insure preferred position. Full page display copy
should be in hand by Tuesday noon preceding publication
day. Want advertisements for current week, to insure
classification, should be in by Wednesday noon.
Address all communications for the editorial or business
departments to PRESTO PUBLISHING CO., 417 South
Dearborn Street, Chicago, III.
SATURDAY, APRIL 14, 1928.
The last form of Presto-Times goes to press
at 11 a. m. Thursday. Any news transpiring
after that hour cannot be expected in the cur-
rent issue. Nothing received at the office that
is not strictly news of importance can have
attention after 9 a. m. on Thursday. If they
concern the interests of manufacturers or
dealers such items will appear the week follow-
ing. Copy for advertising designed for the
current issue must reach the office not later
f han Wednesday noon of each week.
CONVENTION INDUCEMENTS
Tlii' interest in any trade convention usually
is in equal ratio to the expectations of conven-
tion benefits by the prospective conventioners.
That fact is always a spur to the officials of an
association and the out-of-the-ordinarv con-
vention programs are the results. Several
forces are at work providing" inducements to
people in all phases of the music trade to come
to the meetings at the Commodore Hotel dur-
ing the week of June 4.
"What can we do for the dealer in pianos at
the June convention that will enable him to
make more sales?" That is the motive that
actuates the officials of the National Associa-
tion of Music Merchants and the promotion
committee of the National Piano Manufactur-
ers' Association. Showing the war to make
more piano sales is considered the most im-
portant business of the coming convention.
One feature of the plans to interest the dealers
is the contest in presenting methods of piano
gi"()U]> instruction.
In fact, the main idea of the convention pro-
moters is to give the dealer who attends the
convention value for everv dollar he spends
for expenses and railroad fare. The worth of
the convention to the man who sells piano-;
will be the enlightenment, encouragement and
stimulation he receives thereat.
The character of novelty in main of the con-
vention procedures is promised by the officers
of the National Association of Music Mer-
chants. The presence of prominent men from
other phases of trade and notable men in public
life who will bring" their wisdom and experi-
ence to bear on our music trade problems is a
scheme that should add great allurements to
the gathering. Several men of note in bus-
iness and public life already have been secured
for addresses. They will provide opportunities
to the men of the music trade to hear the hard,
cold presentation of facts that apply to other
industries and from which the alert man of the
music trade may adduce lessons.
AIDS GROUP TEACHING
The action of the Hoard of Control of the
National Association of Music Merchants in
providing" for a prize for the best plan for oper-
ating a scheme of group piano instruction to
be awarded at the convention at the Commo-
dore Hotel, New York, during the week of
June 4, is an effective aid to piano promotion.
Cash prizes totaling $200 will be offered for
the best exhibits of phases in the operation
of such a plan.
The Board of Control has chosen a most ef-
fective method for extending the system of
group instruction in making; the exhibits fea-
tures of the annual convention. The plans of
piano merchants operating as groups and
those of merchants operating as individuals
will surely be incentives for similar activities.
Piano merchants generally agree that the
group instruction classes at dealers' stores or
in schools are potent for the encouragement
of the desire to learn to play the piano. And
it follows that the desire to play created in
the children results in the determination of
parents to buy pianos the better to enable the
ambitious children to master the keyboard.
The scheme of the Board of-Control should be
of great educational and stimulative value to
the trade and merchants who have had expe-
riences along those lines should provide
exhibits.
COOPERATION IS KEYNOTE
Cooperation is to be the keynote of the fif-
teenth annual convention of the National Asso-
ciation of Sheet Music Dealers to be held at
the Hotel McAlpin, New York, June 11 and 13.
The sheet music publishers' association will
meet on the intervening day. A temporary
depression in the sheet music business came to
an end with the close of last year. At the
present time sheet music is showing a decided
upward trend, which presages well for the
entire music industry. At the coming conven-
tion ways and means will be considered with
a view to further stimulating trade in music
and music books. A reaction in favor of musi-
cal instruments can be reasonably expected
with a revival of interest in printed music.
The welfare of the sheet music trade is bound
up with that of the other music industries.
The National Association of Sheet Music Deal-
ers is pledged by its constitution to the promo-
tion of music in all its branches.
The spread of sheet music departments m
music stores is a significant phase of the music
business. Of course the vast increase in in-
terest in band and orchestra instruments and.
the growth of amateur and professional or-
ganizations naturally leads to the grer.ter uses
of sheet music. The formation of new sheet
music sections in music stores and depart-
ment stores is a spontaneous response to an
urgent demand.
German dealers are having- their unethical
piano sale troubles, according to the Bureau
of the Association of German Piano Dealers,
which says that since the end of October, 1927.
advertisements have appeared in the press of
east and west Prussia, offering pianos made
by well-known piano makers at great reduc-
tions and on easy terms of payment, and that
similar announcements are being made by well-
known talking machine firms, the reductions
amounting to about 30 per cent.
* * *
The announcement of the New York Times
last week that pianos have "gone" modernistic
created curiosity as to how modern they have
gone, but not much surprise among piano men
that the pianos are included in the art hysterics
of the day. Change of any kind is improve-
ment in the mind of the ultra-modernist so
that the elimination of the grand piano's legs,
as intimated in the newspaper story, is a mat-
ter of course. New treatments in finish have
been presented for several years, showing the
use of other materials than wood veneers for
the cases and the painted cases have been ac-
cepted by the world and the public. The "sky-
scraper" treatment of an upright, threatened
by the newspaper, has vet to be presented.
*
*
*
A recent decision by the Cuban Patent Of-
fice which declared the trade-mark of a well-
known American product to be a "generic
term" and consequently not registrable under
the Cuban trade-mark law. Of course, Cuban
manufacturers were using the trade-mark. It
is an old grievance for American manufactur-
ers. When an American company undertakes to
expand its business into foreign markets, it is
too often met with the problem that another
already has secured the registration of its mark
to cover the same line of goods. This experi-
ence, of course, is unfortunate, but probably
cannot be prevented except by a wholesale
registration in foreign countries prior to the
indication of any possibility of using the mark
there.
* * *
It is certain that—largely because of the
enterprise of some of the great piano indus-
tries—the demand for artistic designs has been
stimulated. The notion that pianos cost so
little has in a measure been dissipated. The
number of line case designs, with artistic de-
tails, is increasing. And they are meeting- with
the kind of reception that proves that the piano
buying public is not all looking for the cheap-
est, but often the finest—for pianos that fit the
purposes for which they should be made. Not
necessarily many case designs by any manu-
facturer, but more variety in the industry as a
whole, and something fine from every ambi-
tious factory.
* * *
Credit is not a tangible thing; it is difficult
to visualize it. In giving credit it is not so
much what the man to whom it is extended has
done, or even what he has seemingly failed to
do, as what he is and is really known to be.
An honest plugger is a better risk any time
than a rly-b\ -night meteoric fellow whose head
may be bright enough, but whose system
scatters and weakens like a tail ol star-dust,
making collections diHicult.
* * *
The New York Division of the National As-
sociation of IMano Tuners has opened a city
headquarters in a conveniently situated build-
ing, and tuners from out of town are invited
to call, make themselves at home there. The
New York Division is one of the lively units of
an energetic association.
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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