Presto

Issue: 1928 2198

September IS, 1928
PRESTO-TIMES
12
methods of piano salesmen in trying to switch the
customer to another make.
"If I were in the piano business I'd sell advertised
goods; people believe in advertised goods; they have
(Continued from page 9)
no faith in non-advertised things nowadays. Nothing
of persons loving music, and wishing to play, who
is sold until it is sold at retail. Selling pianos is the
only hold off from buying the foot power piano due
manufacturers' problem."
to the dislike of the mechanical type of music they
Mr. Boykin Speaks.
bring forth."
A short business session was held at 1 p. m., Mon-
That the sale of these musical instruments has been
day, at which time addresses were made by Edward
killed through the desire of the merchant to speed
C. Boykin, executive secretary of the National Piano
up sales, was a belief expressed by this speaker, who
Manufacturers' association, New York; R. E. Taylor,
offered as a solution the inducement of really learn-
ing to play the foot power piano as a promise of new Cleveland, president of the Ohio association; Corley
Gibson, president of the Autopiano Co., New York,
life in the business. "Educate the public in the
and John S. Gorman, of the Gulbransen Co., Chicago.
musical possibilities of the instrument, teach them self
expression, and you have answered the problem of the
Mr. Boykin stressed the need of publicity for the
fundamental appeal of the piano as a home musical
piano. He urged the dealers and manufacturers to
instrument," said Gibson.
get the word "piano" before the public at every
opportunity.
Mr. Taylor advocated the idea of
Frazier Reams on Installments.
placing music among the recognized studies in public
"It was a piano salesman who started the install-
ment plan idea in his business, and all one has to do and parochial schools, as a major subject.
During the afternoon session Mr. Taylor appointed
today is look about in any industry which caters to
a resolutions committee, consisting of A. L. Maresh,
the home to see that he really started something."
Cleveland, president of the Cleveland Music Masters'
This according to Frazier Reams, trust officer for
the Commercial Savings Bank & Trust Co., who Association, chairman; William W. Smith, president
of the J. W. Greene Co., Toledo, and Harry Barry,
spoke at the convention, was the start of the method
Greenville.
which is tying up the American income, but at the
same time allowing Americans the pleasure of own-
Speakers at the afternoon business session Tuesday
ership while paying.
were Frazier Reams, trust officer of the Commer-
cial Savings Bank & Trust Co., and F. B. Beinkamp,
"The music merchant today has two commodities
Cincinnati.
to offer the public," said Reams, ''good musical in-
struments, and credit. His keenest competition comes
The Resolutions.
from without the business, from salesmen of other
The Resolutions Committee offered a long list of
products sold on the installment basis. There is a
resolutions, all of which were adopted as read. These
tremendous, burden placed upon a sales organization
included thanks to those who so generously contrib-
today, for merchandising is a bigger problem than
uted to the enjoyment of the conventioners; to the
production."
service of the Hotel Commodore Perry; to the golf
association for the use of its course and club house;
Mr. Harper on Salesmanship.
"Salesmanship" was wittily and ably handled at the to E. C. Boykin, John S. Gorman, Delbert L. Loomis,
afternoon session on Wednesday by Harry B. Har- Frank Bayley and others for their messages; to the
per, manager of the Chicago branch of Air-Way music trade press for sending representatives to re-
port the proceedings; to the manufacturers and job-
Electric Appliance Corporation. He said in part:
bers and to other organizations for "making this one
"My experience with piano salesmen has taught me
of the most interesting and instructive conventions
that there is no such thing as good salesmanship in
the piano business," and related a number of his ever held in the music industry."
experiences with piano stores and so-called piano
The resolutions also thanked Henry C. Wildermuth
salesmen in Philadelphia, in Bradford, Pa.; in Chi- for his local work as chairman of the Arrangement
cago and towns in New England to prove his point,
Committee; thanked Robert E. Taylor for the zeal
and created a great deal of laughter and affirmative
he had shown and his work during the year of his
nodding throughout the room as he related the silly presidency.
THE CONVENTION
A Hot Time in the Old Town.
The entire period of the convention was a time of
most distressing heat. This intensity of torridity was
broken on Tuesday night by a teriffic thunder storm
which broke down telegraph wires in the city of
Toledo and caused the fire department to go scream-
ing through the streets. The weather was described
by a gentleman who had traveled in Africa as Nairobi
climate.
Next Convention at Columbus.
The association decided to hold its 1929 convention
at Columbus on September 9, 10 and 11.
It was decided to continue the publication of the
Monthly Bulletin of the association.
Some minor amendments were made to the by-
laws.
It was voted to appoint an auditor at a salary of
$50 a year.
Using Mutual Insurance.
A representative of mutual insurance companies got
the floor—Frank Harrison of Columbus—who ex-
plained the benefits accruing from the system in use
by members of the association.
Before he made his speech Mr. Loomis read a
letter from C. J. Roberts, president of the National
Association of Music Merchants, in praise of the Ohio
association.
Many Pianos Are Junk.
Charles Deutschmann, ex-president of the National
Tuners' Association, made an interesting address. He
said there were 1,500,000 pianos that should be
junked.
Ohio Association Has 437 Members.
It was reported that at the Cleveland convention
last year the association had 487 members. At the
convention this year 26 new ones were admitted,
making the membership of the State Association at
the close of the sessions 437. Mr. Wildermuth was
champion name-getter for new members, and presents
were given him and others for getting new members.
Mr. W.'s present was a box of line new neckties.
Arleigh Dora Attends.
Among those seen at the convention were Arleigh
Dom, formerly Q R S man, now in the gravestone
business at Cincinnati.
J. Enimett Shaw, Oakland, Cal., announces that he
is trading under the name of the Allendale Radio &
Music Shoppe, 3026 Thirty-eighth avenue.
Just One of
Nineteen
Beautiful
Designs of the
Schiller Line
Style M. Jacobean Schiller
If You Are Meeting With Sales Resistance Let Us Help You.
SCHILLER PIANO COMPANY
Factory and General Offices:
OREGON, ILL.
Chicago Offices: 932 Republic Building
New York Office: 130 West 42nd Street
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/
September 15, 1928
P R E S T 0-T I M E S
EASY=SELLINQ
M. SCHULZ MODEL
ionette." And in this the dealers and their customers
will not be disappointed. In the roundness, purity
and mellowness of the "Marionette" tone the promi-
nent feature of M. Schulz instruments is apparent.
Pride in New Model.
So. both in tone, volume and beauty of appearance,
the new little piano is worthy of a foremost place
Marionette Reproducing Grand, Equipped with
Aria Divina Action, Is High Grade Instru-
ment of Small Dimensions and Satisfying
Volume and Purity of Tone.
The great interest of the trade in the Marionette
Reproducing Grand of the M. Schulz Company,
Chicago, is shown by the number of orders and en-
quiries received daily by the company. The Marion-
ette is only three feet, eight inches long in a Louis
LOMBARDO GRAND.
in the presentations of the dealers. The company
takes particular pride in the new model and dealers
who have seen it speak warmly of its merits. It is
an evidence of the M. Schulz purpose to produce the
best in every line regardless of expense.
Other Numbers.
Other pianos in the artistic group of the M. Schulz
13
QULBRANSEN CO. SHOWS
PIANO AND RADIO
Attractive Methods of Displaying and Light-
ing Fine Array of Manufactured
Products Add to Interest.
The most unique and outstanding exhibit in con-
nection with the annual convention of the Music Mer-
chants' Association of Ohio, at Toledo this week,
was that of the Gulbransen Company, located in room
1301 Commodore Perry Hotel.
A very ingenious lighting system had been worked
out by the company, showing off the beauty of design
and finish of the Gulbransen instruments, to the best
advantage. Chief among the instruments displayed
from the standpoint of newness, are the 4 ft. 6 in.
Reproducing Art Grand, never before shown at any
convention; the 5 ft. 4 in. Spanish grand in handsome
walnut, and the Modern Musical Miracle, the upright
reproducing piano nationally priced at $575 and ex-
hibited at Toledo for the first time.
Other Gulbransen pianos on display were the Art
Model Minuet in ivory, with daintily colored decora-
tions; the 4 ft. 6 in. small, double truss grand in
mahogany duco; Autograph Model Registering piano
in mahogany duco; Cosmopolitan Registering piano
in walnut duco and Symphony model, upright in ma-
hogany duco.
A Radio Display.
There also was the first public showing of the
Gulbransen radio. The handsome Console Model
260-C and Table Model 160-T are on display, as well
as the Ivanhoe type Gulbransen radio cabinet. The
Gulbransen radio was displayed in a separate alcove in
the Gulbransen display room, ingeniously illuminated
and furnished.
MARIONETTE REPRODUCING GRAND.
In the way of advertising devices, the company
made its first display of a continuous moving picture
machine for the dealers' show windows, for the pur-
pose of showing Gulbransen films. Many other fea-
tures of advertising were also shown to the merchants.
XVI. case and is equipped with the Schulz Aria
Divina reproducing action. It is four feet wide and
has a seventy-three note scale.
But despite its small dimensions the Marionette
has a volume and tone sufficient for a room of any
size. In fact, in this respect it is scarcely distin-
guishable from the five-foot grand. In every sense
the lktle piano is a high grade musical instrument
with satisfying purity of tone.
Gulbransen merchants were greeted by John S. Gor-
man, vice-president and sales manager of the com-
pany; Walter Kiehn, advertising manager and a
director, and Clark F. Gross, Ohio representative who
has been with the company for a good many years.
A special meeting of Gulbransen merchants was
held Tuesday afternoon, following the regular busi-
ness session, after which they were the guests of the
company at the fish dinner at La Tabernilla.
Symmetry in Design.
The well known M. Schulz ability to case pianos
artistically is again displayed in the new model. Per-
fect symmetry characterizes the "Marionette" and
the finish is in keeping with the high grade methods
of the Chicago company. It is finished in clear
lacquer, high lighted and rubbed by hand.
Of course, the tone quality of the M. Schulz pianos
is such a well-known feature of the instruments, the
trade naturally expects such a quality in the "Mar-
TOO LATE TO BE CLASSIFIED.
WANTS WHOLESALE
LOUIS XIV GRAND.
Company are Lombardo grand and the Louis XIV
grand, both of which are powerful to attract the
interest of the discriminating piano buyers. These
instruments are also shown in accompanying cuts.
POSITION.
WHOLESALE selling position wanted in Kansas, Okla-
homa, Texas and Missouri territory for strong gen-
eral line of standard make pianos (consignment line
preferred) by man with more than 15 years' experi-
ence in the business. Large volume of business guar-
anteed with proper co-operation. A1 references, photo
and all information immediately available upon re-
quest. Wire or write via ail mail. " W . D. T.," 643
West 60th St., Los Angeles, Cal.
JACOB BROS. CO.
Manufacturers of "Pianos of Quality
'
Established 1878
We have a financing proposition worthy
of vour investigation.
JACOB BROS. CO.
3O6 East 1 3 3 rd 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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