Presto

Issue: 1928 2205

November 3, 1928
PRESTO-TIMES
Jenkins, Whitney, Porter, Fay & Egan, Baldwin,
Jackson & Church, Billstrom, Curtis, Jones, Coneaut,
South Bend, Lodge & Davis, Kempsmith, Robinson,
Warner & Swasey, Ames, over 100 Motors all A. C
60 Cycle 220 Volt up to 50 H.P., standard makes.
The property will be offered for sale in various
divisions, to wit, land and buildings as Parcel A,
machinery and equipment Parcel B, inventory Parcel
C, lumber Parcel D, and office furniture and fixtures
Parcel E, as well as in its entirety.
Hummel to Receive Bids.
Bids will be received at the office of the under-
signed until 9:30 a. m. Thursday, November 8, 1928,
and will be reported for approval at 11 a. m. of the
same day to the Honorable Harry A. Parkin, Referee
in Bankruptcy, in his Court Room, 620 Home Insur-
ance Building, 137 South LaSalle street, Chicago, Illi-
nois. Bids must be accompanied by a certified check
for not less than twenty-five per cent of the amount
offered.
The Real Estate Described.
Commencing at a point 315.55 feet south of the
northwest corner of the southwest quarter of said
Section 4, thence east along the south line of Wiley
avenue in the City of Bluffton, to the west rail of the
siding of the Toledo, St. Louis and Western Railroad
Company, a distance of 539^4 feet, thence southwest-
erly on a curve along said west rail of siding to the
west line of said quarter section, thence north on the
west line of said quarter section a distance of 866.66
feet to the place of beginning, containing 6.45 acres
of land.
Also part of the southwest quarter of Section 4.
Township 26 North, Range 12 East, bounded as fol-
lows, to wit:
Commencing at the northwest corner of the south-
west quarter of said Section 4, thence east on the half
section line 382 feet to the center of Baldwin street
in the City of Bluffton, thence south on the center
line of said Baldwin street, if extended, 269.84 feet
to the north line of Wiley avenue, in the city of
Bluffton, thence west on the north line of said Wiley
avenue 377.81 feet to the west line of Section 4,
thence north on said section line 225.63 feet to the
place of beginning, containing 2.29 acres more or less,
together with all rights, privileges and appurtenances,
etc.
Lots numbered 12, 13, 14 and 15 as known and
designated on the recorded Plat of Adams and Deam's
Addition to the town (now city) of Bluffton.
Also the northeast quarter of the northeast quarter
of Section 5, Township 26 North, Range 12 East, and
Lot number 43 as known as designated on the Re-
corded Plat of Studebaker, Todd and Sale's Colum-
bian Addition to the Town (now City) of Bluffton,
except therefrom the following tract of land, to wit:
Commencing at the southeast corner of the northeast
quarter of the northeast quarter of Section 5. Town-
ship 26 North, Range 12 East, thence west 150 feet,
thence north to a point on the center line of an alley
between Washington and Market streets, in the City
of Bluffton, if extended, thence east 150 feet to the
east line of said Section 5, thence south to the place
of beginning, containing 55-100 of an acre more or
less; also except therefrom, all that part of Section 4,
Township and Range aforesaid, lying between the
above described tract of real estate and Bond street in
said City of Bluffton, being a part of lot number 43,
TRUSTEE'S SALE OF
H. C. BAY CO. PLANT
Bids for Whole or Part of Property Will Be
Received by the Trustee, Fred E. Hummel,
Until 9:30 a. m. November 8, at His
Chicago Office.
An inventory of everything on hand at the H. C.
Bay Company's plant at Bluffton, Ind., has been
taken and a general sale has been set for November 8.
From Fred E. Hummel, the trustee, 1321 Bankers'
Building, 105 West Adams street, Chicago, the fol-
lowing information was obtained:
Real Estate and Buildings.
The property includes about 10 acres of land located
on South Bond street and West Wiley avenue, im-
proved with 11 brick buildings 2 and 3 stories high,
having a combined floor space of 350,000 square feet,
constituting all building necessary to a complete piano
manufacturing plant, such as machine shop, glue
building, cabinet case building, stock room, plate
rooms, storage house, engine and boiler houses, etc.
The buildings are also equipped with two 500 h.p.
Kingsford Webster Water Tube Boilers with Huber
hand stokers, two 4-valve Non-releasing Corliss
engines with General Electric motors, two heating
boilers, and a new 150-ft. smoke stack.
The Trustee will also offer for sale approximately
40 acres of land adjoining the city of Bluffton im-
proved with two residences and other out-buildings.
Well-Equipped Plant.
This is one of the finest equipped piano plants in
the West, having an annual capacity of 31,000 pianos.
The stock consists of finished and pianos in
process, piano players, cabinet grands, reproducers,
baby grands, piano cases, radio cabinets, piano and
reproducing actions, keyboards, sounding boards,
scales, standard piano hardware and accessories,
screws, nuts, bolts, machine screws, tacks, core and
piano wire, spring wire, steel brass and copper tub-
ing, flat and rod stock, cold rolled and Bessemer
rods, glue, paints, oils, enamels, varnish, lacquers,
colors in oil, etc.
Large Stock of Lumber.
There is also an enormous stock of high-grade lum-
ber in maple, poplar, elm, chestnut, pine, spruce, gum,
sycamore, shiplap, panels and veneers; a completely
equipped wood and metal working plant which can
be adapted to any kindred line and is equipped with
the most modern machinery mostly all direct motor
driven, and consists of trim, double cut off, cross
cut, resaw, band, variety swing cut off, Dado saws,
stickers, shapers, joiners, facers, Sanders, planers,
mortisers, rubbers, tenoners, sprayers, multiple bor-
ing and drilling machines, tappers, belt sanders, auto-
matic and turning lathes, knurlers, glue mixers, glue
presses, veneer machinery, punch presses, lathes, mill-
ing machines, iron shapers, buffers, plating equipment,
air compressors, drill presses, slotters, coil winders,
all made by the standard manufacturers such as Mat-
teson. Black Bros., Solem, Woods, Greenleaf, Royal,
BEN REYNOLDS & CO.
HAS BUILDING PLANS
Progressive Washington, Pa., Music House,
Established Twenty-eight Years Ago,
to Build Addition.
Ben Reynolds & Co., Washington, Pa., is giving
the best evidence of success and its faith in the future
by letting a contract for the construction of a modern
two-story building especially designed for the proper
display of musical merchandise. The front of this
building as shown will be of limestone with bronze
trimmings, using three display windows, two on the
ground floor and one on the second floor. The inte-
rior will be one large room with space arranged in
a fitting manner for the display of pianos, Victrolas,
radios, small instruments, records and the like.
The company has been in the present location for
over twenty-eight years, and since the beginning has
from time to time made improvements in its store
rooms to care for the continually increasing business.
The line carried by the progressive Pennsylvania
music dealer includes the Mason & Hamlin, Knabe,
Chickering, J. & C. Fischer, Marshall & Wendell,
Armstrong and the Ampico, and other instruments
in the varied line of the American Piano Co. In addi-
tion the company carries phonographs, radios, and
phonograph-radio combinations, band instruments,
small goods and sheet music.
Ben Reynolds, the proprietor of Ben Reynolds &
Company, had worked for many years in and around
Washington for the C. A. House Company, now of
Wheeling, and Chas. M. Stieff, piano manufacturers
of Baltimore, Md., before embarking in his own busi-
ness. He entered the business for himself in July,
1900, in a room on West Chestnut street, and in a
few months moved to the present location at 116-118
North Main street.
W r ork on the new building is being rushed, and
the contractor expects to complete it by the middle
of November. The popular music house is doing
business just as usual while reconstruction is go-
ing on.
Hart's Music Store, Fremont, Ohio, is holding a
"Closing Out" sale and announces that it is "going
out of business."
Studebaker, Todd and Sale's Columbian Addition to
the said City of Bluffton.
The said petition will come on for hearing at Room
620, 137 North LaSalle street, Chicago, Illinois, on
November 8, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon.
An Auction as Alternative.
In the event that no satisfactory bid is received,
the assets described will be sold at public auction
without further notice. They may be inspected, and
a copy of the inventory may be had upon application
to the undersigned.
This notice will admit you to examine the assets
at the above address.
FRED E. HUMMEL,
Michael Gesas, and Donald L. Smith,
Trustee.
Attorneys for Trustee.
JACOB BROS. CO.
Manufacturers of "Pianos of Quality
Established 1878
We have a financing proposition worthy
of vour investigation.
JACOB BROS. CO.
3O6 East 133rd 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/
November 3, 1928
TRADE CONDITIONS
IN INDIANAPOLIS
Business Noticeably Improved in Sales in
Which Higher Grade of Pianos Are Best
Sellers and Trend Generally Is To-
wards That Kind of Instrument.
Business conditions in Indianapolis are improving"
and gradually becoming healthier. The better grade
of instruments are selling and the volume of sales are
in high grade pianos. The radio sections in all of
the music stores report a very satisfactory business.
Talking machines are coming into their own again,
and the sales of records is much improved.
John Pearson of the Pearson Piano Company, Indi-
ana's largest and most complete music house, says
that indications point to a healthier business, and the
volume of sales in high grade merchandise is very
satisfactory.
H. G. Hook, general manager of the Starr Piano
Company, reports business normal with no complaint
to make. Mr. Hook, too, notices theg radual trend to
the better made pianos. The adverse weather, a con-
dition over which no one has control, has been re-
sponsible for a slight lull in sales, but colder weather
in the past week has helped bring up the sales vol-
ume which is now back to normal.
Conditions Much Improved.
Mr. Stockdale, manager of the Wilking Music Com-
pany, says business is normal, and conditions are
much improved. "We are working harder today than
we ever did, but in order to get the desired results, it
is necessary to work, nad work hard." Frank Wilk-
ing is spending several days in Cleveland, Ohio, on a
little vacation. The Woman's Department Club of
Indianapolis have purchased one of the Jesse French
& Sons Style G upright pianos in golden oak for
their club room.
The Marion Music Company have already sold
three of the exquisite Schumann grand pianos, and
prospects for several more sales in the near future
are very good.
Other News.
Frank Davis, manager of the House of Baldwin,
tells of the Baldwin instruments being placed in the
new Fox Theater in Detroit, Mich. Mr. Davis, who
was in that city recently, reports conditions very good.
George Pearson of the Pearson Piano Company
has returned from Pittsburgh, Pa., after a two weeks'
vacation there.
George Shaffer, representative of the Kurtzmann
Piano Company, was one of the recent visitors to the
Hoosier capital.
Clyde C. Holcombe, representing the Kohler Indus-
tries of New York, was in the city during the past
week.
Harry Wunderlich, representing the Schiller Piano
Company, was a visitor at the Pearson Piano Com-
pany during the week.
WURLITZER CO. BUYS
MOHAWK CORPORATION
Secures Substantial Interest in Chicago Corporation
Manufacturing Radio Supplies and Parts.
The Rudolph Wurlitzer Company, Cincinnati, has
purchased a substantial interest in the Ail-American
Mohawk Corporation, manufacturers of radio equip-
ment and radio-phonograph combinations, it was an-
nounced last week.
The Ail-American Mohawk Corporation has exten-
sive interests in Chicago. It is understood the Wur-
litzer Company will concentrate its radio interests
intensively in the Mohawk Company.
The All-American Mohawk Company was formed
last May by the consolidation of the All-American
Radio Corporation and the Mohawk Corporation of
Illinois.
The holdings of the Mohawk Corporation at the
close of September were about $2,000,000, according
to the accounting of expert statisticians.
The acquisition of the interests in the Mohawk Cor-
poration was confirmed last week by Thomas P.
Clancy, vice-president of the Wurlitzer Company.
TRADE GOOD SAYS E. B. BARTLETT.
"Trade is now fair," said E. B. Bartlett, vice-presi-
dent of the W. W. Kimball Company, Chicago, to a
Presto-Times representative on Thursday evening.
"We had a nice retail trade last month and wholesale
is coming in better all the time. Altogether, things
begin to look quite a bit improved." Mr. Bartlett
is one of the most conservative men of the more
prominent manufacturers, either in showing undue
P R E S T O-T I M E S
enthusiasm over a spurt in trade or in getting panicky
over a slowing-up period such as comes to every busi-
ness once in a few years. For these reasons his
words bear more weight than if some excitable crea-
ture had uttered them. What he has to say at any
time may be taken as a true index of conditions as
they are.
SOME VERY LATE OPENINGS
IN THE RETAIL MUSIC TRADE
A Few of the New Ventures in the Bert Business in
the World.
L. F. Hammond, proprietor of Hammond's Music
Store, Logan, O., has rented the east room in the
new Armstrong building now under construction.
For a number of years past Mr. Hammond has been
operating his business in the Case building on S.
Mulberry street, under the name of Case's Music
Parlors. This name was recently changed.
Mr.
Hammond expects to be in his new location by the
first of October.
The Cowman-Hughes Co., Drumright, Okla., has
opened a music store with a big line of phonographs
and music goods.
A grand opening was announced in the Chicago
Sunday Tribune of the "North side home of Majestic
radio" in Uptown Chicago at 1022 Wilson avenue.
The Gateway City Music Shop has opened a new
display room in Niles, Mich., handling Baldwin pianos,
Columbia phonographs, Federal, Sparton, Crosley and
Fada radio.
A. J. Westwood, formerly with the Piano Exchange,
San Francisco, has opened a music store at 30 Mason
street.
Sherman, Clay & Co., San Francisco, has taken
over additional space in the Doe Building, adjoining
the building occupied by the main store at Kearny
and Sutter streets. The piano department will be
given more space and it is now planned to give over
part of the added room to offices.
The lama Novelty & Music Shop, 6305-07 South
Kedzie avenue, Chicago, is now owned by A. G.
Conners, one of the founders of the firm.
Ye Music Box Corp. is the name of a new music
store opened in Martinsville, Ind.
Mr. Elmore, formerly connected with the music
business at New Castle, Ind., is now manager of one
of the branch stores of the Bergstrom Music Com-
pany, Honolulu, Hawaii.
TRIBUTE TO HERMANN IRION
"Our Guest from America," is the heading of an
editorial in Music Trade Review of London in which
this is said: "On another page we give a report of
the Federation's dinner to Mr. Hermann Irion, presi-
dent of the Music Industries Chamber of Commerce
of America. This was in every sense a delightful
function, gracefully conceived and admirably car-
ried out. May we modestly hope that the distin-
guished guest of honor went back to New York with
as pleasant an impression of the British music trade as
we are quite sure the British music trade will cherish of
himself! May we also express the hope that Mr.
Irion will soon again be our over-welcome guest.
His speech at the May Fair Hotel gave us a most
illuminating glimpse o£ American conditions. It em-
phasized also the great lesson that, here as in Amer-
ica, it is. by strong organization only that music
itself even lives."
HEPPE PIANO COMPANY'S ELECTION.
The annual meeting of the Heppe Piano Co., Phila-
delphia, was held in the office of the corporation, Sixth
and Cooper streets, Camden, N. J., last week, and the
following officers were elected for the coming year:
President and treasurer, Florence J. Heppe; vice-
president, M. F. McDowell Heppe, and secretary and
assistant treasurer, George W. Witney. The semi-
annual dividend of 3 per cent was declared by the
directors. At the closing of the session of the Heppe
Piano Co. the stockholders of the Philadelphia retail
house of C. J. Heppe & Son also held annual meet-
ing and re-elected the present officers.
RETIRING AFTER 45 YEARS.
In its issue of October 20, Presto-Times reported
that S. A. Hawke, proprietor of Hawke's Piano Store,
54 Ferry street, Maiden, Mass., was retiring from
business after "twenty years" of active piano selling
in that city. It should have read "forty-five years"
and we stand corrected in a letter from Mr. Hawke
himself. And Mr. Hawke has been on the subscrip-
tion list of this paper all of that nearly half a century.
Gulbransen and other standard makes were handled
by Mr. Hawke.
USED PIANO SALES
BLOTCH ON TRADE
It Is Matter of Regret That Dealers Are Con-
centrating on This Phase of Business and
a Discouraging Thought That Manufac-
turers Encourage the Traffic.
By A. G. GULBRANSEN,
President Gulbransen Company, Chicago.
In certain sections of the country a very alarming
development affecting the piano business, is taking
place. This is the policy of some of the dealers of
doing a very large proportion of their business in
used pianos, instead of concentrating on the sale of
new instruments.
Probably in every piano store in the country there
is a certain normal amount of business to be done in
used instruments—in second-hand pianos taken in
trade. While many are undoubtedly reconditioned
and put into shape that really belong in the scrapheap
instead, there is nevertheless justification for a small
amount of this business.
Manufacturers Encourage Practice.
But to me it is very discouraging to learn that piano
manufacturers are engaged in a regular traffic of
selling used pianos, are printing lists of them, circular-
izing the dealers, offering these old piano relics at
very low prices; selling them "by the yard,"' as it
were. It is almost unbelievable that manufacturers
would be so shortsighted as to take up an angle such
as this.
From a selfish standpoint, every sale of a used in-
strument, kills the saje of a new one. From the
broad standpoint of the piano business, every old piano
relic sold hurts the whole business.
Erom the standpoint of home owners, every one
sold helps to spread the thought in the minds of
people that pianos are old-fashioned, that any kind of
a piano will do for the home; from the standpoint of
the student, every used instrument is a discourage-
ment to the child in music study, fails to inspire and
directly retards the advancement of the piano as an
important factor in child music education.
Blotch on Piano Business.
Investigation shows that most of these old instru-
ments are old-fashioned, clumsy, bulky, unattractive.
Their continued use in American homes is a blotch
on the piano business. In appearance they are eye-
sores, in tone they are inharmonious, displeasing; in
touch they are repulsive to the student and to the
pianist. The sale of these instruments to the Ameri-
can homes has not a single point in its favor.
In the districts where a specialty is being made of
used instruments, public opinion is being molded un-
favorably; the public will soon judge the piano by
these decrepit old instruments that the merchants are
offering and selling.
The Spreading of Disease.
In his traffic in these instruments the piano mer-
chant becomes a party to the spreading of disease,
vermin and filth, for it is a proved fact that epidemics,
uncleanliness have had their origin in the exchange
of used furniture between families. The piano, on
account of its hundreds of small crevices, the presence
of felt and leather and other absorbent materials, is
an ideal resting place for germs out of a slovenly
home.
It is a poor compliment to the merchants of a dis-
trict or a state to have piano manufacturers use it as
a dumping ground for old instruments. It would be
far better to temporarily restrict the volume of piano
business in a territory than to try to stimulate de-
mand, to try to overcome buying resistance with low
priced, worthless instruments. These piano relics,
remember, will continue to exist and to curse the
piano industry, for years, and some of them for gen-
erations.
Body Blow to Business
The piano manufacturers and the piano merchants
engaged in this traffic, I am sure, do not realize the
full seriousness of their step. If they did, they would
hesitate to administer this supreme body-blow to the
business which has for years been their means of live-
lihood and a prosperous livelihood at that.
I predict that there will be a sweep of indignation
against this practice. It is too destructive, it is too
serious to result otherwise. The damage that has
already been done will take years and scores of years
to overcome. In no other field is the public offered
household merchandise relics on a scale worth talking
about. Public thinking toward the piano is wrong, it
is true, but that is no excuse for piano manufacturers
and piano merchants to help along this wrong think-
ing on the part of the people. It is their job to
change public opinion and it can never be done by
making the small merchants' store the dumping place
for the cast-off pianos of the big cities.
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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