Presto

Issue: 1928 2205

November 3, 1928
PRESTO-TI M ES
PAUL B. KLUGH ON
BANQUETCOMMITTEE
Radio Man's Name Added to List of Those
Directing Important Feature of Conven-
tion in June of Music Trades at
Drake Hotel.
Since the announcement last week of committees
which will be concerned especially with the next
music industries convention to be held at the Drake
Hotel, Chicago, the week beginning June 3, an impor-
tant addition has been made, that of Paul B. Klugh,
was elected president of the Piano Club of Chicago.
A period of six years as president of the Autopiano
Company of New York was Mr. Klugh's last connec-
tion with the piano business. It was during bis stay
in New York that Mr. Klugh was elected president of
the National Piano Manufacturers' Association in
1918-19.
Conceived Chamber Idea.
It was in 1914 that Mr. Klugh conceived the idea
of the Music Industries Chamber of Commerce and
plans were laid which resulted in the formation of
the Chamber in 1916.
In 1923, Mr. Klugh began to take a very active
interest in radio matters and was instrumental in
forming the National Association of Broadcasters of
which important organization he was executive chair-
man for three years and is now a member of the
Board of Directors. For the past five years Mr.
Klugh has presided at the radio banquets. He is now
the vice-president and general manager of the Zenith
Radio Corporation.
THE SCHILLER SLOGAN
The Schiller Piano Company, Oregon, 111., never
loses an opportunity to impress its slogan on the
minds of the public. The printed advertising matter
and stationery of the company carry the phrase:
SCHILLER PIANOS
They have made their way by the way they
are made.
The phrase is euphonious and is full of meaning. It
means that Schiller Pianos justify their position in the
trade and their appreciation by musicians by reason
of the thoroughness of the methods by which they
are made.
THE CABLE CO.'S OUTPUT LARGER.
H. L. Draper, vice-president and treasurer of The
Cable Company, Chicago, to!d a Presto-Times repre-
sentative this week that there had been a goodly
output from the Cable plants during the last month
in order to satisfy the demand. He expressed the
belief that when the tenseness of the pre-election
period is over, business will have a spurt of activity
in all lines, the piano included. Mr. Draper thinks
this revival is due, no matter which candidate is
elected.
TUNERS' MEMBERSHIP DRIVE.
PAUL, B. KLUGH
who will serve as a member of the banquet commit-
tee. Special interest attaches to this announcement
because of Mr. Klugh's present connection with the
radio field and his previous close association for years
with the piano industry; in view of the fact that the
coming convention will be the first one ever to be
he!d concurrently with the annual radio trade show.
Began as Piano Man.
Mr. Klugh began his career as a piano man in De-
troit in 1893 where he was employed in a retail store.
He later lived for many years in Chicago and during
that period became vice-president of The Cable Com-
pany. It was during that time also that Mr. Klugh
The drive for new members in the National Asso-
ciation of Piano Tuners is being successful in many
parts of the country. At the headquarters, suite 808,
22 Quincy street, Chicago, President Nels C. Boe feels
very much encouraged over the better conditions for
tuners' employment that now prevail.
REPRESENTS LUDWIG & CO.
W. W. Furbish has been appointed western repre-
sentative of Ludwig & Co., New York, and according
to a statement this week by W. T. Brinkerhoff, gen-
eral manager of the company, will make his headquar-
ters in Chicago.
The Frazel'e Piano Co., Toledo, Ohio, is holding a
closing out sale.
HOWARD WURLITZER
DIES IN HEW YORK
Former Chairman of the Board of the Rudolph
Wurlitzer Company Passes Away at
1 a. m. Tuesday at the Ritz Hotel
After One Week's Illness.
Howard E. E. Wurlitzer, aged 57 years, former
chairman of the Board of the Rudolph Wurlitzer
Company, manufacturers of pianos, harps, organs and
coin-operated instruments, died at 1 a. m. Tuesday
of this week at the Ritz Hotel, New York, of influ'
enza. Mr. Wurlitzer,. whose horhe was in Cincinnati,
had gone east to visit his mother on her recent birth-
day, and he was ill only a week. He had had some
hemorrhages.
The funeral was held at Cincinnati on Friday, and
all the Wurlitzer offices in the various cities were
closed on that day.
Mr. Wuriitzer is survived, by Mrs. Helen Billings
Wurlitzer, a daughter, Valeska, and a son, Raymond.
The retirement of Howard Wurlitzer from the
Wurlitzer Company and sale of his interest in the
company to his brothers, Rudolph H. Wurlitzer, Jr.,
president, and Farny H. Wurlitzer, was published in
Presto-Times on May 19 this year as an announce-
ment from the home office of the company. It was
also announced that Howard's son, Raymond,' had
retired. For a year preceding his retirement Howard
Wurlitzer had been chairman of the board of direc-
tors. He 1 succeeded his father, Rudolph W^urlitzer, as
president of the company in 1912, but retired early in
1S27 because of ill health.
The body of Mr. Wurlitzer arrived in Cincinnati on
Wednesday. Mr. Wurlitzer left Cincinnati on Octo-
ber 26 to go -to Morristown, N.-J., to attend the
celebration of the birthday of his mother, Mrs. Leonie
F, Wurlitzer, at the home of-her daughter, Mrs. Syl-
via, Morristown. After the celebration Mr. Wur-
litzer became i'l and died two days later.
GOOD DEMAND FOR BAUERS.
William M- Bauer, president of Julius Bauer & Co.,
1335 Altgeld avenue, Chicago, • is. greatly encouraged
over the change for the better that has come to the
piano business. He said to a Presto-Times repre-
sentative this week: "Our trade for the last month
has been very good. I realize that's better than a
number of the manufacturers could say, so we are
gratified with the good business that has come our
way."
WILLIAM STRAUBE DIES.
William Straube, who at one time was interested
in the Straube Piano Company, now of Ham-
mond, Ind., died October 22, at
his
home,
5256 Fairmont avenue, Downers Grove, 111. Burial
was in Naperville cemetery. Mr. Straube was born
in Naperville in 1857, the son of Martin and Marie
Straube. He is survived by his widow, one son,
Alfred E., of Detroit, Mich., and a brother, Martin, of
Los Angeles, Calif.
QUICK WAY TO PIANO SALES
The best method of reaching the piano prospects in order to show and demonstrate the
pianos is the BOWEN PIANO LOADER way. A Bowen One-Man Loader and Carrier at-
tached to a Ford roadster enables the dealer to bring the store to the customer. The combina-
tion also provides the quickest, safest and best delivery system for music dealers in city or
country. Write for particulars to
BOWEN PIANO LOADER CO.
Winston-Salem, N. C.
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
F R E S T O-T I M E S
10
trade, much of the player business would be done
again.
Corley Gibson is correct when he states that "dem-
onstration will bring back the player piano." The
grinding out of jazz music in a mechanical way by
the average salesman has done more to retard the
progress of the player business than any other one
Let the piano manufacturers or the whole-
"Thirty Years Ago" Incidents Reprinted in factor.
sale travelers visit twenty-five piano stores and ascer-
Presto-Times Each Week Provide Valuable
tain how few of the salesmen know how to demon-
strate a player.
Comparisons Between Men and Events
The Salary Question.
Then and Now That Might Inspire.
There is another very great weakness in the sell-
By ELMON ARMSTRONG.
ing arena of the piano business. That is the failure
In reading the Presto-Times' "Thirty Years Ago," on the part of the dealers to employ their salesmen
I saw a number of familiar names and references to on the basis of a weekly nominal salary with a
monthly bonus for business. Just after the war when
what some of the "old timers," members of the "old business was good in every line, the commission
guard" were doing in the trade in those days. Is plan was inaugurated. It worked all right in those
there not a lesson to be learned in contemplating the prosperous days, but it doesn't work now. Condi-
creative efforts of such men as H. D. Cable, W. W. tions are different. A change has come about, and a
Kimball, E. S. Conway, Charles Kohler, C. A. Smith,
change in the plan of marketing is absolutely neces-
sary.
J. V. Steger, William Steinway, Jesse French and
others. They had vision. They had creative genius.
The "starvation commission" arrangement has put
They overcame obstacles. Their record shows that
a damper upon the energies and the capabilities of
they produced great results in the musical arena.
salesmen in the piano industry. It has weakened
the wholesale man's efforts. It has lessened the out-
It might inspire some of the men in the industry
today to give serious consideration to what these men put of the factories. It has brought gloom and dis-
achieved. It might be very helpful to the piano indus- couragement into the sales organizations of the piano
merchants. It has driven salesmen into other lines of
try. Charles and Albert Jacob are still alive. They
are both men of vision and courage. They have cre- business and weakened the selling forces. Mr. C. A.
Gulbransen was right when, more than a year ago, he
ative genius. It might inspire some of the trade to
see what they have accomplished, and are still accom- called the trade's attention to the fact that it needed
100,000 new salesmen added to the selling forces in
plishing.
the piano field.
There are very few of the piano manufacturers
Favors Commission Plan.
who are indulging today in what was in those days
called "making dealers." In those days these men
This theoretical talk of cooperation that is indulged
gave encouragement to salesmen to go in business. in so much at the national and state conventions, is
They gave them real cooperation. Using common mere dream dust so long as the present commission
parlance, they "backed them up" financially. Many of
plan of employing salesmen is in use. The commis-
the piano concerns today all over this nation are the sion plan puts the salesman to working for himself.
results of what these men did. It may be that there is The weekly salary plan, with a monthly bonus,
too much high ideals and dream-dust theory being changes the situation. That plan puts the salesman
applied to the piano business that has not and does to working for the institution. Salesmen are the
soldiers that win the battles of commerce. The
not get results.
salaried plan that I have outlined puts the salesman
Recalls H. D. Cable.
under the control of his employer. It enables the
In the last issue of your paper, referring to things employer to direct htm in his work. It gives the em-
that occurred thirty years ago, there is a statement
ployer the right to require so many hours steady
that the Cable Piano Company had increased its organ
work each day. It gives the salesman encourage-
business until they were selling sixty organs a day. ment, confidence and inspires him with energy and
I remember a remark that was made by H. D. Cable stimulates business. Slowly but surely the piano
while this was being done, and at the same time he merchants are beginning to realize this, and in almost
was developing a very active policy in the sale of
every instance where they make the change to this
pianos. One pessimistic philosopher in the trade better plan of employing salesmen, there is an im-
made the casual query to H. D. Cable: "How are provement in their business.
you going to finance all this business?" He replied
with firmness: "This bunch of good traveling men
that we are paying big salaries will produce the busi-
CHANGE OF NAME.
ness and get me plenty of returns from the trade to
The following announcement was printed last week
finance this business. We will have no trouble in
in the Lawrenceville, 111., papers: "The Oldendorf
financing it when the sales organization gives us Music House will pass out of existence next Saturday
returns that will enable me to finance this active and and will be succeeded by the Oschwald Music House.
growing business."
Invoicing was started Tuesday and will be completed
These items in your paper of thirty years ago have the last of the week. In the meantime, if you are in
more than a business lesson for us. They bring back a hurry for that radio, piano or other musical instru-
ment, the invoicing will be delayed long enough to
thoughts of the long ago. This brings to my mind
a quotation: "Oh, memory, tbou hast power to supply your wants. There will be no change in the
carry us back into the fairyland of vanished years, management, but in the future it will be known as the
but all thy thoughts are phantoms, and all of thy faces Oschwald Music House, the only exclusive music
and forms are dreams, for thou canst not bring to us house in Lawrence County.
again the real."
OLD TRADE ITEMS
VIVID REMINDERS
Discusses Player Business.
The piano is the basic instrument of the music in-
dustry. If we should take the pianos out of the
industry the great stores would all vanish, and we
would mere'y have shops. Can any contemplate the
loss of the player business without arriving at the
sound conclusion that the trade as a whole is largely
at fault? There was a time when it represented 52
per cent of the piano business of this country. The
player is still good, it is still desired, and if the piano
merchants and salesmen would go at the selling of
player pianos with that enthusiasm, that confidence
and that determination that was once evinced in the
W. H. BARNES BUILDS ORGANS.
William H. Barnes, who received his A. B. degree
from Harvard in 1914 and is now state president of
the Illinois Council of the National Association of
Organists, designed and built a new $20,0C0 organ
which has just been dedicated in the First Baptist
Church of Evanston, 111., where he is church organist
and choir director. Designing organs has always fas-
c nated him. His first one, now greatly enlarged, is
installed in his home at 1510 Forest avenue, Evauston
He also designed the organ for the First Baptist
Church of Wilmette where he was organist for two
years.
NOW DEMONSTRATING
THE NEW CHORALCELO
An Instrument with Volume and with Versatility of
Musical Performance.
The Aromora Choralcelo is now being manufac-
tured at Chicago, and demonstrations of it are of
daily occurrence at 120 North Green street, seventh
floor, where a Presto-Times representative saw and
heard it on Monday of this week. The demonstra-
tion was by W. L, Flint, electrical engineer and
superintendent of the factory. His son, L. A. Flint,
is also connected with the factory. The president
of the company is Carl Matson and his brother, E. R.
Matson, is one of its officers.
The claims of the manufacturers are that in the
Aromora Choralcelo there are four fundamental types
of musical instruments, having four characteristics of
tone which are always associated with them. These
are two qualities of reed tone, one of which is bril-
liant, the other hollow and nasal; then the whistle
in which category belong the flute of the orchestra
and all the flute pipes of the organ; then the tones
of the stretched string mounted on a sound-board,
which may be struck, plucked or bowed.
In its latest description of the instrument the com-
pany says:
"The instrument is played from a console resem-
bling that of a pipe organ. There is a piano on the
lower manual which may be played with the Choral-
ce'o when desired in certain passages.
"'The stop control is greatly simplified as compared
to the pipe organ. In the organ a large number of
stops have to be often drawn together to obtain loud
effects. In the Choralcelo it is not necessary to use
more than one stop at a time on each manual."
NEW INCORPORATIONS
IN MUSIC GOODS TRADE
New and Old Concerns Secure Charters in Various
Places.
Elmer-Merwin Distributing Corporation, Bridge-
ton, N. J., deal in musical instruments. $25,000.
Ledbetter Music Publisher, Inc., Wilmington, Del.,
$50,000.
W. A. Fischer Phonograph, Manhattan, New York,
$60,000.
Pacific Pathe Record Corporation, Dover, Del.,
manufacture talking machines, $100,000.
The Brunswick Music Shop, 434 South Third street,
Baltimore, Md., with 500 shares no par value.
Harris Freedman, Inc., Buffalo, N. Y., to conduct a
music business with 100 shares of no par value.
The Supreme Radio & Phonograph Co., 880
Amsterdam avenue, New York;- phonographs and
radios: $20,000.
RECEIVER MAKES REPORT.
Paul J. Walburg, receiver of the McFarland Music
Company, Hamilton, Ohio, reported in Common
Pleas Court this week receipt of $693.55 from sales,
$598.33 on accounts, a total of $1,291.88 and expendi-
tures left a balance of $316.37. There are accounts,
collection of which is doubtful, $1,700.32 and install-
ment notes, $793.35. Walburg reported claims filed
against the company total $11,266.02. Among the
claims is that of A. W. McFarland for $3,279.83 and
that of K. B. Allen for $3,137 ;61.
TRADE IN HIGH-GRADE SCHILLERS.
Edgar B. Jones, president of the Schiller Piano
Company, Oregon, 111., was in Chicago recently,
at which tiine he was met by a Presto-Times
representative. "Trade is running into the higher
grades of grands," he said, "and general conditions
are improved." Mr. Jones is proud of a brand-new
style Schiller, just out. It is style E D Gregorian
Design. It is made in mahogany or walnut and its
length is five feet two inches. The bench is made
to match the instrument.
Coin Operated and Selection Controlled Pianos
MECHANICALLY PERFECT
Music That Pays as It Plays
W E S T E R N ELECTRIC P I A N O CO., 832-850 Blackhawk St., Chicago, III.
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/

Download Page 9: PDF File | Image

Download Page 10 PDF File | Image

Future scanning projects are planned by the International Arcade Museum Library (IAML).

Pro Tip: You can flip pages on the issue easily by using the left and right arrow keys on your keyboard.