Presto

Issue: 1930 2249

13
P R E S T O-T I M E S
August, 1930
TRADE PICKUPS
New Firms, Changes, Incorporations, Personal News, Removals,
Piano Sales, Excerpts from Dealers' Advertisements,
and Other Bits of News
The St. Louis store of Wurlitzer, 1006 Olive street,
in connection with a sale it is holding, tells the public
of that city that "Wurlitzer's is the world's largest
music house, with stores from coast to coast."
Fisher's, 118 East Congress streete, Tucson, Ariz.,
held a "clearance sale of pianos" last month which
was successful.
Reproducing grand pianos made a special induce-
ment in a piano sale at the Wurlitzer store in Lou-
isville, Ky., 658 Fourth street, last mouth. The ad-
vertisement said in part: "Press the Button and
Presto! Music to suit your every mood. Entertain-
ment just when you want it—at a price within the
reach of all. Enjoy the world's greatest music mas-
ters in your own home at all times."
"At Corley's pay only the balance due" is an an-
nouncement by the Corley Co., 214 East Grace street,
Richmond, Va. The explanation to the public was:
"We are authorized to sell a number of very choice
instruments forfeited by former owners, for balance
due.''
The Southern California Music Co., San Diego, has
drawn a good deal of trade to its store this summer
by being the headquarters for season reservations for
the performances of the San Diego Civic Orchestra at
Balboa Park. Pianos and the Orchestra run in the
same ads.
The A. Gressett's Music House, Jackson, Miss.,
asks: "Is your home a place of interest to your chil-
dren and their friends or do they have to seek their
amusement outside the home? This is a question you
should consider most earnestly. Make your home
musical now."
The El Paso Piano Co., 215 Texas street, El Paso,
'['ex., Will R. Shutes, proprietor, claims to be El
Paso's oldest music house, established 34 years.
''The House of House" is the trade-mark, or slo-
gan if the reader likes that better, of the C. A. House
Co., Wheeling, W. Va. In telling about their 88-note
player-piano "that every member of the family can
play," they add for a more convincing appeal: "The
cost is so small and the terms so very liberal."
Bailey's Music Rooms, Inc.. 217 College street,
Burlington, Vt., say: "Be sure you are right when
you buy a piano. Let us show you what quality
means in a strictly high-grade instrument."
"Buy a Starr Grand now," says M. F. Shea, 242
Fifth avenue, Nashville, Tenn. "Add charm and
enjoyment to your home with this fine piano.
The cost will be small in comparison to the pleasure it
will bring to the members of your family."
Russell Smith, who for several years past has been
employed in the radio sales and service department
of the Stocking Music Store at Lowell, Mich., has
started work with the O. J. Veiter Furniture Store in
that town. He has established a radio service room
there.
The Kimball Piano Co., of Peoria, 111., has discon-
tinued all its branch stores in that vicinity and the
stock of the Pekin, 111., store has been removed to
Peoria.
Cameron's, 928-930 Hamilton street. Allentown,
Pa., has been conducting a special sale of player-
pianos.
Schmoller & Mueller, 1514-18 Dodge street. Omaha,
Neb., are showing pictures of fine Steinway pianos,
and they also announce some Duo-Art grands.
The Elburn Vertical Grand, "the home piano," is
especially announced by Jenkins Music House at 116
West Third street, Bartlesville. Okla.
The Wurlitzer store at 333 Third street, Niagara
Falls, N. Y., advertising to the people of Wilson,
N. Y., and vicinity, tell them of the beautiful Studio
piano of their make that can be purchased on a 30-
payment plan.
The Milleman Music Co., 568 Merchant street, Am-
bridge, Pa., asks parents to send their children to the
store for free music lessons.
Saunders Music Co., Ottawa, Kan., who sell the
Gulbransen line, say: "Buy of us. It will be a good
instrument; we sell no other kind."
The Vocalion Gramaphone Co., omitted the divi-
dends due in July on its stock.
Jenkins Music House, 313 North Penn street, Inde-
pendence, Kan., says: "Don't let the lack of a piano
delay this all-important child's education."
A fire of unknown origin last month destroyed the
Allied Music Shop in the business district of Valpa-
raiso, Ind., causing a loss of $10,000.
The Griffith Piano Co., which operates two stores
in Newark, N. J., and one in Irvington Center, that
state, says of its player-pianos: "The pleasure of
making music is so much greater than just listening!
Anybody can enjoy the thrill of making music if
they have one of our player-pianos."
Five dollars down and two years to pay the balance
are terms offered in a used piano sale of the Lauter
Piano Co. at 591-593 Broad street, Newark, N. J.
A pre-inventory sale of player-pianos is being con-
ducted by the Andrews Music Store of Charlotte, N. C.
Speaking of the Steinway pianos, the Jenkins Music
Co., 223 West Main street, Oklahoma City, Okla.,
says: "In point of long life, prestige and beauty of
line and tone, it is the greatest piano value ever
offered."
Clarkson's music department, Burlington, Vt., is
selling many Gulbransen pianos.
The Metropolitan Music Co. has leased a building
on East 11th street, Chattanooga, Tenn., and the com-
pany will employ some twenty persons.
New pianos sold by M. Steinert & Sons at Wor-
cester. Mass., include the Steinway, Steinert, Jewett,
Woodbury, Weber and Steck. The famous Duo-Art
reproducing piano is also handled by this concern.
The Pioneer Music Co., 948 South Hill street, Los
Angeles, Calif., rents pianos and says: "Rental may
be applied on purchase later."
The Innes Music Co., Wichita, Kan., advertises:
"As a special inducement this week we will include
a good quality bronze floor lamp with each piano or
radio purchase, without charge."
The Frederickson-Kroh Music Co., 407 W'. Main
street, Oklahoma City, Okla., declare that "more Kim-
ball pianos are in use in American homes than pianos
of any other name in the world."
The Aeolian Co. of Missouri, W. P. Chrisler, pres-
ident, 1004 Olive street. St. Louis, Mo., declares that
"the Steinway is the piano that gives the utmost in
piano quality."
Featuring the Wheelock piano, made by The Aeo-
lian Co., New York, the Birkel Music Co., 446-448
South Broadway, Los Angeles, Calif., says: "The
Wheelock Grand is the Aeolian Co.'s latest achieve-
ment."
Floyd Barber, who has been manager of the Goold
Bros., Inc., music store in Kenmore, N. Y., has
taken up his duties as general manager of all the
Goold Bros, stores.
"Steinway pianos are in a class by themselves—the
standard by w r hich all others are judged," says Mel-
lor's. 1420 Market street. Wheeling, W r . Va.
The C. A. House Co., 1141 Market street, Wheeling,
W. Va., says of itself: "Forty-eight years of experi-
ence is your safeguard."
The Richardson Music Co., 730 West Seventh
street, Los Angeles, Calif., is conducting a sale of
fine used pianos.
D. Z. Phillips Music Co., conducting two stores in
Pueblo, Colo.—one at 621 North Main street and the
other at 1319 East Evans street—is carrying on a
clean-up sale of trade-in pianos.
Knight-Campbell's, 403 North Main street, Pueblo,
Colo., is conducting a mid-summer clearance sale of
high-grade reconditioned pianos.
The new Cable upright piano, in walnut or ma-
hogany, is featured in the advertising of the Adams-
Bennett Music Co., Wichita, Kan.
The Waltham Piano Co. has opened a factory store
in McMahan avenue, Newport, Tenn.
The Silvester Music House. 58 Front street, Wor-
cester. Mass., is offering free music lessons for a
limited time to all purchasers of new pianos, violins,
saxophones, clarinets and other musical instruments.
Daniel Silvester conducts the business.
Grunewald's, New Orleans, has had big success in
its removal sale. It is now settled in its new home,
123 Carondelet street. New Orleans. Grunewald's has
a branch store at Jackson, Miss.
"Your child's education is not complete without
music," declares the C. A. House Music Co., 1141
Market street. Wheeling, W. Va.
. Werner Grand pianos are being handled in a lively
manner and with extensive advertising by the Mann-
Foster Music Co., formerly Vandenberg Music Co.,
118 North Washington street, Green Bay, Wis.
The Adams Bennett store at Wichita, Kan., is
holding its 20th anniversary mid-summer sale of
pianos.
"Have our estimator look at your old piano. We
can refinish it like new," says the Gewehr Piano Co..
Inc., 216 West 9th street, Wilmington, Del.
The Schumann Piano Co.'s store in Rockford, 111.,
has been moved from the corner of Wyman and
West state streets to the Guest House building at
511 North Main street. E. H. Jackson, manager of
the store, is greatly pleased with the new location.
The H. C. Waite Music Co., Davenport, Iowa, has
filed an original notice of suit in the district court
there against Nicholas Massafaro, asking judgment
in the sum of $294.
The Goerke Co., Broad and Halsey streets, New-
ark, N. J., is conducting a sale of used player-pianos.
The Anderson-Soward Music Co. has opened the
Brookville School of Music in the Spitler block,
Brookville, Ohio.
Because of the larger selling field of his Elkhart
and Mishawaka stores, Daniel Templin has decided
to close his music store at Goshen. Ind., and concen-
trate sales work for a time in Goshen, South Bend
and Mishawaka.
Leon M. Lang, for 27 years a representative of
Steinway & Sons, has been invited to Chicago to stay
until December 15 and employ part of his time in
helping to train salesmen for Lyon & Healy.
The Robinson Music Co . 141 North 4th street.
Steubenville, Ohio, representing Stroud, Wheelock,
George Steck, Straube, Packard, Ivers & Pond and
Chickering pianos, is conducting a special sale at
Weirton. W. Va.
The Pioneer Music Co., 948 Hill street, Los An-
geles, Calif., says: "We will pay you $50 for your
old radio or phonograph, regardless of make or con-
dition. Make your selection from our large stock of
uprights, players and grand pianos now on our floors
—and deduct $50 for your old phonograph or radio."
Jenkins Music Co., 223 West Main street, Okla-
homa City, Okla., says: "Seventy-six dollars for your
old radio or phonograph in trade on a new Victor
Radio Combination."
Andrews Music Store, 235 North Tryon street,
Charlotte, N. C, has been conducting a pre-inventory
sale of "any piano in the store for $3 down."
The Baldwin Piano Warerooms, Old Model Laun-
dry building. Rochester, Minn., makes this offer: "We
T
w ill give a full term of music lessons with each piano
sold. Name your own local music teacher. Nothing
could be more fair."
A picture of Edward H. Uhl is used on page 54 of
the Hollywood Bowl for mid-July. Mr. Uhl is presi-
dent of the Southern California Music Co., Los
Angeles, whose building is pictured on the same page,
with the sign "Baldwin Pianos" high above it on
metal stilts.
Arthur Groverman, a 16-year-old senior in a Wash-
ington, D. C, high school, some time ago supplied
himself with about 2,000 match sticks, a quantity of
glue, and made a violin. It has a good tone, Arthur
claims. Anyway, he plays in the Technical High
School Orchestra and has the reputation of being
quite a musician as well as handicraftsman.
The L. Martin jewelry store and Columbia Music
store at 214 West Main street, Trinidad. Colo., a
combination business, has been sold by the court
referee in bankruptcy to a local firm of jewelers and
optometrists.
An involuntary petition in bankruptcy has been filed
in Federal Court against the M. L. Price Music Co.
of Tampa, Fla The French Nestor Co. of Jackson-
ville, Fla., was the principal creditor named in the
petition.
Zibart Bros.. Nashville, Tenn., is . distributing a
phonograph record put out by the Durium Co. under
the title "The Hit of the Week."
The Platt Music Co., with its main store at 832
South Broadway, Los Angeles, operates'ten stores,
and claims that each one is "the house of music
values." Tn pianos the Knabe, the Kranich & Bach,
the Fischer, the Marshall & Wendell, the Straube. the
Ludwig. the Estey, the Wegman, the Settergren and
the Ampico. In radios. Grebe, Bosch, RCA Radiola.
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/
August, 1930
PRESTO-TIMES
14
Atwater Kent, Majestic, Philco, Victor, Radiette—
and a complete line of band and stringed instruments,
Victor, Columbia and Brunswick records, sheet music
and accessories.
A. N. Lang, radio buyer for the Witzel Music Co.,
1454 Barry avenue, Chicago, is on a two weeks' fish-
ing trip at Haugen, Wis.
The Oliver H. Ross Piano Co., 1101 Elm street,
Dallas, Tex., has been conducting a contest with the
No. 7 problem.
The Elder Music Store has opened for business at
Red Cloud, Neb.
In addition to manufacturing its own line of band
instruments, Walberg & Auge, 86 Mechanic street,
Worcester, Mass., handle the Conn band instruments
from Elkhart, Ind.
The RCA-Victor Co., Camden, N. J., has increased
its force in that city by 7,000 employes.
Dowler's Music Store, Marion, Ohio, has been sold
by William Dowler to the Henry Ackerman Piano
Co., of that city. Mr. Dowler, who has been in the
music business for 25 years in Marion, has not an-
nounced his plans for the future.
The fire department at Litchfield, Minn., was able
to save the Olson Music House building last month
when the McGowan building close to it burned down.
The San Antonio Music Co., 316 West Commerce
street, San Antonio, Tex., advises: "Know the joy
of a Grand in the home. The cost is too little to
forego the pleasure to be had."
The Parker-Gardner Co., Charlotte, N. C , says:
"Steinway pianos will last 30, 40 and even 50 years.
It is an investment in culture."
The Duff-Gore Corp., 131 Fayetteville street,
Raleigh, N. C, has been keeping open every evening
during a piano sale it is holding and makes free
delivery to a distance from the store of 100 miles.
"There is a price and a model to suit your special
need," is a declaration by Thos. Goggan & Bros.,
advertising Steinway pianos at San Antonio, Tex.
Kimball grand pianos are featured in the Fitzgerald
Music Co.'s alteration sale at Los Angeles, Calif.
Purchasers of pianos are offered a free course of
piano lessons "by the renowned Jack Baldwin at the
Fitzgerald studios."
Charles Colandrelli, 390 Passaic street, Trenton,
N. J., trading as the Colandrelli Piano Co., last week
filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy in federal
court, listing liabilities at $11,609.80 and assets of
$9,700.
The Wurlitzer Co. will open a piano store at
Georgetown, Ky.
The Kelsall Music Co., Louisville, Ky., has opened
a branch store in the Brown Hotel building, that city.
The O. K. Houck Piano Co. has been conducting
a midsummer sale of traded-in used pianos at Nash-
ville, Tenn.
Workmen are building an addition 25 feet deep to
the Kuyper Music House at Pella, Iowa. Mr. Kuyper
handles pianos, radios and small musical instruments.
WM. THOMSON IS LEAVING
FOR HOME IN SCOTLAND
santly keep before our members the necessity of keep-
ing payments within reason.
"The piano trade is all right if we keep the retail
end up. In our Glasgow store and branches we have
sold more pianos up till the end of June, 1930, than we
did during the same period last year."
William Thomson, prominent musical instrument
Mr. Thomson says that he had intended to come
dealer of Glasgow, Scotland, has had some wonderful
trips in this country and Canada in the last few to Chicago and very much regretted that his engage-
weeks. He had been on a speaking tour which took ments lecturing for the cause of home rule in Scotland
him out to Vancouver, and he spoke in Montreal, precluded the Chicago trip. In these lectures he ex-
Toronto, New York and other cities. Wherever he plained that the new National party in Scotland stands
for a complete measure of self-government. This
went he was welcomed by old friends, for this man
does not involve separation from the British common-
is a cosmopolite, known and esteemed far and wide.
wealth of nations, but it means that any connection
Mr. Thomson has for many years, in fact since
about the establishment of his business, taken much with England shall be entered into freely by the will
of the Scottish people through the Scottish parliament.
interest in American musical instruments and always
Mr. Thomson says, speaking of Scotland: "We
has in his store American pianos, organs and other
send in taxes over 119 million pounds to London, and
goods of this country.
receive about one-quarter of that amount back for
The Thomson Music House was one of the largest her own administration, the balance being used in
buyers of American reed organs when the reed organ
England for English purposes; while if Scotland had
was prominent. His house was the agent and dis- allocated to her to pay her fair proportion of the
tributor for the Story & Clark organs and sold many general utilities, such as the army, rjavy, postoffice,
hundreds and into the thousands of these instru- etc., she would have something like 50 or 60 million
pounds to develop her own land. Matters of serious
importance to Scotland get scant or no treatment
at all from a parliament that is preponderatingly
English and out of sympathy with Scottish needs and
requirements."
STORY & CLARK GIVE
SOME TRADE POINTERS
R. A. Burke Foresees Fall Business—F. F.
Story Regaining His Health—Texas
Salesman Taking Lessons.
AVILLIAM THOMSON.
ments. Since the reed-organ days the Thomson house
has dealt to some extent in American pianos, and
always has a showing of American pianos in its ware-
rooms.
Apropos of this comment on Mr. Thomson's long
years of loyalty to American-made musical instru-
ments, here is a paragraph printed in the June, 1930,
issue of our "30 Years Ago" department as a clipping
from The Presto of July 19, 1900:
"Mr. William Thomson, of Glasgow, and a personal
This cut gives an idea of the appearance of the friend of Charlie Wagner, the European representa-
beautiful and rich-toned new 1930 Style 4 special up- tive of Story & Clark, arrived in Paris on the 10th
of July. Mr. Thomson is a warm admirer of Ameri-
right piano of the Kohler-Brambach Piano Co.
The Kohler-Brambach company in getting out its can organs and other American musical instruments
new models is in the lead in originality and designing. and sells large quantities of American-made goods.'
When these manufacturers start out to produce some-
Mr. Thomson gave an address in Philadelphia on
Scotland on one of the hottest nights this red-hot
summer and his auditors listened intently until after
11 p. m. Mr. Thomson finishes his trip in North
America on August 13 and is booked to sail on Au-
gust 16, as the forms of this issue of Presto-Times
are on the press, on the steamship Minnedosa for
home. To a Presto-Times correspondent he said in
New York last week: "The radio business here in
New York appears to me like as if each dealer was
trying to cut his neighbor's throat. Radios marked
new are offered at prices I could not buy them at for
my business.
"Why can't the dealers get together and stop this
suicidal policy? The public will buy radios, and if
the manufacturers were only to select their represent-
atives from dealers with sufficient dignity to at least
hold their prices with some margin of profit, the radio
trade might flourish for years; otherwise it will go
NEW STYLE 4 BY KOHLER-BRAMBACH PIANO CO.
the
way of the piano trade which, so far as I can see,
thing new or to introduce an improvement they do
the job in a full-fledged way. In research work is being seriously affected by offering good goods at
they spare no expense, and are always anxious to ridiculously low payments.
"Make the public feel that a piano or radio is some-
produce the best. Certainly the designer of this up-
right is entitled to credit from trade and user for thing worth striving to have, and they will value it
chaste lines of beauty, but it must be heard to be as an article worth having, and all musical instruments
fully appreciated. Its tone is so satisfactory to music are in that category. We have the same trouble in
lovers that it is bound to make a large market for Scotland. Luckily, the Scottish Music Merchants As-
sociation is a pretty lively association and we inces-
itself,
KOHLER-BRAMBACH'S NEW
1930 SPECIAL, STYLE 4
Frank F. Story, president of the Story & Clark
Piano Co., who submitted to a major operation in
St. Luke's Hospital, Chicago, was released from that
institution a few days ago and taken to his residence
in Riverside, 111., where at last report he was rapidly
regaining his rugged health. He is expected back
at the Story & Clark headquarters, 173 North Michi-
gan avenue, Chicago, this week, where he will be
thoroughly welcomed by his efficient lieutenants in
the big house.
R. A. Burke, general sales manager of Story. &
Clark's, was called upon by a Presto-Times repre-
sentative last week after his return from a motoring
vacation. Mr. and Mrs. Burke, accompanied by some
Chicago friends, took two trips—one through Elkhart,
Ind., and on up through Dearborn, Mich., into various
parts of the Dominion of Canada, then back and down
into scenic parts of Illinois, including pleasant visits
at the homes of Mr. Burke's mother and Mrs. Burke's
parents.
Mr. Burke is paying close attention to the piano
end of the Story & Clark business. He said indica-
tions point to a broader trade in pianos this fall than
that of 1929. Just now there are piano orders coming
in, but from widely scattered districts. However,
from letters from dealers and from these advance
orders, Mr. Burke is greatly encouraged that the
piano is staging new and larger trade for the coming
fall season.
Russell C. Shambaugh, an intelligent and enterpris-
ing young man, arrived at Story & Clark's a few days
ago to take lessons in piano selling from the expe-
rienced salesmen of that house. Mr. Shambaugh was
sent to Chicago for this purpose by Charles P. Pace,
president of the W. L. Pace Piano Co., Houston,
Texas, with instructions to learn all he could about
methods of selling pianos. Mr. Pace recommends Mr.
Shambaugh as an earnest young salesman, so he sent
him on to the headquarters of Story & Clark, believ-
ing that the knowledge he would gain by actual con-
tact with men of such large experience for a few
weeks would put the young man on the high-road to
permanent success.
The importance of starting right in a piano career
can not be emphasized too much, and Air. Pace and
Mr. Shambaugh both showed excellent judgment in
their choice of the place to get the best schooling.
NEW CORPORATIONS.
Electromatic Record Changer Corp., Room 918, 134
North La Salle street, Chicago. Capital, $30,000.
Deal in phonograph parts and accessories. Incor-
porators: B. Wolan, L. Sass, K. Kelly. Correspond-
ent: Pritzker & Pritzker, 134 North La Salle street.
Bloomington Radio Service Co., 105 North Main
street, Bloomington, 111. Capital, 100 shares non par
value. General merchandising business. Incorpora-
tors: Donald N. Clausen, Eva M. Charles and Nor-
man A. Miller. Correspondent: Donald N. Clausen,
137 South La Salle street. Chicago.
Henrichs Radio Co., Inc., Milwaukee, Wis.; 300
shares, no par value. Install radios, accessories, sup-
plies, equipment. E. W. Henrichs, L. Henrichs, W.
Henrichs.
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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