Presto

Issue: 1931 2258

May, 1931
11
PRESTO-TIMES
THIS PIANO WENT TO SEA
An Associated Press dispatch from Washington,
D. C , says that when Mrs. C. J. Wright, 2220 Bagby
street, Houston, Texas, went to California last fall
she rented her home, including her playerpiano. Two
daughters of the renter later introduced a group of
sailors from the flagship Houston of the Asiatic fleet
to the piano. The instrument made such good music
that the boys simply couldn't leave it, so when the
Houston sailed for China the piano went along. Now
Mrs. Wright is demanding her piano and it is up to
Assistant Secretary Jahncke of the navy to get it.
Mr. Jahncke mused: "I wonder if it won't turn out
Chinese music when we get it home.''
m Miscellaneous Doings
m
at the Convention
GENERAL TRADE
REPRESENTATIVES
Henry Detmcr can now be found at 339 South
Wabash avenue. His offices are on the third floor at
the same entrance as the piano repair shop of Mr.
Bartholomee.
Frank Weiser, who is working for the Gulbransen
Co., when at home is at Elmhurst, 111.
Ben M. Strub, Mathushek man, resides in Chicago
when not out selling Mathushek pianos.
Gordon Laughead, general wholesale representative
of the Wurlitzer Grand Piano Co., of DeKalb, 111.,
whose headquarters are in Chicago, is likely to be
seen at the convention.
The Starr Piano Co., of Richmond, Ind., has as its
local representative for Chicago and vicinity C. R.
Hunt, who is a veteran Starr piano salesman.
Pratt, Read & Co., manufacturers of piano keys,
actions and ivory, Deep River, Conn., will not make
an exhibit, but Richard W. Stevens, an official of that
company, will represent the house during the con-
vention.
The V. C. Squier Co., manufacturers of wound
musical strings, Battle Creek, Mich., do not intend to
exhibit at the Chicago convention. Raymond Gould
of the company, however, will be in attendance.
The Henry F. Miller Piano Co., 234 Boylston street,
Boston, Mass., is not planning to have any exhibit at
the June convention in Chicago. However, G. Wilson
MacDow, treasurer of the company, expects to attend
the convention.
Hardman, Peck & Co., 433 Fifth avenue, New York,
are among those who will not have an exhibit in Chi-
cago during the convention—either at the Palmer
House or in the hands of a dealer.
Jacob Bros. Co., New York, will not have an exhibit
at the Chicago convention. C. Albert Jacob, Jr., vice-
president of the Mathushek Piano Mfg. Co., will be
at the convention and at the Mathushek exhibit in
BURNING RUBBISHY PIANOS
In his department entitled "Things I Never Knew
Till Now But Which You Knew AlLAJong," Walter
Winchell, columnist for the Daily Mirror, New York,
says: "That there is a Long Island dump where a
rooms 802 and 803 Palmer House, and will at the special spot has been set aside for the burning of
same time represent the interests of Jacob Bros. Co. pianos. The radio is blamed." Well, all Presto-Times
Comstock, Cheney & Co., Ivoryton, Conn., the great can add to that is the explanation that the pianos
piano action and hammer house, will be represented burned there are corpses, not real pianos. They may
at the convention by Mr. Seeley of that company. look like pianos in the distance but in reality are only
Mr. Seeley will be at the convention the entire week. fit for the bonfire of the crematory. Nobody with a
Frank Holton & Co., manufacturers of the Holton grain of common sense blames the radio for condemn-
band instruments, Elkhorn, Wis., will not make any ing dead pianos to the flames.
display exhibit during the convention but J. W.
Strong, general sales manager, will probably be a
convention visitor several days of the week.
The etching herewith is torn out of a page of The
The C. G. Conn Co.'s exhibit at the Palmer House
will embrace the Pan-American, the Leedy Co., the Piano Tuners Magazine on which page is a sample
Cavalier lines and other auxiliary organizations. This of Presto advs. published in some of the music and
combine will make a very fine showing; in fact, the
exhibit will bring a little theater with the new Alto
-eaicsman, "Here is Ji
what you are looking for. Now tak.
Saxophone holding the center of the stage. Pan-
this
book
home
and do exactly what
ed
American is to feature a novel motion display and the
m- it tells you and you will come to
Cavalier, himself, is to be on hand to sponsor that line.
ro,
fed
Leedy will feature the mallet-played instruments.
ny
THE PRESTO BUYERS' GUIDE
Soprani, Inc., and The Continental Music Co. will
J will
TO AMERICAN PIANOS
The BLUE BOOK of the Piar
be in Room 886. Both of these companies have inno-
lanufacturir.it Industry.
n this
Kstim&ten
and descriptions of B
a itself
vations of great interest to the trade which are to be
itinos: official record of all piar
rs of ap-
POL
ndin
introduced at the show.
i the book
MM.
TNC BOOK THAT SELLS PIANOS
.mended as a
,nt musical child
S. Ernest Philpitt, head of the great house of S.
Te"Rchors schools, prospective pin no
buyers will find the ISuyers' Guide a
v?en years of age.
Ernest Philpitt & Son, whose headquarters are at 40
K. W. G.
50 cents per copy (25 cents to
S. E. First street, Miami Beach, Fla., with branch
*, by Satis N. Cole-
Free with one year's subscrip-
illustrated. John
tion ($1.25) to PRESTO-TIMES,
stores scattered throughout the state, will be at the
The American Music Trade
ew York.
cenvention the entire week and make his headquarters
is well known to
SLISHINC
ic
of
the
originators
at the Palmer House, arriving Sunday, June 7. Mr.
Dearborn
t children should be
Chk.f o. III., U. S. A.
nusic by first having
Philpitt is secretary of the National Music Merchants'
,i learn to play on crude
Association and a director. He will be accompanied
by Dallas Tucker, an official of the Philpitt concern, music industries papers and the "musical instruments
who will come mainly to attend the sheet music deal- department" of a few daily and weekly newspapers,
ers' convention. Mr. Philpitt will be given the glad
where there is a probability of getting orders for the
hand of welcome by Chicago piano manufacturers and
Buyers' Guide and rendering- a service to manufac-
he informs a Presto-Times representative that he ex- turers.
pects to enjoy Chicago immensely.
Rudy Wiedoft Enterprises, piano dealers, have been
The Wurlitzer store, 444 South Salina street, Syra- incorporated by Miller & Miller, 25 West Forty-
cuse, N. Y., is holding a pre-inventory sale of pianos fourth street, New York. One hundred shares com-
—free delivery and free bench.
AN INTERESTING ETCHING
f
T h e B R E C K W O L D T L i n e of
PIANO BACKS,
SOUNDING BOARDS,
BARS, BRIDGES,
TRAP LEVERS AND
HAMMER MOULDINGS
Is the STANDARD HIGH GRADE of the World
JULIUS BRECKWOLDT & SON, Inc.
Main Factory and Office
DOLGEVILLE,
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/
May, 1931
PRESTO-TIMES
12
BISSELL-WEISERT PIANO
COMPANY RE=ESTABLISHED
WABASH AVK.ATJACKSON BOl'l
4«48 MIIKRriHN RI>.
s i o E A S T <;:ii) S T .
PRESTO
Buyers' Guide
Announcement is made of the resignation of Arthur
Bissell from the vice-presidency of Lyon & Healy.
Mr. Bissell will rejoin his former partner, Henry
E. Weisert, and they will resume business under their
corporate name—The Bissell-Weisert Piano Co.
Their offices and warerooms are located in the Mich-
igan Square building, North Michigan avenue and
Ohio street, which contains the beautiful Diana court
and the famous statue of Diana.
The Bissell-Weisert Co. for some ten years occu-
pied attractive warerooms in the Fine Arts building,
and in 1920 moved to 26 South Michigan avenue,
where their salesrooms were considered among the
most beautiful in the United States. In their new
quarters they will occupy even more attractive quar-
ters than their previous ones.
The Bissell-Weisert Co. has always been consid-
ered one of the highest grade music houses in the
United States, and for years was the largest distrib-
utor of Chickering & Sons and Chickering Ampico
Grands in the United States, outside of New York
city. They enjoyed the patronage of the best people
in Chicago, and their clientele included the leading
families of the city. They carried a comprehensive
line of pianos, representing the Chickering, Sohmer,
Marshall & Wendell, Milton and other makes, and also
conducted a highly successful phonograph, radio, and
record department.
Notwithstanding the prevailing depression, Mr. Bis-
sell and Mr. Weisert feel this is a favorable time to re-
establish the Bissell-Weisert Piano Co., which was
one of the most successful music houses in Chicago.
Mr. Weisert is one of the best known men in the
piano trade, having been president of the National
Association of Music Merchants, and now being pres-
ident of the Chicago Piano & Organ Association. He"
enjoys a wide acquaintance throughout the trade. Mr.
Bissell enjoys not only a fine social position in Chi-
cago, but is identified with many musical and cultural
activities. He was for six years president of the
Musical Art Society; is now secretary of the Cliff
D'wellers' club, and director and chairman of the
entertainment committee of the Tavern club. He
numbers among his friends such prominent musicians
as Frederick Stock, Rudolph Ganz, Rudolph Reuter,
Felix Borowski, Herbert Witherspoon and many
other distinguished artists.
Messrs. Bissell and Weisert show their confidence
in the future by starting afresh in these trying times,
and we are sure the best wishes of the trade at lar#e
go with them. Some interesting developments may
be expected in the near future in connection with the
re-establishment of the Bissell-Weisert Piano Co.
The firm issued a special announcement in the press
with the caption, "Mr. Arthur Bissell and Mr. Henry
Weisert announce the re-establishment of the Bissell-
Weisert Piano Co."
Still Excels
In Price and Quality
See Our Exhibit at
Room 2 3 4
GREAT NORTHERN HOTEL
CHICAGO
O • J-^} Inclusive
AYER & SON CHICAGO EXHIBIT
"The Written Word" is an interesting exhibit by
N. W. Aver & Son, Inc., Philadelphia, which is being
presented this month and up to May 23 in the 9th
floor galleries of Marshall Field & Co., Chicago. The
exhibit, which Is open daily except Sundays from
10:30 a. m. to 4 p. m., is an informal study of the
power of words as applied to a variety of literary
Indispensable t o forms, including advertising. On the w r all hangs a
large chart saying that the exhibit "is designed to
suggest, within certain necessary limits, the difference
dealers and salesmen between
good writing and bad, and more particularly
between good advertising writing and bad. No at-
tempt has been made to define good writing, for that
is impossible to do. We have simply tried to denote
those qualities of taste, imagination and rhythm by
which good writing makes itself known." On one
of the pages of a leaflet given away at the exhibit is
It is a reliable book of ref- a Steinway piano advertisement which in the aggre-
erence in determining the gate represents a polished work of art, and beside it
"the same idea" is paraphrased in another advertise-
origin, make and standing of ment in which the paraphrase falls far short of the
any instrument. The Presto original as prepared by N. W. Ayer & Son, Inc.
and
BE CONVINCED
We have something entirely
NEW
Buyers' Guide is filled with
At present there are about 42,000 owners of radio
sets in Yugoslavia, according to Attache Emil A.
strength to a salesman's Kekich, Belgrade. This is less than one-half of 1
per cent of the total population. Thus, Yugoslavia is
statement and removes all o n e o f the most undeveloped radio markets of Europe.
the information which adds
doubt of his sensible claims
for the goods he sells.
Price: 50 Cents
About 10 per cent of the time radio stations are
"on the air" is devoted to educational programs, ac-
cording to answers from 522 stations to a question-
naire sent out by the Federal Radio Commission to
605 broadcasters.
Let the PRESTO-TIMES classified columns help you
sell that old stock of pianos, violins and sheet music.
Music dealers everywhere are on the alert for any real
bargain that you offer them. Remember, goods that you
cannot sell easily may enjoy a very ready s-ile in ether
towns. There are dealers waiting to buy what you have
to sell.
B. K. SETTERGREN CO
Factory and General Offices:
BLUFFTON, INDIANA
• "=•"*-i-'g^^-'s-'
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 11: PDF File | Image

Download Page 12 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.