Presto

Issue: 1931 2260

MUSICAL
TIMES
PRESTO
Established
1884
Established
1881
THE AMERICAN MUSIC TRADE JOURNAL
10 Cents a Copy
I Year
fl.25
10 Months... $1.00
6 Months. .75 cents
CHICAGO, AUGUST, 1931
Issued Monthly—
Fifteenth of Each Month
ample space for a great display of pianos and other
musical instruments. They have followed the modern
motto—"There is always plenty of room in the sky."
Here I met R. B. Beauchamp, floor manager, who
has been with Hudson's many a year, and he told a
story similar to that related by Mr. Westlake and
Mr. Jenkins—plenty of good prospects, a few weeks
or months more patient waiting for them to get their
By HENRY MACMULLAN
financial feet under them, and then the closing of
many a sale. A lot of real promises listed.
A rush-around among the music dealers of Detroit in reality bumper crops, which if sold at even mod-
E. P. Andrews is general manager of the musical
late in July brought a Presto-Times man, your erate prices would put them in much easier circum-
humble servant, into contact with one of the best stances. Similar reports of excellent crops were com- instrument department at J. L. Hudson's, and E. K.
bunches of fellows in the trade—ardent, hopeful, ing in from other counties of the region—from Shia- Andrews is the buyer. E. J\. Andrews, who has just
purchased himself a new Plymouth car, told me the
vigorous men, alert for whatever life brings, alive to wassee, Lapeer, Oakland, Macomb, Livingston and
Chrysler motor plant is just opening up fine—very
opportunities and path-breakers in short cuts to new Washtenaw counties. So the whole section is bound
busy with lots of orders ahead, too.
to be a good field for selling pianos.
opportunities.
The Mason & Hamlin is the J. L. Hudson Co.'s
"There are many persons in Detroit who desire
1 found it inspiring to listen to J. B. Westlake,
leader, and they also sell lots of Chickerings, supple-
to
buy
pianos—we
have
many
such
on
our
prospect
manager of the piano department of the Wurlitzer
mented with the Knabe, the Marshall & Wendell and
store, 1509 Broadway, who probably had been draw- lists," said Mr. Jenkins, "but who are waiting until the Edward B. Healy, from the Gulbransen Co.,
ing new inspiration from Rudolph Wurlitzer of Cin- such time as they are all back at work on full time Chicago.
cinnati, who had visited the store three or four days or nearly full time. Good people, nearly all of them,
Bayley Contemplates a Return
previous to my call. And Mr. Westlake's enthusiasm to sell to, but in moderate circumstances. And they'll
buy when the tide turns in their favor."
Frank J. Bayley retired from the piano business
over the outlook in general was shared and supported
by C. W. Hendricks, Wurlitzer salesman, who told Grinnell Bros. Buy Out Bush & Lane Detroit Store on July 1 at which time the premises at 1451 Broad-
Grinnell Bros, have purchased the accounts and way were taken over on a lease to a rich corporation
me, before Mr. Westlake came in, that they expected
which, under the management of H. Cohen, has
to put on a staff of five or six additional salesmen to what remained of the stock of the Bush & Lane
stocked it up and is running it as a radio tube store
do field work as soon as the heated term of summer retail establishment and moved it across the street
from the fifth floor of 1514 Woodward avenue to as a unit in a national system.
subsides.
However, Harry E. Russell, who was with the
The trend of Mr. Westlake's remarks showed a Grinnell's, 1515 Woodward avenue. The Bush &
Lane store had not been in very active operation for
Bayley company for twenty years managing the Bay-
firm belief in the stability of the piano business, faith
ley business, is still at the store closing out the Bayley
in the continuation toward normalcy of the activities nearly a year past.
W. R. Trembly, former manager of the Bush & accounts and he says that the Bayley organization
of the gigantic automobile plants that have placed
Detroit as the foremost manufacturing city of the Lane Detroit store, is now district manager for the has a definite plan to resume business as soon as
Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co. at Toledo, Ohio. A. A. general conditions "pick up."
world, and a prima facie, well-grounded belief that
many of the common people actually yearn for music Morris, who preceded him for several years as man-
Complimentary Dinner and Letters of Tribute
and a piano upon which to produce it. He intimated ager at Detroit and who later became president of
Mr.
Russell, or "Harry" as his friends all call him,
Bush
&
Lane
at
Holland,
Mich.,
is
still
selling
Transi-
that the notion that everybody must save and hide
was deeply touched by the many tributes he received
money was breaking up; that people were getting tone radios, manufactured by Bush & Lane.
Grinnell Bros, are handling the RCA-Victor line from them when they learned that the Bayley con-
tired of hugging their fears, but, instead, were getting
of
radios, the Sparton, the Stromberg-Carlson, the cern was retiring from the music trade arena. They
around to the point where they desired to indulge in
a few of the things that make life worth living—a Philco, and in refrigerators the Williams Ice-O-Matic, gave him a great dinner, and since the dinner he has
received many letters from jobbers, advertising men,
made by the Williams Co., Bloomington, 111., which
piano in particular.
concern manufactured oil burners for the past 18 manufacturers and others in praise of the manner in
which he did business with them.
Cable Piano Co.'s Good Prospects
years.
Some "Live" Piano Businesses
Walter S. Jenkins, manager of the Cable Piano
In pianos, Grinnell Bros, represent the Steinway,
C'o.'s interests in the Detroit area, 1264 Library ave- the Aeolian line, the Vose line and the M. Schulz Co.
Other piano concerns in Detroit that are doing
nue, is feeling quite encouraged over the outlook, as line.
more or less business are Marvin Simons, 2040 Park
he says there are many prospects on their lists who
Inasmuch as the Grinnell Bros, house handles the avenue, who has the Baldwin agency; John P. Becker,
will buy pianos as soon as they get their feet under
Williams refrigerators in its main store at Detroit, 2262 Monroe avenue; City Music Co., 7412 Mack
them and see their way clear to indulge that desire. the Starr-Freeze refrigerators are handled only in the avenue; W. VV. Kimball Co., 1425 Broadway; Levine
Detroit is a city that recovers rapidly from setbacks Grinnell stores at Toledo, Ohio, and at Monroe, Ad- & Black, 5666 Grand River avenue; Marquette Musi-
or reverses of fortune, and the municipality, with the rian, Hillsdale, Mich., and their adjacent territories. cal Co., 1216 Beaubien street; A. E. Noble Piano &
aid of Henry Ford and other far-sighted leaders, is
1 called on J. E. Harvey, manager of the sheet Polish Co., 12858 Woodward avenue; Peoples Out-
setting its house in order for much happier and more music department of Grinnell Bros., and he was fitting- Co., 150 Michigan avenue, with a branch store
prosperous days.
at 13025 West Warren avenue; Schilling Piano Co.,
reluctant to admit that there was much doing in
sheet music just now. He is the type of man who 37 West Elizabeth street; Standard Piano Co., 219
Mr. Jenkins says encouraging news has come in
John R street; P. A. Starck Piano Co., 1546 Wood-
from the Cable Piano Co.'s branch stores in different casts up a slight smoke-screen in front of the wonder-
ward avenue; Starr Piano Co. Sales Corporation, 149
parts of Michigan—Pontiac, Flint and other places. ful energy and pep that is the main characteristic of
He had had a conversation with their Flint manager such men. The National Association of Sheet Music East Elizabeth street; Wellensiek Music House, 3343
Gratiot avenue.
a day or two before I interviewed him and this man Merchants knew what it was doing when it elected
had told him that recovery at Flint and the neighbor- him as a member of the board of directors at the
Plenty of Chances for Tuning
hood around that manufacturing center was well recent convention.
Places to order piano tuning in Detroit include the
under way, with very bright prospects for good fall
The J. L. Hudson Co.'s music store was moved Alhambra School of Music, 8242 Woodward avenue;
and late summer trade. Farmers in Genesee county, some time ago from its separate location on Library
Wurlitzer's, 1509 Broadway; Stuart Watson, 14883
of which Flint is the metropolis, were elated, the avenue to the 13th floor of the immense Hudson de- Coyle street; Grinnell Bros., 1515-21 Woodward ave-
Flint manager said, over their most excellent crops— partment store. Here on the 13th floor they have nue; A. William Scharringhausen, 408 West Grand
HOPEFUL CONDITIONS PREVAIL
IN PIANO TRADE OF DETROIT
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, 1931
P R E S T 0-T I M E S
River avenue; Hubert S. Ratcheller, 15828 Wark
street; Becker Piano Mfg. Co., 2262 Monroe avenue;
Paul Stanislaw, 8102 Kentucky street; H. Schwes-
inger, 3790 Columbus street; I. F. Pratt, 446 Navahoe
street: Peoples Outfitting Co., ISO Michigan avenue;
John J. Kollmer,. 1780 Townsend avenue; Ford Lefler,
8545 Dumbarton'road; E. C. Brink. 3046 Hazelwood
avenue; Dean D. Brown, 15881 Muirland avenue;
Detroit League of the Blind, 1363 East Jefferson
avenue; Detroit Piano Tuning Co., 3809 Bagley
street; Homer R. Dill, formerly with Bush & Lane
for 20 years, 14896 Indiana street; Dean S. Gray, 2700
Vicksburg street; E. B. Gregor, 3024 Whitney street;
Frank F. Hopkins, 320 Puritan street; Bryant G.
Marble, 3809 Bagley avenue; Ray H. McElmurry,
3610 Wayburn street; Russel W. Oak, 11757 Broad
street; Passage Piano Service, 52 Putnam street;
Charles F. Bernhardt, 1525 Church street; Walter M.
Blinn, 2661 Taylor street.
LYON & HEALY-DE ACRES
The resignation of Mr. C. H. De Acres as general
manager of Lyon & Healy, is made in the following
announcement, sent out under date of July 15, over
the signature of Raymond E. Durham, president:
ANNOUNCEMENT
Effective today, Mr. C. H. De Acres has resigned
as vice-president and general manager of Lyon &
Healy, Inc., to accept greater personal opportunities
that he has been offered elsewhere.
During Mr. De Acres' lour years' association with
Lyon & Healy, Inc., he has made valuable and last-
ing contributions to our business, so that the com-
pany is now better organized and is operating more
efficiently than at any time in the many years of its
successful business operation.
We regret that, owing to the reduction in the vol-
ume of business in the industry and the proportionate
reduction in our volume, our business does not permit
the retention of the services of a man of Mr. De
Acres' experience and ability.
The present official roster of Lyon & Healy is:
Raymond E. Durham, president; W. P. Roche, vice-
president and secretary; F. G. Le Mar, treasurer.
As to Mr. De Acres' future connections, nothing
up to the time of going to press has been settled. It
is understood that he will take a prominent official
position with the house of Sherman, Clay & Co., but
at the time these lines are written the details of this
connection are not obtainable, nor has any other in-
formation concerning any possible changes in the
house of Sherman, Clay & Co. been given out by
that house.
FORMER MUSIC TRADE MAN NOW
BANK RECEIVER AND BROKER
Will H. W T ade, formerly associated with the music
trades of Chicago as dealer and manufacturer, now
an investment broker at 39 South La Salle street,
Chicago, was appointed receiver by State Auditor
Oscar Nelson of the Builders and Merchants Bank
& Trust Co., Chicago. A petition was signed by
many depositors of the bank to replace Mr. Wade.
Mr. Wade is also receiver for the Millard State Bank,
3645 West 26th street, Chicago.
OPPORTUNITY FOR GOOD BUSINESS
CONNECTION
The advertisement in our classified columns keyed
"Opportunity," care Presto-Times, is worthy of the
attention of anyone desiring to line up with a profit-
able paying business. The house offering this oppor-
tunity is well known and is a house of strict reliabil-
ity and capability. Anyone desiring to make a change
or get into a well-established business we advise to
get in touch with this advertiser.
PIANOS FOR RASPBERRY GROWERS
There's money in raspberries, and some of the
money that is now pouring into Cheboygan County,
Michigan, ought to go into the purchase of pianos. A
Presto-Times staff member was in that county last
week, when thirty prominent agricultural men from
Otsego county interested in raspberry growing made
a special trip of inspection of the cultivated rasp-
berry fields and patches in Cheboygan county.
KANSAS CITY WURLITZER MANAGER
M. W. Newman, recently connected with the Mil-
waukee store of Rudolph Wurlitzer Company, has be-
come manager of the Kansas City Wurlitzer store,
located at 1015 Grand avenue, Kansas City, Mo. The
store at Kansas City is enlarging its school of music
and is making plans for radio broadcasting from its
studio.
Two professional musical publications, the Music?
Observer and the Musical Courier, have merged, b\
the music trade papers are continuing their indivic
uality as units of this division of trade and business
papers.
FILING THE USEFUL FACTS
The Method Involves and Encourages a Systematic Way of Doing Things
and Every Record Is a Reminder That Has a Most
Valuable Suggestive Quality
One music trades dealer finds a'memory-jogger i
most valuable first aid in his daily business transac-
tions. This is kept by the office girl who shoulders
all of the minor details. Whenever he wants to do
something or be reminded of anything he jots it
down on a blank slip of paper and then passes it along
for file in his memory-jogger.
A small pad of blank paper, 2 by 3 inches, is
constantly carried in his coat pocket for this pur-
pose. No matter where he may be, he always takes
out his little memo pad and jots down his ideas
before there is any chance of forgetting them. Then
at a convenient moment he turns these slips of paper
over to his guardian, the memory-jogger. He never
goes anywhere unless he is armed with his memo
pad. It is as valuable to him as his pocketbook.
At just precisely the right moment, time and place,
the memory-jogger brings up the matter for atten-
tion, and a typewritten memo card is placed on his
desk every morning of all the things that have to be
done that day or planned ahead for the week.
Good for Sales.
This system is aiso used to record sales events. A
complete description of t iie idea as conceived and
what it hoped to accomplish is dictated before the
plan it, started. Later a recapitulation sheet is added
showing preparations made and total costs, with the
results obtained stated by days, until the sales died
cut and the effects of the drive wore off. The com-
plete record is then filed away for his future guidance
in the memory-jogger under the title "Selling
Stunts."
On ail seasonal advertising or for the holidays, a
copy of the advertisement used or the sales circular
or letter sent out, is always filed away for future
reference, with a statement of results obtained on any
particular item or items featured.
Recording Window Displays.
If a good window display is staged on any partic-
ular line, the date the window was opened and closed
is noted, with a detailed description of the window
or a photo, and a summary of all sales by days on
that particular line. At the end of each year this
music trades dealer can get a pretty good bird'seye
view of what his windows did for him in a mer-
chandising way during the year, and which windows
pulled the best results, and why.
He is constantly (hanging the interior of his store,
moving items to the front which are not ordinarily
called for and moving things back which will be
most likely asked for anyhow. A notation of results
on each shift helps him out in the future, does away
with guess work, and gives him a complete picture of
"what's what," thus enabling him to do more sci-
entific planning in his interior arrangement and dis-
plays.
Prizes for Staff.
The many little details of successful selling meth-
ods are also cornered and filed away in this memory-
jogger for future use. Weekly sales conferences take
place with the sales force, and at every meeting each
salesman is supposed to offer up something new that
happened during the week, between himself and the
buying public. For the best suggestion at each sales
conference a prize is awarded of merchandise valued
at $2.50 and once a month a cash prize in that amount
is offered. All of the suggestions made are jotted
down by the stenographer at the conference and filed
away in the memory-jogger.
Watching Competitors.
This music trades dealer also believes in keeping
in close touch with what his competitors are doing in
the way of newspaper advertising and window dis-
plays, and each week a runner reports on windows of
other stores, while his stenographer clips and files
away all advertisements and news items under the
head of "Competitors, Week of January 10, Adver-
tising," and another for "Window Displays." In this
way he keeps well informed along merchandising
trends in his city and what is going on in the music
trades generally.
The Call Book.
A call book is a!so kept in which each salesman
notes "requests" from customers which could not
be filled because the item or line was not carritd.
If at the end of a month enough calls come in on
any particular item he is sure to stock it, and here
again the memory-jogger turns the trick, for the
15th of every month is "call" day, and the stenog-
rapher goes over the call book reports and lists all
items not carried in stock, with a statement of the
total number of calls received for each item during
the month.
These varied experiences in buying, selling, adver-
tising and management are thus carded on perpetual
record instead of in this man's head, and he can refer
back at any time to what happened last year this
time, or what happened around Washington's birth-
day, or Labor Day, or Christmas, for everything is
at his finger's ends in the memory-jogger.
A series of 5 by 8 envelopes, indexed on the out-
side, such as "Window Displays," "Selling Stunts,"
"'Advertising Ideas," "Interior Displays," etc., by
months and years, contains all the data for any one
month and year, thus January 1930; February, 1930,
etc. For holidays special folders are used, such as
"Easter, 1931," "Graduation, 1931," "June Weddings,"
"Christmas," etc. Any scheme which has proved val-
uable in the past is thus taken out and re-used, im-
proved upon and enlarged, and put over stronger
than ever, and then filed away again for next year'i
benefit from the experience angle.
Featuring Lines.
Every week he makes a feature of pushing a cer-
tain line and the backs of his sales folks are bent
in this one direction during all of that week, by
calling attention of all comers to a certain item which
is being pushed, and in this way, through suggestive
selling, many other items are moved which might
otherwise have moved only on call or through vigor-
ous advertising measures.
This sales-aid and management memory-jogger
and experience guide has proved worth its weight in
gold, for this music trades dealer has doubled his
sales since the system was inaugurated and this year
lie expects to treble his sales volume.
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF MUSIC
MERCHANTS COMMITTEES NAMED
President Edwin R. Weeks of the National Asso-
ciation of Music Merchants has announced the ap-
pointment of the following standing committees for
the ensuing year.
Membership Committee
Charles H. Yahrling, Yahrling-Rayner Music Co.,
306 West Federal street, Youngstown, Ohio, chair-
man, ex-officio, as elected secretary of the association;
Ben. F. Duvall, W. W. Kimball Co., 308 South Wa-
bash avenue, Chicago 111.; John J. Glynn, Mathushek
& Son Piano Co., 14 East 39th street, New York,
N. Y.
Press Committee
Charles H. Yahrling, Yahrling-Rayner Music Co.,
306 West Federal street, Youngstown, Ohio, chair-
man, ex-officio, as elected secretary of the association;
Miss Mayme Zechmann, Davidson Bros. Co., Sioux
City, Iowa; Fred W. Bush, Hush's Music and Radio
House, 132 Main street, Penn Yan, N. Y.; Fred G.
McKinley, Germain Piano Co., 400 South Washing-
ton avenue, Saginaw, Mich.
Legislative Committee
Melville Clark, Clark Music Co., 416 South Salina
street, Syracuse, N. Y., chairman; Merritt Alfred,
Gallup & Alfred, 201 Asylum street, Hartford, Conn.;
Homer L. Kitt, Homer L. Kitt Co., 1330 G street
Northwest, Washington, D. C ; Fred R. Sherman,
Sherman, Clay & Co., 536 Mission street, San Fran-
cisco, Cal.; Charles E. Wells, The Charles E. Wells
Music Co., 1624 California street. Denver, Colo.
Resolutions Committee
B. E. Neal, Neal-Clark-Neal Co., 473 Main street,
Buffalo, N. Y., chairman: Will R. Shutes, El Paso
Piano Co., 215 Texas street, El Paso, Tex.; Carl Wit-
tich, The Wittich Stores, 635 Penn street, Reading,
Pa.
LETTER TO PIANO CLUB MEMBERS
The following communication addressed to mem-
bers of the Piano Club of Chicago explains itself:
"Dear Fellow Members:
"As there is practically no attendance at the Piano
Club luncheons during the summer, it has been
decided to discontinue the weekly meetings at the
Illinois Athletic Club until the lirst Monday of Sep-
tember.
"A special evening event probably will be staged
later in the summer, and due notice will be given
at that time.
"Sincerely yours,
"BEN F. DUVALL.
"President."
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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