Music Trade Review

Issue: 1929 Vol. 88 N. 19

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
Shackleton Piano Company,
Louisville, Ky.
Address.
Gentlemen:
I have read your proposition to increase the interest
in piano teaching and I will
cooperate and I hereby
agree to take as many as
pupils, and give Five lessons
without charge to these pupils at times to "be fixed by me.
I will give these lessons at #
Street.
T will give lessons at pupils home (?)
My telephone is
I agree to report the progress and talent of each pupil to
you before or immediately after fourth lesson.
Parents Name.
TEACHERS COPY
has qualified for Five
Piano Te'st Lessons with-
out charge.
This pupil will make ap-
pointment with you.
Phone
Piano
Teacher.
-Phone-
Address
Name.
To Teacher: Kindly advisa ui of the ability
•nd progrew of this student before or im-
mediately after fourth Icuon.
Address.
ShackletonPjano Company
The Registration Card That Produced 1 Prospects
H o w the Teachers Were Signed U p
H ow Shackleton
Works JVith Teachers
Jr.-
HE music teacher and the piano dealer and has won their good will and co-operation youngsters of Louisville what was announced
have long ago ceased to be enemies, the to the extent that the Louisville Music Teach- as free test lessons for all children who had
one charged with the sole ambition of ers' Association has freely endorsed plans of not before received piano instruction. There
endeavoring to wheedle commissions out the Shackleton Co. for providing instruction were to be five private lessons in the series
of the dealer for sales alleged to
given by regular teachers of rec-
have been influenced, and the lat-
ognized standing and entrants
ter being viewed by the teachers
were asked to pay only $1.75 to
Thu
Mir plan it tnthutianticnltg endorsed by W
as a grasping business man with
cover the cost of registration.
the e Louisville Music Teacher*' Association JL
no soul for music. Both dealers
The registration period covered a
and teachers have come to realize
week and brought a surprising
that their interests are in the main
number of inquiries and a very
common, for the one makes pos-
satisfactory number of pupils, a
sible a demand for teachers by
very substantial percentage of
will give your child
supplying the instruments, and the
them, displaying sufficient talent to
other maintains and increases in-
warrant the parents having them
FIVE REGULAR
terest in those instruments through
continue to take instruction from
PIANO LESSONS
proper instruction. It has taken
the private teachers at regular
some calm minds, among both the
rates. The remarkable part of the
trade and the profession, to bring
idea was that practically all the
without charge---
this understanding about, but it
teachers who were members of
without obligation
now exists generally.
the Louisville Music Teachers' As-
E'VE mad.- .rrannrmritl* with a
sociation agreed to give the test
There are still, of course, some
W number of Loimvill/i l*«t piano
lessons without charge, filling out
dealers who do not make any spe-
tMchrri to p "
W I T H O U T CHAK<
a regular form specifying the num-
cial effort to win the good will of
or aduhi *'fo hav
ber of pupils who could be ac-
the teachers or to co-operate with
irntruction.
commodated,
where tlie lessons
them, but among the great ma-
ot eli
Th«?
were to be given, and other in-
lessons with'the p
jority who do there are to be
competent (eacKrr, They are intended
formation. A copy of the card
found outstanding examples of ef-
to determine wheth ' your child hat rt.vl
filled in by the teacher is repro-
musical talent.
fective means for combining the
duced herewith. Most of the
work of the teacher and the dealer
It i$ not necessary for you to have a piano for these lessons -of course, if
teachers enlisted in the movement
in a way to produce results for
you have one so much the belter.
in response to a special letter sent
both.
out
by the Shackleton Piano Co.,
Some months ago there appeared
Give your child this wonderful opportunity!
which announced that the plan was
in The Review a story of the man-
REGISTER AT OUR STORE—324 WEST CHESTNUT
STREET
endorsed by the Louisville Music
Registration Fee $1.75 (No Further Charge Nor Obligation)
ner in which the Will A. Watkin
Teachers' Association at its meet-
Co., of Dallas, Texas, had won the
ing on January 9 and which
good will and co-operation of the
read:
teaching profession and musical
"Due to a number of causes,
public of its city by taking an ac-
STEINWAY AND KURTZMANN PIANOS
there seems to have been a falling-
tive interest in all musical activi-
Strand Theater Building
324 West Chestnut Street
off of piano teaching in this city
ties and providing a recital hall
for the past two or three years.
for the use of musicians, teachers
"However, it is a known fact
and their students. Another in-
An Example of the Rotogravure Advertising
that many parents would gladly
teresting example of such effective
give their children the opportunity
co-operation is found in the ex-
perience of the Shackleton Piano Co., Inc., of on an infinitesimal course for youngsters who to study the piano if they knew that their chil-
dren had any musical talent or aptitude.
324 West Chestnut street, Louisville, Ky. The have not heretofore studied the piano.
"It has been a difficult as well as an expen-
Not long ago the Shackleton Co., of which
Shackleton Co. has long been working in close
(Continued on page 21)
harmony with the music teachers of the city Carl Shackleton is president, offered to the
T
L
ouisville's Best Piano Teachers
Shackleton Piano Company
a
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
The

Oil
PAHKER, HARRIS
I
IS yCUC EADIC
OUCH!!
Radio
If so— consult or phone us—
and
The

c* I*
Dr. Harris
Gomes a-Runnin'
?ARKER HARRIS
R. H. CAMPBELL
HIS is the day of specialization, particu-
larly in the medical profession. We have
baby specialists, throat specialists, nerve
specialists, and now we find the radio
specialist, or radio doctor, as skilled in his pro-
fession of tending sick radios as any M.D. is
in tending sick persons. The radio ha,s really
become an integral part of the home—a per-
sonality. When its golden voice is stilled or
even hoarse with static the owner feels lost.
It must be tended carefully and immediately.
To most people the internal parts of a radio are
as intricate and mysterious as the parts of the
human body—so call a radio doctor.
P. M. Harris, general manager of The Music
Shop, New Orleans, always had a hankering to
be a doctor. He wanted to fix things up, to
help people with their troubles, but as fate
ates anything that they get for nothing and
Mr. Harris makes this perfectly plain to all his
patients.
Mr. Harris, like thousands of other radio
dealers, was losing money by constantly re-
pairing, without charge, the many radios he
sold. He decided to eliminate from the public
mind the idea of "something for nothing."
"Make 'em pay and like it" became his slogan.
Of course, he had to educate the public up to
it, but soon he found that they flocked to his
store, rather than any other in town, for they'd
rather have expert radio repair work that lasts
than get it free and need it often.
A radio repair shop, no matter how expert,
is not a new idea, but The Music Shop's repair
department is run on original lines. They
charge for repairs to all radios—even the ones
they sell. Wait! before you begin to expostu-
late and cry, "Impossible! He must be losing
customers by the hundreds." Let me inform
you that in good cold numerical figures it has
been found that Mr. Harris's clientele has more
than doubled in the years since he instituted
his "repair for pay" idea.
It is specifically agreed by the under-
signed, that THE MUSIC SHOP is NOT
He lias printed what he calls an "Addendum-
RESPONSIBLE for the burning out of
Radio
Agreement" which he attaches to every
tubes and batteries, and any replacements
contract.
This addendum specifically says that
of them will be paid for at current list
the undersigned agrees that The Music Shop
prices—and cash on delivery. Furthermore,
that any service to Radio or any call made
is not responsible for what happens to the
to residence will be paid cash at rate of
radio tubes and batteries, or for any replace-
$2.00 a call, plus material necessary.
ments, etc., which must be paid for in cash
Signed
Also this formula prescribes that all calls to
residences are at the rate of $2.00 cash, plus
Address
all materials used. That, he says, is plain
enough and is like those signs in the offices of
Attached to All. Contracts
up-to-date doctors which say politely that a
fee will be charged for all examinations and
that all treatments are cash.
would have it, Mr. Harris had a friend back
A big sign out in front of The Music Shop,
in St. Louis whose father had a big music store
and he went to selling pianos with his friend in Baronne street, tells us all about the idea.
and has been selling music ever since. But his The sign says: "If Your Radio Is Sick and
old idea never quite got away from him and the You Want it Healthy, phone Ra. 6114." And
first time he had a chance he put this idea into right under this in big type: "We Are Radio
Doctors." Another sign says: "We Service
practice and became a Radio Doctor, and, like
Our Radios. We Charge for Our Time, Our
all good doctors, he has made helping people
Service Is Not Free." That's plain enough, ac-
out of their troubles pay. People like to talk
about their troubles better than anything else cording to Mr. Harris, and he says people like
in the world and a doctor likes to be sympa- it. And he has set up a whole suite of offices
thetic and helpful, but there is no use making just to take care of the unhealthy radios and
any beans about it; nobody properly appreci- to have consultations with patients who want
T
to talk about their radio troubles. Everything
that you can think of is in these offices, all
the paraphernalia, equipment, etc., better than
most M.D. offices. And there is a force of
expert assistants to help, because, as Mr. Har-
ris says, you must have good doctors.
The idea has gone over big and Mr. Harris
is known in New Orleans as the Radio Doctor.
But if you could see the 1,500 to 2,000 persons
outside The Music Shop store, almost any day
in the Summer time and on many days in Win-
ter, you would realize that Mr. Harris has not
A ddendum-Radio
Agreement
P. M. Harris
neglected every other form of publicity. A
big feature is his huge Scoreboard sign across
the second' story of the building where the
scores of the baseball games are recorded for
the public from a wire service. And then there
are his window displays, one of which caught
the eyes of all New Orleans one week, when
he had a hundred of so many colored balloons
dancing around to the tune of a big RCA ma-
(Continued on page 19)

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