Presto

Issue: 1920 1760

PRESTO
April 17, 1920.
sale dealer can not safely invite the owners of old instruments to
come in and arrange to have them taken away free of expense, with
a view to selecting a beautiful new piano later along.
In that sense the plan suggests the kind of thing the Better
Business Bureaus are striving for. We like the plan, and we believe
that in other cities and towns where thoroughly reliable piano houses
exist it is a system of selling that will be more and more popular.
At least until the production of pianos becomes normal once more,
and deliveries can be made as fast as the sales can be closed.
LABOR'S DICTATION
The present strike of the Chicago piano movers is causing some
caustic comment on the part of inconvenienced employers.
One complaint is made concerning the unreasonableness of com-
pelling an employer to continue a mover as a particular factory's
moving man, even after that mover has failed to give satisfaction. An
instance is cited of a case of compulsion of this sort on the part of
the "boss" of the movers' union in Chicago last winter. The employer
had complained that a $1,200 instrument had been taken from the
factory by the mover at 10 a. m. on a bitter winter day and had not
been delivered until after 5 p. m. that day. It had remained on the
truck in the winter blasts all that time, and might have checked, but
fortunately did not. The only excuse the mover had given was that he
had to wait for a full load before starting for the piano's destination.
The factory employer took the matter up with the "boss" of the
movers, and was told that he would have to continue to employ the
man, as he had always done their moving before. He could not send
him another mover without taking the matter up with the heads of
the whole organization of movers, and that would be a very trouble-
some matter.
"It seems to me," said the manufacturer-employer to a Presto
representative on Saturday, "that I ought to be able to hire the services
of another mover when the man who had always done our moving
failed to do the work satisfactorily; but it seems that labor is boss,
arid has the final dictum even in my case." That is the experience
also of employers in all other lines of industry. The autocracy of labor
has become unbearable and the unions are breaking their own backs.
It isn't strange that rebellion appears in the ranks, or that signs of
the beginning of the end begin to appear. Labor is entitled to a larger
share than it has been given in the years past. And with reason it will
get it. But nowhere does the fable of the goose that laid the golden
eggs apply with greater force than to the labor unions as now oper-
ated.
AN INDIVIDUAL MATTER
Perhaps it is because we are not familiar with the collateral af-
fairs of other lines of business that we feel the piano trade is, in some
respects, peculiarly favored. We have in mind the association idea, as
now applied to the piano industry and trade in the broad, if not com-
plex, administration of the various organizations, bureaus and special
purposes of the National Associations. For if there is any other de-
partment of industry and trade that is being promoted, in its ethical,
social and psychic phases with more avidity than that of the music
industry, we have failed to notice it.
We have today a central organization, due largely to the initiative
of Mr. Paul B. Klugh, from which radiate a series of auxiliary com-
mittees, controlled by strong men and sustained by a liberality which,
a few years back, would have seemed impossible. There is now, in
New York, a perfectly equipped headquarters, working with the order
and intensity of a big bank, the purposes of which are to still further
spread the popular love of music and to stimulate the retail piano
trade to higher views of their calling, and better results of their work.
The same head-center sustains a systematized effort to control the
musical columns of the newspapers and to place before the people the
kind of intellectual stimuli that fosters the desire for more music
and more pianos. And the same organization has a special department
the purpose of which is to regulate the kind of advertising done by
the retail piano merchants and to put a stop to unfair methods in the
trade.
It is a notable staff of men, of special fitness for their work, that
occupies the desks in the New York headquarters of the Musical
Industries Chamber of Commerce. As we have said, so far as our in-
formation goes, no other industry or business can make such a show-
ing. Nowhere else is there a special adviser and legal counsellor that
can surpass, in learning or experience, Mr. George W. Pound; nor is
there anywhere a more capable promoter of the higher things in any
trade than Mr. C. W. Tremaine; nor is there anywhere a more compe-
tent critic of good or bad advertising than Mr. C. L. Dennis. And
these gentlemen are but the heads of their several departments in
which a small army works in the interests of piano trade expansion,
betterment, safety and progress.
Of course the main idea of this article is to impress upon the
trade the importance of their calling, as so largely enhanced by the
enterprise of the Musical Instrument Chamber of Commerce and the
subsidiary organizations, the various associations of the music trade.
It takes money, and a great deal of it, to sustain so large a work. The
kind of men that can successfully plan and carry forward the special
work could realize a much greater personal return for their efforts
elsewhere. But they prefer the work that promises something more
than money. They have created the ways and means by which they
produce results—results of value to every member of the industry
and trade.
We know that the retailers are appreciative of the good work
of the organizations to which reference has been made. But what pro-
portion of the retail piano trade show their understanding of what
the organizations are doing for them as individuals? What propor-
tion of the retailers are members of the associations that are working
in their interests? What proportion of the so-called "small dealers"
know much about the work that is being done at, and from, 105 W.
40th street, New York, where the enthusiastic gentlemen whose names
1 ave been mentioned have their places of steadily growing responsi-
bility? Presto is read by the retailers all over the land. We want
every one of them to consider this matter. It is their matter. It is of
greater importance to them as individuals than most other matters
into which they put more time and money than is expected of them
in connection with the national associations. Make it your individual
concern and tell us how you feel about it.
It is not necessary to draw special attention to the displayed
advertising of great industries in this issue of Presto. Everyone of
the special pages is strongly suggestive of the kind of publicity genius
that wins results, not only for the advertiser but as much, also, for
the retailers who handle the lines promoted. Every page is artistic,'
in keeping with the character of the goods advertised. The piano in-
dustry has at last found its place among the enterprises that know,
by actual experience, the full power of printer's ink.
* * *
Until recent years the piano industry has not explored the adver-
tising field with the force and assurance of a great business. The
example of the Kohler Industries, the American Piano Co., the Q R S
Company, the Gulbransen-Dickinson Co., the Steger & Sons Piano
Co., the Hallet & Davis Company, and a few others, has lifted the
trade forward a half-century in less than five years. Pianos and
printer's ink have become acquainted, and a new life has been injected
into the business of selling instruments of the artistic kind.
* * *
Sixty per cent of a representative group of one hundred well-
known men in the New York financial district were born in other
states than New York, says the Commerce Monthly. Twenty-eight
of the one hundred came from towns with less than 5,000 inhabitants;
twenty-eight from cities of 1,000,000 or over. And we know some
mighty good piano men among them.
*
•',-
*
s~
.
The reason that several profitable piano factories are ready to
sell just now is that business is so good that sales are easy. And be-
cause business is good, also buyers of going factories know that their
investments will yield large returns quickly and surely. When it is
a good time to buy is a good time to sell, or vice versa—it's all the
same.
* * *
Labor strikes, wage demands, lack of supplies and clamorous calls
from the dealers for more pianos, keep the manufacturers on the
jump. There are many prophecies as to how it is all going to end.
But, fortunately, there is no cause for alarm where business is done
upon good business principles.
* * *
. .
Everybody in the trade, large and small, will be glad to know
that Col. Harger, of the Chicago Musical Times, is steadily improving
in health. He expects to be back on the job before very long.
* * *
With few pianos to deliver and the movers refusing to deliver
any at all, the city dealers are fairly certain that deliveries will be
light for a brief period.
*
-!- *
The bargain sale piano houses are beginning to shout again their
"was and now" prices in the newspapers. That looks like a return to
old-time conditions, notwithstanding the shortage in supplies.
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).
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PRESTO
April 17, 1920.
END OF A LONG DELIVERY TRIP
In the Word Rolls Are Many Prime Favorites
Played by the Keyboard
Masters.
The following Word Rolls are included in the
Advance list of player music issued for May by
the Q R S Music Company, Chicago.
Beautiful Hawaii (Mary Earl) waltz. Played by
Arden & Ohman.
Barefoot Trail, The (Phelps-Wiggers) Ballad.
Played by Phil Ohman.
Chloe (Sylva-Jolson) Fox Trot. Played by Phil
Rinnan.
Crocodile, The (Motzan-Akst) Fox Trot. Played
by "Zez" Confrey.
Dardanella Blues, The (Fisher-Black) Fox Trot.
Played by Pete Wendling.
Hot Tamale Mollie (Weslyn-Kortlander) Fox
Trot. Played by Max Kortlander.
In O|d Madeira (Wehner-Sanders-Carlo) Fox
Trot. Played by Arden & Ohman.
Just Like a Gipsey (Simons-Bayes) Fox Trot.
Played by Victor Arden.
Memories of Virginia (Wilnorf-Atkinson) Waltz
with Marimba Effects. Played by Osborne & Howe.
Missy (Robe-Stanton) Fox Trot. Played by Max
Kortlander.
Nailo (Callahan-Roberts) Fox Trot. Played by
Lee S. Roberts and Phil Ohman.
Oh! By Jingo! Oh! By Gee! (Brown-Von Tilzer)
Fox Trot. Played by Pete Wendling.
Old Man Jazz (Gene Quaw) Fox Trot. Played
by Arden & Ohman.
Pip Pip, Toot Toot, Good-Bye-ee (Kendell-Rob-
inson) Fox Trot. Played by J. Russell Robinson.
Shadows (Brennan-Rule) Ballad Fox Trot. Played
by Victor Arden.
Somebody
(Little-Stanley-Dellon)
One-Step.
Played by Baxter & Kortlander.
Sunny Southern Smiles (Gilbert-MacBoyle-
Cooper) Fox Trot. Played by J. Russel Robinson.
So Long Oolong (How Long You Gonna Be
Gone) (Kalmar-Ruby) Fox Trot. Played by Pete
Wendling.
Turkey In The Straw (Ott Bonnell). Played by
Max Kortlander.
When The Harvest Moon Is Shining (Sterling-
Von Tilzer) Waltz. Played by Baxter & Kort-
lander.
The following Story Rolls are included:
Basket of Roses (Albers). Played by Max Kort-
lander. Golden Age Waltz, The (Barnard).
WILLIAM H. BOWLES CALLS
ON NEW ENGLAND DEALERS
Seven States Will Be Covered in Song Trip by
Autopiano Company's Representative.
William H. Bowles, representative of the Auto-
piano Company, New York City, has started on a
trip which will take him through all towns located in
the New England States. It will probably extend
over a period of six to seven weeks, bringing him
back to New York City around Decoration Day. His
itinerary, which is a lengthy one, calls for stops
in all towns as far north as Bangor, Me., and will
take him through the states of Rhode Island, Con
necticut, Massachusetts, Maine, Vermont, New
Hampshire and New York. Mr. Bowles' trip is in
the interest of several of the Autopiano products:
The Autopiano Welte-Mignon reproducing instru
ment, the playerpiano phonograph and the line of
playerpianos which are being equipped with the new
General Player Action.
The first of these products, the Autopiano Welte-
Mignon reproducing piano, offers a product of con-
siderable selling merit. The instrument is built to
the regular Autopiano quality and equipped with the
Auto De Luxe Reproducing Action, which is licensed
under the famous Welte-Mignon patents. This su-
perior reproducing action is built into both the up-
right and grand pianos and has as an added asset
the vast Welte-Mignon library of music, which is
comprised of thousands of the most popular selec-
tions of music of all times.
The playerpiano phonograph which Mr. Bowles
will practically introduce to the New England deal-
ers is a novelty combination of both playerpiano
and phonograph. It consists of the well known
Autopiano product, the Pianista piano, with a su-
perior phonograph mechanism built into the sanr-
case. This phonograph equipment does not in any
way impair the action of the playerpiano and is built
into that part of the case which, in the past, has.
beer waste space. The General Player Action has
Vose Piano Travels from Boston to Taikuhsien, China, and Arrives in
Condition Highly Satisfactory to Customer
There's a long stretch of land and sea between
the Vose & Sons Piano Company's factory at
Massachusetts avenue and Magazine street, Boston,
and Taikuhsien, China, and in delivering a piano
from the first named place to the last every shade
and variety of transportation problem is encount-
ered. There is a great contrast between the first
incident of the piano's trip—that associated with a
fast Vose motor truck and smooth highways of the
Hub—and the last lap in which the piano was borne
in triumph into Taikuhsien.
The story of this delivery of a Vose upright piano
from the factory in Boston to the customer, Philip
result of which is told by the customer: "I am
highly gratified that it was but slightly out of tune
after its long journey." The sentence epitomizes
Vose piano merits. The hazards of change in the
modes of transporting it, trials of varying climates
and other incidents of a most unusual trip were
powerless to seriously effect the Vose action. It
reached the other side of the earth and was "but
slightly out of tune." The piano traveled from
Boston to Vancouver, B. C, and from there by boat
to Tientsin via Kobe, Japan; thence to Yutze, about
twenty-five miles south of Tai Yuen Fu, the capital
of Shansi Province. There began the job of the
ON TH1<: ROAD N'EAU TAIKUHSIBX.
L. Dutton, in the out-of-the-way Chinese place,
would be full of thrills if told in al! its details. But
the fact that stands out in greatest prominence in
the story is the added proof of Vose durability. The
story, too, earns a tribute for the Vose shipping
room.
"The piano arrived without a scratch or mar of
any kind," is a sentence from the customer's letter
written on the arrival of the piano. It had experi-
ences in trucks and trains; was shunted hither and
yon on docks and yanked up and down ship's holds
by derricks. Human carriers toted it from Yutze to
Taikuhsien over rough Chinese trails called roads
by courtesy. How they proceeded is shown in the
interesting picture which accompanies this story.
It shows the last lap of a journey which tried and
found true the construction of the Vose piano.
The trip was a test to Vose piano qualities, the
Yutze Brotherhood of Strongarm Piano Toters and
the brotherhood did a fancy bit of work.
Note the proud strut of the major-general of
toters who leads the procession. It was warranted
by the occasion and the ovation. No Fourth of July
parade in Chelsea ever brought forth an enthusi-
astic citizenry in such numbers as the transit of the
Vose piano through Yutze caused. The passage of
the huskies with their load intrigued the natives;
the contents of the box piqued the curiosity of peo-
ple who had never seen a piano. Large crowds fol-
lowed the toters through the streets and made the
job of piano toting in close places harder for the
heaving and sweating crew. To effect the moving
they used long poles some eight inches in diameter.
The whole outfit, piano, box and carrying poles
weighed no less than 1,200 pounds.
been designed to meet special demands in the trade
and offers the dealer a playerpiano equipment which
is interesting.
HAVANA TRADE ASSOCIATION
ASSURED OF QUICK GROWTH
COLORED TUNERS IN
CHICAGO DO GOOD WORK
New Organization of Music Trade of Cuban Capital
to Seek Affiliation with N. A. M. M. of America.
The second meeting of the new Cuban organiza-
tion of the trade, The Music Industries Associa-
tion of Havana, will be held at the Spanish Club in
Havana next week. It is considered that a large
addition to the membership will result from the
meeting. Ten of the leading music merchants of
the city of Havana joined at the first meeting held
March 23, and it was agreed upon to seek affiliation
with the National Association of Music Merchants
of America and also with the Music Industries
Chamber of Commerce as a division. The stated
object of the new association is to "instill and de-
velop a larger interest in the art of music, and also
to encourage and insure the best known commercial
principles and practices in our industry."
The officers of the Music Industries Association
of Havana are: President. E. Giralt; vice-presi-
dent, John L. Stowers; secretary-treasurer, Antonio
J. Hidalgo; directors: Manual A. Salas and Antonio
Alvarez.
Several Colored Piano Salesmen Also Call on
Negro Trade in Big City.
Negroes who are graduates of tuning schools are
making good among their own race in Chicago at
their trade in several instances. There are also
three or four colored piano salesmen in Chicago
who are selling for some of the prominent piano
concerns, although they do not appear very often
in person on Wabash avenue. ''Negroes in Chicago
are making big money, and they will buy musical
instruments, so why not make customers of them?"
is the argument used by a leading retail manager
on Wabash avenue in conversation with a Presto
representative on Thursday morning.
"The influx of negroes from the South during the
last two years of the war brought between 100,000
and 200,000 new settlers of this race into Chicago,"
continued the speaker, "and it did not take a very
observing" person to see that the newcomers were
from among the best colored people of the whole
South. They have been thrifty, and as I said before,
they have money, so it is up to us to sell them some
instruments of music;'for as a race thev love music."
Arcana Lodge, No. 246, A. F. and A. M., presented
a suitably inscribed gold watch to E. Leins, presi-
dent of the E. Leins Piano Co., New York, on his
birthday anniversary recently.
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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