Presto

Issue: 1920 1763

PRESTO
PRESTO
PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY AT 407 SOUTH DEAR-
BORN STREET, OLD COLONY BUILDING, CHICAGO, ILL.
A. DANIELL and FRANK D. ABBOTT
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Private Phones to all Departments. Cable Address (Commercial Cable Co.'s Code),
"PRESTO," Chicago.
Entered as second-class matter Jan. 29, 1896, at the Post Office. Chicago. Illinois.
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under Act of March 3, 1879.
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euarge in U. S. possessions, Canada. Cuba and Mexico.
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Address all communications for the editorial or business departments to PRESTO
PUBLISHING CO., Chicago, III.
Advertising Rates*=»Three dollars per inch (13 ems pica) for single insertions.
Six dollars per inch per month, less twenty-five per cent on yearly contracts. Th«
Presto d.o«s not sell Its editorial space. Payment Is not accepted for articles of de-
scriptive character or other matter appearing In the news columns. Business notices
will be Indicated by the word "advertisement" in accordance with the Act of August
*4, 1912.
Rates for advertising 1 in the Year Book issue and Export Supplements of The
Presto will be made known upon application. The Presto Year Book and Export
issues have the most extensive circulation of any periodicals devoted.to the musical
Instrument trades and industries in all parts of the world, and reach completely and
effectually all the houses handling musical instruments of both the Eastern and West-
era hemispheres.
The Presto Buyeis' Guide Is the only reliable index to the American Muaieai
strumenta; it analyzes all Pianos and Player- Pianos/ gives accurate estimates ex
elr values and contains a directory of their manufacturers.
9 Items of news, photographs and other matter of general interest to the muses
trades are Invited and when accepted will be paid for. Address all comraunicatloas to
Presto Publishing Co.. Chicago, HI.
S
SATURDAY, MAY 8, 1920.
TO CORRESPONDENTS.
PRESTO IS ALWAYS GLAD TO RECEIVE NEWS OF THE
TRADE—ALL KINDS OF NEWS EXCEPT PERSONAL SLANDER
AND STORIES OF PETTY MISDEEDS BY INDIVIDUALS. PRESTO
WILL PRINT THE NAMES OF CORRESPONDENTS WHO SEND IN
"GOOD STUFF" OR ARE ON THE REGULAR STAFF. DON'T SEND
ANY PRETTY SKETCHES, LITERARY ARTICLES OR "PEN-PIC-
TURES." JUST PLAIN NEWS ABOUT THE TRADE—NOT ABOUT
CONCERTS OR AMATEUR MUSICAL ENTERTAINMENTS, BUT
ABOUT THE MEN WHO MAKE MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS AND
THOSE WHO SELL THEM. REPORTS OF NEW STORES AND
THE MEN WHO MAKE RECORDS AS SALESMEN ARE GOOD. OF-
TEN THE PIANO SALESMEN ARE THE BEST CORRESPONDENTS
BECAUSE THEY KNOW WHAT THEY LIKE TO READ AND HAVE
THE OPPORTUNITIES FOR FINDING OUT WHAT IS "DOING" IN
THE TRADE IN THEIR VICINITY. SEND IN THE N E W S -
ALL YOU CAN GET OF IT—ESPECIALLY ABOUT YOUR OWN
BUSINESS.
THE BY-LAWS
There is more than news-interest in the publication of the By-
Laws of the Chicago Piano & Organ Association which appears else-
where in this paper. The purpose is rather to present something of
practical usefulness to the retail trade everywhere. And we feel sure
that the Chicago organization will take no exception to that use of
the rules and regulations.
It is probable that we have been asked by at least twenty embryo
piano associations for some special by-laws by which to formulate
plans for local purposes. The requests have come from Toronto to
Tampa, and from Kennebec to Kansas City. The order of procedure
adopted by the Chicago association is similar to that generally used,
and it seems to be a model for any other similar organization in the
trade.
At a time when the music propaganda is being prosecuted in man-
ner fairly tense in its enthusiasm and liberality, it must seem that
new piano trade associations would spring up in all of the cities of
considerable size. The broad-cast, or nation-wide, effort of the cen-
tral bureau, in New York, is doing good work. There a staff of skilled
executives is putting forth tons of literature and suggestion designed
to stimulate the appreciation of music, and so to enlarge the demand
for musical instruments.
While it can not be said that there has been any dearth of enthu-
siastic missionaries of music, it is true that until now no systematic,
businesslike campaign in its behalf has been set going. In the old
days music-love was left to the leaders of music and to the "conven-
tions," schools and traveling artists. The part of it that had to do
with the distribution of pianos was altogether in the hands of the local
music merchants. And that they did yeoman duty no one who is fa-
miliar with the traditions of the trade will deny.
What share in the great demand for pianos and player-pianos,
that makes the present time musical, is due to the work of the Bu-
May 8, 1920.
reau of Music in New York, no one can fairly say. That there are evi-
dences of a great awakening is certain. And it is the more remark-
able because of the general unrest and the high cost of the commoner
things of life. It is not a question of piano demand at this time, but of
supply. It is our opinion that to insure the continuance of this de-
mand for things musical the formation of local trade associations
is needed. That is the best insurance against a return of the profit-
killing, and generally demoralizing, customs which formerly cursed
the piano trade almost everywhere.
Read the by-laws of the Chicago piano men's association. Think
over seriously the advantages of a similar organization in your own
city. It need not be nearly so large in membership. That won't
lessen the interest of the usefulness of it. Let someone of force and
initiative take the lead in it and form a local association. In a business
sense, socially, and in the cause of fraternity and the better conduct of
the trade along profit-making lines, the association will repay many
times over. Help along the music-love movement in a way to also,
and directly, help yourselves.
THE PRICE PROBLEM
Some very forceful illustrations of the change which has come
upon the piano industry during the past decade, and more, have re-
cently been drawn to the attention of this paper. And with those de-
velopments in the industry have come effects and results by which
the principles and purposes of the better class of manufacturers have
sometimes been severely tested. For it is the industry with high as-
pirations and the determination to improve, in defiance of conditions
that tempt to the sacrifice of quality that must feel the effects of the
changes which have been pushing prices steadily upward. The so-
called commercial piano makers must share in the conditions, but for
them there is always a margin of salvage impossible to the higher
grades of industries.
And it would be most remarkable if the absolutely necessary ad-
vance in wholesale prices did not meet with the kind of opposition that
grows out of a lack of understanding on the part of the buyer. And
this seems to apply with particular force to the export trade. It is
not easy for an importer abroad, who has been buying some special
American piano for many years, to realize that the present-day cost
of the fundamentals of the industry render a large advance absolutely
necessary. The foreign buyer who is asked to pay from two to
three times the price asked for the same piano ten or more years ago,
can not at once comprehend the situation. It may not yet have be-
come a part of his knowledge that every item that goes into the in-
strument today costs the manufacturer even proportionately more
than the increase in the price of the completed piano. It doesn't
seem possible that in some instances the cost of materials has gone
up to not fifty per cent, not one hundred per cent, but four hundred
per cent more than the same essential cost five years ago. This ap-
plies to the articles in piano manufacture that are most easily compre-
hended. By way of illustration, perhaps, lumber is as good as any-
thing. Oak, for instance, which was once considered high at $48 per
thousand is today soaring above the $225 point. And labor, more or
less skilled, for which the piano makers used to pay a cheerful $2.50
a day is now very hard to get at $1 an hour. From eight to ten dol-
lars a day for the work that goes to fashion and finish the materials
that cost from four to five times the prices of ten years ago, may
help to make it easy to understand why the high-grade piano of today
is a matter of more expense to the manufacturer than he can safely
consider when he predicts the selling price to a cash customer across
the sea, or even nearer home.
A case of peculiar aspect recently came to this paper's notice. It
was that of a New York piano manufacturer who had been challenged
by a customer abroad, because of the seemingly great advance in
prices. The manufacturer had been selling to the foreign house for
twenty years or more, and the relations between buyer and seller had
always been cordial. The foreign house had promoted the piano so
loyally that it has become an asset in the retailer's business. To change
would mean a loss of prestige and, aside from that, there was no
desire to change. The buyer made a trip to New York and made his
protest personally to the manufacturer. He could not, seemingly, un-
derstand that conditions not only forced the increase in price, as a mat-
ter of self protection to the industry, but that even the large increase
left the manufacturer in positon to sacrifice his profits. He could not
add enough to cover the difference between the former and present
cost and still keep his friend and customer contented. So he sacrificed
his own modest profit, and even that did not suffice to save him from
criticism, if not the loss of his long-time representative.
The case just referred to is, no doubt, typical of many others. The
changes which have shaped the American piano industry during the
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
May 8, 1920.
past twenty years could not at any time have been foretold. There
has been a fallacy concerning the cost of piano production through all
of that time. When the unprecedented increase in cost of materials
and labor began to be felt, the industry generally was not prepared
for it. The inadequate margin of profits to the manufacturers did
not permit of any other way than to increase in proportion to the
advance in first cost. As the prices of the various items advanced, the
only move for the manufacturers was to follow. And that the retailers
have found it difficult to become reconciled to conditions does not seem
strange.
There is another consideration—and we think a very large one—in
connection with the New York piano to which allusion is made in
this article—the piano which in fact suggested this article. It is that
the instrument is not today at all the same piano that it was twenty
of even ten, years ago. It belongs to the kind of American pianos in
which there is the quenchless determination to improve, to become
better, irrespective of the consideration which may influence pianos
of lesser merit whose makers see cost first and quality last, if at all.
A piano that was good twenty years ago and has been steadily im-
proving through all the intervening time, must be worth very much
more today than it was then—it must not only be worth more but,
even in normal times, it would cost much more to produce. The ex-
perience, added skill and accumulated capital that goes into such a
piano must present an indisputable argument in favor of a betterment
that can not easily be computed in dollars or pounds.
But, aside from that, it should not require great powers of dis-
crimination to recognize, by the homely means of conditions of first
cost of production today, that fine pianos must bring from three to
four times as much as they did twenty years ago. It's just a simple
problem in mathematics. And the importer abroad who has held
allegiance to any particular piano will certainly find it a mistake to
break associations of long standing until he looks closely into his
problems. He will find that all American pianos—especially fine ones
—have advanced, and some of them to a much greater extent, prob-
ably, then the one to which he may owe a share of his success and the
progress which has been mutually advantageous to himself and his
American source of supplies.
These are trying times in business—in the piano business as
others. And it has been our observation that when discontent arises
it is usually due to a condition by which the manufacturer is the suf-
ferer, and not the merchant.
REED ORGANS WANTED
When the famine in fundamentals ends, there will be larger oppor-
tunities for ambitious reed organ industries in this country. The whole
world wants the American organ. But no considerable part of the
world need apply for them just now, as the following, from one of the
few active industries in that line, clearly indicates:
Editor Presto:—We are in receipt of your valued favor dated April 16, in
which you have also enclosed communication which you received from M.
Witsenburg, Amsterdam.
We have noted contents of your subscriber's letter, and in reply we beg
to advise you that yesterday we received an inquiry from the party referred
to, and we answered that we were so situated that we could not accept any
business calling for export organs, on account of not being able to obtain
certain material that goes into the construction of reed organs, in large enough
quantities to take on any new buisenss. We also said that just as soon as
conditions would get better we would be very glad to open up further negotia-
tions with them and see if it would not be possible for us to make up a
line of export organs which would appeal to the party in question.
It is just as exasperating, of course, to the reed organ maker to
turn away good trade, because of shortage of supplies, as it is for the
piano manufacturer do the same thing. And just now it is a case of
"they're all doing it." The reasons for the condition are not so clear,
but that fact doesn't at all lessen the uncomfortable results to the
industries. The point is that even were supplies less hard to get, it is
probable that the Amsterdam house would find it difficult to secure
instruments in any considerable numbers. For the American reed
organ is fast becoming a remembrance of glories that are gone.
In last week's Presto a well-posted correspondent—in fact him-
self a reed organ manufacturer in the East—gave a complete list of
the industries in that line which are still existent. And the roll-call
contained only ten names, of which three were those of folding organs
while three more are "doubtful" or have announced their purpose to
discontinue reed organs in favor of pianos exclusively. That leaves
just four remaining of the once large array of makers of the American
organs which easily won first place, the world over, as models of their
kind.
Twenty-five years ago there were at least as many reed organ
factories as piano industries. Many of the large piano plants sustained
reed organ departments where the little "parlor" and "chapel" instru-
ments were turned out in numbers so large as to seem incredible
today. In the East there were many giant reed organ plants. In Wor-
cester, Mass., there was a nest of them, though but a single piano
factory existed there. Boston possessed a number of them, also, and
close to New York were many more. In Chicago some of the biggest
musical industries were devoted to the reed organ. The energies of
the Kimball Co., The Cable Company, Story & Clark, Newman Bros.
Co., and others, were examples. And of the big ones now wholly ex-
tinct, the Tryber Piano Co., Geo. P. Bent, the Western Cottage, and
others were energetic specimens.
The story of the reed organ is an interesting one. At one time,
and for many years, it was a profitable industry and inventive genius
found wide field there. Will the reed organ come back? There are
some in the trade who believe it will. The demand has never shown
any sign of dying out. There are sections of the country in which the
dealers still find opportunities of sale and profit in the reed organ.
But they can not get the goods! Nothing so quickly kills demand as
the lack of response to calls for any special kind of thing. No matter
how insistent the cry for reed organs today, if it receives no satisfac-
tory response for a considerable period, the call will cease, some other
sound-producing product will supplant it, and the reed organ will die.
No doubt a share of the success of the phonograph is due to the decline
of the reed organ. Or possibly it may be reversed and said that the
decline of the reed organ is due to the phonograph. But we doubt it.
In any event, the reed organ remains in brisk demand abroad.
And we have little doubt that in time—after things become settled in
the world's social and industrial life—the reed organ will return and
its makers once more show the kind of activity that never fails to win.
OUT SOME SHOWS
Speaking about shows, the automobile men have introduced a new
one. It is the "Used Automobile Show." Nothing new is displayed.
No brand new cars are to be seen. The point just now is that, inas-
much as some piano men like to compare pianos with autos, in their
relations to the exposition idea, the "Used Show" presents still an-
other difference between these two industries.
Of course such a thing as a used piano show has never been sug-
gested or thought of. The nearest thing to it was when some genius
proposed a big bonfire of second-hand squares at one of the annual
conventions. The idea was to set the example of destruction for
the benefit of the dealers who had a habit of slicking up their trade-ins
and selling them again. It was someone's dream that, by burning
the old ones, more new pianos might be sold. The more useful and
rational method of the Philadelphia house of Heppe had not yet
been introduced. The Heppes give away their old squares to the
deserving poor who may possess a longing for the higher things of
life.
But, to return to the show business, as we have said, there is no
place for a used piano show anywhere. The automobile is so differ-
ent that it may easily attract crowds to a display of second hands—in
fact that may have been second hand for a long time, and have been
painted, slicked up, oiled and loaded with the juice of propulsion to a
degree that makes them seem salable.
Nor is that all. The Used Automobile Show announces that "all
exhibits are changed twice daily." Think of any display of pianos
that could be changed once daily, or even once a week. It couldn't
be done. There are not enough presentable used pianos to make a
decent show anywhere. And if there were, the people who crowd the
used automobile show wouldn't cross the street to go to the used piano
show. It is true, probably, that more people love music than care to
ride in automobiles, and do the steering themselves. There are more of
them that like the sound of the piano than of those who care for the
honk of the automobile, especially if they happen to be just ahead
crossing the road. But for some reason people who rush to the used
automobile show, and seem to be proud of it, would feel ashamed to be
seen going into a used piano show. They couldn't think of being sus-
pected of wanting to buy a used piano! Mercy, no! If they were to do
such a thing, they would go to a fine piano store and select the old
one from the stock of trade-ins on the upper floor. But a used auto-
mobile is different. And if the exhibition is changed twice daily there
is reason to go to the show often.
Here is one of the differences between pianos and automobiles
as articles for exposition purposes. And there are many more. The
car presents so large a variety of novelties. The piano is beautiful,
more appealing to the intellectualities, more conducive to home hap-
piness. And yet—well, it isn't a show thing. The player piano and
the automatic instruments contribute greatly to the possibilities of a
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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