Presto

Issue: 1920 1764

PRESTO
May 15, 1920.
11
FINE SHOW OF BAND INSTRUMENTS
NEW STAMP SERIES
READY JUNE FIRST
Piano Manufacturers Go Fifty-Fifty with
Music Merchants in Combination Plan to
Support Music Industries Chamber
in Enlarged Field of Operations.
The new combination stamp of the two associa-
tions which contribute chiefly to the Music Indus-
tries Chamber of Commerce will be ready to place
on piano shipments beginning June 1st. The new
stamp plan will equalize the financial support given
to the Chamber of Commerce by the piano manu-
facturers and the music merchants, each of whom
will pay 25c per piano to carry out the approval
program for the advancement of music and the de-
velopment and protection of all branches of the mu-
sic industry.
Piano manufacturers who place their orders for
the new stamps before May 20th will receive stamps
in time for all June shipments. All manufacturers
having stamps of the old series on hand June 1st will
be asked to return them and receive credit for new
ones.
Merchants Strong for It.
The new combination stamp is the result of the
success of the Merchants' Official Stamp which was
adopted a year ago at the Chicago convention, when
the National Association of Music Merchants by
unanimous vote asked the piano manufacturers to
In Lyon & Healy's big corner window, Jackson Healy factory where these instruments are made.
collect 25c on each piano as the merchant's contri-
boulevard and Wabash avenue, Chicago, there is a
The band instruments are arranged upon a suc- bution to support the Music Industries Chamber of
novel display that is attracting wide and admiring cession of steps which are draped in purple. Cur- Commerce.
attention.
tains of the same shade make an attractive back-
The stamp plan, which was introduced at the 1919
A truly magnificent assortment of band instru- ground; for the gleaming brass against the deep, convention by P. E. Conroy, then president of the
ments is being featured—trumpets, cornets, slide rich purple creates an effect that is gorgeous in the National Association of Music Merchants, proved
trombones, mellophones, baritones, bugles, saxo- extreme.
to be such a success that 99 per cent of the piano
This exhibition is striking proof of the ornamental dealers of the United States willingly contributed
phones—in fact practically every form of "Lyon &
Healy Own Make Band Instruments." In addition posibilities of band instruments for music store 25c for each piano billed on manufacturers' invoices
there is a large painting in colors of the Lyon & window decoration. It is well worth seeing.
during the past year. The dealers will continue to
do this, again having voted unanimously in favor
of it at the 1920 convention in New York in Feb-
Conditions"; speaker, J. H. Tregoe. Discussion: eration Between the Various Sections of the Music ruary.
Manufacturers Adopt Stamp.
"Maintenance of Proper Credit Conditions in the Industry."
Musical Supply Industry."
Friday, 9:30 a. m.: (West Ball Room, Hotel Com-
The piano manufacturers who hitherto contribut-
Thursday, 7 p. m.: Informal dinner (Hotel Astor): modore). Discussion: "Effective Methods of Pro- ed by subscription to support the Music Industries
Guests and speakers, Howard S. Mott, "The Under- moting the Use of American-made Supplies in Chamber of Commerce, decided that the stamp plan
lying Causes of Present Prices and the Factors American-made Pianos." Leader of discussion, Ed- was a more equitable way for them to raise funds
Which Will Influence Future Price Changes"); R. mund C. Johnson of Schaff Piano String Co.
also. The National Piano Manufacturers' Associa-
B. Aldcroftt (President Music Industries Chamber
Friday, 2 p. m.: (West Ball Room, Hotel Com- tion decided to ask all manufacturers to contribute
of Commerce); E. Paul Hamilton (President Na- modore) : Musical Supply Association of America. 25c per piano, through medium of a combination
tional Association of Music Merchants), "Co-op- Meeting and Election of Officers.
(Continued on page 22.)
VOSE PIANOS
ESTABLISHED 1851
IQne of the Largest Outputs In the United States
The Fastest Selling Piano in the Market
Send for Illustrated Catalogue
VOSE & SONS PIANO CO.,
THE
Boston, Mass.
O. S. KELLY CO
Manufacturers
PIANO
SPRINGFIELD
of
High
Oraaa
PLATES
-
-
OHIO
Not An Every Day Proposition
GORDON & SON
Pianos and Playerpianos
Nearly 75,000 in U M
THE GORDON PIANO COMPANY
Established 1845
7O9-713 Whitlock Avenue
The Greatest of all Player-Pianos
H. C BAY
Solo-
Concerto
You can liven things up with the enthusiasm of the "Right Goods"
if you sell the high class
Factory: Bluff ton,
PIANOS AND PLAYER-PIANOS
If your line is already a strong one you can make it still stronger
by adding the £trmib*. LET US HEAR FROM YOU.
STRAUBE PIANO CO.
General Offices and Factory:
HAMMOND, IND.
For quick returns try Presto Want Ads
NEW YORK
Ind.
Pre-eminent in ad-
vanced ideas prac-
tically applied. Not
like the others.
IT IS PLAYED —
NOT "MANIPU-
LATED."
Try it yourself and
you will nil it
SECURE THE
AGENCY AT
ONCE AND SEE
YOUR PRO- Offices, 806 Republic Bid*., 209 SL State St.
FITS GROW.
CHICAGO,
ILLINOIS
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/
PRESTO
12
WORLD TO KNOW
PACKARD STORY
Instrument Which Long Ago Arrived Is to
Be Nationally Advertised in the Interest
of the Public and the Musical
Instrument Trade.
Another of America's successful climbers in the
piano industry is to have its story told to the world
by means of "broad-cast" advertising. It is an am-
bitious piano. It is a piano that "has arrived." It
bears a name that is everywhere honored and has
the power that every piano merchant must value,
because the piano-buying public, recognizes it as a
guaranty of excellence. Here is the announcement
as put forth under the signature of President Albert
S. Bond, of the Packard Piano Co., of Fort Wayne,
] ndiana:
Nationally Advertised.
I am glad to be able to announce that Packard
pianos are to be nationally advertised. For many
years, I have looked forward to the time when con-
ditions would warrant taking this important step.
The foundation of any advertising campaign is a
product of such great merit that the pitiless light
of publicity can find no flaws in it. Consequently,
A. s. KOXD.
for the last several years, countless perfections and
refinements in production have been brought about.
Until we have succeeded in making Packard pianos
that can be acclaimed to the four corners of the
world as the finest musical instrument that men
can make.
Every Packard dealer knows the slogan, "If there
is no harmony in the factory, there will be none in
the piano," and the significance of it. The men who
comprise the Packard Family at Fort Wayne
banded together in a helpful spirit of co-operation—
and the results have been so great as to attract
favorable comment from editors, educators and
business men everywhere.
Artistic Display.
The series of two-page advertisements which will
appear at regular intervals in The Saturday Eve-
ning Post are, to my earnest belief, the most re-
markable piano advertisements ever published. They
establish a new standard of piano merchandising
that is as revolutionary to the industry as was the
Packard plan of industrial democracy in its scope.
With the strength of simple elegance, these adver-
tisements tell the story of Packard pianos. They
tell of the men who are the reason for the superla-
tive merit of Packard pianos, and of the joy and
pride that comes with possessing one.
The benefit to Packard dealers of this public pref-
erence for Packard pianos can not be measured. It
is beyond imagination. People will want Packard
pianos because they are Packard pianos. Packard
dealers will be lifted above the petty evils and poor
business tactics that have crept into piano retailing.
They will be safely aloof from the attacks of com-
petition.
Will Help Dealers.
As a result of this national advertising, and of all
the supplementary advertising and merchandising
helps that are provided, Packard dealers will experi-
ence a noticeable increase in the flow of trade to
their stores.
And there is an obligation which every Packard
dealer assumes. Live up to this campaign. Be
worthy of it. The Packard factory realizes that it
must keep its pianos worthy of this advertising.
You—every Packard dealer—should accept the obli-
gation to keep your store and your business meth-
ods worthy of this advertising.
I am glad that I can announce this campaign to
the Packard Dealer Family, for I know the tre-
mendous force for good it represents. And I shall
be glad, too, to hear the comments of every dealer
giving his views of the campaign.
Mr. Bond's Personality.
In the last edition of The Packard Bulletin there
also appeared a sketch of the Packard Piano Co.'s
president, to whose enterprise and forceful adminis-
tration the remarkable progress of the Ft. Wayne
industry is due. From that sketch the following is
extracted:
Mr. Bond needs less introducing to Packard deal-
ers and to the entire trade than any of the other
folks here. He has been around the place almost as
long as the name "Packard" itself—not that we are
trying to disclose any secrets of his age, but—any-
way a good long time.
He started at the bottom, a boy, doing odd chores
around the shop, beginning his career in that way,
his father believing it the logical starting point. He
went "through the mill," literally as well as figura-
tively, and through the various departments until
he gained a good knowledge, from first-hand ex-
perience of what the factory job was like from the
workman's standpoint.
He Also Travels.
His next most decided step was that of packing
the grip and calling on trade, which in those days
was not the cinch, from the traveling standpoint,
that it is now with railroad and interurban connec-
tions to most everywhere and Fords and yellow
cabs to take you the rest of the way when street
cars are off schedule.
Much of his traveling was done behind old Dob-
bin, rented by the day for the present price of a
gallon of good gasoline. Furthermore, back in those
times, it was considered a good day's work, when
an order for two instruments was secured after
twelve hours of effort, where today it isn't a bit un-
common to have dealers offer, almost on silver
platters, carload orders, without the slightest effort
on the part of the salesmen at that moment.
After serving several years with the Knights of
the Grip, and with a fair idea of their problems and
burdens, he came into the offices—or perhaps
"office" would come closer to the truth. He took a
job as correspondent, filing clerk, bookkeeper, pur-
chasing agent, long-hand stenographer, paymaster
and assistant manager. Outside of that he hadn't
much to do.
As the years rolled 'round and the business grew
steadily, naturally each of his duties became large
enough for a one-man's job and the little office
force grew to an organization, with Mr. Albert
stepping right along up the ladder of progress.
Through the course of those years he filled the jobs
of secretary, secretary-treasurer, vice-president and
director.
A Champion Golfer.
His hobby is golf. He enjoys driving a Cadillac
and likes to ride fast—sometimes a bit too fast.
During one of the Liberty Loan drives, he bribed
an aviator who was in town helping the campaign
along with his daredevil stunts, to take him for a
heavenly spin. After an hour in the air, looping-
the-loop, tail-spinning, nose-diving and a few other
hair-raising tricks, he landed a real enthusiast and
ready to go back on the next flight.
And that's a good sketch of Albert S. Bond. All
piano men who have visited the Packard plant in
golf season are familiar with the Cadillac and its
"demon" driver, for Mr. Bond finds such delight in
racing over the good road to the Club House that
he can do it with both eyes shut. And he's sure
to take you out there.
CLARK ROLL CO.'S FACTORY.
The Clark Orchestral Roll Company, of which
Ernest G. Clark is the head, has bought buildings
and grounds in the heart of De Kalb, 111., where it
will manufacture its rolls for theater and other in-
struments. Mr. Clark has been out at De Kalb
much of his time lately, making arrangements to
transfer his roll manufacturing from Chicago to
De K
MOVES IN HUDSON, N. Y.
J. T. Rider, Hudson, N. Y., moved his store
from Z2Z Warren to the Denegar building at 530
Warren street, May 6. Mr. Rider has up-to-date
show rooms and a fine display of pianos, player-
pianos, phonographs, records, player rolls, sheet
music and musical instruments. A removal sale was
held at 322 Warren street before possession was
taken of the new quarters.
May IS, 1920.
KRAKAUER BROS. SEEK
BIGGER EXPORT TRADE
New Catalogue Printed in Spanish Is Latest
Evidence of Thoroughness in a Well-
Organized Export Department.
As an accompaniment to reliable goods, consist-
ently commendable advertising literature is a prime
requirement for success in the Central and South
American trades. That is the important fact borne
in mind by Krakauer Bros., New York, which have
just issued a catalogue for use in countries where
Spanish is the language spoken. The Krakauer Bros,
catalogue in Spanish is a tasteful proof that the ex-
port department of the company properly estimates
the requirements for interesting the South American
dealer and ultimate consumer in the merits of the
pianos and playerpianos manufactured at the seven-
story factory which covers a block at Cypress ave-
nue and 136th and 137th streets.
Of course the booklet only contains a translation
of facts already known to American dealers. They
comprise a romance of the piano trade that makes
interesting reading in Spanish or P2nglish. The
founding of the house in 1869 by the ambitious mu-
sician, Simon Krakauer, to be later joined by Julius
Krakauer who had already won fame as a violinist,
are early facts in the history of the house that
promised meritorious results. Thorough musicians
by inclination and education, they immediately ex-
hibited the natural ambition to produce pianos sec-
ond to none in tone quality, beauty of design and
durability. In the description of the Krakauer Bros,
uprights, grands and playerpianos printed in
Spanish in the booklet the company merely sets
forth the realization of the early ambition. Seven
styles of Krakauer Bros.' productions are printed
on separate sheets and fitted in a pocket in the book-
let.
"A section in the catalogue is devoted to a de-
scription of the Madison pianos and playerpianos
made by the Madison Piano Co., New York. A por-
trait of the fourth president of the United States is
used as a frontispiece for this part of the booklet. A
brief biography follows. The reliability of the pi-
anos and playerpianos made by experts in the man-
ufacture of these instruments is set forth in the text.
The attractiveness of the Madison piano and player-
piano designs are plainly shown in the excellent cuts.
SELLS TWO A. B. CHASE
PIANOS WHILE ON VACATION
Even the Keen Delights of Asheville, N. C, Could
Not Quell the Ruling Passion in W. E. Jones.
That work is like play when your heart is in it, is
an opinion that W. E. Jones of Mansfield, O., tacitly
endorses. The Mansfield piano man is one of the
practical kind who achieves while others theorize.
Even when he is on a vacation in Asheville, N. C,
he is not satisfied to plan future sales on paper.
Asheville, N. C, is one of those balmy, eternal
summery resorts, where climatic joys induce a for-
getfulness of a vacationer's usual occupation. In
the movie dramas less fortunate ones have seen the
delightful possibilities of the Blue Ridge Mountains
for inducing the dolce far niente. But while the
Ohio dealer enjoyed himself in the orthodox way of
the resorter in Asheville, he occasionally added the
spice of the Mansfield life. To be exact, on two
occasions when the golfing, hiking, motoring and
lazing palled upon Mr, Jones he picked out his pros-
pect and sold him an A. B. Chase piano.
GULBRANSEN WINDOW DISPLAYS.
The Gulbransen-Dickinson Company, Chicago, has
received notices from over one hundred Gulbransen
dealers saying that they are running window dis-
plays of the playerpianos of the house this week.
These are in addition to those who keep up contin-
uous displays of the Gulbransen Baby-at-the-Pedals
in their windows. The manufacturing house ap-
proves this plan. Mr. Stewart, of the advertising de-
partment, in speaking of the matter to a Presto
representative Monday of this week, said: "This
is the proper method—to work in connection with
the national advertising."
ADVERTISED THINGS SAFEST.
"How the Home Is Safeguarded by Advertising,"
was the topic discussed yesterday at a luncheon
given by the Women's Advertising Club and the
Advertising Council of the Chicago Association of
Commerce. "Use advertised goods and see that
they are as advertised" was the advice of the ad
women. "A business man cannot afford to adver-
tise goods that do not come up to what he says of
them," said Mrs. Strohm. "The glare of publicity
on a man's name is as bad as the glare of daylight
on a woman's complexion. Both must be good to
stand it."
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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