Presto

Issue: 1920 1768

24
PRESTO
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
FOR TURKISH MARKETS
Egyptian and Turkish Markets Are Nearly
Drained of Pianos and Bureau Believes
U. S. Industries Have Opening There.
The issue of "Near East" of April 8, under the
head "Field for British Pianos," notes that there
was an opening in the Near East markets for mu-
sical instruments, of which little or no advantage
was taken by British manufacturers before the war.
Germany was quick to take advantage of the mar-
ket, however, and was gradually laying the founda-
tions of a substantial trade in the Near East. In
Egypt, for instance, out of imports of pianos, organs,
etc., valued at 13,955 Egyptian pounds, Germany's
share was 10,112 Egyptian pounds. Turkey's im-
ports for the same period were valued at rather less
than 50,000 Turkish pounds, and of this total one-
half the amount came from Germany.
The writer of the article suggests that the present
is the psychological time for British manufacturers
of pianos, phonographs, and other musical instru-
ments to introduce their goods into Egypt under
most favorable circumstances, and it is pointed out
that undoubtedly that market presents one of the
most promising openings for the industry, in view
of the greatly increased purchasing power of the
inhabitants as a result of the country's immense
prosperity during the last few years. Turkey is
June 12, 1920.
another market which offers an undeniable scope.
This market can not be capturcn, however, unless
something more substantial than catalogues be used.
The British-made piano is practically unknown in
Turkey. Articles de luxe find :< ready sale at present
among those who have made money during the war.
Pianos are almost unobtainable on the market, but
catalogues alone will i.ot sell them. It is stated
that pianos, from the boudoir grand to the small
upright, player pianos, and a few reed organs not of
the mirrored dummy-stop type could be marketed.
The obvious conclusion to draw from this article
is that musical instruments made in the United
States have a chance for competition in the Egyp-
tian and Turkish markets, unless barred out as lux-
uries. The official statistics of the United States
show almost no exports of musical instruments of
any kind to Turkey or Egypt, and in all probability
those sent to Turkey were almost entirely limited to
instruments placed in American schools. In other
words, American-made instruments are as yet prac-
tically unknown jn both countries, but it may be
possible to create a market by judicious attention to
the field.
ADDS TO MUSIC DEPARTMENT.
Kibbe & Spillman, Grant City, Mo., have com-
pleted a fine music wareroom as an addition to their
store on the south side of the square. The new mu-
sic goods department is enclosed and separated
from the rest of the store, and the pianos, player
pianos, talking machines, music, records and other
music stock will be shown in this room.
BJUR BROS. CO.
ESTABLISHED 1837
Makers of
Pianos and Players of Quality
Manufacfurcft of Bjur Bros. Pianos
ATTENDANCE AT MONTHLY
MEETINGS AN OBLIGATION
Tacit Agreement to That Effect Now Governs the
Members of the Canton, O., Association.
Attendance at the regular monthly meetings of the
Canton Music Dealers' Association, Canton, O., will
be considered the essential mark of loyalty to the
organization in the future. The association is nearly
six months in existence and according to the diagno-
sis of its president, C. M. Alford, needs the stimula-
tion periodic gatherings will give. The vice-presi-
dent is J. C. Kiiikaid, manager of Kenny Bros. Mu-
sic Co., and the secretary-treasurer is George C.
Wille, president of the George C. Wille Music Co.
President Alford is a firm believer in the efficacy
of the free circulation of good feeling which the reg-
ular meetings will insure. He is decided in his opin-
ions of the uselessness of the perfunctory effort to
improve trade methods. Hence the tacit understand-
ing among the members that the attendance at
monthly meetings is obligatory. At a recent meet-
ing it was decided to affiliate with the Ohio Piano
Dealers' Association.
Bollinger & McNeal have opened a new store in
Oskaloosa, la.
BUY EBE PLAYER PIANOS—
2469 Third Ave., N. W. Cor. 135th, New York
T h e Sign of
The Sign of
HONEST
PIANOS
LIBERAL
VALUES
WESER BSOSJnc
NEW YORK
705-717 WH1TLOCK AVENUE, NEW YORK
HALLET & DAVIS
Grand
Small Grand
Upright
Player Piano
__
D
I
_
_ _
A
-^
-^
I A lVl f l C
L /TL 1^1 V*/ hD
Handled
by the
mo
^ successful
retailers in the
country.
HOME OFFICE, 146 Boylston St., Boston
WAREROOMS, Boston, New York, Chicago
FUEHR
&
STEMMER
PIANOS
PLAYERS
AND
FACTORY: Boston
Standardized by The Quality
Every Instrument in this Line
is a Trade Winner because it
possesses Musical Character-
istics far Exceeding the Price
asked for it.
Write for Catalogues and Particulars.
Fuehr & Stemmer Piano Co.
PHONOGRAPHS
18-22 E. 24th St.
Chicago, IHinois
BAUER PIANOS
JULIUS BAUER ® COMPANY
Office and Wareroom*
Factory
1335 Altgeld Street. CHICAGO
Old Number, 244 Wabash Aw.
New Number. 70S S. Wabash Avo.
BRINKERHOFF
Player-Pianos and Pianos
fh« Lin* That S«lla Easily and Satl«fle« Alwav'*
BRINKERHOFF PIANO CO. " " S ^ K y ™ CHICAGO
SWAN PIANOS
are of the highest grade
t h a t c a n be obtained
through over 50 years of
p r a c t i c a l experience in
piano and organ building.
Illustrations a n d c a t a-
logues of various styles
will be furnished p i a n c
merchants on application.
SWAN OMAN!
The tremendous sup«fff»
^*.** % ^R! ML § Organs over all others tint
ijWS igi § in the absolute mechanina
Jk^iL fyJfM ana scientific perfection m
GsSffi §2^) the bellows action and stop
^egS m*?®* action, making it the beat
value in modern orga-a
building.
1 M . SWfld ft SONS, M - M M * FREENMT, ILL
E. Leins Piano Company
Makers of Pianos That Are Leaders
in Any Reliable Store
N6W FACTORY, 304 W. 42nd St.. NEW YORK
*Uhe K o h l e r & C a m p b e l l P i a n o is thoBestPiano in thoWorldfor theMoney
Everybody says so fWhy ? Because their enormous output permits the manufacture of
an instrument it is impossible to equal for the money on any lesser scale of product!
K o h l e r ^ C a m p b e l l . 5 0 t h . S t r e e t
^
H
t
h
.
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
June 12, 1920.
THE
TALKING MACHINE
News of the Week in the Phonograph Field
NOW READY
Phonograph Directory and Guide
, The first complete Lists of all departments of the
industry and trade — manufacturers, supplies,
dealers and distributers — with descriptions of
the foremost instruments.
184 Pages===Y0U WANT IT===25 Cents
PRESTO
PUBLISHING CO.
407 South Dearborn Street
THE ESPRIT DE STORE
The spirit of progress in a store is the rest-
less desire to do better. If you investigate
you will discover that in all big institutions in
the talking machine industry or trade there is
an animating spirit that has won the way to
success. It is an esprit de corps—a oneness
of aim, intent and ambition. The business with
an esprit de corps is permeated with a motive,
has a soul as you might say.
That motive includes serving the buyer
well and anticipating his needs. There seems
to be a fine friendly relation between sales-
men and customers in the store with the mo-
tive. The entire spirit of the place works
towards eliminating waste motion in both the
buyer and the seller. The prevailing element
of the Esprit de Store is the continual restless
desire to always do better in pleasing the cus-
tomers. Nothing is ever quite good enough.
The belief expressed is: "Business is built on
confidence and good will. We make money
out of our friends.
Our enemies will not
trade with us."
In the literature of the so called advanced
thinkers the word Bourgeois frequently oc-
curs. It used to express the bitterness of the
fashionable idler for the fellows who worked.
Its Bolshevik meaning today is about the
same. But with us Bourgeois means the same
as prospect.
Bourgeois means a workaday,
ordinary sort of person, mainly concerned
about making a living; sweetening the butch-
er and grocer and keeping up the payments
on the talking machine.
Great is the suggestive force of the slogan
—if properly framed. The trade proverb,
orphic, epigram or motto should be a six-
cylinder truth, self lubricating, on ball bear-
ings. It should be a concentration of biff. If
you make a slogan for your talking machine
business do not think about pleasing the lit-
erati as much as of influencing the multitude,
from which you pick your prospects.
25
DUNKARDS BAR PHONOGRAPHS
Old Order of the Brethren in Annual Conference
Confirms Rigid Rule.
The pleasant talking machire salesman will save
his words and legs by giving the homes of the Old
Order Dunkartls a wide berth. For therein, it is or-
dered, there can be no joys of phonograph jazz nor
even the most decorous music of the records.
The Brethren refused at their annual conference
near Logansport, Indiana, last week to lift the ban
which bars the talking machine from the homes of
its communicants. At the same time an unsuccessful
effort was made by the more rigid members to bar
use of motor driven vehicles. A few supporters for
this project were found, but the majority was not
opposed to the internal combustion machine.
In the Old Order Branch are united the strictest
of our Dunkards. The parent association, formed at
Schwartznau, Germany, in 1708, with Alexander
Mack as its first minister in protest against the lack
of spirituality in the State Church, was soon the
object of persecution. Within a dozen years migra-
tion to America marked its development, and the
first church in this country was founded near Ger-
mantown, Pennsylvania, in 1723.
BOOSTING THE MEMBERSHIP
CHICAGO
San Francisco Talking Machine Dealers* Association
Takes Action to Add to Roster.
One of the most important committees recently
by the Talking Machine Dealers' Associa-
Always and Forever, and Your Money Back appointed
tion, of San Francisco, was one on membership. In
if Not Satisfied." At the time it was consid- the appointment the new committee gets a real job
ered a daring thing to do. It lessened the and the association looks to it to make good. The
committee consists of J. Black, of the Wiley B. Allen
work of shopping immensely; it reduced the Co., and C. W. Shumway, of the Emerson Phono-
toil of salesmen and it saved for everybody.
graph Co. "Go get 'em" were the instructions, and
with such a vigorous pair the round-up is expected
to be a success in point of numbers.
Whether the prospect holds a position or
Columbia Grafonolas are handled by Harry
fills a job is not the most important considera- P. Rothermell in a new store recently opened by
tion for the salesman. There are various de- him at 1609 Polk street, San Francisco. Mr. Roth-
ermell has traveled considerably for eastern talking
grees in jobs and positions and an infinite va- machine
firms.
riety in the prospects.
A department for talking machine records has
H*
r
A'
been installed at Shapro's Song Shop in San Fran-
cisco.
Sound-proof demonstration rooms have been
That motor in your talking machine does
erected for the convenience of the record trade.
not necessarily feel run down because some
of your competitors continuously and adversely
L. D. Heater, Portland, Ore., recently entertained
discuss it.
W. E. Willson, manager of the educational depart-
ment of the Columbia Graphophone Co., at a picnic
* * :'.:
at Eagle Creek.
The most trustworthy dealer is usually the
one who makes it a specialty of being particu-
lar in finding things out about Tom, Dick and
Harry Prospect before he trusts them.
* * *
A seeming indifference by anybody to this
Talking Machines
or that talking machine may not mean a com-
Challenge
Comparison in
plete lack of desire for a machine. It may
every point from cabinets to
tonal results.
mean a bit of fertile prospect soil unworked.
* * *
Prices attractive for fine
goods. Write us.
Don't waste time telling how some other
salesman did it or in telling how you would
Deterling Mfg. Co., Inc.
do it. Dig in and do it your own way.
TIPTON, IND.
* * *
A great many dealers are too modest to say
their talking machine is better than others. But
they are willing to admit it is different.
"
* * *
—The ACME allows test with
You never can get ahead of your work by
the drag of the needle throughout
catching up with your worries..
the length of the
record.
Optimism is often produced by good times
s
DETERLING
Guesswork Won't Do"
but often too it is generated by a good liver.
NEW AUSTIN, TEX., STORE.
The Standard Specialties Store, Austin, Texas,
opened its doors to the public May 21. A great
amount of interest has been manifested in the open-
ing of this store, as it represents a new idea—the
specializing in each line of goods handled by the
firm. The company will carry a complete line of
Columbia Grafonolas and records among other com-
modities. A specialist will be in charge of each de-
The real declaration of commercial inde- partment. A large number of people attended the
pendence in the retail trade was framed and opening of the store and much interest was shown
published by John Wanamaker when he was in the drawing of the lucky number for the winning
of a Grafonola given away the following Saturday
still a young merchant of Philadelphia. It night. Numbers were given to anyone who visited
was when he boldly advertised: "One Price, the store on opening day.
Acme Speed Indicator
—is precision made.
—clears the tone arm.
—locates
motor
troubles.
—registers 78 and 80
revolutions.
Made by
The Acme Engineering & Mfg. Co.
1622 Fulton St.
:
:
:
:
CHICAGO
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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