Presto

Issue: 1920 1770

PRESTO
PRESTO
PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY AT 407 SOUTH DEAR-
BORN STREET, OLD COLONY BUILDING, CHICAGO, ILL.
C- A. DANIELL and FRANK D. ABBOTT
Editors
Telephones: Chicago Tel. Co., Harrison 234; Auto. Tel. Co., Automatic 61-70S.
Private Phones to all Departments. Cable Address (Commercial Cable Co.'s Code),
"PRESTO," Chicago.
l!ntered as second-class matter Jan. 29, 1896, at the Post Office, Chicago. Illinois.
under Act of March 3, 1879.
Subscription, $2 a year; 6 months, $1; Foreign, $4. Payable In advance. 'No extra,
•u&rfe in U, S. possessions, Canada, Cuba and Mexico, '
~ '
Address all communications for the editorial or business departments to PRESTO
PUBLISHING CO., Chicago, III.
Advertising Rates%WThree dollars per inch (13 ems pica) for single insertion*.
Six dollars per inch per month, less twenty-five per cent on yearly contracts. The
Presto does 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
wlll.be Indicated by the word "advertisement" in accordance with the Act of August
«4, 19 \ 2.
Ri^teJB for advertising 1 in the Tear Book issue and Export Supplements of The
Presto Will be mg.de 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-
ern hemispheres.
TKf Presto Buyeis' Guide is the only reliable Index to the American MuaUal
Instruments; it analyzes all Pianos and Player-Pianos^ gives accurate estimates m
their, values and contains a directory of their manufacturers.
Items of news, photographs and other matter of general interest to the muiM
trades are invited and when accepted will be paid for. Address all communications to
Preate Publishing Co., Chicago, 111.
SATURDAY, JUNE 26, 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.
NOT SO BAD
In an address before the Federation of Women's Clubs, at Des
Moines, Iowa, Mrs. Max Obendorfer made a startling statement. It
was that "ninety per cent" of the popular music of the day "is un-
speakable," and "would not be allowed through the mails if it were
literature."
We are certain that the lady placed the proportion too high. It will
not be disputed that much of the song stuff of the day belongs in the
list of the taboo, but ninety per cent is too much even if applied alone
to the heart of Hit Alley. Nor can there be much doubt about the
need of censorship in the matter of the flood of suggestive "song
wanted" verse that is being set to "music" by the "editors" and con-
tributors to the publishers whose top story enterprises keep the sheet
music dealers guessing a good share of the time. And yet we be-
lieve that, were Mrs. Obendorfer to employ less hysteria, and fix her
charge at about forty per cent, she would be nearer the mark.
There are still a good many high-class music publishers in
America. And there are a good many reputable sheet music mer-
chants who would not permit much of the sloppy, and often obscene,
order to find place upon their counters. As long as we have the
Schirmers, Fischers, Booseys, McKinleys, Ditsons, Jacobs-Bonds,
Summys, Gambles, Williss,' and others of their kind, there will be
no dearth of good music, both vocal and instrumental.
At a time when the personal appetites and tastes of people are
safeguarded by law, when what is not good for either the head or
the stomach is controlled or prohibited, it may seem to lovers of mu-
sic that there might be some way by which to save the highest of
all the intellectual and moral influences from contamination. And,
if there is any necessity for placing a muzzle upon such delights
of the people as Dickens, Burns, Sterne, and practically all of the
intellectual dreamers gloried in certainly there seems a still better
chance for purification in the kind of songs we sing or are forced
June 26, 1920.
to hear sung. The censorship of "popular" songs doesn't seem any
less needed than the other purposes of the purification brigades just
now so active.
And so let us have it, and there may be no more such plaints
as that of the lady who talked at Des Moines, and whose charges
are going the rounds of the newspaper press to the injury of the
innocent as well as a challenge to the evil. If it were true that
ninety per cent of the American music were "indecent," the inspira-
tion of the real composers, and the enterprise of the better class of
publishers would soon become hopeless. The flood of the "unspeak-
able" in "music" would submerge the struggling ten per cent and the
sheet music trade would soon become extinct.
But it isn't so. There are many reputable sheet music pub-
lishers and there are many high class music dealers, who prefer to en-
courage the sale of good music, even if now and then they are obliged
to reply to a call for trash that they haven't it in stock. The time
may come when the music dealers will announce their unreadiness
to sell the "unspeakable" to which Mrs. Obendorfer draws attention.
And a good way to do it will be to have signs bearing the names
of the reputable publishers whose prints they sell as being worthy of
the dealer's attention and the music loving public's confidence.
A FEATURE FOR PIANO SHOW
A ragged little boy on his way to the recent Chicago dog-show
was leading a very "ornery purp," when Frank Hood, of the Schiller
Piano Company, said: "My boy, you can never expect to win a prize
for showing that kind of a dog." "Oh, yes I can, Mister," replied the
boy. "I can if they give a prize for showin' the kind o' dog dat no
dog ought to be."
Now here are two good suggestions for the coming piano show—
if another one is coming: Show the kind of piano that no piano ought
to be, and show the kind of piano man that no piano man ought
to be. The piano man must necessarily be a good actor, especially must
he be able to portray the villain; the piano that he will pretend to be
selling must be one of the very kind that has caused so much trouble
in the trade.
Here will be a test of the power of ridicule—one of the greatest
forces known to the human race. The reason we have bad piano men
is because we tolerate them, and thereby give them direct encourage-
ment to perpetuate their forms of impudence. The reason we have bad
pianos is because we tolerate their existence.
OVER SWIFT ROADS
Just now the problem of transportation is worrying the piano
manufacturers—all lines of industry. The time is coming when it
won't make much difference whether there are any freight cars to be
had or not; it won't disturb the manufacturers to know that miles of
"empties" are strung along rusted and unused tracks, nearby or a
thousand miles away.
The manufacturers will not be using the rails for purposes of
delivering the goods, as they are now doing—when they can—and as
they have been doing ever since steam supplanted ox-power. For
the millions of dollars now rusting in rails and box cars will be
diverted into road-making and the cities and towns will be linked by
smooth highways, upon which the great motor trucks will speed along
with the ease and certainty of the fastest freight. A hundred miles
will be as nothing, and five hundred miles will be covered in a day,
because the hard, smooth road, especially designed for heavy traffic,
will run direct, with no detours between central points, from which
spurs will lead to the smaller places. The millions now poured into
railroads will be invested in the newer roads and the passenger or
pleasure travel will have highways of its own.
And in that way travel will be both safer and swifter. It will be
no more cause of industrial paralysis that the freight handlers have
"struck," for these swiftly moving giant trucks will carry the "goods"
right from factory to store, just as if the producer and his customer
were near neighbors, even if they are 250 miles or more apart.
And when pianos are delivered in that way there will be less
lamenting about the lack of supplies. The raw materials will be
brought from the fields, and the mines, and the forests, and the first
causes of difficulty will be overcome. It will be the industrial mil-
lennium—perhaps!
But, just a moment! You must not lay any plans based upon
the new improved methods of transporting freight. It is being done
already, in a small way—comparatively small. It will take time for
the world—even our part of the world, which always leads—to get
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 26, 1920.
the right of way and to make the perfect highways, and to so far
improve the motor trucks as to insure transportation of the kind fore-
seen. It may not come during your term of office as the president,
or owner, or manager of a piano store. But it will come eventually,
just as other "impossible" desires are gratified because the world is
never satisfied until the imperfections of the present give way to the
betterments of the future, and the forward look of the visionary paves
the way also to the substantial beauties of reality.
CHOOSING THE CUSTOMER
Presumably when a piano dealer tags his stock with prices "in
plain figures," he expects to sell at the prices named!—or possibly for
less, though we hope not. And there is a kind of wholesome fallacy
that the dealer is in some way bound to accept the prices thus em-
blazoned forth. But it isn't so. The merchant who puts prices on
his goods, either on the floor or in the show window, is not thereby
legally obligated to sell for the figures indicated.
How many in the piano trade know this? Certainly the trade
paper writers who have, time and again, scarified certain dealers for
advertising prices which they refused to recognize as obligations,
when customers called, do not know that the price tag is not a con-
tract. The obligation to accept the price exists only when the dealer
has said to his customer that he would sell for the price and the cus-
tomer has agreed. Then it is a sale, but the mere display of the price,
even in big, red figures, doesn't constitute an offer to sell to anyone
who may happen to want to buy. There must be a separate and dis-
tinct proposition to make it binding upon the merchant.
There have been endless disputes based upon this point in busi-
ness. It is natural for the average person to suppose, when he sees
an article displayed in a store window with price affixed, that it is
only necessary to tender the sum indicated and become the owner of
the thing coveted. Usually the supposition is accepted by the mer-
chant, for it is customary to display prices which are acceptable, even
if sometimes the display is designed more as a bait than to indicate
values. But in law the rights of buyer and seller are based upon an
old axiom which declares that the owner of an article has the right
to choose his customers. He need not accept anyone's money unless
he chooses to do so. Consequently, if a dealer has a piano in his
store window bearing a mark-down price, he is under no legal obliga-
tion to sell the instrument for the figures shown. Nor is he obliged
to accept even a better price unless he feels that it will pay him to
do so.
Why, then, is it that the Better Business Bureau is not called
upon to discipline cut-price piano dealers for setting their traps with
prices so absurdly low as to draw prospects who can have no possible
chance of buying at the figures indicated? Why can't a tricky dealer
announce the "special sale" of "fine pianos" for, say, $100, or for that
matter, $10 apiece, and "get away with it?" The answer is simple
enough—too simple to be interesting.
No piano dealer can be successful if he indulges in tricks of any
kind. The trick of fake prices is so palpably dishonest that any dealer
who might try it would find that he had put into practice the old fable
of crying "wolf" when no such animal was around. He would fill his
store once, and once only. After that the people would stay away.
It is a trick of the same kind as the old one of sticking signs in the
window announcing pianos that were not in stock. But the point of
law is interesting, nevertheless. And we believe it is a new one to
even many of the piano men who may themselves not be altogther
young.
SOMETHING WRONG
What is the matter with the piano trade that, as individuals, it is
so hard to awaken to a sense of its own interests in co-operative con-
cerns, such as are involved in the national associations and the annual
convention? In a recent issue of Presto the suggestion was made
that the dealers send in some expression as to their ideas of the best
season for the meetings. That was three or four weeks ago. To the
time this article is written, we have received just sixteen responses
—too few to base a conclusion upon, and not enough to make inter-
esting as the core of a trade paper discussion.
But nothing would be said on the subject at this time but for
the fact that the condition seems to emphasize again a thought that
has protruded itself more than once in the past. It is that the piano
men, with all their energy and initiative, are not sufficiently alert in
the interests of their own special affairs, as a class. They are wide-
awake in their local spheres. They see opportunities and grasp them
within the circle of their individual efforts. They read the trade papers
and thus keep in touch with the manufacturers—especially when
prices seem too high, or when a note is falling due—but they do not
exert themselves in matters of general concern, even if their own
interests are indirectly at stake.
What we have said may easily be verified. And we regret to
notice that the same criticism applies more largely to piano men than
to some other lines of trade. It is noticeable that, in the publications
devoted to some other lines of business, the very best contributors are
the manufacturers and merchants associated with the work of
which the papers are the mouthpieces. Some trade papers in other
lines would be extremely dull but for the enthusiasm and clearly dis-
played writing-interest of their readers and supporters. It is true that
the music trade papers sometimes enjoy similar help from those in
special authority, but not infrequently even that assistance comes
second-hand, or by matters reprinted from other publications.
It is not that the men of the music trades lack either the capacity
of expression or the faith in their trade paper. It is, like other things
pertaining to psychology, a problem of custom, habit or lack of intel-
lectual contagion. Now and then some piano manufacturer projects
a thought by means of a trade paper. His idea meets with either
sympathetic approval or is opposed by one or more of his contem-
poraries. The result is a general discussion which becomes both in-
teresting and instructive—perhaps generally beneficial to the trade.
And then he becomes an exception to the rule in mind at this writing.
An illustration of what has been said was had in the discussion
of standardization which some time ago gave added interest to Presto
and was finally made the central topic of debate at the recent meeting
of the piano supply men in New York. And this trade paper, as well
as others in the same line of work, has frequently been helped in
similar manner. But that fact doesn't excuse the seeming lethargy
of the retail piano men in the matter of their annual conventions.
The officers of the national association of the music trades have
invited the dealers to give expression to their choice of a season for
holding the annual meetings. Shall it be in spring, summer or win-
ter? And does the trade want another music show? Is the show
worth the money and the time? These questions have been formally
put. Presto has repeated them with the meagre result already stated.
Will the entire membership of the national association rest upon the
votes of sixteen active dealers? Or, possibly, have the officials of the
national association received a full vote? What is the matter with
the music trade?
Piano tuners will take notice that Dr. Dinshah G. Ghadiali, of
63 Park Row, New York, is breaking into the tuning business. He
says it does not matter what the ailment is, color waves, if they are
properly used, will effect a cure. A person suffering from malaria,
he said, takes quinine, the blue waves of which drive the fever out
and cure the patient. To restore a state of healthfulness, reduce the
dominating color, or add one that is missing, to make the system
balance properly. Isn't that just what the piano tuner does? If the
tone is too harsh, he softens it by taking the blue note out of it; if
the tone is too soft, he makes it sparkle with life by putting a red
note in it. And he makes the system balance properly by rearranging
the tones so that they blend.
In New York City Italians are in large proportions among the
mechanics in the piano factories. From the beginning of the industry
in this country, a. large percentage of the best mechanics in the piano
factories in all parts of this country have been of German extraction.
The shortage of workmen is giving the proprietors some concern as
to what race or nationality to look to for recruits to the ranks of
factory workers. The Italians are musically inclined and industrious.
In New York City there are piano factories manned almost exclusive-
ly by mechanics of that race. At least three thriving piano industries
are owned by them and their instruments are attractive and popular.
* * *
There are a few—just one or two—-advertising men and "space
buyers" for big music houses who persist in nursing the old-fashioned
notion that it is a sign of smartness to be insolent. The man paid
to do advertising is the last man who should forget to be civil. Cour-
tesy is his first requisite. And the man whose business it is to do the
actual advertising for the house that employs him cannot afford to
keep a grouch or a boob in the publicity chair. Most of the adver-
tising men understand the rules of their game too well to permit
their employers to pay them salaries for turning away trade by in-
civility toward the very men whose business it is to build more trade.
*
+
*
One of the critical questions sometimes put to representatives of
Presto is "why doesn't your paper have a colored cover?" And while
there is really no answer, it might be said that Presto had a fine
colored cover every week for nearly a quarter-century. But 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).
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/

Download Page 4: PDF File | Image

Download Page 5 PDF File | Image

Future scanning projects are planned by the International Arcade Museum Library (IAML).

Pro Tip: You can flip pages on the issue easily by using the left and right arrow keys on your keyboard.