Presto

Issue: 1920 1784

PRESTO
PRESTO
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Act of August 24, 1912.
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Presto will be made known upon application. Presto Year Book and Export issues
have the most extensive circulation of any periodicals devoted to the musical in-
strument 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.
Presto Buyers' Guide is the only reliable index to the American Pianos and
Player-Pianos, it analyzes all instruments, classifies them, gives accurate estimates
of their value and contains a directory of their manufacturers.
Items of news and other matter of general interest to the music trades are in-
vited and when accepted will be paid for. All communications should be addressed to
Presto Publishing Co., 407 So. Dearborn Street, Chicago, III.
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 2, 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 YQy CAN GET OF IT—ESPECIALLY ABOUT YOUR OWN
BUSH
A MODERN CONVENIENCE
An article reproduced on another page, from the Gulbransen Bul-
letin, suggests some of the changes that have taken place in the retail
piano trade. The subject has been discussed in this column before,
but the changes in the retailers' equipment and methods follow so
quickly that they are not the same for many months in succession.
And in the matter of piano deliveries it is interesting to recall that for
years after the squares passed out, one of the real problems was to find
an easy way of local transportation.
When the piano trade began to grow into something of commer-
cial importance, the only system for handling the heavy instruments
was by main strength applied with no mechanical helps. And it re-
quired four men to deliver the piano. Then came the "truck/' by
which the instrument was rolled securely and lifted, one end at a time,
into the lumbering wagon. Often the antideluvian "dray"—a two-
wheeled, inclined plane vehicle—was employed and the work was a
good deal like moving a small house.
When the upright began to win favor, the dealers were perplexed
as how best to transport it. It was "top-heavy" and didn't seem at all
fitted to the treatment given the square. It still required four huskies
to do the lifting and the piano was strapped to the wagon bed. It was
a very long time before H. G. Atwood, of Iowa, thought out his "load-
er" which has solved the delivery problem. And the Gulbransen-Dick-
inson Bulletin declares that the loader is the thing the trade needs.
That alone gives to the inventor of the loader a new and enlarged im-
portance in the history of the piano trade.
But the loader could not have existed in its present form but for
the "flivver." It was the automobile which has dropped in price 31
per cent that suggested to the late Mr. Atwood the practicability of
his loader. And the lowering in price of the Ford car should create a
greater demand for the loader, for dealers will now feel that they can
afford the means for safe and rapid deliveries. More than that, as the
Bulletin suggests, the loader takes the piano store right out into the
October 2, 1920.
country and enables the farmer's family, miles away from town, to
see and hear the instrument right in his own front yard. And here's
the fate of the loader inventor, which shows again the inscrutable
workings of fate.
Atwood, the inventor of the safe means of piano delivery, met his
death by the overturning of an upright piano which he was taking into
the country. The piano was loaded in an ordinary wagon. The road
was rough and, in an unguarded moment, the wheels slipped over an
embankment and the inventor of the safety device for piano delivery
was crushed beneath the instrument. It was an ironic commentary
upon the strange decrees of fate. Had Mr. Atwood started with his
loader hitched to a Ford, he might still be selling pianos and profit-
ing by the fruits of his invention, instead of its being the property of
his successors in the patent rights, who see the device steadily grow-
ing in use and popularity.
And this bit of history has its value in the old way as well as in
the new. It illustrates again that often the man who creates a way
to safety loses his life because he neglects to put to practical applica-
tion the means to which he points others. And it gives added empha-
sis to the increased possibilities of the piano business, easily made clear
by the perambulating piano store so quickly realized by the use of
the convenient and inexpensive "Piano Loader."
THE UPRIGHT CASE
How far has the upright piano case advanced in point of beauty
of design since the square gave up the battle for existence and went
down the way to oblivion? Away back in October, 1881, just thirty-
nine years ago, a trade writer had this prophetic vision of what was
about to happen:
The square piano seems destined in the course of time to become obso-
lete. Every manufacturer is putting all his energies into the improvement and
manufacture of the upright instrument.
There is no doubt that in most respscts the upright is superior to the!
square piano. In point of household convenience, the large square box has
always been in the way, while it has not the slightest claim to beauty in
appearance.
A larger volume of tone is obtained from the upright than the square, and
the tendency of the former to easily get out of tune, has been obviated by
marked improvements. The upright, however, considered in the light of a
piece of furniture, is open to vast improvement. It is a matter of surprise
that an upright piano case, beautiful in form, has not yet been invented. The
time has got to come when the present style of piano case will be revolutionized.
When that was written the upright was still almost a novelty and
the piano stores were filled with the "large square boxes." Even
some of the really artistic piano makers were declaring that they
would never adopt the upright cases, and continued to develop the
"square grands" as if they could net possibly lose their plaice in 1
the world of music. And it may be interesting, as a matter of piano
history, to revert to the fact that one of those lovers of art and davel-
cpers of the beautiful in tone, was the late Hugo Sohmer, of New
York. As showing how firm was that loyal artisan to his faith in
the inferiority of the square over the upright, is the fact that one of
the last of the piano industries—if not actually the very last—to
introduce upright cases in the catalogues, was Sohmer & Co. Long
after the other high-grade industries had succumbed to the changing
spirit of the trade the Sohmer piano continued to appear in the form
of the square. But in time the Sohmer uprights came forth, and
they sustained the character and quality of the famous output of the
old Fourteenth street factory of those days. And there never lived
a finer specimen of the American piano manufacturer than Hugo
Sohmer.
But while the trade writer of 1881 was a good prophet, so far
as the square was concerned, has the upright style of that time been
"revolutionized" to the degree he seems to have foreseen? Of course,
in all minor effects the upright case of today discloses a vast advance
over that of forty years ago. And the number of improvements in
construction are too many to enumerate. The list of "talking points,"
if collated, would bewilder the most stolid salesman. But we all
know that there are uprights, even now issuing from some piano fac-
tories, that present no marked improvement over some that ap-
peared at the beginning. And, too, there doesn't seem to be any
prospect of radical changes, or betterments. The outlines of the
upright are fixed. None of the efforts of the Conovers, or Shimmels,
or Brambachs, or other geniuses, to create the upright so beautiful
that the grand might grow ugly beside it, have brought permanent
glory. The upright is the upright still and it has not afforded the
opportunities of case variation possible even to the old-fashioned
square.
But if the outline of the upright has been inflexible in matters of
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/
PRESXO
October 2, 1920.
detail, the piano manufacturers have advanced greatly. And in the
beauty of the veneers and finish there could be nothing finer or more
satisfying to the artistic eye.
material wealth, thus aiding the economic progress of a country."
erally, but if he had written of pianos specifically, he could not have
This man was dealing with beautifying manufactured articles gen-
hit the nail on the head any truer.
PANAMA PIANOS
H=
A piano man in Panama has sent to Presto specimens of various
native woods which he thinks are superior to anything commonly
used by American manufacturers, especially for the climate of his
country. The purpose of the gentleman in submitting the samples is
to secure an opinion on the probability of success in a piano venture
in his part of the Canal Zone. For he has under consideration a
plan of assembling pianos, the skeletons of which may be made in
New York and the cases in Panama. He believes that the result
would be not only instruments better suited to the climatic condi-
tions, but of considerably smaller cost than finished American
pianos.
The samples of woods sent from Panama are four in variety.
One is of a species of palm, and closely resembles our weathered
oak; another is laurel which closely resembles rosewood; another is
cocobolo of a beautiful golden shade. The fourth is known as "Naza-
rene" and is purple in color and, of course, unlike anything employed
in piano manufacture. The Panama piano man wants to begin by
securing one thousand caseless pianos from some American industry.
He believes that he can make the cases, and so inaugurate what, he
has confidence, will develop quickly into a large business throughout
Central America. And the gentleman asks this paper for advice as
to where he may be able to secure the skeleton instruments with
which to start his enterprise.
Without having made any investigation, the project of the piano
man in Panama seems to have some attractive features. But, on the
other hand, and just now especially, the proposition may meet with
a rather chilly reception, by the piano manufacturers, because of
conditions nearer home. Most of the piano industries are working
to capacity in anticipation of a brisk winter's demand. Others are
short of essential supplies, and still more of them reject the thought
of sending forth their products denuded of the names which often are
a prized asset of the completed piano.
Nevertheless, the plan of the Panama piano man has interest.
More than that, the gentleman is one of the persistent brotherhood,
and he has decided to embark in piano making and to employ the
palm and Nazarene woods in his cases. When he gets well started
we hope that his enterprise may spread afar and that some of the
strangely beautiful woods, of which samples are in Presto's office,
may find their way northward. They would lend a rich variety to
the lines already so varied as to have no competitors the world over.
A contributor to a well-known art magazine writes: "The art
element introduced into manufactured products can increase their
value indefinitely, and is, therefore, a possible boundless source of
*
*
Pianos were about the last of manufactured things to increase
in price. The piano manufacturers fought against their own com-
mon sense in the effort to retain the old prices. And pianos will be
among the last to come down in price, because everything that goes
into their manufacture, from lumber to labor, seems to conspire to
make it hard for the manufacturers to realize a fair margin of real*
profit.
* * *
If Mr. Henry Ford had been making pianos he could not have
cut the wholesale price thirty-one per cent. If a piano manufacturer
could make that kind of a reduction in selling pianos the industry
would be filled with multi-millionaires long ago, whereas, in all the
history of the instrument, there have never been more than a dozen
modern Croesuses.
* * *
It promises to be a good winter for the piano trade. The retail-
ers will have their opportunity. It will be only a matter of hovi
much energy they put into it and the kind of instruments they pro-
mote and the way they make their collections. For "time payments"
are coming back, notwithstanding that spot cash sales are more fre-
quent than formerly.
* * *
It doesn't take long for a live industry to win distinction for a
trade name. The Lyon & Healy "Apartment Grand" is a good illus-
tration. The eastern manager of the big Chicago house says that
there is scarcely a dealer in, his territory who is not familiar with
the description of the little grand, even if they have not all seen it.
* * *
The Baldwin piano is the latest to apply Saturday Evening Post
circulation to the field of its publicity. It has become a habit and,|
we hope, a good one. The piano is no longer a matter of provincial-
ism. It has become an object of the larger promotion, and with the
great industries there is no limit to the cumulative ambitions.
The increase in the "house organs" in the piano trade is notable.
Scarcely a month passes that doesn't bring a new one, and often the
new ones bear very old-fashioned names, borne by publications long
extinct. But a very live subject may bear a very old name.
* * *
A live man is far more interested in who's who now than in
who jwas who in the dim and echoing past. The best piano pros-
pects are living who's who's.
NEW CHICKERING HOUSE
AND ITS MANAGER
cant and far-reaching musical achievement of the
age, will also be sold and may b"e had in the famous
Chickering, as well as in pianos of a more moderate
price."
SYRACUSE, N. Y., DEALERS
HELP SUCCESS OP FAIR
Milwaukee Branch of Chicago Firm Has Dis-
tinguished Musician in Charge
of Its Business.
PITTSBURGHERS ACT.
The possibility of a state-wide piano trade organ-
ization for Pennsylvania lies with the Pittsburgh
Piano Dealers' Association, which will hold the first
of its fall monthly meetings this week. It is ex-
pected that local organizations elsewhere will fol-
low the example of the Pittsburgh association in
favoring a state-wide body. W. C. Dierks, of the
C. C. Mellor Co., is head of a special committee pro-
moting action for a state organization.
Efforts of Piano Houses There Agreeably Aided the
Advancement of Music and Growth of Sales.
The announcement in this issue of Presto of the
Bissell-Weisert Piano Co. Milwaukee branch, with
Frederick W. Carberry as local representative, with
headquarters at 420 Jackson street, is of special in-
terest.
Mr. Carberry is one of the well known musicians
and music teachers in Milwaukee, and in the last
three years gained a national reputation as a com-
munity sing leader, having filled engagements in the
largest theaters of the United States. He also has
appeared in all parts of the country as a baritone
soloist. For many years he conducted a studio of
vocal instruction in Milwaukee. Additional interest
is lent by the fact that the Chickering & Sons re-
gain? direct representation in the Milwaukee market
after an interruption of nearly a year. Mr. Car-
berry's announcement is as follows:
• "Mr. Frederick W. Carberry announces the open-
ing of the Chickering Studios at 420 Jackson street.
He will represent in Milwaukee the Bissell-Weisert
Piano Co., of Chicago, general distributors of the
celebrated piano-fortes of Chickering & Sons, Bos-
ton, who for ninety-eight years have occupied the
leading position among American piano makers.
The Ampico Reproducing piano, the most signifi-
PIANO DEPARTMENT GROWS.
The piano department of the big Bloomington,
111., hrm of E. A. Ensenberger & Sons will have the
exclusive use of a new 47-foot show window now
being installed in the store front. "The firm recog-
nizes the wonderful growth of the piano department
and a significant mark of that recognition is the op-
portunities allowed for piano display," said Otto F.
Mueller, manager of the department, this week.
NOW VICTORY ROLL CO.
The name of the Altoona Music Roll Co., with
roll factories at Altoona and Lansdale, Pa., has been
changed to the Victory Music Roll Co., of Lans-
dale, Pa. The factory at Altoona will no longer be
used for making rolls. These will be produced in
the Lansdale factory. Boxes for rolls and other
supplies will be made in the Altoona plant.
The Syracuse, N. Y., piano houses added to the
musical gayety of things during the recent State
Fair held in that city. The Clark Music Co., God-
dard's Music House and the Bolway Co. provided
delightful concerts in front of theii stores and
greatly aided in imparting the old-time spirit to the
events of the week. In the great parade through
the streets preceding the official opening, the God-
dard Music House was represented by one of the
most attractive floats in the parade.
The Clark Music Co. had one of the notable ex-
hibits in the industrial section of the fair. It occu-
pied a space measuring 100 by 150 feet, which was
divided into sections for the display of its different
lines. The first Chickering piano made was one of
the interesting things shown in the Clark Music
Co.'s exhibit.
Another big exhibit was that of the C. F. How-
ard Piano Co., which showed the extensive line of
the Hallet & Davis Piano Company to excellent ad-
vantage. Clever demonstrations of the pianos and
players shown led to many good sales.
Frank C. Nicholson, who for several years has
been a conspicuous figure as a salesman of musical
instruments in Kokomo, Ind., and throughout
Howard county, joined the sales department of the
Pearson Piano Company.
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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