Presto

Issue: 1922 1892

Presto Buyers* Guide
Analyzes and Classifies
All American Pianos
and in Detail Tells of
Their Makers.
PRESTO
THE AMERICAN MUSIC TRADE WEEKLY
Presto Trade Lists
Three Uniform Book-
lets, the Only Complete
Directories of the Music
Industries.
#• c.nt., tu*. • r««
CHICAGO, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1922
NEW OFFICERS FOR
CHICAGO PIANO CLUB
James T. Bristol Made President at Annual
Meeting and Dinner at Drake Hotel
This Week.
James T. Bristol was elected president of the Piano
Club of Chicago at a meeting following a dinner at
the Drake Hotel on Monday of this week. John
McKenna was elected vice-president, R. E. Davis sec-
retary, and Thomas W. Hindley, treasurer.
The new board of directors is composed of: W. S.
Jenkins, K. W. Curtis, W. A. Stapleton, Harry
Schoenwald and Eugene Whelan.
There were three tickets in the field, one of which
was filed by the nominating committee of the club.
Drake Hotel. The Drake management has tendered
the convention the use of its Radio broadcasting
servicer, ranked as one of the best stations in the
west.
An interesting event of the evening was the presen-
tation of a bouquet of American Beauty roses to each
of the ladies who entertained the members.
SALES FORCE OF BIG
INDUSTRY IS ENLARGED
F. W. Wood in Charge of the Gulbransen-Dickinson
Co. Sales Correspondence.
F. W. Wood, an experienced piano dealer and
salesman, has joined the sales correspondence force
of the Gulbransen-Dickinson Co. in Chicago.
Mr. Wood started in the piano business seven
years ago, in the retail end of the game. He has
subsequently had experience in branch house work,
and a great deal of wholesale selling experience.
The addition to the force at the Gulbransen-Dick-
inson Chicago general office has been brought about
by the increase in business which has been generally
noticed through all branches of the trade. Mr. Wood
wiil give his attention to the correspondence with
dealers, and expects to keep in close touch with the
trade in all parts of the country.
WILLIAM T. MILLER'S
DEATH WAS SUDDEN
President of Henry F. Miller Piano Co. Was
Last of Three Brothers Who Built Up
Industry Founded by Their Father.
William T. Miller, president of the Henry F.
Miller & Sons Piano Company of Boston, died sud-
denly late last week Wednesday night at his home in
Brookline.
Mr. Miller complained of not feeling well the day
before his death, when his son, Stanwood, called for
him to go to his place of business. A physician was
called. His condition became worse and shortly after
10 o'clock he died.
He was born in Boston 65 years ago, the son of
Henry F. Miller, founder of the Henry F. Miller
VERY LATEST ADDITIONS
TO THE NEW YORK TRADE
New Incorporations and Increases and Other Acqui-
sitions as Recorded in Empire State.
Ye Shoppe of Sweet Melodies, Manhattan, musical
instruments, $25,000; F. A. Machold, R. J. Frey, R.
Muenchow. Attorneys, Hogan & Dauenhauer, 27
Cedar street.
H. Leviten, Manhattan, pianos and phonographs,
$20,000; L, and E. and H. Levitone. Attorney, B. S.
Deutsch, 261 Broadway.
Baker Music House, Albany, stated capital from
$275,000 to $1,100,000; preferred shares $50 each, from
5,000 to 20,000; common shares, no par value, to
20 000.
JAMES T. BRISTOL..
This, known as "regular,' 1 was the winning ticket. The
other tickets were prepared and signed by ten mem-
bers. One of these was headed by Adam Schneider
for president, Eugene Whelan for vice-president,
Harry Schoenwald for secretary, and Frank M. Hood
for treasurer.
The attendance was above what had been antici-
pated by the energetic committees appointed to carry
out the details of the annual meeting. Communica-
tions were read from several who could not be pres-
ent, among them one from Jack Bliss. A long letter
from Will L. Bush, dated Dallas, Tex., said his
heart was always with the club. "I would like to
charter an aeroplane and slip over to Chicago for the
occasion, but a good and safe one is not to be found
at the Dallas aero-taxi stand," wrote the sojourner in
Dallas.
A miscellaneous entertainment proper, the vocal
and instrumental artists, the fancy dancing, the Boy
Scouts drills, went along with the dinner, one or
more numbers for each course, while a good orches-
tra furnished music alternately. Everything was joy-
ous. Even the annual reports by retiring officials and
committee chairmen, delivered in Volsteadic sur-
roundings, were far from dry.
The '.'heavy'' part of the program, the "Deep Stuff"
furnished by Axel Christianson, F. W. Carberry, Mil-
waukee, Will Collins, Sid Sachs and others and the
speech of the evening by Congressman Rainey, came
after the repast.
The Committee on Permanent Quarters did not
make a report, but it was suggested in one of the
speeches that a fund should be started to carry out
the plan for a permanent clubhouse.
Matt. J. Kennedy, secretary of the National Asso-
ciation of Piano Merchants, spoke of the forthcoming
Music Trade Convention of 1923 to be held in Chi-
cago, the first of May, the headquarters to be at the
CLEVELAND ASSOCIATION MEETS.
Plans for fall and winter in the affairs of the Cleve-
land, O., Music Trade Association were discussed at
the monthly meeting last week. The meeting, pre-
sided over by President C. H. Randolph, was pre-
ceded by a dinner at the Hotel Winton and represen-
tatives of the following firms were present: The
H. B. Bruck & Sons Co., Brunswick-Balke-Collender
Co., the B. Dreher's Sons Co., Charles H. Kennedy,
the Muehlhauser Bros. Piano Co., G. M. Ott Piano
Mfg. Co., Randolph House of Good Music and the
A. B. Smith Piano Co.
THOMAS COMPANY MOVES.
The Thomas Piano Company, formerly located at
4321 Milwaukee avenue, Chicago, has moved to 4338
Milwaukee avenue, and has opened for business at
the new location. The new location is a very attrac-
tive corner store, with roomy displays, featuring the
Gulbransen pianos and a line of talking machines.
At the opening, which took place recently, entertain-
ment was furnished for the visitors by a jazz orches-
tra hired for the occasion, and attractive souvenirs
were given away.
NEED MORE PIANOS FOR SHIPMENT.
The Story & Clark Piano Company, Chicago, is
making a record in shipments of pianos, and need
many more for shipment between now and Christmas,
say officials of the company. The factory is being
worked to full capacity.
GEO. J. DOWLING'S TRIP.
George J. Dowling, president of The Cable Com-
pany, Chicago, will return next week from a trip to
the Pacific Coast. Mr. Dowling has been away for
three weeks, having called on dealers in several Far-
Western states.
WILLIAM T. MILLER.
Piano Company, and after receiving his education
went into business with his father. He was married
to Miss Florence Stanwood, who died several years
ago.
He is survived by his son, Stanwood Miller,
and two grandchildren.
William T. Miller was the last of the three brothers
who entered the industry established by their father,
Henry F. Miller, and carried it to its place in the
musical world of Boston. William T. was the young-
est of the three, and, somewhat singularly, his death
was almost identically like that of James C. in its
suddenness, while the passing of the elder of the
three, Henry F., Jr., while not sudden, followed a
brief illness.
Like his brothers, William T. Miller was a re-
markably urbane gentleman and a thorough lover of
music, a good pianist, and an earnest man of busi-
ness. The piano industry will be carried on, as be-
fore, his son, Stanwood Miller, assuming largely the
responsibilities laid down by his father, in connection
with other directors already active in the house. Mr.
Miller had a large following of sincere friends in
trade and art circles, who mourn his going.
On Wednesday of this week, October 25, directors
of Henry F. Miller & Sons Piano Co. met and elected
Burton R. Miller to be director and president, and
Stanwood Miller, who is a director, to be director and
treasurer.
F. O. GAMBLE VISITS CHICAGO.
President Fred O. Gamble, of the new Paul Piano
Company, Baltimo/e, was in Chicago last week look-
ing for a line of medium-priced instruments for the
artistic store on Charles street, in the Maryland city.
He was not successful, because all of the Chicago
industries are overflowing with orders. Mr. Gamble
is proud of the new store, and confident that many
Ampicos will be sold to the art loving Baltimoreans.
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
The American Music Trade Weekly
PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY AT 407 SOUTH DEAR-
BORN STREET, OLD COLONY BUILDING, CHICAGO, ILL.
Editors
C. A. DANIELL and FRANK D. ABBOTT
Telephones, Local and Long Distance, Harrison 234. Private Phones to all De-
partments. Cable Address (Commercial Cable Co.'s Code), "PRESTO," Chicago.
Entered as second-clasa 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
charge in United States possessions, Cuba and Mexico.
Address all communications for the editorial or business departments to PRESTO
PUBLISHING CO., 407 So. Dearborn Street, Chicago, III.
Advertising Rates:—Five dollars per Inch (13 ems pica) for single Insertions.
Complete schedule of rates for standing cards and special displays will be furnished
on request. The Presto does not sell Its editorial space. Payment Is not accepted for
articles of descriptive character or other matter appearing In the news columns. Busi-
ness notices will be Indicated by the word "advertisement" In accordance with the
Act of August 24, 1912.
Photographs of general trade interest are always welcome, and when used, if of
special concern, a charge will be made to cover cost of the engravings.
Rates for advertising in Presto Year Book Issue and Export Supplements of
Presto will be made known upon application. Presto Tear 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 tha 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 inelr 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 28, 1922.
October 28, 1922.
steadily on. Old methods are permitted to rule, and the things that
belong to the progressive age are disregarded or despised. The re-
sult is inevitable. Others in the field play upon what belongs to the
industry afflicted with dry rot. Others take away what, by years of
conscientious effort, belongs to the one thus afflicted. A little effort,
and little spirit of the times, would save it. A little latter-day en-
terprise would keep it at the front and enable it to easily discount the
best of its earlier attainments.
The Shoninger piano will continue, but with a changed vision of
what is required. And there are other famous, or at least firmly cred-
itable, pianos which are in the same fix. Their responsible heads do
not realize it, but they are drifting to a like halting of what might, if
well directed, be a greater progress than ever before. They are mak-
ing pianos and shipping them. But that is all. They are not progress-
ing. They are not adding to either their list of customers or to the
factory dimensions or equipment. They present a marked contrast,
with their retrogressive methods, to the intense energies of the other
kind—the industries that move restlessly ahead, and build larger and
larger, keeping their names more and more, to the front and com-
pelling the trade, and the piano world, generally, to know them and
to buy their products, because the retailers will sell them and, often,
them only.
Look over the field of the piano industry and trade, and you will
put your finger upon the two classes of industries without much hes-
itancy. Every piano dealer knows them. Many dealers are grad-
ually dropping the pianos of the non-progressive kind in favor of the
more active and profit-producing. And price has nothing at all to do
with it. The higher the price the better the instrument. The better
the instrument the better the customer. The everlasting rule of pro-
portion holds good in the piano business as everywhere else.
PRESTO CORRESPONDENCE
BUSINESS
IT IS NOT CUSTOMARY WITH THIS PAPER TO PUBLISH REGU-
LAR CORRESPONDENCE FROM ANY POINTS. WE, HOWEVER,
HAVE RESIDENT REPRESENTATIVES IN NEW YORK, BOSTON,
SAN FRANCISCO, PORTLAND, CINCINNATI, INDIANAPOLIS, MIL-
WAUKEE AND OTHER LEADING MUSIC TRADE CENTERS, WHO
KEEP THIS PAPER INFORMED OF TRADE EVENTS AS THEY HAP-
PEN. AND PRESTO IS ALWAYS GLAD TO RECEIVE REAL NEWS
OF THE TRADE FROM WHATEVER SOURCES ANYWHERE AND
MATTER FROM SPECIAL CORRESPONDENTS, IF USED, WILL BE
PAID FOR AT SPACE RATES. USUALLY PIANO MERCHANTS OR
SALESMEN IN THE SMALLER CITIES, ARE THE BEST OCCA-
SIONAL CORRESPONDENTS, AND THEIR ASSISTANCE IS INVITED.
Whatever has to do with the advancement, promotion or stabili-
zation of the material things of art or industry is business. The busi-
ness of the piano manufacturer would be of no special importance
without the business of the retail merchant. The business of the re-
tailer would be small, and lacking in any degree of development, but
for the energies and intelligent ambitions of the piano salesmen.
Everything in business is dependent for its development upon co-
operative and systematic union of effort and direction. And in the
piano business the trade paper has its place in much more than a dual
capacity. It might be enough if the trade paper gave the news of the
business in its diverse departments, and served as the medium of ad-
vertising the products of the industries to the dealers or retailers.
Originally those were the twin purposes of the trade paper. But,
as time passed and the trade paper gathered influence and the confi-
dence of business men, it broadened out, whether designedly or not,
into a medium of exchange by which employers and employes were
brought together, and the producing and selling departments of tha
business found ready and convenient source of the most vital means
to progress and success.
Nor is this all. The trade paper has become the chief subject of
both the complaint springing from misunderstanding, injured self-in-
terest, selfish pride and a hundred other motives and commendation,
based upon recognition of fair conduct, influence, understanding and
Avillingness to serve. No trade paper can expect to have the unan-
imous praise and support of all the manufacturers and workers in the
industry it seeks to serve, and whose esteem it may want to have.
There are jealousies in business, as in politics, and there are little
minds directing special interests of large industries, as there are
biased and unfair minds governing in public places. All that any trade
paper can do is to use its intelligence and influence to further busi-
ness as may seem good for the larger interests. And in this the
strength of the trade paper finds its best expression.
It is here that the well conducted trade paper becomes, even
against its original purposes, a medium of interchange between the
manufacturers and the workers or employees. And in this the trade
paper has an intimate influence which coordinates with its usefulness
as a medium of publicity. It makes still stronger the link which joins
together the industries and the merchants.
What has been said is well illustrated in the "Where Doubts Are
Dispelled" department of Presto, where often in a single issue, twenty
or more questions, concerning pianos and other trade topics, are
answered. It is equally, or even more clearly, seen in the calls that
come from manufacturers for workers in factories and for salesmen
on the road. The same applies to the requests for expert player
demonstrators and retail salesmen for stores and outside piano sell-
ADVERTISING INFORMATION
Forms close promptly at noon every Thursday. News matter for
publication should be in not later than eleven o'clock on the same
day. Advertising copy should be in hand before Tuesday, five p. m.,
to insure preferred position. Full page display copy should be- in
hand by Monday noon preceding publication day. Want advs. for cur-
rent week, to insure classification, must be at office of publication not
later than Wednesday noon.
DRY ROT
Nothing in business is more deplorable than to see a well estab-
lished industry, with a good name and a product of quality, even dis-
tinction, slowly decaying because of lack of energy and a disposition
to "let well enough alone." And this condition is especially melan-
choly in a famous old piano industry. It is dry rot, simple and unmis-
takable. No line of industry is wholly exempt from notable in-
stances of the kind. Certainly the piano industry has had its ex-
amples of the condition to which reference is made.
Recently the newspapers everywhere told of the application for
a receiver by the B. Shoninger Company, of New Haven and New
York. It would get you guessing to name any piano industry that has
stood higher, financially and otherwise, than the one founded seventy-
two years ago by the late Bernard Shoninger. There had never, until
recent years, been a suggestion of anything but straightfonvard and
sterling progress, conservative but steady, in connection with the
name. From the ancient little melodion to the modern playerpiano,
the New Haven house has moved forward. The name of Shoninger
has stood so high that it had passed everywhere as flawless assurance
of credit. And yet a receiver is appointed.
Conservatism is an admirable characteristic. But, like virtue,
itself, if carried too far, conservatism takes on another meaning and
becomes destructive. It is destructive as the moth is destructive in
a rich garment. Its inroads are not seen but the disintegration goes
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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