Presto

Issue: 1923 1927

PRESTO
instrument he represented was one of the
most musical the world had produced. And
what Mr. Dolge said finds an echo in the judg-
ments of others who are still doing the same
THE AMERICAN MUSIC TRADE WEEKLY
kind of good work that gave to him the sat-
isfaction that came with his years with the
Published Every Saturday at 407 South Dearborn
Street, Old Colony Building, Chicago, III.
Haddorff.
It is impossible to estimate the happiness
Editors
C. A. D A N I E L L and F R A N K D. A B B O T T
that the 100,000 Haddorff pianos have given
Telephones. Local and Long Distance, Harrison 234.
Private Phones to all Departments. Cable Address (Com-
to their owners. And it is a great achieve-
merclal Cable Co.'s Code), " P R E S T O , " Chicago.
ment that the Haddorff Piano Co. has made
Entered as second-class matter Jan. 29, 1896, at the
and
distributed 100,000 thoroughly good and
Post Office, Chicago, Illinois, under Act of March 3, 1879.
representative instruments within the compara-
Subscription, $2 a year; 6 months, $1; Foreign, $4.
tively few years which have passed since the
Payable in advance. No extra charge in United States
possessions, Cuba and Mexico. Rates for advertising on
present-day giant industry at Rockford was
application.
established.
Items of news and other matter are solicited and if
of general interest to the music trade will be paid for
at space rates. Usually piano merchants or salesmen
in the smaller cities are the best occasional corre-
TOO VALUABLE
spondents, and their assistance is invited.
Things that some people know are very
Forms close at noon every Thursday. News mat-
valuable—to
themselves. Many things that
ter should be in not later than eleven o'clock on the
same day. Advertising copy should be in hand before some other people know are decidedly valu-
Tuesday, five p. m., to insure preferred position. Full
able to a wide circle of other people, and
page display copy should be in hand by Monday noon
preceding publication day. Want advs. for current
some things that a very few people know are
week, to insure classification, must not be later than
of
vast value to the entire world that has the
Wednesday noon.
capacity to think. In the music trade there
Address all communications for the editorial or business
departments to PRESTO PUBLISHING CO., 407 So.
are men who know a little about everything
Dearborn Street, Chicago, III.
and a great deal about their own affairs.
There
are also some men in the business who
SATURDAY, JUNE 30. 1923.
know a little about their own business and
entertain a boundless estimate of that little.
HADDORFF No. 100,000
They imagine that no one else knows much
One hundred thousand. Haddorff. pianos are of anything.
today adding- to the happiness of the human
The latter kind of men in the music busi-
family. That is an accomplishment which no ness seem to belong to lines of "specializa-
one associated with the Rockford industry
tion." Some of them are employed by large
could have foretold at the start of the big music houses and, no doubt, they earn their
factory in 1900.
wages. But among them are just a few whose
It is one of the most remarkable records in
fund of information is so rare as to be beyond
the history of the piano. It is still more computation upon a money basis. They say
gratifying because, from the very first Had-
so themselves. An illustration may serve the
dorff piano to the splendid Grand which car- purpose just now.
ries the high number today, there has not been
The other day a representative of this paper
a single instrument of the name that does not
was instructed to call upon certain heads of
bear evidence of the makers' ambitions and
departments in several wholesale music
determination to achieve upon a basis of ar-
houses, for the purpose of verifying statistics
tistic attainment.
which had already been compiled. It was
Today, the name of Haddorff, in the piano
merely a matter of reinforcing judgments al-
world, not only stands high in the judgment
ready worked out by the experiences of ex-
of those qualified to judge, but holds a place perts, as is necessary when special phases of
unique because of conditions of its industry
the industry are discussed in Presto's "Where
quite unusual. The record of the Haddorff
Doubts Are Dispelled" columns. And when
discloses the enthusiastic co-operation of
the inquiring trade paper reporter put his
some notably distinguished workers, and
questions to the music house department
proves a consistency and loyalty rare in any
heads he was, as a rule, given such informa-
special industry. The originators and develop- tion as was within reach.
ers of the Rockford piano have progressed
But there were exceptions which suggested
quietly and with almost singular absence of
the need of a broader conception of the music
the uncertainties or changes which mark most
business. One employee of a widely known
large enterprises. The executive staff, from
house said that the information was "impos-
President P. A. Peterson, Mr. C. A. Haddorff, sible."
No amount of investigation could
and Mr. A. K. Johnson down, have devoted to serve to uncover the desired data. He may
the work of upbuilding, the unswerving effort
have been right. At any rate, his caution was
l:y which alone large progress can be made. The
commendable. Another vastly more deeply
expert knowledge of what a fine piano must
entrenched employee of another big house,
be, as personified in Mr. Haddorff, has had
said this:
the undivided confidence and support of the
"Why, you've got the • nerve to ask that!
business departments and, without a change
That information would be worth thousands
in the official personnel, the Haddorff Piano of dollars! Do you think I'd tell you that just
Co. has moved steadily forward and rapidly.
to pass it along to our competitors?"
Don't ask us what house the wise gentle-
Some of the most influential, because ex-
man holds up with his massive intelligence and
perienced and authoritative, piano men of the
past two decades have been enlisted in Had- boundless sources of secret information. What
he really knows has little to do with what he
dorff progress. The late Alfred Dolge de-
thinks he knows. But the incident goes to
voted some of the most fruitful years of his
show that, in some way, our last week's edi-
life to opening the great west for the piano
torial about the betterment that has come
from Rockford. He said to the writer of these
over the music trade was a little overdone.
lines that he could not have succeeded as he
There are still left some of the kind of wise
did were it not for his own conviction that the
June 30, 1923
men who do not know that what they know
is of little value to the rest of the world—
even in their own line.
The knowledge of all the world, in the
music business, is reflected on the sign that
hangs over the door. And there are signs,
even of familiar names, in which there is not
so much suggestion of understanding as to
cause the passing throng to pause and enter,
even in search of the things displayed in the
front window.
Information is a part of service. Service
is a word overdone at this time, but there can
never be too much readiness to pass along
what little we know—unless we happen to be
lawyers or members of the Ku Klux Klan.
There are very few who know everything;
ask us and see !
YOUR SIDE LINES
The music store is the logical center of lo-
cal musical activity of whatever nature. If well
conducted, the music store in any community
is the source of information, suggestion and
advice, whenever any special acquisition to
town or city music-making equipment is pro-
posed. If a new band is to be formed, a new
theater established, a new "movie" opened, or
a new church erected, the demand for a con-
siderable musical instrument investment be-
comes obvious.
And the wide-awake music dealer recog-
nizes the opportunity well in advance of the
actual need.. If he is a recognized authority
in his business—as most music dealers are—
he is consulted on the subject of what may
be best adapted to the local needs, the ap-
proximate cost, and the ways and means for
securing and paying for the band instruments,
the orchestra, the automatic instrument, or
the pipe organ, as the case may be. No active
music dealer will permit opportunities of that
kind to pass unprofitted.
Nor is it only a matter of the immediate
profit. It is, also, and perhaps more to the
point, the opportunity which builds local in-
fluence and directs attention to the advan-
tages of a well-conducted music store, where
understanding of the sources of things musi-
cal is made the basis of service and public
convenience.
It is possible that some piano dealers do
not take advantage of such opportunities as
have been implied. But if so they are not
making the best of their business. The band
instrument, the "movie" and church organ,
and the other things of musical equipment,
are parts of the music store and may be made
to extend the activities and results of the
business many fold. For naturally the local
music dealer—the home piano man—must
know of projected enterprises which call for
the kind of goods in which he is most inter-
ested. And he is the logical man to fill the
wants of that nature.
Don't let the mail order house in the far-
away city get that business. Don't let the
big town specialist in band instruments fur-
nish the equipment for the band, and dos't let
the pipe organ factories get the orders for
the new church or lodge or the movie theater.
This subject is discussed, so far as concerns
the brass band part of it, in this week's
"Where Doubts Are Dispelled" columns. Read
that, too. and take advantage of all the op-
portunities that belong to you. Don't be only
a piece of a music dealer!
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 30, 1923
BUSINESS IN GRANDS OF
BURLINGTON, IA., FIRM
Part of Mark P. Campbell and Brambach
Piano in Achievements of Guest Piano
Co. Told in Newspapers.
THINGS SAID OR SUGGESTED
How do you play grand opera on your harmonica?
Not very well! Then let the next small boy you
meet try it out for you. He may be a professor of
the harmonica in the near days ahead. For the
humble little instrument that performs almost auto-
matically, but without pedals or action, is coming
into its own—or some better instrument's own! It
may have surprised you—and possibly also some of
the contemporary great pianists—to see a full-page
Hohner Harmonica advertisement in some of the
great daily newspapers. But time's charges are at
work. Hail the Harmonica!
* * *
The Music Industries Chamber of Commerce is
sending out ready-made copy to the newspapers.
Clippings from other sources are put into type and a
new convenience added to the.already too-easy work
of the editorial staff. The purpose, no doubt, is to
stimulate the love of music. If it helps to that end
the effort is well expended. The more the people
read about music the less they may care to ride over
the country roads reading nature from the open
limousine.
* * *
Don't let the band boys go away from home to buy
their bazoos, bass tubas and drums. First time you
hear of a new band in contemplation get in touch.
Use your general knowledge of business, plus what
you know of the music trade and the brass-band
instrument makers. If you do not already represent
a good brass band industry, write to the C. G. Conn,
Ltd., at Elkhart, Ind., or Lyon & Healy, Inc., Chi-
cago, or some other good one, and see what you
can do.
*

*
You must have read what this trade paper has said
about the music roll business. What are you doing
about it? Are you selling music rolls, or just carry-
ing a few samples—enough to help you sell the
playerpianos? If you are a real music dealer you
must be selling a lot of music rolls at a good profit.
What music rolls are they? There are music rolls—
and music rolls. Not all sheets of paper with holes
in them are music rolls. Advertise the make of rolls
you like best—and sell them.
* * *
Twenty years Ego two young men in a big city
were in the reed organ business. Both were making
a small number of good instruments. Later both
added pianos to their product. The other day the
two men met—not so young as twenty years ago,
but still far from old. One was active, prosperous
and aggressively enterprising. He is the president of
a great industry, with several factories. The other
is almost forgotten and his manner shows it. His
store has been closed and his factory might as well
be. The former has advertised, and pushed and im-
proved his product. The other has drifted without
much effort and with parsimony as his watchword.
This is a busy world. Things change. The music
trade has changed. So have the two men. One has
turned backward; the other changes his styles and
widens his vision. Same in any business, though,
only these two are in the same business.
* * *
Croaking, kicking and seeing things bluely are not
the ways to success. Croakers who can sec nothing
'out disaster in whatever may not suit them are not
built with their faces to the sun. They let the other
fellow's troubles become their own troubles, in the
wron gway. To sympathize with an unfortunate
doesn't mean that you also are in need of sympathy.
Perhaps you have heavier burdens than he has. To
really sympathize with another is to help him with-
out hurting yourself. The old maxim about charity
beginning at home is, like so many of its kind,
foolishness. Help him also with a cheerful face and
a "jolly" that may start him along the right way
again. This isn't piano talk. No, but it is just what
one of New York's greatest piano men said during
convention time.
* * *
A few years ago you would not have thought that
a man conid make a profitable business of lecturing
on the subject of selling things. But there are sev-
eral eloquent gentlemen who do well .by giving talks
.to business organizations. It is just the idea that has
been practically applied by several of the larger piano
manufacturers for years past—notably President Al-
bert S. Bond, of the Packard Piano Co., at Fort
Wayne, Indiana. Mr. Bond has made it a practice
to assemble the hundreds of factory workers once a
week and deliver a familiar talk on subjects per-
taining to Packard work and the requirements of
consistent progress in piano manufacture. It is the
practical working out of the thought expressed in
the Packard piano slogan: "If there's no harmony
in the factory there will be none in the piano.''
"Shop talks" are good, and the professional business
talker has a very wide field in which to exercise his
peculiar and forceful abilities. One of the business
talkers participated in the music trade convention,
and some of his ideas are still subjects of office and
wareroom discussion.
There has been some talk of one of the old eastern
pianos invading Chicago which in a way revives a
past glory. It was said that a prominent building
would be occupied and signs of huge size perched
upon it in a way to almost dominate the sky after
dark. The plant was an ambitious one. It would
bring to prominence again a piano which was once
the pride of one of the most popular manufacturers.
It would prove that a great piano name, even if per-
mitted to partially drop out of sight, may be revived
again. The interesting part of it, as applied to the
Chicago talk, would be to see how quickly the re-
vivifying process might be made effective.
* * *
Trade visitors to Chicago, or passing through east-
ward bound, can take a trip to Rockford in a day,
see the great Haddorff piano factory, meet C. A.
Haddorff, one of the most skillful, also A. Johnson,
whose genius for work and organization have done
so much for the industry; even meet also Mr. Peter-
son, one of the real industrial giants of the Mid-
West. It requires little more than two hours to
reach Rockford.
* * *
And there's Milwaukee, too. A boat trip "in sight
of land all the way" is a pleasure to any visitor.
Milwaukee is a piano making city now. Its former
fame as Blatzville, or as the "city that beer made
famous," has given way to a better fame—the city
where Waltham pianos are made. And when in
Milwaukee no dealer should miss the others—the
Miessner Piano Co. and Otto Miessner himself; then
also Conrad Kreiter will smile upon them, though
his factory is, as you know, in the beautiful little city
of Marionette, Wis., three hundred miles northward.
* * *
Commuters who travel on the I. C. suburban trains
rub up against many men of fame in special lines
of professional work. They may not recignize the
possessors of names with which they have become
familiar by newspaper or book reading. But they
see them often. The other evening I saw four very
prominent men in the same stifling car, homeward
bound from their day's work and all reading the
newspapers as they sweat! One was the sculptor,
Taft, whose latest masterpiece, typifying Time,
graces the Washington Park entrance on the Mid-
way. Another was the champion pessimist and great
lawyer, Clarence Darrow; the third, Judge Landis,
baseball grand umpire, who, when he wore the
ermine, soaked Standard Oil the well-known thirty
millions. But the fourth, even more interesting, to
Presto readers, is the man who has for years dic-
tated fine "copy" for the advertising space of a great
music house. Still more, he is the author of the new
measurement known as "millines," which has been
adopted by the great newspapers and advertising ex-
perts, including the Chicago Tribune. He is Ben. H.
Jefferson, sturdy, modest and studious. He has done
something. His ideas have influenced millions in the
world of publicity—a great world, and now pro-
digiously inhabited. But you must know "Ben"
Jefferson a long time to really know him at all.
BALDWIN FOR CONFERENCE.
Baldwin pianos are in use in the Winona Assembly
and Bible Conference opened this week at Lake
Winona, near Warsaw, Ind. It is the beginning of a
succession of enjoyable events at the place in which
musical features will be provided. Among the sched-
uled attractions are Tito Schipa, the tenor of the
Chicago Civic Opera Company, Joseph Levinne, the
pianist, Bachman's Band and others.
The United Music Co., New London, Conn., re-
cently bought the stock of pianos and players of D.
S. Marsh & Co., and sold it by special sale.
The Guest Piano Co., Burlington, la., is a con-
sistent proponent of the of the grand piano in its
smaller forms. The firm early saw the "talking
points" of such an instrument; its power of appeal to
the "average family" which at one time considered
the grand piano as something beyond its means to
acquire and its musical usefulness to the professional
or proficient amateur pianist.
The earnest adherence to the claims of the small
grand piano recently suggested a theme for a special
article to one of the staff of the Burlington Hawkeyc
and in this the activity of Mark P. Campbell, presi-
dent of the Brambach Piano Co., and the small grand
instruments made by the company are entertainingly
set forth for Burlington readers. This is said:
The world admires a man who does something.
The pioneer takes up more pages in our history than
the army of men who follow in his foodsteps. The
followers may make greater progress than the
pioneer, but still the pioneer is the man who is ad-
mired and remembered.
Robert Fulton would perhaps not dream there was
any relation between the greyhounds of the Atlantic
and his Claremont, but he is credited with the inven-
tion of the steamboat; and Eli Whitney's model of
the cotton gin is a curiosity compared to the machin-
ery of today, yet it is the name of Eli Whitney that
is linked with the cotton gin.
Mark P. Campbell, who is president of the Bram-
bach Piano Company, New York, is the pioneer in
the small grand piano for the home. Since 1856 the
grand piano has been held in reverence and awe as
a wonderful thing beyond the reach of the American
public, because it was believed to be too expensive
and too large. This was not fancy, but real fact.
However, the people of America aspire to the most
beautiful things and have a desire to possess them in
their homes. Back in 1912 Mr. Campbell took up
this problem, and was able through his organization
to have designed a small grand piano that was truly
musical in every way, possessing the full, rich tones
of a grand piano, and the same even, beautifully re-
sponsive action that the large grand has, and having
all the grace and charm of a grand piano from a
descriptive standpoint.
The Guest Piano Company was one of the very
first to see the great possibilities in bringing to
Burlington a grand piano that was of such a charac-
ter as to possess true musical qualities and at the
same time grace the home as no other musical
instrument could. It was over ten years ago that
the first Brambach was sold in Burlington, and since
that time their sale has become increasingly large.
Imitation is the sincerest flattery, and Mr. Camp-
bell has now many imitators. His factory produces
more grand pianos than any other factory in the
world and has been working continuously for over
seven years without a let-up, each year showing an
increase of production—a true mark of success.
In some men's lives the gaining of a livelihood is
of small importance compared to the doing of some-
thing worth while for their fellow men. It is Mr.
Campbell's hope and desire to see the majority of the
somes in America equipped with a piano that has the
artistry and symmetry that only a small grand pos-
sesses. The influence of this on the home life is hard
to measure, but it certainly lends a very strong force
to the atmosphere that is created to bring up the
coming generation of Americans with a love of the
beautiful.
READY FOR BIG WORK.
H. H. McFarland, the progressive Springfield, O.,
music dealer, is pointing with natural pride to the
excellent arrangements in all departments of his
new store at 14 South Fountain avenue. Mr. Mc-
Farland's experience in music goods merchandising
is evident in the way he has planned things for
the three floors of the number named. "It is one
of the preparations for expansion. Now it is up to
the energy of myself and sales staff," said Mr. Mc-
Farland this week.
PLANS IMPROVEMENTS.
Plans for the improvement of its store have been
made by the Bechtold Music Co., Fourteenth and
Champa streets, Denver, Colo. The proprietor and
manager is Martin Bechtold, whose energies and
merchandising abilities have built up a big business
for the store. More economy of space will be
effected by the carrying out of Mr. Bechtold's plan.
OCCUPIES NEW BUILDING.
Stanton Powell, the Grants Pass, Ore., music
dealer, is now located in a building specially con-
structed by him to properly house a business that
shows growth at the passing of every month. In ad-
dition to the line of players of the Gulbransen-Dick-
inson Co., Chicago, Mr. Powell carries a line of
talking machines and small goods.
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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