Presto

Issue: 1923 1938

PRESTO
Presto
THE AMERICAN MUSIC TRADE WEEKLY.
Published Every Saturday at 407 South Dearborn
Street, Old Colony Building, Chicago, 111.
C. A. DANIELL and FRANK D. ABBOTT
Editors
Telephones. Local and Long Distance, Harrison 234.
Private Phones to all Departments. Cable Address (Com-
mercial Cable Co.'s Code), " P R E S T O , " Chicago.
Entered 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 charge in United States
possessions, Cuba and Mexico. Rates for advertising on
application.
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-
spondents, and their assistance is invited.
Forms close at noon every Thursday. News mat-
ter 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 current
week, to insure classification, must not be later than
Wednesday noon.
Address all communications for the editorial or business
departments to PRESTO PUBLISHING CO., 407 So.
Dearborn Street, Chicago, III.
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1923.
DISGUISED HOUSE ORGANS
The trade papers sell more pianos for the
manufacturers than all other kinds of public-
ity combined. Nearly every reader of a trade
paper makes his living by selling- pianos or
other instruments of music. There is no rea-
sonable argument, therefore, against the ac-
curacy of the opening statement of this edi-
torial. All advertising is good. But for the
manufacturer who sells to dealers who sell by
personal contact with the public, trade paper
advertising is the best—by far the best.
But, if one were to depend upon some of the
music trade papers for his judgment of piano
values, and the possibilities of piano selling
as a business, it might lead to the notion that
only a very few instruments exist that are
worthy the salesman's efforts. For the trade
papers of today not infrequently suggest that
they are conducted for the exclusive benefit ot
one or two, possibly sometimes three, indus-
tries. The rank and file of pianos have no
show at all. They are just "stuck in" to fill
some small corner that is not needed by the
manufacturers whose elaborate displays over-
shadow their perhaps smaller competitors.
. That is a modern trend of music trade "jour-
nalism." The "large advertiser," possessed of
the means and the space-buying skill to subsi-
dize the publication, gets all of the advantages.
The lesser advertisers merely chip in to help
produce the publicity for the larger space-user.
It can be shown that trade papers, boasting of
loyalty to the whole industry alike, have "car-
ried" six or eight pages of flamboyant "pro-
motion" of certain pianos, bearing as many
names, and all from the same sources. It af-
fords a poor return for the other supporters
of the trade papers thus turned over, body,
boots and breeches, to the concerns which, for
comparatively small investment, gain all of
the advantages for which other instruments
must pay their earned but very uneven propor-
tion.
The late Mr. Hobart M. Cable was an astute
advertiser. He once said to a prominent trade
paper man that he "would not pay his money
to promote a rival's piano at his expense."
And, to use a term of the common debate, Mr.
Cable "said a mouthful." The ''house organ"
is sometimes a good thing. But no well con-
ducted piano trade paper can afford to be any
one's house organ.
PIANO OPPORTUNITIES
One of the younger members of the piano
industry, in a large city, told a Presto rep-
resentative of his success and some of its
causes. He is not a man generally known
personally, because he has not made much of
the annual conventions and has stuck pretty
closely to his own offices and factory ever
since he embarked in the industry about fif-
teen years ago. But what he said contains,
under the surface, a fine lesson for others who
may go into the same business at any time.
The piano manufacturer said that he had no
capital to speak of when he decided to try
piano making. His investment was principal-
ly in pluck and hard work. He began with an
arrangement with three retail concerns to
take a weekly aggregate output of six instru-
ments for cash. He gradually added to the
list of regular buyers and so created a line of
cash customers at a fair profit—sure, but slow
perhaps.
In time he opened his confidence to a prom-
inent action maker who had extended credit.
The action man was glad to extend his line
of credit and the piano industry has grown
steadily until the man who, fifteen years ago,
was not able to employ a typewriter, is mak-
ing between 4,000 and 5,000 instruments a
year and has never borrowed a dollar from
any bank since he started, has never renewed
a note, and is free of debt save current
monthly accounts.
And yet there are piano men who seem to
think that there is something the matter with
the piano business. But there are enough of
the other kind to present all needed enthusi-
asm to newcomers who have the foresight to
take advantage of opportunities due to the
flying of the white feather. And such oppor-
tunities exist, as scarcely never before. Any
who mav be interested can ask us.
HELPLESS CREDITORS
Another fine illustration of the way the
creditors' money is thrown away in bankrupt-
cy cases is disclosed in a report this week from
the New York referee in the matter of the
F. G. Smith, Inc., failure of a year and more
ago. After the customary delays, and the
usual piling up of costs and lawyers' fees, no-
tice is given of the filing of the "final report,"
and that the "remaining uncollected accounts"
will be sold at auction.
There is no schedule of collections already
made, nor any hint of the probable returns to
the unfortunate creditors. But there is a
careful assurance that the neat little sum of
$15,334.96 is assessed for attorneys' fees and
commissions. Of course, the attorneys must
have money. They need it, and probably they
have earned some of it. What the creditors
will get will pay the postage, and possibly a
little more. It usually does in these bank-
ruptcy cases.
The point is that some better way should
be discovered. The legal talent required to
settle a bankrupt piano industry's estate isn't
exactly what might be called a specialty.
September IS, 1923
Piano men know more about values in such
cases than lawyers do. Last week's Presto
contained some plans of a recently formed
New York league of business men designed
to ease the way for bankrupts, and in the
event of its being impossible to save them,
then to conserve the property of creditors.
Better yet, if piano concerns which may
happen to find themselves caught in the quick-
sands of financial bogs, would notify the or-
ganized forces which regulate the trade af-
fairs, and which sustain a legal department for
the purpose, things might move more smooth-
ly and save a lot of money to creditors who
possibly sometimes need it as much as the
lawyers do. The bankruptcy methods are all
out of plumb with reason, and the waste is
monstrous. The creditors are helpless.
THE STRAUBE LINE AT
THE OHIO CONVENTION
Display of Instruments from Hammond, Ind., at Cin-
cinnati, This Week Attracted Attention.
Unusual interest was manifested in the Straubc
players on display at the Hotel Gibson during the
Ohio Convention held Tuesday and Wednesday of
this week in Cincinnati. The Straubc line is handled
in Ohio by forty of the liveliest dealers in the state
and, if the interest shown in the instruments by other
dealers is of any significance, the Straube line will
soon be sold in every nook and corner of the state.
E. R. Jacobson, president of the Straube Company;
J. R. Adams, advertising manager; and the concern's
two Ohio travelers, W. S. Robertson and D. L. Ster-
ling, were in charge of the Straube exhibit and were
kept busy explaining the special Straube features to
interested persons.
As was the case during the Prosperity Convention,
held in Chicago this year, the Straube display rooms
were crowded all the time. The Artronome player
action, with which all Straube players arc equipped,
came in for an unusual amount of praise.
The Straube line is sold in Cincinnati by George P.
Gross, one of the livest and most enterprising dealers
in the country.
WALTHAM PIANO CO. BUSIER
THAN BEFORE IN YEARS
Milwaukee Industry Receives Six Carload Orders
Within as Many Days.
Carload orders for Waltham pianos and player-
pianos were received by the big Milwaukee industry
within four days last week. This refers only, of
course, to carload orders, and the lesser quantity
orders have been coming in with unusual regularity.
As a matter of fact—we have it from Sales Manager
R. N. Wilson—the demand for Waltham instruments
just' now exceeds the ratio of demand for several
years past.
According to General Manager Paul Nctzow, also,
the outlook is that business will be especially good
throughout the balance of the year. There are more
orders on file in the Waltham shipping rooms and
offices than have been on file since the rushing days
following the armistice. It looks well for the Wal-
tham Piano Co., and the new styles of that industry
are having a particularly lively call.
A PROPITIOUS OPENING.
John A. Cartwright formally opened a new music
store in Greencastle, Ind., recently. The new store,
in which he is ably assisted by his wife, is in a fine
location on the south side of the Square. The extent
of the acquaintances and friends of Mr. and Mrs.
Cartwright was proved in the big and continuous
crowds which enlivened the store during opening
day. Both are prominent in musical circles and Mr.
Cartwright has earned fame as a successful piano
salesman.
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION PLANS.
Robert N. Watkin, president of the National Asso-
ciation of Music Merchants is arranging for a meet-
ing of the various Associations in the state of Texas
to be held at Dallas the last of this month, at which
time Matt J. Kennedy, secretary of the association,
will be in Dallas to co-operate with Mr. Watkin in
formulating some big plans for the National Asso-
ciation of Music Merchants for this year's work.
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
September IS, 1923
TURNER MUSIC HOUSE
EXPANDS IN FLORIDA
Progressive Tampa Music Company Now Pre-
pared For Active Fall Business in Head-
quarters and Five Branch Stores.
THINGS SAID OR SUGGESTED
The death of David H. Schmidt, two weeks ago,
removed a unique character from the ranks of the
piano supply industry. Mr. Schmidt was one of the
hard workers—workers with his hands as well as
head. He won his success along the old-fashioned
lines of earning it. He was a good man to meet,
and he always had time for the trade paper reporter,
because he wanted to keep posted himself as to what
the industries that used his product were doing.
* * *
Had Mr. Schmidt been one of the sort of men who
felt that they are too busy to see the chance callers
at their places of business, he would never have re-
quired the large factory at Poughkeepsie which he
kept busy for many years. He was a "self-made"
man because he was willing to help some others
make themselves.
All who met Mr. Schmidt felt that he understood
his business, and a good deal more. He had a way
of welcoming which won the stranger and strength-
ened the good will of the business caller. He wasted
little time, but was never "too busy" to see the caller
who wanted to see him.
In this day of daily "conferences," such business
men are a delight. They help the grind of common-
place events, and they encourage the young men who
need the example of the busy men who seem to have
time to say a cheerful word and never seem quite as
busy as they really are. Mr. Schmidt's death was a
loss to all who knew him.
* * *
The piano manufacturer who has won success in
a comparatively short time, and says that he ''owes
his success" to any particular man points straight to
a good example of what a man should be. One day
last week the very prosperous head of a large piano
factory said to a Presto writer that his success was
due, more than to any other single person, to W. B.
Thayer, now of the piano action industry at Rock-
ford, 111. The piano manufacturer said that, while he
had never been greatly in financial "distress," at a
time when he was new in the business and needed
substantial encouragement, Mr. Thayer extended it
so whole-heartedly that progress was made compara-
tively easy.
* * *
"Are you worrying? I'm not!" is the way Mr.
Thayer put it to the young piano manufacturer.
"When I begin to worry I'll let you know it, but until
then go right on and we'll take care of your orders
just as if you had paid in advance!" And from that
day to this the industries in which Mr. Thayer has
been interested have been doing it, with the change
that of late years the piano manufacturer has been
discounting his bills.
* * *
Of course there could be no other actions in sight
for that piano industry. The successful head of the
piano industry has built up a large business and uses
a great many actions. He has many friends in the
supply industry and among the prosperous piano
dealers. But he names first the man who expressed
faith in him at a time when he had little capital and
nothing to depend Upon but his own energies and in-
tegrity.
The Turner Music Company, 608 Franklin street,
Tampa, Fla., J. A. Turner, owner, is opening a new
store in St. Petersburg, Fla., at 1 Alhambra Arcade.
The store is to be one of the handsomest and best
equipped in the South. The decorating is in charge
No doubt, too, his chief pride is in the fact that
the action manufacturer has never had occasion to
regret.the faith he placed in a beginner who frankly
disclosed his condition and gave no bonds for future
performance. Mutual confidence is a great asset in
any business.
* * *
The item in last week's Presto about the early or-
ganization of Lyon & Healy seems to have attracted
considerable interest. In the same issue there was an
editorial about the name of Estey as associated with
reed organs.

*
*
It must be equally interesting to recall that the
names of the old Chicago music house and the indus-
try at Brattleboro, Vt., were closely associated far
back in the early days of the late P. J. Healy. In
one of the rare original letters of the late founder of
the great music house there is one which appeared,
in fac simile, in the "Appreciation" which was put
forth by the directors of Lyon & Healy shortly after
Mr. Healy's death.
In the letter alluded to reference is made to the
Estey Company, in a way that suggests the great
activity and the popularity of the Estey organ at the
time when Oliver Ditson, of Boston, sent the young
men of his employ out to the sprawling city on Lake
Michigan to establish a music business. The letter
appears in Mr. Healy's peculiar hand-writing and,
brief as it is, the straightforward clear-cut method of
expression, which contributed so much to his success,
is apparent.

*
*
Here is Mr. Healy's letter about the Estey organ—
written on April 6, 1865—the year the Civil War
closed—and just one year after he had established
himself in the Smith & Nixon Hall at Washington
and Clark streets, Chicago. The letter is addressed
to Mr. Mclntyre, Princeton, Wis., presumably a
music dealer of the time:
"Dear Sir: We regret to say that we can not
promptly ship the instrument required. Messrs
Estey & Co., owing to the great demand for their
instruments, are not able to supply us." etc.
That's as much as the facsimile of Mr. Healy's
letter shows. It is enough to indicate the candor,
the characteristic promptness which marked the late
head of Lyon & Healy, and equally to prove the
activity of the Brattleboro organ which is today one
of the few that still survives.
* * *
A story going the rounds of the New York trade is
evidently a "transcription" of an old Scotch joke. A
piano dealer had sent a clerk to collect from a delin-
quent installment customer. He came back empty-
handed. Later the delinquent called and paid ex-
plaining that he asked the clerk to wait till he got the
money and the clerk went away. The dealer asked
the clerk how it happened that he didn't collect.
"I had an accident," said the clerk.
"An accident! What was it?"
"It was a cold day and I had my ear muffs on
so's I didn't hear him, and he shut the door." Ear
muffs and music never did mix well.
JOHN A. TURNER.
of S. Cusson, and the building being of Spanish-
Moorish architecture, lends itself to a great deal of
artistic elaboration. W. B. Word is manager, and
J. D. Saumening, assistant manager.
On September 15 the Turner Music Company will
open a new store in Orlando, Fla., at 136 South
Orange avenue, one of the best locations in this very
lively southern city. J. V. Borum will be the man-
ager, and Earle Stafford assistant manager of this
store.
In each of these places a complete line of Knabe,
Marshall & Wendell, Packard, Mathushek, Bram-
bach, Brinkerhoff and Turner pianos will be carried,
as well as the Ampico and phonographs and records.
The success of these two new stores is assured, by
the fact that the organizations are well trained, have
had much experience, and are thoroughly prepared
to take care of the business in the most aggressive
manner.
On November 1 the Turner Music Company will
open a new store in West Palm Beach, Fla., with the
same line of instruments. With these five stores and
an agency in Jacksonville, Turner Music Company
is well prepared to take care of the musical needs
of the state of Florida.
CATALOGUES FOR SYDNEY.
Consul E. M. Lawton of Sydney, Australia, under
date of August 14, states that any playerpiano manu-
facturers who desire distributors in Sydney can send
to him, by mail, catalogues, price lists, and other, de-
tails covering any proposition they care to make.
New Edition Ready About November First
PRESTO BUYERS' GUIDE
Will Contain Full Lists with Concise Classification and Description of all
American Pianos, Players and Reproducing Pianos, with Sketches of their
Makers. Edition for 1924 in preparation. Price 50 cents, post paid.
NO PIANO DEALER OR PROSPECT CAN AFFORD TO BE WITHOUT IT.
PRESTO PUBLISHING CO,
407 S. Dearborn 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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