Presto

Issue: 1924 1986

PRESTO
August 16, 1924.
'
CREATING
A
SENSATION
IN
THE PIANO
WORLD
Never has there been cre-
ated a line of automatic
pianos so e s p e c i a l l y
adapted for handling by
the regular piano trade
as the
SEEBURG
Pianos of genuine musical
merit, a pneumatic mech-
anism of exceptional reli-
ability and durability and
art case designs which
mark a new departure in
this class of instruments.
Style "K T" with its
many musical combina-
tions is meeting with
remarkable favor.
Let us give you par-
ticulars.
J. P. SEEBURG
PIANO CO.
CHICAGO
General Offices: 1510 Dayton St.
Factory 1508-16 Dayton St.
EXPERT REVIEW OF
REMARKABLE EVENT
Publicity Man Who Has Done Much to Pro-
mote the National Music Merchants' Asso-
ciation Writes Graphic Story of San
Francisco Convention.
CAUSES OF SUCCESS
Unusual Enthusiasm as Evidenced by Patient De-
termination of Members . and Guests to Hear
Papers and Discussions in Formal Sessions.
By ALEX McDONALD.
Viewed in perspective, the first West Coast Con-
vention at San Francisco stamps itself as one of the
most remarkable demonstrations of the co-operative
spirit in the history of the music industry.
As a member of the Executive. Board of the Na-
tional Association of Music Merchants and special
commissioner to represent that body at this conven-
tion, the writer was privileged not only to participate
in its public functions but to meet in an advisory
way with the committee on organization.
From the first rap of the gavel, by Philip T. Clay,
calling the convention to order, it was apparent that
here was gathered a group of serious-minded men
who had come together in the fullest spirit of co-
operation. Every man in attendance was animated
with the desire and purpose to give of his best for
the benefit of all.
Enthusiastic Leadership.
The admirable manner in which Mr. Clay handled
the chairmanship of the convention, his insistence
that the dealers of the smaller cities and towns should
voice their sentiments and the unanimity with which
the convention followed his modest but far-seeing
leadership, contributed in a large degree to its suc-
cess.
The enthusiasm of Ed Uhl, of the Southern Cali-
fornia Music Co., and his manifest sincerity of pur-
pose in leading the discussion preceding the deter-
mination to effect a permanent organization was in-
fectious. The enthusiasm of the first noon-day lunch-
con and the marked interest in the message of the
special commissioner from the National Association
was further exhibited by the earnestness with which
the entire body attended the sessions lasting three
days.
This enthusiasm rose in constant crescendo until
the convention closed with the wonderful banquet
on Thursday night.
Evidence of Interest.
When it is stated that many of those in attendance
stood during the entire sessions to listen to the vari-
ous papers because sufficient seating space could
not be provided for the unexpectedly large attend-
dauce, there can be no doubt that these men came to
learn. It must be said that the papers read were
worthy of this attention.
The frank way in which the speakers handled the
subject and the facts and figures they gave were of
a most intimate and direct character.
The acid test of the real interest of those in at-
tendance at the convention was shown by the fact
that everyone attending the meetings registered with
the secretary and obtained a card of admission to the
convention hall for which a fee of $3.00 was charged.
It was a new and sure method of determining the
real interest of those in attendance.
The social features which included a dinner-dance
by the Victor Company and the banquet of the con-
vention itself were of a character that might well be
envied by the National Association itself.
The Exhibits.
With characteristic western spirit the matter of
manufacturers' exhibits was handled in a manner that
contributed rather than detracted from the conven-
tion. Those in charge of these exhibits, with a fine
spirit of co-operation, attended the sessions of the
convention personally, leaving the exhibits absolutely
unattended during the meeting hours. They won
praise for themselves and a better standing with their
trade as a result of this exhibition of interest in the
convention itself.
The convention was representative in every sense
of the word, geographically and by small dealers as
well as those from the larger houses.
The San Francisco trade did themselves proud as
hosts to the convention. The splendid work of Shir-
ley Walker and Fred Sherman of Sherman, Clay &
Co., and Harold Pracht of Wiley B. Allen, George
Chase, and others, made everyone feel perfectly at
home and perfectly at ease to take part in every
phase of the activities.
A Permanent Organization.
The permanent organization, under the leadership
of E. A. Geissler, as its first president, gives every
evidence of a strong and effective organization. Mr.
Geissler's experience as an active member of the
Southern California Music Merchants' Assn. and one
of its presidents, brings to the new association an
experience and knowledge that will be invaluable in
putting the organization on a fine footing.
While the papers and discussions covered a wide
field, the keynote of the convention was to make
America musical. The great West is now enlisted
under that banner. It is marching on with undaunted
courage, energy, and boundless enthusiasm. There
can be no doubt that this association will function
and function effectively, and in many ways the East
will now have to look to the West for inspiration in
doing the worthwhile co-operative things to advance
music and the music industry.
INDIANA MUSIC TRADE
FOLK ENJOY PICNIC
Active Staff of South Bend and Logansport Stores
Hold Annual Frolic.
Employees of the Dependable Music Store, of
South Bend, Ind., and of the Frank H. Brown &
Company's store of Logansport, Ind., held their an-
nual picnic on August 3rd at Adams Grove on the
Tippecanoe River, near Rochester, Ind. The em-
ployes of both stores with their families and friends
motored to the grove in the morning and spent the
day at outdoor sports and bathing and a wonderful
picnic dinner was enjoyed at noon. Employees and
guests attending numbered nineteen. Everyone de-
clared that the outing was one of the most enjoyable
of the kind they had ever participated in.
In the picture, reading from left to right, are:
F. G. Harlington, tuner and repair man, South Bend;
Oscar Kreig, tuner and salesman, Logansport; Esther
Hanna, record saleslady and bookkeeper, Logansport;
Frank H. Brown, South Bend, president of the De-
pendable Music Stores, Inc., and partner in the Frank
H. Brown & Company; Mildred Murphy, record
saleslady, South Bend; W. A. Sandberg, sales man-
ager, South Bend; Gladys Lee, saleslady, South
Bend; C. E. Harmon, credit manager, South Bend;
J. Arthur Jamison, partner and manager, Logansport.
SHIPPING PIANOS BY SEA
TO HOUSTON, TEX., DEALERS
Steamship Company Found Very Effective Trans-
portation Means by Lester Piano Company.
When the Southern Steamship company steamer
City of Dallas arrived in Houston, Texas, last week,
it had on board a shipment of pianos for the Carter
Music company, the first that this company has
shipped via the ship channel to Houston.
The steamship line, which transports thousands
of phonographs every year for Texas distribution,
is seeking to increase its music service to Houston by
encouraging general use of its service for shipment
of pianos.
The Lester Piano Co., Philadelphia, has a growing
business in Texas and the services of the Southern
Steamship company are found very effective in bring-
ing the Lester uprights, grands and reproducing
pianos to the Texas dealers.
IMPROVES AKRON STORE.
The George S. Dales Co., Akron, Ohio, one of the
largest of Akron music houses, announces that con-
struction work on enlarging his store in South Main
street has been started and will be rushed to com-
pletion. Plans call for acquisition of the adjacent
building, removal of the partition and merging of the
two .main floors into one large room which will be
devoted to talking machines and records and the third
floor will serve as the piano studio and general offices.
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/
J
PRESTO
presto
THE AMERICAN MUSIC TRADE WEEKLY.
Published Every Saturday at 417 South Dearborn
Street, Chicago, Illinois.
C. A. DANIELL and FRANK D. ABBOTT •
- Editors
Telephones, Local and Long Distance, Harrison 234
Private Phones to all Departments. Cable Address (Com-
merclal Cable Co.'s Code), "PRESTO," 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.
Frrrrs c'ose 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., 417 South
Dearborn Street, Chicago, III.
SATURDAY, AUGUST 16, 1924.
ART AND NATIONAL SONGS
There has been a good deal in the news-
papers about the revival of the Wagner Fes-
tival at Baireuth, Bavaria. The old-time
glories of the Wagnerian music mystery plays
created a sensation in art circles, and devel-
oped into a "nationalistic demonstration" in
Germany.
But there was one incident in connection
with the opening- performance which was
passed without comment by the critics and
Wagner enthusiasts in the United States.
And the incident has special interest because
it seems to prove once more that music—if
it is music—has no gradations as to morals
or its bearing upon fitness, time or occasion.
In other words, however high the main pur-
pose of the performance, it is not out of place
to inject the commonplace, in theme, or char-
acter of the music.
This was made clear at Baireuth where, at
the conclusion of Wagner's mighty "Meister-
singer," the orchestra struck up "Deutschland
Uber Alles," and the temple of the Holy Grail
resounded with the martial notes of the Ger-
man national song. It was perfectly natural,
too, that "the entire audience vociferously
joined in three stanzas of the song."
But the point now is that seven years ago,
after this country had entered the World
War, a discussion arose concerning the "des-
ecration of art" by bringing in "Star Spangled
Banner"-at Symphony concerts. In Boston a
distinguished director—later banished—openly
refused to perform the song of Old Glory.
His excuse was that the tune was not artistic.
It offended the director's highly sensitized
ears. And in Chicago an equally famous con-
ductor neglected to close his concerts with
the national air for the identical reason, add-
ing that popular songs had no place in a high-
class program.
The war is past. But, according to com-
petent keepers of historic records, all war
will never cease. And it is therefore consoling
to find the land of Beethoven, Bach, Mozart
and Wagner adding, even if tardily, to the
conclusion that a nation's songs are plenty
good enough for the best and biggest demon-
stration of any people's art, however high.
NEWSPAPERS AND PIANOS
The big newspapers are beginning to worry
about the pulp supply. The demand for pulp
wood is becoming so great that within twenty-
five years the supply will not be equal to the
demand for newsprint alone. That's a se-
rious matter. It threatens to starve our
grandchildren in the feast of scandal, crime
and sport, which today demands several large
sections every Sunday, to say nothing of six-
teen-page editions every day in the week.
But there are other considerations in con-
nection with the fast decimating forests. If
the pulp paper w T ood is getting scarce, and the
supply of hardwood is almost exhausted,
what are we in time to do for piano cases?
Long ago, when the reed organ called for a
lot of fine walnut, and the walnut and "gum"
trees were giving out down in Indiana, sev-
eral ingenious advance agents of prosperity
experimented in pulp, with a view to produc-
ing a substitute for the figured and plain wal-
nut. It was proposed to produce papier mache
cases. We believe that a few were stamped
out, and they looked all right. Then an east-
ern piano manufacturer tried his hand, also.
But he covered the pulp case with plush, and
presented a gorgeous looking instrument.
But there was something lacking in both
the organ and piano case. They didn't afford
the satisfactory quality of tone, so the critics
decided. The velvet piano case was exhibited
in store windows and it was talked about in
the trade papers. And then it was stored
away. Just where it is no one knows, but if
all the experiments in pianos and other in-
struments could be gathered together, a fine
museum might be created with which any
alert manager might make some money.
When the pulp wood trees disappear, the
newspapers will find something else. They
may economize and improve by cutting out a
lot of the "features" which do not belong to
newspapers, because there are too many spe-
cial publications printing the same "stuff.'*
But, pulp, or no pulp, we will have newspa-
pers, and no walnut, and no mahogany, we
will have pianos. So don't let's worry.
August 16, 1924.
it if there's coal in the cellar. Hot time piano
selling insures cold spell happiness in any
home.
* * *
A real profligate is the man who will buy
a piano on installments and pay spot cash for
a flivver.
* * *
Girls too tired to practice an hour a day on
the piano will practice with a golf club for
three.
30 YEARS AGO IN THE TRADE
From the Files of Presto
August 16, 1894.
Mr. Melville Clark, of the Story & Clark Organ
Co., and Mr. C. H. Wagener, manager of the London
house, were in Berlin a short time ago, visiting the
Story & Clark piano factory, which is located in the
Koenigsburger Strasse.
Mr J. V. Steger has been in southern Wisconsin
this week attending to some business there. Mr.
Wm. H. Bush, of the Bush & Gerts Co., is at Mack-
inac accompanied by Mrs. Bush and daughter. Mr.
P. J. Gildemeester, of Gildemeester & Kroeger, is
now on the road and will probably make a western
trip.
To some firms a fire like the one that destroyed
the London factory of the Story & Clark Organ Co.
would undoubtedly have proved so severe a blow that
operations for some time would have been badly
crippled and possibly their usefulness might have
been forever impaired. Not so with the Story &
Clark Organ Co., however.
Mr. J. B. Trevor, the almost lifetime partner of
the late John Church, and whose remarkable industry
did much in laying the foundation for the present
powerful house of the John Church Co., is at Ham-
inerfest, Norway. When the present corporation was
formed Mr. Trevor retired with a half million. Now
he is seeking to recover some of his health lost in too
close application to business.
20 YEARS AGO THIS WEEK
From Presto August 16, 1904.
Newman Bros, are now making specially designed
pianos for some wealthy people who have given ex-
clusive orders, and they are also busy with certain
styles for the fall trade.
This question of a name for the new product of the
Cable-Nelson Piano Company has been very thor-
oughly considered by the officers of that company.
Mr. Cable was in favor of calling it the "Nelson,"
but Mr. Nelson wanted the name of the company's
president added and his wishes overruled in the mat-
ter. And so the new piano will be the 'Cable-
Nelson."
Poole pianos are keeping steadily in popular favor
and the dealers are constantly widening the sale of
the distinguished Boston piano. The Poole Piano
Co. is one of the progressive industries and the Poole
pianos are of the kind that win success for the
dealers. There is a Peculiar Poole Style and a Par-
ticular Poole Popularity which force people to prefer
Poole pianos.
A correspondent tells us that the straight
Some time ago mention was made in The Presto
the new addition to the factory of the Packard
piano is "coming back." But where has it of
Company in Fort Wayne designed expressly for the
been? We hadn't heard of its being lost, manufacture of grand pianos. The new building at
strayed or stolen. The piano—the dear old the Packard piano factory for the exclusive use of
the grand piano department is now under roof and it
piano we used to play upon for four hours is expected to occupy the building by September 1.
a day, is still with us and it will never leave us. It will give 11,250 square feet of additional floor
space.
* * *
It was hoped that this week the condition of Mr.
Kimball might be reported as greatly improved, but
How many Reproducing Grands were pro- such
is unfortunately not the case. Mr. Kimball is
duced last year? Not just players sold for losing in vitality and there are grave fears of the
He rests comfortably, but does not appear to
Reproducers—but the real thing? One says result.
respond to efforts of his physician to induce a return
ten thousand; another three thousand. And of strength notwithstanding that he eats fairly well.
He is nevertheless the same courageous and cheerful
the last speaker was nearer right.
hearted "Governor," and that is the best symptom in
* * *
his case at the time.
The only possible excuse for an intelligent
family man refusing to consider the purchase
of a piano is that he already has the best
piano he can buy.
*'c
>k
sfc
Keep after that sale until you land it. If
you think you hear the prospect saying No,
don't you believe it.
* * *
It's pretty bad Weather for playing the
piano. But it will never be too cold to play
I. N. RICE'S CONTEMPLATED TRIP.
I. N. Rice, on his farm near Des Plaines, near Chi-
cago, is living the life of a "landed" individual. With
Mrs. Rice he will, however, leave Chicago for the
Pacific Coast for the winter about the first week
in September. He expects to go by the northern
route, along which he has several appointments in
the piano trade. Toward the latter part of Septem-
ber Mr. Rice expects to meet T. Linton Floyd-Jones
of the William P. Haines & Co., who is booked for
a trip to the Pacific Coast on a visit which the lat-
ter gentleman had expected to make last spring, but
was detained by pressure of business in New York.
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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