Presto

Issue: 1924 1995

October 18, 1924.
PRESTO
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.
MANUFACTURERS' DISPLAY
AT ILLINOIS PRODUCT SHOW
Pianos, Radio, Phonographs and Musical Mer-
chandise Seen in Attractive Booths at
633 Lake Shore, Chicago.
The Illinois Products Show, which opened Octo-
ber 9th, and which is being held at the American
Furniture Mart Building, 633 Lake Shore Drive, Chi-
cago, is marked with attractive exhibits, depicting
the enormous output of the state of Illinois in natural
resources, farming and manufactured products.
In the latter is listed the music industry, which
plays a part of no little importance at the big show.
Manufacturers of musical instruments in Chicago and
other Illinois cities and towns have their products on
display in beautifully decorated booths that have at-
tracted much attention from the throngs that visit
the show daily.
The largest booth is that of a number of Chicago
manufacturers who have combined their efforts and
space in one big display of harps, violins, banjos,
cornets, saxophones, drums and other small mer-
chandise.
In this booth the Slingerland Mfg. Co., 1815
Orchard street, is showing two fine banjos of the
May Bell style. This particular product of the Chi-
cago firm is indorsed by the leading musicians of the
country as an unusual instrument of fine musical
qualities. Lyon & Healy is showing the Washburn
line of stringed instrument, and also a large harp
which is known the country over for its tonal quality.
Other manufacturers who have exhibits in the large
booth are Geib & Schaefer Co., Harmony Mfg. Co.,
Regal Mfg. Co., Walter M. Gotsch and Ludwig &
Ludwig Co.
In a section of the hall is a large space allotted to
the products of DeKalb, 111., and the DeKalb Piano
Co. is demonstrating an Apollo reproducing grand.
Another piano shown is a playerpiano by the E. P.
Johnson Piano Co., Elgin, 111. The player is a style
O, P. C. Weaver instrument.
A fine radio booth is that of the Howard Radio
Mfg. Co., of Chicago, which concern is demonstrating
several models, including a four-tube neutrodyne.
NEW INCORPORATIONS
IN MUSIC GOODS TRADE
New and Old Concerns Secure Charters in Various
Places.
The Pendleton Music House, Inc., Pendleton, Ore.;
increase of capital stock from $15,000 to $30,000.
The R. Mapelli Music Co., Denver, Cala.; $10,000
capital. Joseph, Esther and Ambrose Mapelli, all
of Denver.
Elite Music Publishing Co., New York City; $100,-
000; J. Bruckner, G. P. and S. V. Heimberger.
Keystone Radio Service, New York City; $10,000;
E. Schneider, H. Jeffery, E. M. Foley. Attorneys,
A. & H. Bloch, 99 Nassau street.
W. B. Sales Co., New York City; radio apparatus;
$7,000; O. Wechsler, D. Bloch. Attorney, M.
Schwebel, Woolworth Building.
Vim Radio Corp., New York City; $50,000"; E.
Klinger, G. Swift. Attorney, D. G. McConnell, 97
Warren street.
E. Kunzel & Co.; E. Kunzel, E. B. Rausner and
J. E. Vorbach; the capitalization is $5,000.
The C. H. Stephenson Music Co., Raleigh, N. C.;
$25,000; Mrs. T. J. Bowles and others.
The Bosstone Co., Portland, Ore.; $50,000; to man-
ufacture and deal in musical instruments; Herbert J.
OPEN DOORS IN NEW
PIANO SELLING VENTURES
street. The building is being remodeled. The firm
conducts a large music department under the direc-
tion of C. L. Wainwright.
The Jones Store Co., Kansas City, Mo., is remodel-
ing the third floor of its Twelfth and Main street
building and will move the music department into this
part of the store.
PERSONAL ACTIVITIES OF
CONTINENTAL PIANO CO.
Representatives from the Headquarters to
•Branches at Other Points.
Visit
A. C. Clausen, manager of the sales promotion de-
partment of the Henry F. Miller Stores Co., who
returned to Boston after a visit to the company's
stores in Detroit and Chicago, left Saturday for a
few days' visit at the company's Kansas City Store.
George H. Hill, production manager of the Conti-
nental Piano Company, left Boston last week to re-
turn to the western factories.
John E. Carter, manager of the Boston store of
the Henry F. Miller Stores Co., was in New York
over the week end.
Roger S. Brown, of the Continental Piano Co., has
returned to the Boston offices after an extensive trip
through the West.
DETROIT HAS NEW BRANCH
OF THE JOHN CHURCH CO.
Old Cincinnati House Invades Automobile City and
Will Carry Fine Line There.
Detroit is not only the big town of the motor in-
dustry, but one of the most fully supplied with live
piano houses. And a new one has just opened there.
The John Church Company, of Cincinnati and Chi-
cago, has entered the lists with a good line not only
of the products of the factory at Dayton, Ky., but
also other saleable instruments. A carload of pianos
from the Nordlund industry, in Chicago, went for-
ward to the Detroit store this week.
The new Detroit branch of The John Church Co.
is located at 154 Bagley avenue.
FLOREY BROS. GRANDS.
It is significant that the small grands of Florey
Bros., of Washington, N. J., are steadily finding their
way into dependable piano stores throughout the
middle-west. The statement that the New Jersey
industry is the "pioneer" in exclusive grand manufac-
ture has interested a good many dealers who like to
handle fine instruments that have not been in any
degree 'shopped." It has helped the demand for the
Florey Bros, instruments. And they are pianos that
sustain all that their manufacturers claim for them.
LIVELY BUFFALO DEALER.
Kappel Bros., Buffalo, N. Y., is one of the lively
stores which show the result of energetic methods
of effecting piano sales.
Martin Kappel, the pro-
prietor, is believer in the direct appeal to the prospect,
and an able corps of salesmen share in his belief. A
good business in Gulbransen Registering pianos is re-
ported by Mr. Kappel.
BUSY PHILADELPHIA FIRM.
The Ilenton-Knecht Co., Philadelphia, Pa., music
dealer, which moved recently to new and larger quar-
ters at 110 South Seventh street, reports an excellent
business in the new location. This firm was located
at 1734 Market street for many years, but the steady
increase in its volume of business has made neces-
sary the taking over of the entire four-story building
and basement at the new address. The members of
the firm are H. Benner Henton and Albert A. Knecht.
INAUGURATED LIVELY BUSINESS.
Opportunity Seen and Grasped by Vigorous Ones
in the Piano Selling Field.
The Crawford Milwaukee Music Shop was opened
recently at 3315 Milwaukee avenue, Chicago.
Frank E. Felt, who conducts a jewelry and music
business in Newcastle, Ind., has moved to new quar-
ters in the Heller Building, Newcastle.
Seth Laraway, music merchant of Eugene, Ore.,
has moved into his new building at 968 Willamette
street, Eugene.
Gibson Bros., music merchants, will open a branch
in Middlesboro, Ky.
The Martin Music Co. recently opened a store in
Inglewood, Cal.
The Schaeffer Music Co., Milwaukee, will soon
move to Third and Center streets.
The Music Shop has been opened at 2014 College
street, Cedar Falls, Iowa.
The Armstrong Furniture Co., Memphis, is pre-
paring to move to its own home at 66 North Main
The lively business inaugurated at the formal open-
ing recently of the Finley Music Co., Salem, O., con-
tinues. The Finley Music Co. is successor to the
Perkins Music Co., formerly operated by R. O.
Perkins on Main street. Mr. Finley was formerly
affiliated with the Salem Hardware Co. and resigned
to devote all his time to the music store. The new
location of the Finley Music Co. is 13 Broadway.
REPRODUCING PIANOS IN FLORIDA.
A season of active featuring of reproducing pianos
is having a good effect in the Orlando, Fla., branch
of the S. Ernest Philpitt & Son Music Store. Mar-
shall Philpitt, the new manager who succeeded Ross
B. Steele, is an enthusiast in the promotion of the
instrument.
The Arkadelphia Music Co., Arkadelphia, Ark., has
purchased the D. C. Richards Music Co., of Hot
Springs, one of the oldest music houses in Arkansas.
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
Presto
T H E AMERICAN MUSIC TRADE WEEKLY.
Published Every Saturday at 417 South Dearborn
Street, Chicago, Illinois.
C. A. D A N I E L L and F R A N K D. ABBOTT -
Editors
Telephones. Local and Long Distance, Harrison 234
Private Phones to all Departments. Cable Address (Com-
mercial Cable Co.'s Cede), " P R E S T O , " Chicago.
Kntered as second-class matter Jan. 29, 189G, at the
I'osi 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. Ra,tes for advertising on
application.
best to serve as a center to be surrounded by
other and younger instruments. Later the
Chickering capitulated and the McPhail con-
tinued along its independent way.
The Chickering is old enough without any
exaggeration. Its career has been remark-
able in many ways. In a full century's con-
tinuous existence it has run upon financial
shoals but once. The Chickerings themselves
—all now passed away—were of the highest
type of Americans, and not long before his
death Mr. C. Frank Chickering is known to
have told an importunate creditor that in all
the years since his house was established it
had never been sued for debt, nor had it until
then even so much as been threatened with
suit.
So that the old piano which took prominent
part in the opening of New York's latest
music temple has a many-sided significance.
It symbolizes the long-lived character of the
piano business, as well as the vitality of the
industry and instrument itself. Perhaps, still
r- „_,. „-„,,„ q t r\rr- n every Thursday. News mat-
ter shorl 1 be in not later than eleven o'clock on the more, it proved that with all the changes and
sarm day A '.vertiring copy should be in hand before
TifsJay five p. m., to insure preferred position. Full improvements which have marked the piano's
p?pe d srlay copy fhcu'd be in hand by Monday noon development during a hundred years, the prin-
prfe.ii-g r-uHicrt'cn day Want advs. frr current
/ eek to n~ure classification, must not be later than ciples of its construction remain practically
\» ~^~ crt-f n^rn.
untouched and the character of its manufac-
Address all communicRtions for the editorial or business
ture as good at the beginning as it is today.
departments to PRESTO PUBLISHING CO., 417 South
Items cf news and other matter are solicited and if
r{ icre-a interest to the : mus'c trade will be paid for
at space rates. Usually p ano merchants or salesmen
in the smaller cites ere the best occasional corre-
spondents, and their assistance is invited.
Dearborn Street, Chicago, III.
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1924.
THE "FIRST" PIANO
The opening of New York's new Chicker-
ing Hall, on 57th street, was one of last
week's events. Architecturally, as in other re-
spects, the new building' bears not the least
resemblance to the Checkering Hall which
long ago adorned Fifth Avenue at Seventeenth
Street.
Naturally the inauguration of the new piano
structure prompted some good newspaper
advertising, with the century-old Boston in-
dustry as the centerpiece. Equally natural,
perhaps, that the enthusiasm of the publicity
department led to some exaggeration. For
instance, the story of the opening, as printed,
said that the "First piano made in America"
took part in the baptism of the new building.
It is always easy to start history, of any
kind, on a detour from the truth. The old
instrument displayed in the new Chickering
Hall is not the first piano made in this country.
Not by a good many. And, lest all piano his-
tory become distorted for future generations,
it may be well to make the correction now,
Not even the most enthusiastic Chickering
admirer would say that the Boston industry
had any existence back of 1823. When Cap-
tain Mackay took an interest in- the struggle
of Jonas Chickering to establish a piano indus-
try, the first instrument bearing the name
appeared. No doubt it is the one now exhibit-
ed in New York. But nearly a quarter century
before that instrument was made, pianos had
been built in a little shop in Milton, Mass.
Benjamin Crehove was busily at work, as the
forerunner of his piano, years before Jonas
Chickering moved from New Hampshire to
Boston. And a number of others had estab-
lished themselves as piano makers in other
places, notably Philadelphia.
It is interesting, in this connection, to re-
member that when Mr. George Foster had
perfected his plan of a great combination of
piano industries be started at Boston and the
Chickering. Repulsed at first, he approached
the owners of the McPhail piano, as the next
THE KILLER
A newspaper feature writer says that the
automobile has "killed many a piano sale"
because it affords instantaneous enjoyment for
the whole family, whereas the musical instru-
ment can be really entertaining only "after
long and often painful study." But up to this
time no space-writer, or automobile booster
has contrasted the number of piano sales
"killed" with the number of possible piano
buyers killed by his motor car.
But even then this subject has only a very
superficial and inadequate consideration. From
the first the contrasting of the piano and the
motor car has had but little sense or reason.
They are no more alike than the workshop
and the school, the boiler factory and the
university, or the dish pan and the diamond.
All are essentials to human comfort and
decency. But in such contrasts the real basis
of the piano's worth, its best mission and its
place in life, are overlooked. Even the piano
'dealers and the salesmen have seemingly for-
gotten that the piano is an important part of
the educational equipment. In times past it
was the custom to talk about the close rela-
tionship of music and mathematics. Of the
immeasurable help of piano' playing in the
general education of youth. Of the refining
influences of the piano in home life.
And these points are as true today as ever
they were. Even more so, for the age is more
reckless of the more refined side of existence,
and more heedless even of life itself. The
rapid multiplicity of the great engines that
roar through the city streets has lessened re-
gard for personal safety, and both youth and
old age contribute about evenly to the toll
exacted by the modern delight that kills
piano sales.
Naturally the question arises: Wouldn't it
be a good idea if piano salesmen returned
to the argument in favor of the piano as an
adjunct to education and refinement? It must
seem that the best influences accorded to
mankind are better, as arguments, than any
other arguments that go to prove that by
killing—whether of piano sales or little chil-
October 18, 1924.
dren—the world is made to advance by adding
to the delights of the killers.
* * *
A good letter will stimulate the desire for a
musical instrument. A poorly worded, badly
typed letter will have the opposite effect.
* * :|:
In many piano stores the old "prospect"
book has been accumulating dust through mis-
use. Now is the time to blow away the dust
and copy the names and get out after the
doubtful fellow citizens who want something
vital to their happiness and don't seem to know
it.
*
*
*
The Department of Commerce at Washing-
ton is trying to make manufacturers realize
that the production of seldom-used varieties
of "everyday commodities" represents waste.
The suggestion is not at all novel in the piano
industry, although there are still too many
styles turned out by some of the manufac-
turers.
•\-
*
+
In Indianapolis one retailer advertised
grands for $350, and a competitor advertised
"a better grand" for $675. The latter sold
more than the other one. How? He adver-
tised a few "damaged in transit grands" for
$210.'' There were two of them in the store.
Neither would make a sound. "No," said the
salesman, "we can't put them into condition.
We pell them just as they are, and we really
don't know whether the internal mechanism is
damaged or not. But"—with the usual sigh
of relief—"over here are our better grands."
And, as usual, the "better grands" win the
day.
30 YEARS AGO IN THE TRADE
From the Files of Presto
(October 18, 1894.)
Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Kimball are expected to
arrive in Chicago to-day (Thursday).
Mr. G. W. Tewkesbury, treasurer of the Chicago
Cottage Organ Co., will probably leave for Europe
in November.
One of the Lyon & Hcaly harps exhibited at the
Antwerp Exposition was sold by Mr. James E.
Healy to the harpist of the Court of Saxony.
One of the most glorious combinations of the
piano maker's art and the artist's brush, is the hand-
painted baby grand piano now on exhibition in the
warerooms of Steinway & Sons.
Considering that we are as yet only in the "vesti-
bule of winter," and the opening of the trade revival,
the enormous demand for high grade pianos is very
significant. The American factories alone of the
S einway
piano shipped 117 instruments last week,
and o ( these forty-four were grands.
20 YEARS AGO THIS WEEK
(From Presto, October 20, 1904.)
W. W. Kimball's condition has been reported dur-
ing the last week as "just the same." Which means
that the distingu shed piano manufacturer's health is
no better thru it was last week.
Bernard Kroeger celebrated his eighty-fifth birth-
day on Friday of last week. He ce'ebrated it as he
has the majority of his birthdays—in a piano factory.
Of course it was the Kroeger factory and the activ-
ity of this octogenarian piano maker would put to
shame many men of an age sufficiently tender to
qualify them as his grandchildren.
The Strich & Zeidler Diminutive Grand is taking
very well in the territory through which Mr. Strich
has been traveling, as well as in all other places
where it is known. "This Diminutive Grand is a
winner," is the way Mr. Strich expressed himself
concerning the piano in question while talking to a
representative of Presto.
Of the thirty year, and longer, associates, who still
re-nain with Mr. P. J. Healy are Robert Gregory,
C. N. Post and several others. Mr. Jefferson came
in a little later, as did Messrs. Byrne and Bowers.
Chas. Bobzin, now traveler for the house, was also
with Mr. Healy in the olden days. But most of even
the "old heads" of the house today have joined since
the old time of the music hall music store at Wash-
ington and Clark streets.
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/

Download Page 7: PDF File | Image

Download Page 8 PDF File | Image

Future scanning projects are planned by the International Arcade Museum Library (IAML).

Pro Tip: You can flip pages on the issue easily by using the left and right arrow keys on your keyboard.