Presto

Issue: 1925 2013

PRESTO
February 21, 1925.
PLANNING AHEAD
FOR NEXT SUMMER
Wise Dealers, Profiting by the Experiences in
the Past Two Years, Make Preparations
to Give Old Precedent of Dull Sum-
mer Sales a Knock-out Blow.
HOARY IDEAS KILLED
every dealer
knew what
successful
SEEBURG
dealers know
about conduct-
ing and oper-
ating auto-
matic piano
businesses,
every dealer
would be en-
gaged in the
business!
Beliefs That Hot Weather Marked the End of De-
sires to Buy Pianos Completely
Shattered.
When spring is near, summer is not far away,
sounds like a line in a popular song, but it is all right
for a text about music trade activities in the pleasant
days ahead. It is a good text for the music dealer
determining the size of his stock during summer, for
instance, and also the number of salesmen in a season
that should be busy in sales notwithstanding the
hoary precedents of the trade. The music dealer
with a purpose to ignore the precedents and smash
the hoodoo, makes his preparations both as to goods
and the people to sell them and while he is making
plans for spring it may be wise to include plans for
summer. In fact he might make summer a continua-
tion of spring.
There are several considerations that should impel
the music dealer to prepare with assurance for a good
run of business in the summer months. Besides the
pleasure of smashing the ancient precedent there
should be the pride in rolling up a good record of
profitable sales at a time supposedly somnolent in
results. In 1923 during the summer months the vol-
ume of retail business handled throughout the coun-
try broke all previous records. The fact provided a
stimulative thought for dealers in the summer months
last year and the results were very cheering. The
old fallacy of summer dullness was disproved by the
music dealers with spirit.
The Happy Thought.
The sales organizations in the wideawake firms
everywhere kept right on working through the recog-
nized vacation season without a let-up of energy
and with results that fully justified the efforts. The
pepful salesmen proved that the so-called summer
slump was only a state of mind or that if such dull-
ness was a possibility it could be avoided and that
any old precedent can be controlled by earnest work.
The lessons learned in 1923' made a deep impres-
sion on the minds of dealers and when it came time
to prepare for the activities of 1924, they influenced
their actions. A large number of dealers made un-
usual efforts to accomplish more than they did in
1923. Special inducements to salesmen inside and
outside were offered by the dealers and sales depart-
ment heads. The old hoodoo of summer dullness was
ignored, the vagaries of thermometer laughed at,
retail advertising was maintained in a generous way.
In fact, the sales efforts were continued on a more
elaborate scale than usual and the most gratifying
results were brought about.
Significant Facts Learned.
The lessons learned were significant. The well-
organized and directed canvassing forces in the large
cities as well as in the country got excellent results
that well repaid the efforts. Besides the profits there
were the daily proofs that the hottest periods are not
barred to the enthusiastic salesman. And in addition
to the closed sales there were valuable lists of pros-
pects accumulated. These were later followed up to
further build up the sales volume.
Activity in Many Forms.
The activities of some of the energetic music houses
included the establishing of branch stores and agen-
cies to aid as centers of effort in sections somewhat
removed from the main stores. The plan gave a
more concentrated form to the campaign in the sepa-
rate districts and the local advertising was made
more effective.
The experiences of the energetic dealers during the
past two years should prove valuable lessons and in-
centives for the ambitious dealers during the ap-
proaching summer. Now is the time to lay plans
both as to stock and also as to securing the services
of enthusiastic salesmen convinced of the sales possi-
bilities of the summer season. And the dealers who
normally make spirited efforts in the spring should
be easily induced to continue their activities into the
heated term, notwithstanding poor business fears to
prompt a contrary procedure.
THOS. A. EDISON CELEBRATES.
Admitting that lie felt "fine, despite his wife's in-
sistence that he slept six hours a day instead of his
customary four." Thomas A. Edison today celebrated
his seventy-eighth birthday at his winter home at
Fort Myers, Fla., on Wednesday of last week. Ex-
cept for a deluge of congratulations from all over the
world and the giving of his customary birthday in-
terviews, which in recent years have become a na-
tional institution, the day was a quiet one. On his
birthday anniversary Mr. Edison and Henry Ford, his
next door neighbor, took a trip up the Orange River
in a small motor boat.
NEW ST. LOUIS MANAGER.
Theodore W. Maetten has been made sales man-
ager of the Kieselhorst Piano Co., St. Louis, suc-
ceeding E. T. Hammon, who becomes manager of
of the Ampico department. Others on the sales staff
are E. C. Johnston and Frank S. Roeder. A dinner
meeting of the sales organization will be held at the
City Club February 23, where hereafter monthly
meetings will be held in a private dining room.
IMPORTS FOR 1924.
The dutiable imports of musical instruments and
parts, including strings, during December, 1924,
amounted to $327,865. The twelve months' total,
ending December, 1924, shows importations valued at
$4,034,831.
UNTOLD.
"Dad, what do they mean by untold wealth?"
"Means the man hasn't filed a tax statement, son."
BENDING GRAND PIANO RIMS
J. P. SEEBURG
PIANO CO.
CHICAGO
"Leaders in the
Automatic Line "
General Offices: 1510 Dayton St.
Factory 1508-16 Dayton St.
How the shape of a grand piano is produced is
somewhat of a mystery to the general public, and
even dealers express surprise at the effectiveness of
the processes employed to effect the piano manufac-
turer's purpose. Visitors to the grand rim bending
department of the Baldwin Piano Co., Cincinnati, al-
ways say that they never have been able to imagine
how the shape of the grand piano is produced. The
mystery is easily understood when the workmen are
seen to bend the multiple layers of wood around the
sturdy forms. The operation is shown in the accom-
panying picture.
With powerful clamps operated by long levers the
plywood rim is held firmly till the glue between the
sheets of wood has set. The resulting rim is then
ready for the cabinet makers, a structure with con-
tinuous grain around the instrument, with all the
technical advantages of the built-up beam.
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
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.
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., 417 South
Dearborn Street, Chicago, III.
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1925.
UNCOMMON CASES
Why not take a lesson from the French
piano manufacturers? Of course no one will
presume to say that there is anything over
there that suggests a betterment over our
American pianos in tone or construction. But
in the matter of case designs and ornamenta-
tion, even plain elegance, the pianos of France
sometimes present something different. And
there are indications that something different
is what the trade of this country needs and
the piano public is waiting for—if there really
is any waiting.
For many years past the notion of uni-
formity, standardization, or similitude^ has
taken hold of the American piano industries.
There are many makes of pianos, and a num-
ber of fine standard case designs. But there
is a sameness that can not help but strike
the interested visitor to any large piano ware-
room. There does not seem to have been
much special effort at beauty of effect in any
of the pianos of splendid tonal results in a
good many years. Perhaps the manufactur-
ers have become so accustomed to their sub-
stantial and severely plain cases that nothing
else is at all desirable.
How would it do if a few of the piano in-
dustries were to make a specialty of unusual
case designs—of special decorative features,
or some departure from the standardized
cases? In France the leading piano manufac-
turers produce cases of marvelous beauty,
and often artistically dainty in minor details.
Such beauty of case ornamentation must
have its effect upon the more "exclusive"
class of buyers. It must draw the line be-
tween the commonplace, or even the "stand-
ard," and the unique or rare designs by which
the drawing room has an added charm to the
eye as well as the ear.
At intervals, in the larger piano ware-
rooms, it is possible to see an instrument of
peculiar beauty and novelty of case design
and decoration. Would it help trade if more
of that kind of thing were on display?
THE FIRST PIANO
Mr. A. M. Lansford, of Charlotte, N. C,
writes to Presto as follows, on a subject which
has been supposed to belong with the closed
discussions:
Chas. Goodrich Piano Co., Emporia, Va., report a
find that seems to dispute the common impression
that pianos are only about two centuries old. Mr.
Goodrich recently traded in a beautiful, five-octave
square piano bearing the date of 1579 in two places.
It has one pedal, but no plate. It has two unison
treble and single, wrapped bass strings. The solid,
inlaid mahogany of which it is made, is exceptionally
pretty and perfectly preserved. The fall board is in-
scribed as follows: "Astor & Co., Crownhill, Lon-
don.". Mr. Goodrich says the family from whom he
got the old relic traced its ownership back 280 years.
If someone can tell when Astor & Co. were in ex-
istence, we might thereby verify dates on piano.
Evidently there must be some mistake
about the date which appears on the old piano
traded in by Mr. Goodrich. There were
no pianos made as long ago as 1579, which
was the period following the finest develop-
ment of the harpsichord. It is no longer
disputed that Cristofori, of Padua, devised the
first piano action, from which has developed
the almost perfect mechanism of today—about
1709.
There was an Astor piano industry in Lon-
don in the middle of the seventeenth century,
and it was a son of the founder of that indus-
try that has credit of starting the piano busi-
ness in the United States. The son was John
Jacob Astor who, in about the year 1780,
opened a fur store in New York and installed
there several of the Astor instruments which
he had brought over with him.
Probably the figures to which Mr. Lans-
ford refers, as appearing on the old piano
traded in by Dealer Goodrich, were placed
there by tuners or others for some other pur-
pose than to settle the time of the instru-
ment's creation. In any event, it is an inter-
esting relic of the times past, and should be
reserved as such, the more because it retains
some of its original beauty of tone and ap-
pearance.
Can't keep a good man out of the piano game
after he has been in it all his life. Mr. Geo. P.
Bent traveled over the world selling Crown
pianos, repeated it for the Price & Teeple
pianos; then he wrote a book, and now he will
go back to selling pianos in the Pacific Coast
country.
The Price & Teeple is again the
lucky piano.
* * *
It isn't too soon to talk about the big music
trade convention set for next June, with head-
quarters at the Drake Hotel, Chicago. There
will be displays, and already the promise is of
the most enthusiastic gathering in the history
of the trade.
We do not recall having read anything
more reasonable, or more fraught with good
sense than Mr. A. G. Gulbransen's admonition
to quit fluttering about inconsequentials and
sell more playerpianos. Practical advice well
put.
A CRAWFORD EDITORIAL
[Reprinted from Presto of Feb. 7 by request.]
There are few, except among the very youngest
recruits in the piano trade and industry, who do not
know Mr. Henry W. Crawford, long prominent as
head of the old Smith & Nixon Piano Co., of Cin-
cinnati. Mr. Crawford has not been active during the
past four years because of severe illness. But his
mind is as vigorous as ever, and Presto takes the
liberty to make use here of a private letter, by the
former yery energetic piano manufacturer and sales-
man. The letter, from which the following is taken,
was written three years ago and is the more interest-
February 21, 1925.
ing and valuable because it was addressed by Mr.
Crawford to his son at Harvard college:
Fame and fortune are the ambitions of life, but not
its object. So prepare that you may be dependable
and do well that which you undertake to do.
Lack of thoroughness is the great defect of the
human race. Superficiality is the father of ignorance.
Ignorance is the father of fear. Fear makes slaves
of men and makes despotism possible. Aim to ren-
der such service as to make the community happier
and better because you have lived in it. In the lan-
guage of Lincoln's mother, "Be honest and be kind."
"Know thyself and then you will know God."
Worry not, nor concern yourself about going to
heaven, or about the heaven after death. Concern
yourself with helping to make this place, here on
earth, a heaven and a decent place in which to live,
both for yourself and for others.
We are inclined to think that the letter, from a
piano man who has put a lifetime of energy into the
business, and who for years was a dominating char-
acter in the industry, is good enough to cause other
piano men a sense of pride. It is an" admonitory ad-
dress of a kind to be of great value to any young
man about to start out in the world, whether in the
piano business or any other. And in its eloquence
we believe that it has so few equals that we are glad
to adopt it as an editorial.
30 YEARS AGO IN THE TRADE
From the Files of Presto
(February 21, 1895.)
Music-Trade exhibitions are quite common in Eng-
land. Strange that we do not have them in America,
also. Here the result would be more satisfactory
from a commercial standpoint, and in the matter of
public interest we believe they could be made to pay
the management.
Decker & Son, 971-975 East One Hundred and
Thirty-fifth street, New York City, favor us with
their Piano Catalogue, recently issued. The catalogue
is printed on superior paper and tastefully bound in
an embossed enamelled cover, with the name of the
firm stamped in red relief. Judging by the testimonials
at the end of the book convinces one that the Decker
& Son piano is making a great record.
At the recent trade banquet Mr. A. H. Reed said
he expected some day to see the cheap piano accepted
in this country just as it is in Europe, implying
that the trade across the water regarded the "stump
boxes" with complacent unconcern. The question of
the cheap piano is stirring the old-world trade just
as in this country. And over there, as here, many
refuse to believe that pianos can be profitably made
for the prices asked for the cheaper grades or to
admit they have "come to stay."
The Old Square Piano.
How dear to my heart was the old square piano
That stood in the parlor when I was a boy,
With its wide-spreading case, it was built on a plan, O,
That filled all the neighbors with ecstatic joy.
How it tinkled and roared, resounded and rattled,
When mother sat down to its ivory keys;
Yet ah, how I hated to practice, and battled
To jangle and bang on them just as I pleased.
Ah, the old square piano, its tone was so tinney,
Its thin little legs were so round and so spare;
Its top so expansive, whatever was wanted
We looked on the piano and sure found it there.
20 YEARS AGO THIS WEEK
(From Presto February 23, 1905.)
The cross of the Legion of Honor lately conferred
on Charles H. Steinway, president of Steinway &
Sons, by the French government, has just been trans-
mitted to him bv the French consul-general in New
York.
The tribute to the late W. W. Kimball, which
appears elsewhere this week, was written by Mr.
Alfred Dolge for American Industries. It is a splen-
did contribution by one captain of industry to the
memory of another.
The W. B. Brinkerhoff Piano Company is having
a fine business; in fact, is snowed under with orders.
Everything is moving along nicely, and their new
addition was finished Monday, and they hope to be
able to use this addition by the first of March, the
weather permitting.
When the changes now in progress at the ware-
rooms of J. Bauer & Co., on Wabash avenue, Chi-
cago, shall be completed they will be as handsome as
any in this country. The ground floor will be trans-
formed into a series of piano parlors, and the offices
will be made as elaborate and convenient as the de-
mands of the splendid establishment suggest.
Merely to say something really startling someone
has started the rumor that several of the old-time
eastern piano industries will henceforth confine their
energies to the production of grands. Such a proced-
ure on the part of certain of the distinguished piano
manufacturers would precipitate a panic in the trade.
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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