Presto

Issue: 1925 2025

May 16, 1925.
PRESTO
GOLF TOURNAMENT
FOR CONVENTION
EEBURG
Annual Sporting Event Open to Everyone
Connected with the Music Industry to Be
Held on Fine Courses of Olympia
Fields Country Club, Chicago.
ment scheduled for this course later in the present
year.
Accommodations Ample.
A new clubhouse completed last year at a cost of
$875,000 is the largest private golf clubhouse in the
world and one of the most beautiful. It contains its
own ice-making plant, its own laundry and has a
main floor men's locker room with 1,500 steel lockers
GET YOUR ENTRIES IN
TYLE"L"
The KEY to
OSITIVE
ROFITS
MANUFACTURED ONLY BY
J. P. Seeburg
Piano Co.
"Leaders in the
Automatic Field"
1510 Dayton St.
Chicago
Address Department "E"
Reasons for Urgent Advice Made Plain in Instruc-
tions of Kenneth W. Curtis, Herewith
Printed in Full.
The Music Industries Convention Golf Tournament
in connection with the gathering of the trade this
year will be held Friday, June 12, at Olympia Fields
Country Club, Chicago. The tournament is open to
everyone connected with the music industry, music
dealers, retail salesmen, phonograph men, small goods
men, manufacturers, traveling men and supply men.
This event must not be confused with the tourna-
ment of the National Piano Golf Association, which
is an organization with a limited membership. The
Music Industries Convention tournament is open to
all in the music industry whether members of asso-
ciations or not.
The Expense Item.
Players participating in the Music Industries Con-
vention Golf Tournament will pay an entrance fee of
$10. This entrance fee covers all the player's tourna-
ment expenses, with the exception of caddie fees, and
includes transportation to and from the club,
luncheon and dinner. Each player will pay his own
caddie in cash at the completion of play.
Competition in the morning will be nine holes
medal play, handicaps to apply. Players will go off
in flights of four each, and there will be first and
second prizes for the low net scores in each foresome.
Afternoon Competition.
Competition in the afternoon will be eighteen holes
match play. There will be first and se.ond prizes for
the winners of each nine holes in the afternoon play.
In addition prizes will be given for first and second
low gross in the afternoon as well as for first and
second low net.
Entries along with check for $10 should be sent to
Kenneth W. Curtis, Kimball Building. Chicago. Ac-
companying each entry should be the name and ad-
dress of Ihe player, his club handicap if h tc a golf club, his five best scores for 1924, whether
or not he belongs to a golf club, and the address to
which he wishes his transportation and tournament
tickets sent. If he fails to obtain his tournament
tickets through the mail he can get them at the in-
formation desk in the lobby of the Drake Hotel.
Transportation Facts.
Transportation tickets will be accepted only on
Illinois Central suburban trains leaving the station at
Randolph street and Michigan boulevard at the fol-
lowing hours:
9 a. m., 11:22 a. m. and 12:44 p. m.
Trains leave Olympia Fields station at 5:46 p. m.,
9:20 p. m. and 10:20 p. m. This applies only to the
day of the tournament.
Players are urged to get their entries in as early
as possible in order to expedite arrangements for
caddies and meals at the club. A certain number of
last-minute entries can be accepted at the information
desk at the Drake Hotel.
Players should allow 15 minutes by taxicab from
the Drake Hotel to the Illinois Central suburban sta-
tion at Randolph and Michigan. Further information
can be secured from Kenneth W. Curtis, Kimball
Building, Chicago.
Location of Tournament.
The following are interesting facts about the Olym-
pia Fields Country Club, where the convention Golf
Tournament will be held:
The club is the largest private golf club in the
world. The property owned by the club outright
consists of 690 acres of rolling wooded land, more
than a full section a mile square twenty-five miles
south of Chicago's loop.
There are four championship eighteen hole courses
on the property. More than half the fairways of
the seventy-two holes are fringed on one or both
sides with fine growths of natural timber. A stream
of running water crosses twenty-three fairways on
the four courses. The fourth course at Olympia
Fields is said to be one of the wonder golf courses
of the United States. It is 6,500 yards in length with
a par of seventy-two. The Professional Golf Asso-
ciation of the United States has its national tourna-
OLYMPIA FIELDS CLUB.
and two shower rooms with a total of fifty shower
baths. The membership in the club numbers 1,000
resident and a few non-resident.
The main line of the Illinois Central Railroad bi-
sects a corner of the club's property and the club has
a private railroad station within three hundred yards
of the clubhouse. Illinois Central suburban trains are
run between Chicago's downtown lake front and the
Olympia Fields station nearly every hour during the
day.
M. SCHULZ COMPANYS
GAIN OVER LAST YEAR
Dealers, Everywhere, Accorded Fine Trade for
M. Schulz Co.'s Line, Place Liberal Orders
for Pianos and Players.
The trend of the business done by the M. Schulz
Co., 711 Milwaukee avenue, Chicago, during the
spring months, has been on the upward grade, and
is indicative of a growing demand for the extensive
M. Schulz line.
Liberal orders accompanied with cheering reports
of better business are constantly arriving at the M.
Schulz Co.'s headquarters. Repeated requirements
by wire and mail has kept the entire factory operat-
ing at the production limit.
The class of business done by M. Schulz dealers
shows a demand for instruments of the higher grade
and has prompted a large number of them to concen-
trate their efforts in pushing the M. Schulz line. In
catering to a high class trade the M. Schulz instru-
ment is a fitting requirement in the warerooms of
dealers who value this class of trade above all others.
At the corresponding period last year, business with
the M. Schulz Company was considered good by
officials of that firm. A survey of business done this
year shows an increase of over 25 per cent.
STARR REMOVAL DAY
WAS ALSO SALES DAY
Manager Hunt of Chicago House Reports that Not a
Single Sale Missed During Kemoval.
The Starr Chicago Co. is now settled comfortably
in its new quarters at 234 S. Wabash avenue, and
Manager Hunt reports that there has been no notice-
able change in the steady trade accorded it at the old
location, 430 South Wabash.
"The removal was accomplished in a short time
and customers looked us up and became familiar
with our new place of business without losing any
time. We have not noticed any drop in our record
sales during our move," said Mr. Hunt, last week.
Construction of a four-story reinforced concrete
building, to cost $125,000, was started April 15 at 816-
818 Nicollet avenue, Minneapolis, Minn., for Foster
& Waldo, dealers in musical instruments.
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/
May 16, 1925.
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-
mercial Cable Co.'s Code), "PRESTO," Chicago.
Entered as second-class matter Jan. 2!», 1896, at the
Post Office, Chicago, Illinois, under Act of March 3, 1879.
Subscription, $2 a year; 6 months, $1; Foreign, f4.
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
d e p a r t m e n t s to PRESTO P U B L I S H I N G
Dearborn Street, Chicago, III.
CO., 417 South
SATURDAY MAY 16, 1925.
IN THREE WEEKS
Only three weeks remain before the clans
of music will begin to head for Chicago and
the Silver Anniversary Convention. Usually
the silver anniversary has reference to the
twenty-fifth year, but evidently the pleasing
designation was overlooked when the gather-
ing of two years ago took place at the Drake,
in Chicago. And two years, more or less, can
make no difference anyway. Under any other
name the convention which will open Monday,
June 8th, Avill be one of the largest, if not
actually the largest, in the history of the
music industry and trade.
There are many who will attend who can
recall the first of the present series of meet-
ing at Manhattan Beach. A number of the
men who took prominent part in that gath-
ering will be present next month. And there
are a few who can remember the first of all
the meetings of piano men for the purpose of
organization for the common good of the piano
industry. That meeting took place in old
Steinway Hall, New York, away back in 1875.
Its purpose was not identical with that of the
later conventions, for it was called as a mat-
ter of self-protection by the piano manufac-
turers of New York City.
The occasion which prompted the first piano
association was a factory workers' strike
which threatened to tie up all of the New
York piano industries. The late Mr. William
Steinway made the suggestion and, as a re-
sult of the meeting, the original piano manu-
facturers' association was formed. It was at
first a local affair, but it was the parent sug-
gestion from w r hich the later associations have
been born. And, incidentally, as one of the
results of that first piano makers' meeting,
the first American music trade paper was
issued.
Dealers who expect to attend the forth-
coming convention in Chicago, should be get-
ting ready so that the store—in very many
cases—may not suffer from the absence of
the "boss." Prospects should be so lined up
that no sales may escape. And this is a mat-
ter of vastly more importance than the aver-
age layman can comprehend. Only a man who
has conducted a music store in a small city or
almost any city, for that matter, aside from
the biggest—can fully understand what it
means to have competition in piano selling and
find that, because of some lapse of his own or
his salesman, a prospect has been induced to
buy the "wrong" instrument at the "wrong"
store.
Anyway, the June convention is to be a big
one. There can't be too many dealers present.
And all who do come will be glad of it for a
long time after the last meeting ends during
the week of June 8th.
MORE TUNERS NEEDED
There is a call for piano tuners which seems
to exceed the supply. It is not uncommon to find
such calls in Presto's classified adv. columns, and
within a week one progressive piano dealer,
not far from Chicago, has written to this trade
paper asking if it wouldn't be well to suggest,
editorially, that more young men enter the
remunerative and always pleasant vocation.
Judging by appearances, there is nowhere a
more cheerful or satisfied lot of workers than
the professional harmonizers. In no other
pursuit is the work done in the parlors of the
most intelligent class of home lovers. And
nowhere else is it possible to become equipped
for a life work in so short a time or with so
large an equation of general information.
More than all, nowhere else, or at least in few
other lines of work, is it possible to do more
good or add more to the happiness of the
whole people without adding in the least de-
gree to the pain of any.
There are several well-appointed and com-
petently equipped piano tuning schools in this
country. One of them has recently taken pos-
session of an entirely new building in one of
the prettiest of the middle-west towns, where
there is also located a progressive piano indus-
try. We refer to the Polk College of Piano
Tuning of La Porte, Indiana. For nearly
fifty years that institution has been turning
out tuners from its former location at Val-
paraiso, Ind., in which city it was founded by
the late C. C. Polk.
In its new location the Polk College of
Piano Tuning, headed by Mr. Willard R.
Powell, an acknowledged expert, has every
possible convenience and advanced equipment
for teaching the art of putting pianos in con-
dition to fulfill their function in the home life.
Why there should be a dearth of competent
tuners is something of a mystery. Young
men in piano stores should see to it that the
void is quickly filled.
HELPFUL ADVERTISING
Now and then— not too often—you will
find some piano house doing the kind of ad-
vertising that ,casts its beams abroad and
helps wherever its rays may hit. One of the
retail houses of that kind is the Griffith Piano
Co., of Newark, N. J. And a recent advertise-
ment of the Newark house will serve to prove
it. Here is an extract, which appeared under
the head "What measure should you apply
to a work of art?"
A piano is a work of art and should be purchased as
you would select a precious stone, famous porcelain or
rare piece of furniture. In such matters you must have
implicit confidence in the merchant whose shop you
visit or you cannot enjoy choosing what your heart de-
sires. When the very name of the institution bespeaks
the highest attainments in expert knowledge and service
to the community then your selection from among 1 its
carefully gathered wares is a long-to-be-remembered
day in your diary of life's happiest moments. Though
our warerooms are host to many visitors each day, as-
sisting you in reaching a decision never becomes trite to
us. There are more famous makes of pianos to be seen
here, side by side, than anywhere else in the entire
Metropolitan District.
There is serious truth in what is said in that adver-
tisement. It is the kind of statement that helps to lift
the average "prospect'' above the shop window signs,
and dispels the "bait" sort of thing. In times gone
by there was an edge of art in every piano sale. The
thought of "how cheap" had not yet overshadowed
the finer thought of a means for making music in the
home. The matter of price had not become the domin-
ating thought when the idea of a piano came to mind.
The statement of the Newark house, that "a piano
is a work of art," is one that should be true. But it
isn't—not always, by any means. The word "piano"
has lost its original meaning. The sentiment has gone
out of it. From manufacturers to dealers, and on
through salesman to customer, the upermost thought
is no longer art. It is cheapness.
A piano should be selected "as you would a precious
stone." But how often is it so selected? How often
does the salesman even think of the piano in any such
sense ?
Nevertheless, it is a good sign to find a retailer of
pianos making use of such terms as appear in the
Griffith advertising. And it is, in consequence, interest-
ing, and perhaps instructive to other dealers, to note
the line of instruments that is dignified by local pub-
licity of a kind befitting works of art. Here is the
list of instruments whose names appear in the model
advertising of the Newark house: "Steinway, Sohmer,
Krakauer, McPhail, Lester, Kurtzmann, Brambach,
Hallet & Davis, Griffith, The Duo-Art in the Steinway,
Weber, Steck, Stroud, Aeolian."
And the motto of the house is very correctly, also,
this: "Let us be known by the quality of the Pianos
we sell."
30 YEARS AGO IN THE TRADE
From the Files of Presto
(May 16, 1895.)
A lady whose name is withheld from a curious
public is said to have written an opera under the in-
spiration of Beethoven's ghost. This precious work
is to be produced in London in the course of the
season.
The golden jubilee of Theodore Thomas will be
celebrated with the present year. Mr. Thomas has
recently been the recipient of a handsome silver
punch bowl, lined with gold, of Louis XV design.
The New York Herald of last Sunday contains
about two-thirds of a column of matter rehearsing
the correspondence that has recently passed between
Hardman, Peck & Co., the honorable secretary of
the treasury of the United States and R. E. Preston,
director of the mint, Philadelphia, concerning the
publication of World's Fair medals.
Chicago has been a Mecca for piano and music
trades' men and has entertained some very notable
men in the business during the past week, among
whom may be mentioned Messrs. Charles and Fred
Steinway, Nahum Stetson, Karl Fink, Rufus W.
Blake, A. F. Brooks, Calvin Whitney, Marc A. Blu-
menberg, Harry E. Freund, Willard A. Vose, Wm.
Rohlfing, Otto Bollman, W. J. Dyer, J. B. Wood-
ruff, E. W. Furbush, J. Mueller. C.'H. O. Houghton,
R. O. Burgess, W. C. Newby, Otis Bigelow, Jno.
Anderson, H. J. Raymore, J. C. Minton, C. H. Becht,
and S. D. Porter, and they said some mighty nice
things about the "windy city."
[Ed. Note, May 13, 1925: Could there be a single
paragraph more suggestive of the uncertainty of life
than the foregoing in which appear 25 familiar names
of piano men of whom 15 have passed away since
the item appeared in Presto? But the survivors are
better known today than then—and most of them
still hard at it!]
20 YEARS AGO THIS WEEK
(From Presto, May 18, 1905.)
There is scarcely any other business that affords
such wide opportunities for men of the intelligent
kind as that of selling pianos. The young man who
can close sales is more rare even than the employer
who can pick him out when he applies.
The last of the old guard in the all 'round music
trade passed away when P. J. Healy died. Ditson,
Pond, Balmer, Peters, North, Church, Hempsted,
Faulds, Brainard, Root—all of the old-time leaders
in the first Music Trade Association—have gone.
And the music business as they knew it has become
a thing of the past also.
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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