Presto

Issue: 1925 2029

PRESTO
MANUFACTURERS
DISCUSS PROBLEMS
New and Vital Topics Included Freight and
Technical Matters Interest National As-
sociation of Piano Manufacturers at
Drake Hotel.
NEW PRESIDENT APPEARS
Max de Rochemont Just Returned from Long Euro-
pean Trip, Greets Old Friends and Makes
Important Suggestion.
The National Association of Piano Manufacturers
finished its annual convention in two sessions at the
Drake Hotel, Chicago, on Tuesday of this week.
But they were periods filled with interest for every
member present. The appearance of the first vice-
president before his name was presented as the presi-
dent for the ensuing term, came as an agreeable sur-
prise to the convention.
NEW OFFICERS.
President, Max de Rochemont.
First vice-president, W. E. Guylee.
Second vice-president, C. D. Bond.
Secretary, Harry Schaaf.
Treasurer, Charles Jacob.
Membership committee: Allan B. Lane, Roger S.
Brown, F. P. Bassett, Walter Lane and E. B. Bogart.
Nominating committee: T. L. Floyd Jones, J. J.
Clark and P. S. Wick.
PRESIDENT JACOBSON'S REPORT.
The past year has not been one of full production
in our factories; there seems to be no good reason
why there should not be good steady business ahead
and we look with confidence to the future in this
respect. The prosperity of the agricultural dis-
tricts is linked up with the prosperity of the other
portions of the country, and we are therefore pleased
to see the improved conditions rurally which will
enable the tiller of the soil to again enter the ranks
of active piano buyers, said President E. R. Jacob-
son.
Every manufacturer recognizes that the industry is
gradually getting down to a solid foundation; that ex-
cessive items of cost and overhead are being elim-
inated and that our products in the main are being
sold at the lowest possible price consistent with safety
and good business.
Growth of Grand Favor.
The grand piano is steadily increasing its hold on
the buying public. In 1923 the production of grands
was 15 per cent of the total, in 1924 this had gone
up to 18 per cent and current figures indicate that
1925 figures will show a still further increase of sev-
eral per cent. We do not believe that upright or
players have had their day. On the contrary, we
believe they will continue to be sold in large num-
bers, as they fill a definite need that cannot be taken
care of by any other type of instrument.
We are particularly interested in a few of the
Chamber activities and of these w T ill make brief men-
tion.
A Helpful Influence.
Credit Bureau. This bureau is one of the most im-
portant features of our work, and if there are any
manufacturers who do not avail themselves of this,
we feel that they are overlooking a helpful influence
in their businesses. To grant credit intelligently
means the securing of reliable information having to
do with the activities past and present of the in-
dividual or concern seeking credit, and this informa-
tion our bureau is in position to give in a remarkable
degree. Through the co-operation of the users of
this bureau there are now in the files information
affecting over 23,000 individuals and concerns, a ver-
itable storehouse of facts and figures of tremendous
value to the trade. To grant intelligent credit means
better merchants and greater safety for the manufac-
turers with consequent greater stability for the in-
dustry at large.
We have had applications from five concerns dur-
ing the year for membership in our association, and
eight members have resigned.
The Grim Reaper has taken three of our mem-
bers during the year, viz: Walter A. Schaff, Wil-
liam B. Jacob, and Francis L. Wing. Peace be to
their memory. Suitable resolutions will be presented
to the convention for adoption at the proper time.
Those Who Helped.
In closing my activities as your president I am
not unmindful of the honor which is mine by reason
of this office. To have my name associated with
those of my illustrious predecessors is indeed an honor
and a cherished privilege, for all of which I desire to
extend my sincere thanks. It has been a year of
pleasant service, rich in associations with our various
members who have one and all showed a desire for
friendly and helpful co-operation.
And now, my earnest wish and hope is that our
association might grow and prosper, and take its
definite part in the development of our piano manu-
facturing industry, to the end that our industry may
secure the universal recognition its importance de-
serves.
The Freight Traffic Report.
In the report of the freight traffic committee, of
which E. J. Whelan was chairman, the following was
said in relation to the Hoch-Smith resolution before
the Interstate Commerce Commission. By this reso-
lution the rates on agricultural products shall be re-
duced, and the rates on other commodities increased,
so that the total revenues of the carriers will be com-
patible with the maintenance of adequate transpor-
tation service:
"It is the judgment of your committee that the Na-
tional Piano Manufacturers' Association should go
on record in opposition to any and all tinkering with
the rate structure by Congress; that Congress has
delegated to the Interstate Commerce Commission the
authority to adjudicate these questions, and that the
Commission is admirably equipped to exercise this
authority, and it should be permitted to do so."
In Memoriam.
Secretary Hill read a resolution on the death of
Frank Luman Wing, and one on the death of Walter
A. Schaaf, which were adopted.
Delegates to Chamber.
The nominating committee suggested the follow-
ing as delegates to the Music Industries Chamber of
Commerce: E. R. Jacobson, M. J. de Rochemont,
Chas. Jacob, Mark P. Campbell, J. W. Stevens, Ho-
bart M. Cable, Ava W. Poole, George Miller, George
J. Dowling, Herbert Simpson, W. C. Hepperla, Otto
Schulz, Louis S. Roemer.
Chamber Directors Named.
C. D. Bond moved for their election and the motion
was carried.
Secretary Hill read the names submitted for three
directors in the Chamber, E. R. Jacobson, C. Alfred
Wagner and A. G. Gulbransen, who were duly
elected.
C. D. Bond moved that the association endorse the
work being done by the National Association of Piano
Technicians. The motion was seconded and adopted
unanimously.
Calls on Max de Rochemont.
President Jacobson said the convention would like
to hear from Max de Rochemont, who has just re-
turned from Australia, having spent six months as a
world traveler.
'"I really haven't got my land legs yet and I
haven't been home long enough to find out what has
been going on," said Mr. De Rochemont. "I have,
however, scanned the newspapers on the way out.
I wasn't particularly interested whether we evoluted
from the monkey or whether the government sold
some of the old ships to F"ord. I am vitally inter-
ested, however, in the report of a professor from the
Boston University that 90 per cent of the homes had
electrically operated household machines, such as
washing machines, irons, and such things. He also
found that only two per cent of those homes had
pianos, and that is the one thing that is taking up
all my thought, and I couldn't possibly think of any
speech, and I think it is something that the piano
manufacturers had better give some consideration."
DEALERS NOT OVERSTOCKING.
A number of dealers said that it was well under-
stood throughout the trade that piano merchants
were not buying in the large quantities that they had
been heretofore ordering; they were now buying in-
struments as they needed them; from hand to mouth,
if a gustatory simile might be used. Months ago
several big houses found themselves overstocked.
One large house on the Pacific Coast, at a meeting
of its executive committee, finding itself with $1,150,-
000 worth of pianos on hand, passed a rule not to do
any more promiscuous placing of big orders.
HAS SOLD LOTS OF 'EM.
J. A. Bates, of Middletown, N. Y., who was one of
the speakers at the Bent dinner on Tuesday night,
has sold over 100,000 pianos and organs in his long
career as a music trade man. He is a member of the
firm of Mead & Bates. Middletown is ad far-out sub-
urb of New York city. For many years he was of
the old house of Ludden & Bates, of Savannah, Ga.
Mr. Bates is now in his eighties, but he is as much
interested in placing good pianos in good homes as
he ever was. His young partner, F. W. Mead, is
physically equipped to do the more strenuous work
of their prosperous and aggressive company.
A MAN FROM NEBRASKA.
Gordon L. Hammond, who succeeded W. G. Hay
when he resigned from the Gaston Music & Furni-
ture Company, Hastings, Neb., has been with the
company nineteen years, and is now general man-
ager of the piano department. Mr. Gaston does a
lot of wholesale piano business throughout Nebraska
in addition to his retail selling.
June 13, 1925.
LEADER AMONG FRENCH
PIANO INDUSTRIES
A Brief Expression Concerning the Paris House of
Gaveau and Its Eminently Modern Methods of
Manufacture.
As the trade very generally knows Charles Stanley,
one of the Story & Clark Piano Co. experts, has been
in charge of the modernization, along American lines,
of the eminent French piano factory of Gaveau in
Paris. The industry of the famous French house is
an extensive one. The factory proper is just outside
the capital, and in a recent letter from Mr. Stanley
a very pleasing pen sketch of that plant is given. It
is certain that the following extracts from Mr.
Stanley's letter will be read with interest:
Editor Presto: I am sending a copy of the Gaveau
catalog, recently off the press, showing the styles
and models from the upright to the 8 ft. 6 in. concert
grand. I have been engaged on the reorganization
of the factory, and have aided in completing plans
for the new building, the scope of which is quite
ambitious and has evidently engaged the attention
of the house for a long time.
Their Gaveau system of keeping the factory going
steadily the year around, keeping their men employed
at all seasons of the year, cannot be well improved
upon, and in this respect could be extensively copied
by some of our American makers of pianos. I find
the French workman a very hard and industrious
worker, who gives his utmost attention to the task in
hand, and he is at all times ready to receive sugges-
tions and with equal consistency does his best to
please.
Fontenay-Sur-Bois, where the Gaveau works are
situated, is eight miles from Paris, or about the same
distance that Oak Park is from Chicago. It is a de-
lightful suburb,—not a factory town,—comprising
18,000 people and has very fine homes. If the streets
are a little bit twisted, they are picturesque and
quaint, and delight the heart of the stranger coming
from America, where all is so new and well organ-
ized, as to streets and their maintenance.
Here it is so different. The streets are narrow and
very short, with many turns to them, and each and
every house with its stone wall and iron fence, with
a glimpse, now and again, into a well-ordered court-
yard and pretty home. But all so very old and
strange to the American eye that one's mind turns
to history so far back that one forgets living in the
present.
Seven months have elapsed since I left New York
and I feel half French and, while the language, as
some say, is not hard to learn, I have found it not
so easy after all. But, I like French, I like Paris,
and I like living here. The weather is not severe
in winter and the summer promises to be delightful.
And when last winter I read of what was happening
in New York and Chicago regarding the cold and
snow, I felt quite cheerful about my presence here
and rejoiced that I was not wearing earmuffs far
along into the spring.
But soon new thoughts will turn to preparations
for returning to the "land of the free"—at least his-
torically free and in many cases still gloriously so.
Meantime my best regards to all my friends in the in-
dustry and trade "at home."
CHARLES STANLEY.
WILLIAM HAZELTON
AT THE CONVENTION
Veteran Piano Maker Meets Crowds of Old
Trade Friends and Delighted Dealers
Proud to Make His Acquaintance.
None at the convention was more entitled to the
reverence and respect of every man who makes and
sells pianos than the fine old dean of pianomakers,
William Hazelton. For Mr. Hazelton has been ac-
tually at work making pianos for 62 years. He be-
gan work at the age of 15 with his two uncles, who
started the business of Hazelton Bros., Inc., in 1849.
Today, at the age of 77, he still goes to work daily,
and personally tone-regulates every Hazelton piano
that leaves the factory.
The quality of the Hazelton is pretty well known
now, and this fine old gentleman has been an impor-
tant factor in making it what it is. He is hale and
hearty and mentally alert and full of interest in his
work. His presence at the Hazelton exhibit at the
Drake was a great pleasure to those who know him,
and afforded an opportunity to those who had not
previously met him to meet the youthful-spirited
grandad of piano makers. Mr. Hazelton himself
anticipated with keen interest his trip to Chicago to
attend the convention, where he hoped to meet many
of his old friends.
An electric piano was the cause of a fire at Girard,
Ohio, that caused $6,880 worth of damage. The
piano was in a local theatre and due to improper
wiring 1 , started the fire.
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).
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June 13, 1925.
PRESTO
BETTER BUSINESS
BUREAU'S WORK
EEBURG
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"
"Bait" Advertising in Music Trade Not So
Much in Evidence Owing to Vigilance of
This Admirable Department of Music
Industries Chamber of Commerce.
The concentration of trade attention upon the prob-
lems presented by "bait" piano advertising was the
outstanding development of the year's Better Busi-
ness activities of the Chamber, according to C. L.
Dennis, manager, in the annual report of the Better
Business Bureau of the Music Industries Chamber of
Commerce. The report continues in part:
An increasing volume of misleading price advertis-
ing brought the piano field to its lowest morale of
recent years, with a consequent revulsion of feeling
on the part of the legitimate trade. Not since the
picture puzzle contest and coupon scheme was rooted
out of the industry has it been so thoroughly aroused.
A year ago the Bureau's annual report included a
warning against "dishonest and unwise methods under
threatening business conditions," noting as the first
item "the 'bait' of low price advertising." In Octo-
ber, the Board of Directors ordered an investigation.
The Bureau submitted a "Report and Recommenda-
tions with Reference to Low Price and 'Bait' Piano
Advertising," which was approved by the Advisory
Committee of the Bureau and accepted and adopted
by the Board of Directors at its January meeting.
The recommendations have been carried out.
Flood of Bait Subsiding.
The Bureau believes that the great flood of "bait"
advertising is subsiding, partly because of organized
activities and exposure of the "bait" methods of sell-
ing, partly because the wavering ones of the trade
are turning away from it instead of toward it as a
business stimulant, and chiefly because the public is
not as much attracted by "bait" offers and conse-
quently such advertising does not pay as it did.
The greatest factor enlisted by the Chamber in the
drive against "bait" piano offers and other advertising
evils of the music trade is the National Vigilance
Committee (now National Better Business Bureau)
of the Associated Advertising Clubs of the World and
the 43 affiliated local Better Business Bureaus.
The Chamber has been striving toward the end of
a better working relationship, -which has been taking
shape rapidly since the first of the year.
Cases Handled by Chamber.
The Chamber gave attention to 156 better business
matters during the past year, of which 83 related to
merchandising problems and 73 to the song swindle.
The principal merchandising cases had to do with
the "bait" piano offers, complaints arising in the band
instrument field from the agreement against secret
subsidies to musicians, a special sale repetition of
"wholesale price" claims involving a prominent
dealer, trade name violations several "credit check"
or coupon schemes which were stopped, and a radio
selling scheme which appeared to be the outgrowth
of past phonograph company operations
which made
trouble for several small town w r estern dealers.
Complaints of advertising by piano tuning schools
were taken up.
An effort to assist the passage of a fraudulent ad-
vertising law by the Illinois legislature was made
upon request of the Illinois Music Merchants' Asso-
ciation.
The Song Swindle.
The finish of the song swindle, so far as volume
operations are concerned, was foreseen in last year's
report. The indictment on June 30, 1924, of George
Graff, Jr., and Albion S. Keller of the Broadway
Composing Studios, New York Melody Corporation
and World Music Publishing Corporation, followed
by a postoffice fraud order in October, was the first
decisive action in New York and removed one big
operator. Another big one changed his plan and the
smaller ones are having a hard struggle. Several
have closed up shop. While it is difficult to end such
an elusive fraud, the volume business is stopped and
the post office authorities have the situation in hand,
with prospects of further arrests and examples being
made of New York offenders.
Features of Swindle.
Offers of music roll cutting service to amateur song
writers and mail order schemes for selling sheet
music to local "agents" are side issues of the song
swindle which are being watched.
The Chicago post office authorities closed up the
last of the song swindlers there. The New Era
Music Co. and Music Sales Co., of St. Louis, both
operated by Robert A. Bell, were closed by post
office fraud order. The Chamber campaign against
the song swindle was given wide publicity, including
an article in the Saturday Evening Post and two
radio talks from Station WGBS by the undersigned.
Hundreds of inquiries about song sharks were an-
swered, and many warnings sent to amateur song
writers.
Stock Selling Schemes.
The Chamber was partly responsible for the ex-
posure of the stock-selling scheme of the Hearst
Music Publishers of Winnipeg, Canada, with offices
in New York and Chicago. Hearst is a fugitive from
justice. Several other stock selling schemes have
been given attention.
Book of Business Standards.
Through the Chamber's representation in the Com-
mercial Standards Council, to whose executive board
the writer was re-elected in February, we have taken
an active part in the publication and distribution of
"The Book of Business Standards," by J. George
Frederick, which is receiving widespread attention in
trade organizations and the world of business
generally.
AMERICAN PIANO CO.
AT THE CONVENTION
Great Number of Visiting Dealers See Numer-
out Fine Piano Exhibits and Others En-
joy Social Pleasures Provided.
The American Piano Company, New York, ar-
ranged events for the convention as follows: On
Tuesday morning, June 9, R. K. Paynter, president
of Wm. Knabe & Co., gave a breakfast for his Knabe
dealers at Hotel Drake.
The American Piano Co. gave a theater party, sup-
per and dance for all of their dealers at the Hotel
Blackstone on Tuesday evening, June 9.
As to exhibits, the Mason & Hamlin Company ex-
hibited at the warerooms of The Cable Piano Co.,
Wabash and Jackson, Chickering & Sons exhibited
at the warerooms of the Bissell-Weisert Piano Co.,
26 So. Michigan avenue, and Wm. Knabe & Co. at
the warerooms of the Raymond Music Co., 300 N.
Michigan avenue.
The Foster-Armstrong lines were shown as fol-
lows: The Franklin and Fischer at the warerooms
of the Raymond Music Co., the Marshall & Wendell
at the warerooms of the Bissell-Weisert Piano Co.,
and the Haines Bros, at the warerooms of The Cable
Piano Co.
A YOUNG PIANO MAN
FROM AN OLD TOWN
An M. Schulz Enthusiast Who Is Filling a Section
of Indiana with Good Pianos.
Peter F. Schneider, a dealer in M. Schulz Co. pi-
anos, is a young man from an old city, Vincennes,
Ind. This place is the oldest town within the limits
of the state of Indiana.
With the exception of Detroit, Michigan, which
was settled by the French in 1670, and of Kaskaskia,
111., which was also settled by the French in 1673,
it is the oldest town in that vast expanse formerly
known as "The Territory Northwest of the River
Ohio," out of which the five great states of Ohio,
Indiana, Illinois, Michigan and Wisconsin have been
formed.
Vincennes was settled by the French from Canada
about 1735, and it was the capitol of Indiana Terri-
tory from 1800 to 1813. There are many historical
landmarks present, including the old home of Wil-
liam Henry Harrison and the old cathedral. The In-
dian name for the town was Chippe Coke, meaning
Brush Wood. No part of our country is richer in
hitorical interest than Vincennes, a town which is one
of the oldest on the continent; one for the possession
of which the greatest nations of the earth have con-
tended—France, England and the United States.
And "Alice of Old Vincennes"—why, she lived there,
too!
SHOWS PIANO WITH
THRILLING TORNADO RECORD
Oldendorf Music House, Mt. Carmel, 111., Features
Storm-Scarred Piano Taken in Trade.
On display at the Oldendorf Music House, Mt.
Carmel, 111., is a piano which went through the tor-
nado of last March 18. The piano was sold eight
years ago by Mr. Oldendorf to Arthur Keneipp, who
lived a mile west of Owensville.
When the storm struck the house was destroyed
as well as barn and outbuildings, and the piano was
blown for some distance and shows the effects of the
storm. Mr. Keneipp was blown through a window
but did not suffer serious injury. Mrs. Keneipp was
found some distance from the house in an orchard,
unconscious, and Mr. Keneipp carried her for almost
half a mile to get help. She is now recovering at the
home of her mother.
The piano which went through the storm lay in
the open where it was blown for two days before
being taken to shelter. It has been returned to Mt.
Carmel and a new piano is taking its place.
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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