Presto

Issue: 1925 2032

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, JULY 4. 1925.
LET THEM SELL PIANOS
It is folly to set up a hue-and-cry about
"bait advertising" in the piano business unless
the conditions, character and policy of the ad-
vertisers are understood and weighed against
any seeming disregard of the ethics of busi-
ness. No man, or body of men, whatever they
may call themselves, are competent to criti-
cize the purposes of a piano house merely
upon a reading of the printed word. It re-
quires an under-the-skin knowledge of the
piano business, and its varying difficulties, to
fully measure the right or wrong of an adver-
tisement in the local newspaper.
When a critical onlooker sees what seems
like a very astounding offer of "fine" pianos
for little money, he is apt to conclude that
there must be something wrong about the
advertiser. It looks to him almost as if he
had discovered a "fence," where something
like stolen goods are concealed, or where
paste diamonds are being offered for the genu-
ine thing.
But it is more likely that the environment
of the advertiser is such that his public has
been taught to believe that pianos are cheap
things and that the price is of little conse-
quence and the time-payments even of still
smaller importance. It is competition run
wild, and the merchant who wants to do busi-
ness must for the time, realize that he, too,
is in Rome where the Romans are doing
things in their own way.
The piano dealer must sell pianos or he must
close up his shop. That much is certainly ob-
vious. If he is a fair-minded man he will sell
pianos that are as good as he can afford for
the price. And he must "meet competition."
But he must sell pianos. And the piano manu-
facturer, who may prefer that his represen-
tatives get large prices for the instruments he
makes, nevertheless wants his representatives
to sell pianos. All the talk about "bait" and
such things is well enough, but it must have
reason behind it. It must not take on the
complexion of the Volstead act. The dealer
July 4, 1925.
who indulges in startling advertising to catch expect to get. That is the something the spe-
trade must not be classed with criminals, or cial sale offers and, in communities where
threatened with arrest. He is selling his own pianos have sold very slowly, we have known
goods and is trying to make an honest profit. of special sales which have resulted in more
If his advertisements catch more attention deliveries in two weeks than might, under or-
than some other kind, then don't let us charge dinary circumstances, have been made in six
him with casting imitation flies to lure the months' time.
innocent minnows. Usually the minnows are
When times are dull, and stagnation seems
more likely to turn out sharks, anyway, and to threaten, it is not a bad idea to apply the
will swallow the bait, hook and sinker, leav- stimulation of a well conducted special sale.
ing the fisherman with the freight and cart- But don't do it too often.
age to pay.
Don't let us worry too much just now. So
Radio manufacturers and dealers seem to
long as the very foremost music houses per- agree that a slump has overtaken the newest
sist in advertising grand pianos for $300, and industry. As a rule the music dealers do not
at "nothing down, three years to pay," don't seem to be excited in the matter, because most
let us convict the smaller dealers with de- of them have had no share in radio selling.
scending to "bait" advertising, to the ruination The manufacturers of receiving sets have not
of the big fellows. Let them all sell all the been alert in locating their trade representa-
pianos they can legitimately and at a profit. tives.
* * *
The "bait" won't hurt the pianos any. They
will be just as "fine" as ever, and last even
If every retail piano dealer would start a
longer.
special selling campaign, determined to sell
a fixed number of instruments between now
and, say, September first, this summer would
SPECIAL SALES
be
a good one.
In most lines of business the retailers,
* * *
while they may stimulate sales by local adver-
There is marked activity in the demand for
tising in which the "bait" is cut prices, have
organs
of all kinds for public places. The organ
no such opportunity or advantage as the piano
department
is no longer a sideline with a large
trade possesses in the special sale. Properly
number
of
houses.
conducted, with every fairness to the public
* :;: *
and the merchant and manufacturer, the spe-
The
piano
action
manufacturers report a
cial sale serves as a sort of cleaning up, or
marked
increase
in
orders
and output. Nothing
renewing process.
could
more
positively
tell
of
a general advance in
It is a kind of laxative by which clogging of
the
piano
itself.
the commercial system may be remedied or
* * *
prevented. And while, unless conducted with
To
find
cause
of
complaint in the loss of a
judgment and good business effort, the special
sale
is
to
be
like
the
man who refuses to earn
piano sale may be harmful, when well done
a
living
because
he
failed to fall heir to a
it is in every sense legitimate and as beneficial
fortune.
to the public as to the store.
When the average store in most lines of
business becomes overstocked the merchant
may find himself, as a result, short of money
with which to meet his current obligations.
From the Files of Presto
This is bound to be so if business drops below
normal or proves disappointing to expecta-
(July 4, 1695.)
We are glad to hear, and likewise glad to announce,
tions. And, as a rule, there is no other way
the Weaver Organ & Piano Co. has decided to
out of it, at once speedy and satisfactorily that
run their works thirteen hours each working day,
until further notice.
profitable.
Mr. E. V. Church returned from the Northwest
In the piano business, the special sale is yesterday.
Mr. Church and Mr. Northrup, manager
easily applied by way of relief. There are of the Emerson Co., expect to go on a fishing trip
Wisconsin within a day or two.
men of experience, and expert in piano selling, to About
$4,000 is to be expended in the erection of
who make the special sale their particular the new addition to the Ann Arbor Organ Co.'s plant.
New dry-kiln and a new seventy-five horse-power
study. They will "put on" the sale, from start engine
are to be put in. The company has decided
to finish, without a minute's help or a word of to increase its capital stock to $50,000.
A report comes to us that an organ factory is to
suggestion from the merchant, and guarantee
be established at Columbus, Indiana.
results. Nor does the special sale necessarily
Mein Herr Ludocio Cavalli has been holding a
mean any sacrifice of the fair profits of busi- reception this week. Among those who have called
upon him were Thos. F. G. Foisy and T. Nadean,
ness. It more properly means a clearing out of Montreal; H. R. Moore, of the A. B. Chase Co.,
of the "store keepers," and getting rid of the of Norwalk, Ohio; Mr. Paulsen, of the Century Piano
Co., Minneapolis; Mr. R. J. Mason, of the Sterling
accumulation of trade-ins and repossessions Co., Derby, Conn., and Mr. Geo. P. Bent, of Chicago.
that often clutter up the warerooms where
floor space might better be given over to new
stock and better sellers.
20 YEARS AGO THIS WEEK
Every piano dealer has a list of prospects.
Often most of the prospects who will not lis-
(From Presto, July 6, 1905.)
ten seriously to the local salesman, will con-
The Fourth is over and we are again convinced
sider the proposition of a new-comer who puts the constitution guarantees every piano man liberty
the pursuit of prospects.
his message in different terms and from a in The
Kalamazoo (Mich.) Telegram offers a piano
fresh angle.
to the winner of a contest in counting that paper's
subscribers in the United States. Another fly-speck
Quick sales are often made to very slow puzzle.
people. Many a dealer's neighbors, who have
It is a mistake for the trade papers to discuss the
question. Not one of them has more
for a year or more been "thinking about" buy- circulation
than half the circulation even of Ladies' Home Jour-
ing will buy at once of a special sales pro- nal, which only claims a million.
As showing one side of the influence of the late
moter who puts his proposition with the un-
W. W. Kimball it is interesting to note that several
derstanding that his work in the community of the "Governor's" good stories are still going the
ends within a week or two. Most of us are rounds of the press. A Michigan newspaper recently
contained one of them in the form of an advertise-
looking for something more than we really ment by a local piano dealer.
30 YEARS AGO 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/
July 4, 1925.
PRESTO
REPRO ART ACTION ON DISPLAY
Ability to Cover Long Distances and Load and
Unload with Ease Is Asset with Sales-
man Using Useful Device.
In the piano business there is greater need than
ever before for the conservation of time, something
which has to do with the building up of the pile of
profits. Conservation is a necessity; it means the
saving of energy in the pursuit of sales and the pre-
vention of waste in advertising, but the conservation
of time is the most important consideration because
time mast be utilized as it swiftly passes by.
To save time is to do the maximum work in a given
space. That is where modern devices for time-sav-
ing are necessities. Among the most admirable is
one well proved a friend of the piano dealer—the
Bowen One-Man Loader and Carrier. This device
is both a time and a labor saver. The device is ex-
actly what the name implies. One man can load and
unload or demonstrate an upright piano without as-
sistance. It is feasible to load or unload a piano in
about five minutes with the aid of the Bowen One-
man Loader and Carrier.
The carrier is designed to fit a Ford runabout and
is easily attached. A carpenter or anybody handy
with tools can accomplish the job. No changes have
to be made in the car except to remove the rear
deck. The load makes no appreciable difference in
the tires if kept properly inflated. It is an easy mat-
ter for a salesman with a Bowen carrier to run out
fifty or seventy-five miles, sell his piano and get
back the same day.
NEW OFFICERS FOR GOLF
ASSOCIATION OF TRADE
The accompanying cut is from a photograph taken
on an interesting occasion at the exhibit of the
Peerless Pneumatic Action Co., Inc., New York, at
the Drake Hotel, Chicago, during the recent conven-
tion of the music trades. Every member in the group
is known to piano men everywhere, so their approval
of the merits of the Repro-Art Artistic Action, shown
in the foreground, is commendation of the most valu-
able kind.
The incident was one which naturally elated Tol-
bert F. Cheek, president of« the Peerless Pneumatic
Action Co., who takes a great interest in the Na-
tional Association of Piano Tuners and their work
in improving the quality of tuner service and encour-
aging greater efficiency in individual tuners. The
officials of the tuners' national association thoroughly
enjoyed their visit to the exhibit and were enthu-
siastic over the great merits of the Repro Art Repro-
ducing Action in the Mehlin Grand on account of its
simplicity, compactness and assurances of durability.
L. C. Singer, president Chicago Division of the
N. A. P. T., the oldest active piano tuner in the
United States came in too late to be included in the
group.
Left to right, top row: (1) H. Kemper, past vice-
president, St. Louis Division; (2) J. G. B. Astenius,
past president, Chicago Division; (3) W. F. Bieritz,
Appleton, Wis ; (4) C. G. Seeger, Appleton, Wis.
Bottom row, left to right: (1) Chas. C. Ewart,
treasurer, Peerless Pneumatic Action Co.; (2) Tol-
bert F. Cheek, president Peerless Pneumatic Action
Co.; (3) W. Braid White, honorary member, N. A.
P. T.: (4) W. F. McClellan, secretary, N. A. P. T.;
(5) Chas. Deutschmann, national president, N. A. P.
T.; (6) T. J. O'Meara, editor, The Tuners Journal,
Kansas City, Mo.; (7) G. C. Johnston president
Division, Toulon, 111.; (8) J. B. Birdsong, sales man-
ager, Peerless Pneumatic Action Co.
L. C. Singer, president Chicago Division, and J. N.
Brown, the oldest active piano tuner in the U. S.,
came in just too late for the photograph.
NEW CIRCULAR FROM
TONK MANUFACTURING CO.
they also are artistic in design. There are no experi-
mental efforts in producing Tonk benches. Artistic
designers plan them; expert mechanics fashion them
with the aid of every machine and patented device
essential to the production of high class types of
cabinets and benches.
The Los Angeles branch, just opened, serves the
entire Pacific Coast and export business to Hawaii
and Mexico. The plant in charge of G. E. Patter-
son will operate as far as possible as an independent
unit. A complete selling organization has been formed
to serve western territory as far east as El Paso and
Salt Lake Citv.
Ability to Serve Entire Music Trade of the
Country From Two Central Points,
Proved by List.
Every music dealer has a ready market for music
roll cabinets, but many are neglecting to supply it.
It was in response to an incessant demand that the
Tonk Manufacturing Co., Chicago, has placed at the
disposal of piano dealers the most practical line of
these cabinets that has ever been offered to the trade.
The company has prepared a circular with prices and
descriptive matter which will be sent on request to
dealers who may with profit consider this line right
now and get a full line of samples attractively dis-
played on their floors. People naturally look to a
The Tonk Manufacturing Co., 1910 Lewis street,
Chicago, with a new factory at 4627 East Fiftieth
street, Los Angeles, Calif., is equipped to serve the
music dealers with an admirable line of Tonk benches,
stools and cabinets. In support of the claim to sup-
ply the music trade today is the record of fifty years
of ambitious efforts to provide a good and profitable
line of benches, stools and cabinets. Now more than
ever before, the element of high quality in its prod-
ucts is considered the fundamental principle in pro-
duction by the house.
The features of reliable construction which have
always distinguished the products of the company
have likewise been accompanied by the artistic attri-
butes so essential in such articles of furniture. Tonk
benches are not only made from the best materials
and constructed by the most expert craftsmen, but
BRAZIL A PIANO MARKET.
The Wood Industry says that the German piano
industry enjoys a great reputation in Brazil, and with
the development of that great country the demand
grows from year to year. The small native industry
is incapable of supplying the demand, although it
might deliver valuable pianos in view of Brazil's
wealth in pine woods. The country encourages every
industry generously, and a regular sale is assured to
any German piano firm that would "build" in Brazil.
The greatest demand is for the upright piano; grands
are hardly inquired for. The instruments should be
packed in zinc sheet lined cases.
THE LATE W. J. DYER.
W. J. Dyer, president of W. J. Dyer & Bro., 21
West Fifth street, St. Paul, Minn., the oldest music
house in that city, who died at his home there last
week, was proud of his title, "Veteran piano man."
He had been in business in St. Paul for the past fifty-
four years. His death was preceded by that of his
three brothers, who had been associated with him in
the music business. Few men had a wider circle of
friends in the trade.
W. H. Alfring Elected President After Tournament
in Which R. O. Ainslee Wins Club Championship.
W. J. Alfring was elected president of the National
Golf Association of the Piano Trade at the meeting
following the dinner at the Westchester Biltmore
Club last week. Harry J. Sohmer was elected vice
president; Otto De Moll, secretary; Herbert W. Hill
treasurer, and George W. Allen, sergeant-at-arms.
W'illiam H. Alfring and Theodore Cassebeer com-
prise the new tournament committee and the new
handicap committee of Herbert W. Hill and Theo-
dore Cassebeer.
Excellent weather favored the games on Monday
and Tuesday in which the club championship was
won by R. O. Ainslee, whose score for seventy-two
holes of medal play totaled 319. His individual score
for each time around was 79, 82, 75 and 83.
SPRINGFIELD, MO., DEALER
LEADS BAND TO CHICAGO
Lester E. Cox, of Martin Bros. Piano Co., Found
Opportunity to Visit Gulbransen Factory.
Lester E. Cox, of Martin Bros. Piano Co., Spring-
field, Mo., was a visitor to Chicago last week, where
he attended the conclave of the Modern Woodmen
of America. With Mr. Cox came the Boy Scout
Band of Springfield, with 150 pieces, which has the
distinction of being the largest and best equipped
Boy Scout Band in the world.
Mr. Cox, while in Chicago, took advantage of the
opportunity to visit the Gulbransen factory at Chi-
cago and Kedzie avenues, and tell of the fine Gul-
bransen business in the Missouri city. The Gulbran-
sen line is a strong seller with the Martin Bros.
Piano Co.
Charles E. Wells, progressive music merchant of
Denver, Colo., was also a caller at the Gulbransen
headquarters in the week just passed. Mr. Wells was
en route to his home from Cleveland, Ohio.
EXHIBITS BRING BUSINESS.
Satisfactory results from exhibits at the Northwest
Industrial Exhibition, held in St. Paul, Minn., in con-
nection with the Norse-American Centennial, have
been reported by music firms taking part therein. The
Howard-Farwell Co.. Raudenbush Piano Co. and
the Gulbransen Co., Chicago, had attractive displays,
which were rewarded with sales and prospective
business.
ITALIAN PIANO ABUSE.
At a recent meeting of piano industrialists at Turin,
says a Milan journal, amongst the questions dealt
with was the use of foreign names on Italian pianos,
to prevent which abuse a formal resolution was
adopted.
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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