Presto

Issue: 1925 2039

August 22, 1925.
11
PRESTO
KURTZMANN
Grands—Players
MUSIC DEALERS'
LOCAL PUBLICITY
Manufactured by
Close Range Advertising to Influence the Com-
munity a Matter of Great Importance Too
Often Regrettably Neglected and Its
Potency Ignored.
C. KURTZMANN & CO.
THE LOCAL PUBLISHER
Factories and General Offices
526-536 Niagara Street
BUFFALO, N. Y.
STRICH & ZEIDLER, b e
GRAND, UPRIGHT and PLAYER
AND
HOMER PIANOS
740-742 East 136th Street
NEW YORK
BRINKERHOFF
Grands
- Reproducing Grands
Player-Pianos
and Pianos
The Line That Sells Easily
and Satisfies Always
BRINKERHOFF PIANO CO.
OFFICES, REPUBLIC BLDG,
209 State Street
CHICAGO
the Heppe, Marcellus and Edouard Jules Plaoo
manufactured by the
HEPPE PJANO COMPANY
are the only pianos In the world with
Three Sounding Boards.
/Patented In the United States, Great Brltai&s
France, Germany and Canada.
LiberaJ arrangements to responsible agents only.
Main Office. 1117 Chestnut Sfc,
PHILADELPHIA,, FA.
Obviously a Functionary of Considerable Importance
But Whose Responsibility in Retail Matters in
His Town Is Often Disregarded.
The splendid exhibit of advertising in the music
trade which was such an instructive feature of the
recent annual convention of the national music trade
association at the Drake Hotel, Chicago, invited at-
tention to conditions in the retail music trade. It
disclosed the use of high grade music publicity and
recalled the fact that, in the face of opportunities, a
great number of music dealers are notoriously poor
advertisers.
But perhaps the poor advertisers in the music trade
present no bigger percentage of the whole than the
retailers in any other trade. Just now the national
associations of all the trades as well as the music
trade, are paying particular attention to the retailer's
advertising activities. Vigilant bureaus in the trade
associations and the local, state and national organ-
izations of advertising men, direct the dealers in the
straight and narrow path of advertising rectitude;
alert manufacturers and wholesalers provide the
means for manufacturer-dealer co-operation and the
trade press carries matter filled with instruction and
suggestion for the wide-awake dealer.
Presto's Part.
To print articles stimulating the music dealer's in-
terest in every phase of his business has always been
the policy of Presto. And the most highly valued
commendations of the paper by old and constant
readers are the letters acknowledging the worth and
practical value of the articles on advertising, sales-
manship, credits, store efficiency, window dressing
and other topics. Notably effective have been the
advices of Presto to the music dealer to use the local
newspaper constantly to the fullest extent. Keen
editors of country newspapers have recognized their
own opportunity in the necessity of the retailer to
advertise, as pointed out by Presto. Many live coun-
try newspapers are now subscribing to advertising
art service for the use of retailers.
Of course the advertising of many of the larger
music houses is a credit to the trade and it must
have a beneficial influence on the ambitions of the
smaller houses. But all the same the music dealers in
many places are the limit in advertising inactivity.
In too many cases the advertising efforts to sell the
pianos and other music goods is perfunctory and
without a direct purpose. The jokes about the
advertisements in country newspapers that are
changes only when the type wears out, have a basis
in fact in the music trade.
The Excuse.
Perhaps another fact may form something of an
excuse for the music dealer. That is the notorious
one that the one man in the rural community who
should know most about advertising—the country
publisher—often knows less about it than anyone else
in town.
In the campaign for better business methods in the
music trade of the smaller places, the man who is in
the best position for service is the country publisher.
It is service that will pay him and the music dealer
he may serve. The right kind of newspaper pub-
lisher can truly make over the retailing in his town
by a proper study and practice of co-operation.
Co-operation Days.
There never was a time when manufacturers of all
kinds did more advertising for the benefit of their
retail distribution. National advertising has stirred
the waters of merchandising until it has created a
current that flows in the direction the retailer must
take to succeed. Not only must the dealer link his
ADAM SCHAAF, Inc.
^P?™™
0
GRANDS AND UPRIGHTS
Established Reputation
FACTORY
1020 So. Central Park Ave.,
p
P ^o?
and Quality Since 1873
OFFICES AND SALESROOMS
319-321 So. Wabash Ave.,
Corner Fillmore Street
CHICAGO, ILL.
own business with the national advertiser and make
his advertising co-operate with that of the progres-
sive manufacturer, but he must strengthen his efforts
by giving his own store a local distinction by con-
tinuous publicity in his local newspapers.
What Is Advertising?
Fundamentally there is no difference between the
advertising of the great city retailer and the small
dealer in the country town. Advertising is simply
sending out word to your public about your standard
lines and your special offerings. It is the true
motive power of any store anywhere and has no com-
petitor.
But the trouble is that too often the advertising of
the music dealer has no life to it. It lacks news
value. This fault in the advertising of many is in
regrettable contrast to the bright efforts of the few.
These active-minded dealers know that advertising
news necessarily is not about bargains. The dealer
who knows his line of pianos and appreciates it can
tell real news about it even without mentioning
prices. Advertising is efficient salesmanship in print.
It must have the selling quality.
CHANGE IN OWNERSHIP OF
ESTABLISHED MUSIC STORE
Manager A. L. Huber Buys Branch of Meskill Music
Co., and Rechristens with His Own Name.
A. L. Huber, who for the past nineteen years has
been a music dealer in Muncie, Ind., has bought the
store at 109 West Jackson street from the Meskill
Music Company of Indianapolis, for whom he has
managed the store for the past two years. The store
will be known as the Huber Music Company. It will
continue in the present location.
"The business of the store in the past two years
has been remarkable. There has been a larger vol-
ume of business this year so far than there was dur-
ing the whole year of 1924," Mr. Huber said.
Mr. Huber will sell Edison phonographs and rec-
ords, one hundred and sixty Edison phonographs
having been placed in Muncie homes through the
local agency. Kimball pianos will continue to be
sold by the company.
Mr. Huber recently was offered the position of in-
structor to all Edison dealers all over the country,
but declined. The Huber Music Company will con-
tinue independent of the Meskill Company with Mr.
Huber as sole owner.
The cheap music box should not be allowed to
keep a family out of a good piano; one that must be
played by hand in the good, old-fashioned, Pader-
ewski way, if you please. Why establish a society
which mistakes comfort for civilization?
Builders 01 Incomparable
[[PIANOS, PLAYERS^REPRODUCING PIANOS
THE BALDWIN
CO-OPERATIVE
PLAN
will increase your sales and
solve your financing problems.
Write to the nearest office
for prices.
CINCINNATI
INDIANAPOLIS
LOUISVILLE
RADLE TONE
INCORPORATED
CHICAGO
DALLAS
ST. LOCIS
DENVER
NEW YORK
SAN FRANCISCO
The Musician's Delight
Whenever you hear the name RADLE you immediately
think of a wonderful tone quality, durabili y and design.
Musicians insist on RADLE
New Adam Schaaf BuIIdintf,
F. RADLE, Inc. EiL 1850.
609-11 W. 36th St., New York City
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/
August 22, 1925.
PRESTO
12
AN ANNOUNCEMENT BY
THE Q R S MUSIC CO.
Acquires Red Top Radio Tube, a Triumph in
Reception, and Is Promoting It with
Accustomed Vigor.
The latest important development in radio equip-
ment is the Q R S Red Top Tube. It is an advance
which must attract radio fans and prove profitable to
the trade. The three-color page in this issue of
Presto makes forceful announcement of the addition
to radio essentials. The advertising as it appears
this week is a reproduction of the back cover page
of the Literary Digest and is the first of the fall pub-
licity campaign on this remarkable radio tube.
The page will be followed by others of the same
character in the Saturday Evening Post, Review of
Reviews, World's Work, Harper's Magazine, Century
Magazine and The Golden Book. And its appearance
in Presto is evidence that the Q R S Music Co. rec-
ognizes that the music trade is equally the logical dis-
tributor of radio.
Some time ago the Q R S Music Company took
over the Radio Essentials Corporation and the Red
Top Radio Tube. The Red Top Radio Tube repre-
sents more than two years' research to construct a
tube that could combine power, quality, reception
and rigidity. At the same time it was the aim, fully
accomplished, to eliminate all microphonic noises
usually found in radio tubes. In this elimination the
Q R S Red Top Radio Tube measures up to every
test and presents one of the real improvements in
radio reception.
The Red Top Radio Tubes are made in the fac-
tories of the Q R S Music Company, where the
"last word" in radio tube machinery is installed. At
present only the 201-A type tube is being made, and
the Q R S guarantee goes with every tube. That
means that when a purchaser buys a Q R S Red Top
it insures his getting a perfect tube for his money.
It is the customary Q R S protection to the dealer
as well as to his customer.
Q R S advertising has made a place in the world
of music. It invariably points to assurance of satis-
faction in whatever it announces. And in the force-
ful announcement of the new Red Top Radio Tube
the force of Q R S methods and security must carry
weight. But it does not signify any lessening of the
Q R S Music Roll advertising.
On the contrary the "Buy a Playerpiano" slogan
will continue to appear in the leading magazines in
the customary attractive manner. Very shortly the
reading world will see the fall Q R S roll program,
and it will challenge trade and public.
Something like two and a half million dollars have
been spent in national advertising to make the trade-
mark "Q R S" stand for quality merchandise. That
large investment will be an immense factor in the
merchandising of the Red Top Radio Tube. In fact,
the wonderful good-will built up by the policies and
personnel of the Q R S Music Company will furnish
a ready-made market for anything that carries the
Q R S trademark, and the Q R S Red Top Tube is
born with the proverbial silver spoon.
AH
ARTISTIC
IN EVERY
DETAIL
FACTORY AT FORT RECOVERY, OHIO.
Fort Recovery, Ohio, will have a factory for the
manufacture of stringed musical instruments, one of
which is the "tambouresa," an elaboration of the
guitar and mandolin, but which produces a greater
volume of sound. It is the plan to make the ukulele,
banjo and violin. A company from Chicago and one
from South Bend have combined and a factory has
already been equipped.
HADDORFF PIANO CO.
NEW BROCKTON, MASS., STORE.
The United Music Co. recently opened a branch
in the new Bigelow Building, Brockton, Mass. The
lines featured are the Gulbransen, Lester and Leonard
pianos; Victrolas, Brunswick and Sonora phono-
graphs, and Atwater Kent and Stromberg-Carlson
radio receivers.
ROCKFORD,ILL.
Wholesale Office*:
N.w Tork Cit
130 W. 42od S*
Chicago
410 S. Micnifan At*
San Pranciact
111 California Si.
II
CALIFORNIA FIRM REORGANIZED.
The name of the Krieger, Ayer Music Co., Long
Beach., Calif., has been changed to the Ayer Music
Co., following reorganization and the removal of the
business to new and larger quarters at 530 Pine ave-
nue. F. B. Ayer is president and W. A. Heck secre-
tary-treasurer.
The Portland music trade had a several days' visit
last week from E. Kroll of New York, violin special-
ist of the C. Meisel firm.
AMPICO SCHOOL ATTRACTS LARGE CLASS
Schaff Bros.
Players a ad Pianos have won their stand-
ing with trade and public by 54 years of
steadfast striving to excel. They repre-
sent the
LARGEST COMPETITIVE VALUE
because «f their beauty, reliability, tone
and moderate price. They are profitable
to sell and satisfactory when sold.
Brighten Your Line with the
SCHAFF BROS.
The Schaff Bros. Co.
Established 1868
Huntington, Ind.
The Good Old
SMITH & NIXON
Pianos and Player Pianos
The Ampico traveling school recently closed a bril-
liant session in Cincinnati. E. J. Piquette, who con-
ducted the classes, reports unusual interest the stu-
dents registering from various parts of Kentucky and
Ohio and one from as far afield as Duluth, Minnesota.
The enthusiasm general amongst those who enrolled
for this session of the school is expressed in the fol-
lowing letter from H. E. Pilgrim:
"The Cincinnati session was the first traveling
school in the field instructing tuners who were desir-
ous of learning the operation of the beautiful Ampico
Reproducing mechanism. Modern public schools are
different from the old schools in that everything is
so arranged and equipped that it causes the mind of
the pupil to ascend to higher esthetics—just so is the
Ampico School arranged and conducted. The school
room is in one of the newer buildings of Cincinnati,
with proper light and ventilation—it makes an im-
pression upon entering the school. It reminds one
of a drawing room of a technical school. The Am-
pico Corporation provided chairs and tables, while on
the tables we found pencils, drawing paper, squares,
triangles, etc., not even overlooking the personal com-
forts, such as ash-trays for the smokers. Most tuners
can think better when smoking.
"Our instructor knows how to go from the known
to the unknown, step by step, making drawings on
the blackboard of the various parts of the Ampico,
and after the lesson asking his pupils to make the
same drawings with a description as to the function-
ing of the working parts.
"The Ampico Corporation is to be congratulated
upon the completeness of their traveling school cam-
paign, well equipped in every way and guided by com-
petent instructors.—(Signed) H. E. Pilgrim, Hamil-
ton, Ohio."
Better than ever, with the tame
"Grand Tone In Upright Case."
Grands and Players that every deal-
er likes to sell, for Satisfaction and
Profit
Smith & Nixon Piano Co.
1229 Miller St., Chicago
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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