Presto

Issue: 1925 2040

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. 2V>, 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, AUGUST 29, 1925.
AN OVERSIGHT
Strange how a chance remark or incidental
statement will sometimes suggest a missing
link in the chain of important events. For
instance, this paragraph from a facetious Chi-
cago Tribune editorial on the "Portrait of a
Business Man":
The intellectuals can find something to respect in
proletarian thought. They would have more use for
a convention of piano movers than piano makers. A
business man's gathering is rated as something which
enables the men to pin red ribbons on themselves,
laugh vacuously, call out "Come up to room 410, Bill.
We have everything," and try out new golf courses.
A NEW PROHIBITION
This is the age of prohibition. And the
promise seems to be that we may eventually
find it as necessary to watch our ears as our
lips. For we are told of another big "don't"
which may issue from headquarters some-
where. It is foretold in the newspapers, un-
der the head of "To Can Can-Can," where it
is stated that an effort may be made to pad-
lock "indecent music" and to put whatever it
is in jail along with what is known as "booze."
It has been pretty well agreed, by authori-
ties more competent than the traffic cops, that
music can not be "impure." Therefore it is
hard to understand where the League of Mu-
sic Purification can find any serious charge
against even "that hoochy-coochy class of in-
tonation," as someone has expressed it. But
it appears that some musty folly in the of-
ficial records has been dug up and the things
that were wont to trot along with the joys of
life are supposed to belong equally to the
things that should be suppressed in order that
the world may be made perfectly "good."
It is hard enough that the prohibition of
another kind has taken so much joy out of
life for some of us. It would be still worse
were the "intoxication" of music at its jazziest
to be taken from the few liberties remaining
and our meals be denied refreshment for the
ear as well as for the gastric juices.
But there's little danger. With the com-
bination of booze and auto, the police are
sufficiently occupied. And the terrors of the
tom-tom and hoochy-coochy jazz are not yet
sufficiently boisterous to demand any legisla-
tive tommyrot. There is still coffee drinking,
gum chewing and the sin of chocolate caramel
eating, before the censors can find time to
suppress "indecent music"—of which there
never could be any.
A trade paper in the interests of manufac-
turers in general has polled its advertisers on
the prohibition problem. A majority of the
replies points to faith in "decent regulation
of the liquor question." No music trade paper
Isn't there something peculiarly familiar would have the nerve to seek a vote on such
about that reference to a business man's gath- a subject. It is a foregone conclusion that
ering? And isn't it still more suggestive of a men engaged in the music business are in
possible oversight on the part of the organ- favor of everything that is decent and of noth-
izers of our music trade associations? For ing that is otherwise. Few intelligent Amer-
certainly the reference to piano movers draws icans deny the advisability of regulating
attention to a void in the list of divisions or everything that intoxicates—even music itself.
groups that go to make up the large aggrega-
* * *
tion of which all members of the music indus-
Radio still has a long way to go before it
try must be proud, and most of which were so can be much of a rival to the piano in the
liberally represented in Chicago last June.
music stores. While it is said that about sixty
While it may not be quite true that the "in- per cent of the music dealers handle receivers,
tellectuals" would so largely prefer the con- it can be more accurately said that a majority
vention of piano movers to the piano makers, of them are not wholly satisfied that the ad-
it is true that as now organized there is no dition is a good one for their business.
way by which to prove it. For we have as yet
* * *
had no convention of piano movers, nor has
As soon as the next sky-scraper goes up on
that large and, in a sense, very powerful Wabash avenue, Chicago, the first floor will
branch of the piano business been admitted to be occupied as the new and elaborately ap-
the Music Industries Chamber of Commerce. pointed retail wareroom of one of the most
It is understood that there are many wealthy prosperous of the Western piano industries.
gentlemen manning the giant vans that play Another proof that the piano is still moving
so important a part in delivering the goods in forward.
the piano business. They are as well equipped
* * *
to help sustain an organization, to debate at
Bait advertising isn't so bad if the worm
conventions, and to do the other things that isn't there just to hide the hook. It is as
add to the annual events in the trade, as the necessary to use bait to draw trade as trout.
tuners, the travelers or even, as the Tribune The kind of bait is the chief consideration.
* * *
suggests, the piano makers themselves. What's
the matter, then, with the National Piano
When financial experts and business leaders
Movers' Association?
agree that the best period for business in
August 29, 1925.
years is just ahead, who can doubt that the
promise is in that direction? Who wants to
doubt it? Several articles in this issue of
Presto afford the glad tidings in unmistakable
terms.
* * *
Retailers say that collections are better this
year than usual in the summer season. That's
a sign also that times are suitable for the
activities of the outside salesmen.
* * *
It is said that notwithstanding the alleged poverty
of the German industries, scarcely a week passes that
fails to bring announcement of at least one new piano
factory. It is estimated that Germany will produce
about 100,000 pianos this year.
* * *
France is having a prosperous piano year. Nearly
200,000 instruments will be this year's output, accord-
ing to an expert estimate, and French pianos are to be
found in the retail stores throughout England, and even
in many German cities.
* * *
The return of piano activities in the United States
is clearly evident. Retailers in many sections say that
they anticipate an unusually good fall and winter trade.
And some of the factories report orders in rapidly in-
creasing ratio.
* * *
Don't let the "dumps" rob you of business which may
be almost ready to knock at your door. A little more
pep where there is now only pip will do a lot this fall.
* * *
This is to be the farmer's year. All piano salesmen,
especially in the smaller cities and towns, know what
that means, and they will get busy.
30 YEARS AGO IN THE TRADE
From the Files of Presto
(August 29, 1895.)
The Chicago "Tribune" suggests that a noble
band-stand be erected in Lincoln Park to the mem-
ory of Geo. F. Root.
If the farmer has an old square to trade in, and
"it's just as good as the day I bought her forty years
ago," and "wants the same price that he paid for it,"
let him alone. He knows more about the business
than you do. Quit it and try your luck at farming.
It is understood there is a contract of long stand-
ing between the Weaver Organ company and the
Granger's State Executive committee of Pennsylva-
nia, under which grangers throughout the Keystone
state purchase Weaver organs in preference to all
others.
Mr. Linton Floyd Jones, son of Thomas Floyd
Jones, has lately composed a piece of music entitled
The Glentworth Two Step. It is dedicated to the
Haines Bros, pianos, the author being connected with
the Haines Bros, house at New York. We hear that
it is very catchy and reflects much credit upon its
author.
20 YEARS AGO THIS WEEK
(From Presto, August 31, 1905.)
When the music attachment for automobiles gets
into common use it will be easier for the poor pedes-
trians who may die to the music of soft pipes. It's
a sort of pipe-dream, in fact.
At the Put-in Bay Convention, when the National
Piano Travelers' Association was formed, following
were the officers nominated: J. C. Amie, President,
New York; H. O. Fox, first vice-president, Detroit;
W. S. Rich, second vice-president, Boston; D. D.
Luxton, third vice-president, Chicago; T. T. Fischer,
treasurer, New York; W. M. Plaisted, secretary, New
York. Executive board: J. C. Amie, T. T. Fischer,
W. M. Plaisted, P. J. Gildemeester, Nathan Ford.
Membership committee: J. C. Amie, T. T. Fischer,
Wm. Plaisted, Howard Hill, O. W. Williams, F. J.
Woodbury.
A country clergyman was visited recently by a
stranger, who introduced himself as a representative
for Bangem's Pills, and who stated that having de-
rived great benefit from his sermon he wished to
present a new set of hymn books to the choir. The
parson gladly accepted the gift, and the books came
and were distributed among the congregation. The
following Sunday the minister gave out Hymn 973,
"Hark the Herald Angels Sing." The organ pealed
forth, but the congregation on rising began to titter
instead of sing. The clergyman, with a vague sus-
picion that something was wrong, took up the book
to examine the hymn. It read thus:
Hark the herald angels sing,
Bangem's Pills are just the thing,
Peace on earth and mercy mild,
Two for a man and one for a child.
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 29, 1925.
PRESTO
The Background
A BUSY ROLL
DEPARTMENT
THE NEW
CAPITOL
WORD ROLLS
SEPTEMBER RELEASES
No.
Title
1235 Alone at Last—Fox-Trot
1241 Can't Your Friend Get a Friend for Me?
1237
1256
1246
1242
1236
1238
1243
1239
1244
1255
1234
1253
1249
1254
1247
1252
1257
1240
1251
1248
1250
1245
—Fox-Trot
Carolina Sweetheart—Waltz
High Tone Mama of Mine—Fox-Trot
Honey, I'm in Love With You—Fox-Trot
If You See That Gal of Mine Send
Her Home—Fox Trot
Isn't She the Sweetest Thing—Fox-Trot
I've Found My Sweetheart Sally—Waltz
I've Got the Blues for Tennessee—
Fox-Trot
Just Lonesome—Waltz
Let Me Linger Longer in Your Arms—
Fox-Trot
My Sweetie Turned Me Down—Fox-Trot
Oh! Heinrich! (You're So Nice)—
Fox-Trot
Red Hot Henry Brown—Fox-Trot
Rose of the Evening—Waltz
Silver Head—Fox-Trot
Somebody's Crazy About You—Fox-Trot
Sometime—Waltz
Sonya—Fox-Trot
Summer Nights—Fox-Trot
Twilight (The Stars and You)—Fox-Trot
Underneath the Yum-Yum Tree—
Fox-Trot
We're Back Together Again—One-Step
You Can't Make a Monkey Out of Me—
Fox-Trot
Extra Choruses
A Longer Roll
Seventy-five cents
Printed Words
Hand Played
Made of the best materials
obtainable.
Will please your trade and
double your sales.
Quality and price make
Capitol rolls the deal-
er's best profit producer
in a roll department.
Capitol Roll & Record Co.
721 N. Kedzie Ave., CHICAGO, ILL.
(Formerly Columbia Music Roll Co.)
THINGS SAID OR SUGGESTED
Many of the sons and grandsons of the founders
of great American piano houses are "carrying on,"
to use an extremely English expression, in the lines
begun by their ancestors.
Is the business of piano manufacturing in the
United States some day to be like one of those
European industries which are the hereditary mon-
opoly of a few families, like flint-knapping, violin
making and gold-beating?
* * *
Our enlightened capitalists are said to be exploring
new methods of eliminating waste. Now, is it crim-
inally extravagant to go on employing labor in the
fabrication of a constant supply of new goods before
the old are worn out? Let us hear from some of the
piano manufacturers on this subject, please.
* * *
The completion of the New York-Chicago tele-
phone cable on Tuesday, August 11, an 882-mile line
costing $30,000,000, suggests the broad thought that
something is always being "connected up." Great
connections are being made in all directions—in the
missing links of racial evolution, in the shading of the
sciences and the practices into one another, all lead-
ing to higher and better living here, instead of prat-
ing so much about the joys in store for us in the
land of kingdom come.
No connection is more wonderful in the realm of
appliance than that of the piano with radio trans-
mission. Here is a chance to exploit to the full the
possibilities of obvious and unusual truths—obvious
to the scientist; unusual and "scary" to the unscien-
tific mind.
* * *
This Presto representative, who called at several
piano stores in Cleveland last week, found no dull
trade at the "live" places. This midsummer activity
in piano selling proves, as Presto has always be-
lieved and said, that the salesman's will has more to
do with trade than the time of year. Feeble and
puzzled spirits make time the sleeping partner of
their lives to accomplish what ought to be achieved
by their own will.
* * *
Wouldn't it startle some of the old fellows now
in the grave, if they could come back for a few days,
just to look into some of the new things this genera-
tion is producing? Our non-partisan elections in
such a great city as Detroit, our proportional repre-
sentation charter in such a great city as Cleveland,
would startle the old-time "boss" politician.
Our Reproducing pianos, made in wonderful fac-
tories, our radios and, more than all, our good roads,
would make some of the dead wish they were alive
again. Although, at first, a returned individual
might, if iie had not progressed in his new world,
present a picture of the mental confusion of a man
faced with the many-sidedness of truth.
* * *
More population, more jazz, more Luna Parks and
palatial movie theaters, more wop immigrants, more
lipsticks used, and slang, slang, slang from the un-
cultured and cultured alike. The "best" magazines
giving prominent positions to dialect stories.
These are some of the things we put up with today.
Many of the records and rolls are either slangy or
in dialect. A story went the rounds in Cleveland
that a member of the Chicago Browning Club was
asked whether he liked dialect verse. He replied:
"Some of it. Eugene Field was all right. But the
other day I read some verses by a fellow named
Chaucer and he carries it altogether too far."
* * *
"Don't be stingy, Daddy! Buy a piano for that
timid, shrinking, talented daughter, the tips of whose
fingers are just aching to dance along the keys.
She will bring many a surge of pride in your manly
bosom as with her piano she makes an astonishing
impression or fertility, of force, of range, variety
and richness. Didn't know 'twas in the gal, did you?
* * *
Some of the best piano salesmen can neither play
a bar of music nor sing the simplest tune. George
MacDonald, the great Scotch author, couldn't sing
or play, but like the kind of salesman referred to, his
soul was truly musical. In Mary Marston, vol. 2,
page 280, lie wrote:
"It seems to me, at least in my great ignorance,
that one cannot understand music unless he is humble
towards it, and consents, if need be, not to under^
stand. When one is quiescent, submissive, opens the
ears of the mind, and demands nothing more of
them than the hearing—when the waters of question
retire to their bed, and individuality is still, then the
dews and rain of music, finding the way clear for
them, soak and sink through the sands of the mind,
down, far down, below the thinking-place, down to
the region of music, which is the hidden worship o,f
the soul, the place where lies ready the material for
man to making withal."
,'•
* * *

! ;
It is not always possible to determine whether a
particular piece of work that helps to make a piano
distingue and individual, is by the master of the
factory or by one of his pupils. And nobody would
care to know except the dealer, and he only to satisfy
his curiosity.
* * *
Take a vacation, tired piano man. One of the
surest ways not to see life whole is to see it too
steadily in one place.
* * *
Common sense is effective in the words of the
side-door salesman and the wide-floor salesman. It's
better for the beginner to post up on the points of
merit in his piano, rather than load himself down
with parrot-learning talking points.
Many a well-mannered sentence delivered at a
residence or a store dies of its own preciousness
* * *
There is something behind all surfaces. The roots
of the seen remain unseen. In these words we might
be describing a true-toned piano—an instrument that
speaks the language of the cultured. It's a good
companion. Although the best companion is not he
who says nothing, the good companion is known by
what he omits to say.
KNABE PIANOS FOR
NEW HOTEL GRIM
Fine Texarkana Hostelry Opened This Month
Has Been Equipped Through the H. V.
Beasley Music Company.
The beautiful new Hotel Grim of Texarkana, which
was brilliantly opened on July 15 last, has been
equipped with Knabe pianos by the H. V. Beasley
Music Co. of that city.
The Hotel Grim is one of the finest in the country
and its completion and opening is something which
has been looked forward to with much pride by all
residents of Texarkana. The opening was a social
event of considerable importance, which included, be-
sides a banquet which taxed the complete capacity
of the hotel, a fine musical program and other enter-
tainment.
The Knabe pianos supplied by the H. V. Beasley
Music Company include grands for use in various
parts of the hotel and for the orchestra leaders.
Incidental to the real estate developments which
are daily adding to the beauty of this southern city
is the proposed new building to be occupied jointly
by the H. V. Beasley Music Company and two other
firms. This fine new building, to be erected at Third
and Pine streets, will be one of the handsomest build-
ings in the city.
PAYS FORTUNE FOR OLD VIOLIN.
Caryl Bryan Oakes, a young artist completing his
studies under Leopold Auer, famous teacher of Hei-
fetz, Elman and Zimbalist, has just purchased the
famous Stradivarius violin known as the "Duke of
Edinburgh." The instrument was part of the ce'e-
brated Partello collection owned by Lyon & Healy.
Mr. Oakes, who is a resident of Tipton, Ind., selected
the violin after hearing it played by Professor Auer.
Though made by Stradivarius in 1722, the violin is
in perfect condition with a rich golden varnish, the
secret of which has been lost for centuries.
W. A. Sallee, a pioneer music dealer, Litchfield,
111., will retire after 34 years in the business. Old age
and the poor health of his wife are reasons for his
retirement. He will move to Houston, Texas.
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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