Presto

Issue: 1925 2041

Presto Buyers' Guide
Analyzes and Classifies
All American P i a n o s
and in Detail Tells of
rheir Makers.
PRESTO
E,tabu.hed i8u.
THE AMERICAN MUSIC TRADE WEEKLY
Presto Year Book
The Only Complete
Annual Review of the
American Music In-
dustries and Trades.
to cent,,- $2.00 a r.a,
CHICAGO, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1925
instruct the new owner. If a salesman is unable to
demonstrate the merits that he talks about he is use-
less in carrying out the proper methods of player-
piano presentation. Too many playerpianos have
been improperly sold.
Too many people have
acquired instruments while failing to acquire that en-
thusiasm that perpetuates love for the instrument.
Dan C. Thomas, of Barberton, Caught When
Return to Original Methods of Presenting the The blame is on the dealer and his salesmen.
His Car Took Fire and, Leaping Into
The
old
belief
of
the
playerpiano
advertisers
who
Playerpiano as an Instrument Inviting the
won
the
tired
business
men
and
others
not
so
tired
Stream, Met Death by Drowning
Personal Touch of the Performer, a
was that the American people are not satisfied to just
in Shallow Water.
Pleasant Fact in Advertising.
listen to music but have the healthy desire to make
music themselves. The growth of golf, a foreign
game, was caused by the fact that you play yourself
instead of sitting on a grandstand watching others
play. And your golfing is what you make it. You
Late Items from Cleveland, Ohio, Give Signs of
Instrument's Merits Not Price Allurements Consid- put your personality into your game.
Activity and Promise a Lively Fall and
What
Users
Think.
ered Most Potent Means for Augmenting
Winter Trade.
The home in which the playerpiano is the great
Favor for Instrument.
and continuous source of personal pleasure is where
Dan C. Thomas, a well-known piano and music
A noticeable thing in the advertising of the player- everybody knows how to play correctly and puts goods dealer of Barberton, Ohio, met death late
piano today is that it is a return to first principles; his or her personality into the playing. The player- Friday afternoon. August 28, by fire and drowning.
to the methods which depended upon the intrinsic piano is the simplest and most direct means offered Mr. Thomas hired a car from a local taxi company
musical worth of the instrument following its ap- for that purpose. The dealer's customers are to be and, when about five miles from Barberton, the
pearance as a regular and valued number in the piano found among the millions of people who love music car took fire from an unknown cause, enveloping
dealer's stock. The playerpiano publicity at this but can't play the piano. Where they have the Mr. Thomas in flames. He rushed to the Tuscara-
time is in reality reform and the necessity for the natural feeling for music the dealer or his salesmen was River, about thirty feet from the car, and
reform is shown in its beneficial effects. To the can make them enthusiastic playerpiano players. The jumped in.
trade paper editor who looks through the piano deal- playerpiano should be sold to them not as a clever
The river has but a few feet of water in it and
ers' ads in the exchanges reaching his desk, it is and ingenious piece of mechanism but as a means Mr. Thomas, who weighed about 225 pounds, sank
plain that the merchants using the playerpiano as a for expressing their own emotional reactions. The into the mud and, in his weakened condition, could
basis of bargain advertising are comparatively few dealer can increase interest and make more sales not extricate himself and drowned. His body was
in number, whereas those who present the instrument by denying that anyone can play the playerpiano discovered by some farmers who notified police.
on its quality and intrinsic musical value are in a by merely pumping. The spirit of a new appeal is
Later the remains of the car were discovered,
pleasing majority.
plain.
still smoking, about thirty feet away on the Barber-
ton-Clifton road. The body, which was almost im-
The Good Old Plea.
mersed in the mud, was taken to a local undertaker's.
A good line of appeal much used by advertising
Mr. Thomas had been in business for the past fifteen
piano merchants at one time was the opportunity for
years and was highly respected. He is survived by
self expression afforded by the playerpiano. It was
his widow and one son.
directed to father, mother, son and daughter and
Starr Pianos For Schools.
in a special way to the "tired business man." It was Decatur Firm, in Strong Newspaper Advertising,
shown that resting is really the exercise of certain
The Lakewood Board of Education—suburb of
Speaks Highly of Instrument Made in Buffalo.
muscles of the body and cells of the brain not ordi-
Cleveland, Ohio—has just purchased three Starr up-
"Kurtzmann, the Piano That Endures," is the way right pianos for the Lakewood schools. The Starr
narily employed. In addition to showing the recre-
ational value of the playerpiano. the advertisers the Decatur Music Shop, Inc., Decatur, 111., charac- has proven very satisfactory in Cleveland schools
showed how the playerpiano could be made a means terizes the product of C. Kurtzmann & Co., Buffalo, and in Lakewood and other suburbs, and it was due
to artistic expression and also of cultural develop- N. Y. The firm, which handles "Everything in to this excellent record to a great extent that the
ment. That the playerpiano was not a mere auto- Music" and widely advertises that fact, speaks thus order was placed.
matic machine but a delightful instrument needing of the piano named in a handsome newspaper dis-
Nose Diving Cure-All.
the co-operation of an enthusiastic player got the play this week:
The fame of Ernest S. Hall, piano dealer of War-
"When
you
bring
a
Kurtzmann
into
your
home
you
kind of people who wish to stamp their personality
acquire an artistic as well as a musical masterpiece. ren, O , continues to grow and it begins to look as
on work or play.
Come in today and let us explain why you owe it to though he would have to devote considerable of his
That kind of playerpiano presentation won at first your family to replace the old piano with a Kurtz- time to taking deaf folks up in his plane and nose-
and it is winning again today. It is again the rule mann."
diving with them to cure their infirmity.
for playerpiano advertisers to appeal to the desire for
A Clevelander, John Teli, had Mr. Hall take his
self expression which exists in every human being
son up last Sunday, to a height of nine-thousand
DEALER
MAKES
PIANO
RECORD.
and the results are apparent in every lively piano
Dan J. Sullivan, a piano dealer in the Walker feet, from which the plane nose-dived to five hun-
house. Now, when the playerpiano has been brought
dred feet. Results were reported satisfactory and
to an astonishing perfection the old appeal is more Building, Boston, and well known in the trade as a another flight lias been arranged for.
composer
and
pianist,
recently
made
a
trip
to
New
potent than ever.
The Grossman Bros. Music Co. have launched one
York, during which he was busy at the recording
Should Be Good Seller.
of
the biggest outdoor advertising campaigns ever
studios of the Columbia Phonograph Co., Inc., mak-
The playerpiano from its own merits should be an ing special piano records. He was accompanied on undertaken by any music house in Cleveland. Bill
easy seller, according to every rule of business. the trip by his daughter, Catherine, who is the able boards in all parts of the city are being used and
Where its desirability as a musical instrument has head of the auditing department of the company.
considerable newspaper space as well.
been obscured and the element of price made of
Music Master Meeting.
greatest prominence it has been the fault of the
Many
dealers
from Cleveland and parts of north-
PERCY TONK'S RETURN.
dealer. It is the privilege of every music merchant
ern Ohio attended the business session and informal
Percy
Tonk,
president
of
the
Tonk
Manufactur-
to create the selling policy for this or that instrument.
banquet of the Music Master Corporation, which was
If the playerpiano fails to enjoy a market equal to ing Co., Chicago, who has been in Los Angeles for given at the Hotel Cleveland on September 2. The
its appeal, the responsibility for the condition may several months attending to various matters in con- affair was under the auspices of the Ohio Musical
nection with the Tonk Company's new factory in
be fastened on the music merchant.
that city, is expected home next week. He is booked Sales Co., distributors of the Music Master for this
The playerpiano had been allowed to become re- to arrive on the ninth of this month—next Wednes- territory.
garded as a merely mechanical instrument in the mis- day.
The business session started at 2 p. m. and ended
taken efforts of the trade to create customers on
at 5:30 p. m. Executives of the Music Master Corp.
were present and included Walter Eckhardt, presi-
a price basis. Now that the correct and fundamen-
OTTO WISSNER TO BUILD.
dent; D. W. Williams, general sales manager; H. N.
tal basis of the playerpiano sale is again generally
Otto Wissner, the Brooklyn, N. Y., piano manu- McMeinen, general field manager; C. T. Miller, direc-
recognized conies a return to fundamental principles
in sales. But this involves something many dealers facturer, has completed plans for the erection of a tor of the Cross Advertising Agency; Wm. H. Nolan,
have lost sight of for quite a while—the need of the store and loft building on the east side of Flatbush district manager.
best type of demonstration and faithful instruction avenue, west of Fafayette avenue, at a cost of $60,000.
of the customer. Owners must be constantly im- The building will be five stories in height, the first
PROGRESSIVE IOWA FIRM.
pressed and reminded that the musical expression of to be used for piano warerooms.
The Massey Piano Co , Des Moines, la., will
the instrument is under the direct and personal con-
occupy the first, mezzanine, second and basement
trol of the player.
THE CABLE FACTORIES BUSY.
floors of a new building being constructed by T. I.
Proper Presentation.
"The Cable Company, St. Charles, one of the big Stoner and W. J. Massey at 914 Walnut street, Des
To present the playeriauo on its merits as a musi- industries of this part is working with a full force in Moines, Iowa. This building, to cost from $80,000 to
cal instrument capable of giving continuous joy, an effort to keep up with the orders," says the Elgin, $100,000, will be five stories high, with 22 feet front-
age on Walnut street and 132 feet deep.
the retail salesmen must necessarily be competent to 111., Courier in its news pages this week.
BACK TO OLD WAYS
OF PLAYER SALES
TRAGIC DEATH OF
OHIO PIANO MAN
REFORM IN PROCESSES
SCHOOLS BUY STARRS
ACTIVE ILLINOIS FIRM
FEATURES THE KURTZMANN
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/
September 5, 1925.
PRESTO
SAN ANTONIO MUSIC
HOUSE CELEBRATES
Stapleton Music Co. Holds Formal Opening of
Its Fine New Quarters at Broadway
and Travis Street.
The formal opening of the new quarters of the
Stapleton Music Co., San Antonio, Tex., recently
was an opportunity for showing the admirable char-
acter of the line of music goods carried. The facil-
ities in the remodeled store at Broadway and Travis
street for displaying, demonstrating and storing the
goods were well impressed on the numerous visitors
on opening day.
About three times the space occupied in the old
quarters is now enjoyed by the progressive San An-
tonio tirm. The commodious basement has been
handsomely decorated and furnished for the piano
department and special rooms for demonstrating the
pianos, players and reproducing pianos have been
provided.
The opening event, with a history of the Staple-
ton Music Co., were well written up by the San
Antonio dailies and in the Sunday edition of the
San Antonio Light an entire section was devoted to
the growth and future purposes of the house.
THE MAN WHO KNOWS IT ALL.
This life is full of troubles.
From cradle to the grave,
It swells and fairly bubbles,
And seldom will behave;
And not the least offender
In ways that oft appall.
Appears that mild pretender—
The man who knows it all.
Perhaps you tell so gaily
Of scenes you know so well—
In youth you've seen them daily—
The times you could not tell;
And then butts in another.
Whose face you can't recall,
Who says "You're all wrong, brother,"—
The man who knows it all.
You've worked out, near completely.
Some new devise of trade,
And hold it quite discreetly
Till all your plans are made;
When, lo. some wise go-getter
Comes, putting up some stall.
To show you something better—
The man who knows it all.
Some time, with fortune smiling,
When dawns the final day,
Perhaps, the fates beguiling
May keep that man away;
And then, our sweet harps finding
Far from this earthly ball,
We'll choose our own, not minding
The man who knows it all.
—CAD.
The Ohio Musical Sales Co., Cleveland, Ohio, lias
been chartered with an authorized capital of $100,000
to manufacture and deal in pianos, phonographs and
musical instruments.
WHERE DOUBTS ARE DISPELLED
Under This Head Presto Will Answer Any Question Pertaining to Pianos, or
Other Subjects of Direct Interest to the Trade and Musical Public
inquiries must bear the signature and address of
writer in order to receive attention. Answers thought
to be of general trade interest will be published. If an
answer is not of general interest it will be mailed pro-
vided stamp is inclosed.
CORRECTION.—In a recent issue of Presto this
department said that the Raudenbush & Sons Piano
Co., of St. Paul, Minn., had discontinued the manu-
facture of pianos. We are informed by the industry
named that only the "Garland" piano was withdrawn
from the line, and the correction is here made. The
"Raudenbush" piano is still produced for the trade of
its manufacturers.—Ed. Presto.
* * *
THE BEST REED ORGAN.
Zumbrota, Minn., August 16, 1925.
Editor Presto: Would you let me know who is
at present manufacturing the best reed church organ
outside the "Estey"?
J. A. BORAAS.
We do not know of any "best" reed church organ
that is any more so than the Estey. The Aeolian Co.
also makes an organ and a number of manufacturers
are making small pipe organs, but we do not know
of anything better than the Estey in the line of reed
organs.
* * *
THE "EVERETT" PIANO.
Columbus, Ohio, August 28. 1925.
Editor Presto: Is the Everett piano still made
and, if so, is it under the control of John Church, of
Cincinnati? Please give me the address of John
Church. Any information will be gratefully received.
CHAS. HUNTER.
It is our understanding that at least a part of the
output of Everett pianos comes from the factory of
the John Church Company, at Dayton, Kentucky,
across the river from Cincinnati.
The address of the John Church Company is 109
West 4th street, Cincinnati, Ohio. The house also
has a branch at 421 South Wabash avenue, Chicago.
The name of "Everett" as applied to pianos is owned
by the Cincinnati house of the John Church Com-
pany. If your request refers to Mr. Church person-
ally, we regret to say that the gentleman passed
away in Boston in the prime of his career more than
thirty years ago.
* * *
THE "KRAUSE" PIANO.
Salem, S. D.. August 20, 1925.
Editor Presto: Can you tell me the manufactur-
ers of the Krause piano and their address? I would
like that information so I can get some repairs.
Please find 50 cents enclosed for one of the latest
Presto Buyers' Guides.
CASH GALVIN.
Piano Supply Co., New York. Perhaps any good
tuner in your vicinity may assist you.
+
*
*
PLAYER ACTION BOOKS.
Frederick, Okla., August 17, 1925.
Editor Presto: Have you a guide to the different
player actions? What""I want is something explain-
ing the player actions and their differences. Send
C O.D. if you can secure this book. Send me a Presto
Buyers' Guide also.
M. C. HULLENDER.
A good way to find out all about player actions
would be to write to the following: Kohler Indus-
tries, New York, N. Y.; Gulbransen Co., Chicago,
111 ; Baldwin Piano Co., Cincinnati, Ohio; M. Schulz
Co., Chicago, 111. In fact, any of the large concerns
who are now making the player piano a specialty will
advise you. Also a new book on the subject of
player actions was recently issued by the Edward
Lyraan Bill, Inc., of New York City.
* * *
ABOUT "STARCK" PIANOS.
Rockvale. Colo., August 18, 1925.
Editor Presto: Please find enclosed 50 cents, for
which please send me the Presto Buyers' Guide for
1925. Meanwhile please let me know how P. A.
Starck pianos rate; also "Ellington," Cincinnati and
Baldwin pianos.
Please say how these pianos rate and in what man-
ner. Would be much obliged for answer, as I had
piano agent tell me Starck pianos were like pianos
of Montgomery Ward & Co.; also that Starck pianos
do not stand difference of climates.
J O H N B. SCAVARDA.
It is a pity that any piano salesman should make
the statements you have repeated. It is untrue that
the Starck is any more "like" instruments produced
by or for the great mail order house than any other
good pianos are like them. The P. A. Starck Piano
Co. has a tine factory in Chicago and produces all of
the instruments which bear the Starck name, and the
piano is a distinctly good one.
The Baldwin piano is a fine instrument and is the
leader of the large line produced by the house of
Baldwin, Cincinnati. The Ellington is the second, or
popular, piano produced in one of the great Baldwin
factories.
We believe that you will find such information
concerning all the instruments named by you as may
help in Presto Buyers' Guide.
* * *
WANTS SMALL UPRIGHT.
Wayne, Nebr., August 23, 1925.
Editor Presto: 1 want to ask you to send me one
Presto Buyers' Guide at once. Do you know of a
company that makes small pianos like the Miessner
The entire edition of Presto Buyers' Guide for 1925 piano and like the Cable and the Baldwin? I cannot
has been exhausted. The new edition will be out late sell either one of them, as they are handled in Omaha
in October. We are now presenting a copy of the and Norfolk, Nebr. The house there controls this
new edition to all new subscribers to Presto. If you part of the country.
are not a regular reader of this paper will be glad
Do you think that it pays the piano makers to give
to have you become one. The cost is but $2 per year. Omaha houses such large territory? We found that
Answering your question about the "Krause" piano, it doesn't, and an industry that used to sell to A.
we are not certain as to where that instrument is now
Hospe, of Omaha, found it out, too. When the house
made. It is a trade name. We suggest that you can
secure piano repairs by addressing the Piano Repair in mind got our first letter they wrote us that Hospe,
Shop, 3395 Wabash avenue, Chicago, or the United of Omaha, was selling them in this part of Nebraska.
I wrote them that A. Hospe hasn't sold a piano out
Specialty Co.. Monticello, Ind.; or the American
THE BEST PIANO SEASON
is with us. Dealers and salesmen who take advantage of it—and most agree that this season will be a good one—
must have the proper facilities for displaying" and delivering- the instruments. The only complete equipment is the
latest fool-proof Loader. It may now be had for only $95. Satisfaction guaranteed.
BOWEN PIANO LOADER CO.,
Winston-Salem, N. C.
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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