Presto

Issue: 1925 2044

PRESTO
Presto
THE AMERICAN MUSTC 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. 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
d e p a r t m e n t s to PRESTO P U B L I S H I N G
Dearborn Street, Chicago, III.
CO., 417 South
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1925.
YOUR FRIEND AND "LEADER"
A popular newspaper feature just now is the
short prose poems by George Matthew Adams
by which are syndicated touches of sentiment
designed to twang the heart strings and agi-
tate the lachrymal glands. The latest of the
"Today's Talks" comes to Presto from a
prominent piano man who is just now in the
Far West. And following is the opening
paragraph of the article, to which the piano
man has appended the complimentary sugges-
tion to the editor that "You will appreciate
this, as I do" :
Sometimes I wonder if friends, after all, aren't appor-
tioned to each of us. For as the years go on and we
meet new people and like them, still, how rare it is that
we take on a new friend.
That is a fine sentiment. And isn't it equal-
ly as applicable to pianos as to our other
friends? When a man who makes it his life
work to sell pianos has been daily, for years,
associated with any particular piano, as most
successful dealers have been, doesn't that
piano become a closer friend and something
more than merely an article of trade?
Talk about no sentiment in business! Two-
thirds of the men who pass their days selling
pianos have so much affection for their "lead-
ers" and spend so much of their vitality talk-
ing about the instruments' beauty and charm,
that sentiment "is their middle name."
We recall a veteran piano merchant from
Australia who said that he sold the Steinway,
and just after the great war started he found
that, with but two of the "Instruments of the
Immortals" in stock, he could get no more. He
sold one of them and, though he had many
customers eager to get the last one, he could
not bear to part with it. "I play the piano
myself," said the Australian, "and I loved to
sit down to that Steinway so much that I was
very loath to part with it."
Was there no sentiment in that? And isn't
it the same in almost innumerable other in-
stances, the world over? The same thing ap-
plies to every one of the great pianos. There
is a real affection for them in the men whose
business it is to sell them. And that is one
of the inestimable assets of a great piano's
name—of the piano itself, from the polished
top to the casters that rest upon the floor.
Sentiment and art are inseparable. And in the
cases of many a veteran dealer, it is as true of
the piano in their warerooms as with their
friends in the flesh—"how rare it is that we
take on a new friend."
They may not say so, for that would not
be "good business." And they will take on a
new piano, so long as it does not interfere
with the old friend, for that may be good busi-
ness. But the leader in the line! Every trav-
eling salesman knows how hard it is to get
in anything that may seem to be designed to
supplant the instrument that has won the
dealer's affections and continues to retain it.
ONLY FIVE PER CENT
We are told by a London trade paper that
only five per cent of the pianos made in Eng-
land contain player actions. In other words,
only five in every hundred instruments are
playerpianos. And yet proportionately it
seems that the piano business in England is
as good as it is in the United States. How
do you account for it?
Probably, as one London piano manufac-
turer said at the recent meeting of the Brit-
ish trade, there would be greater activity if
the player were to be made more of. If the
same spirit had been put into the British play-
erpiano that has marked its manufacture and
sale over here, the London factories would be
busier and the retailers would be correspond-
ingly active. At least for a time.
And the question naturally arises : Why has
the playerpiano developed so slowly in Eng-
land? Is it that the English people are less
musical? Or is it a sign to the contrary? Is
it that the manufacturers are less ingenious,
or the dealers lacking in selling energy? Or
is it that the English people of musical taste
persist in preferring to play the piano in the
old way, exercising their digits while they
exert their musical understanding and taste?
And is it true that, in the long run, the
English playerpiano, if permitted to push
aside the old-fashioned instrument, would be
more profitable to either the manufacturers
or the trade ? In the face of the fact of the
coming of the perfected player, is it evident
that the industry or the trade has flourished
more liberally, or become vastly more wealthy
than it was in the earlier days? And is the
future more filled with promise of increasing
prosperity because of the player?
In England there have been the same de-
terrent influences that over here have been
charged with hurting the piano business. Over
there they have automobiles, their roads are
good and the love of the out-of-doors has
never been less than our own. The moving
picture is as much alive over there as here,
and the radio is as much in vogue—and just
as uncertain.
What, then, has kept the hand-played piano
so far ahead of the player in the industry and
trade of England? We dislike to think that
it is a sign of a larger love of the study and
application necessary to piano playing in the"
old way. Nor do we want to believe that it is
a vastly smaller regard for what Mr. A. G.
Gulbransen has characterized as the unmusical
noise called jazz. Anyway, and whatever the
September 26, 1925.
cause, the piano remains far ahead in England
with the playerpiano tagging behind with only
five per cent of the piano output to its credit.
As an index to the uppermost thought in
governmental authority a nation's post office
direction is suggestive. Just now the provin-
cial English cancellation stamp reads in large
letters, "British Goods Are Best." Our Uncle
Sam contents himself with "Air Mail Saves
Time."
* * *
The aim of several piano manufacturers to
win the favor of school boards and similar
educational influences, is a good one. Of late
several special piano advertisements have
pointed that way, and with good results. The
future of the piano rests largely with the am-
bition of the young to actually possess the
ability to interpret music in their own way,
and by the use of their own fingers.
* * *
The Cooper patent on Player Grands was
issued in 1910. Its purpose was to protect a
plan of construction wherein the player mech-
anism would not injure the appearance of the
piano, and so that the addition of the mech-
anism would not necessitate changes in the
form .of the case. The patent is stirring a
good deal of interest just now.
* * *
Thirty years ago the daily newspapers were
invading the sheet music trade, printing "pop-
ular songs" and otherwise threatening to an-
noy the music publishers. Nothing of that
kind today. Even the big popular magazines
no longer boast of their music departments.
30 YEARS AGO IN THE TRADE
From the Files of Presto
(September 26, 1895.)
This is Geo. P. Bent's jubilee year—his twenty-fifth
year in business.
We understand on good authority that E. W. Fur-
bush is going to "cut a pie" soon, also that Geo.
Grass has known for a long time how that check-rain
came to be found.
Newman Bros, are feeling quite elated over their
success in England. A cablegram came yesterday
from Robert Cocks & Co., London, ordering a num-
ber of special styles. The export styles of Newman
Bros, are specially adapted for foreign trade and they
are already in great demand across the waters.
The new business that is coming to Presto is the
best possible proof of the place the paper holds in the
trade. This new business, as already indicated, does
not all appear in the form of regular displayed cards,
nor in special full page advertising. But its effective-
ness will be fully recognized and felt at the proper
time.
The fall trade is developing just as Presto has pre-
dicted—not a boom nor a general all around slide
into ease and prosperity, but a decided brightening
up, with promise of a good business for those who
work for it. The piano trade is at all times largely
a matter of hustle, and the man who sits idly in his
office waiting for customers is not the one who does
the business.
20 YEARS AGO THIS WEEK
(From Presto, September 14, 1905.)
Bush & Gerts Piano Company, Chicago; capital
stock increased from $700,000 to $1,000,000.
A w-ealthy Englishman named Backhaus has con-
tributed five thousand francs for first prize in a piano
competition. What a dandy name for a bum piano.
The Schumann factory, at Rockford, is so busy at
present that the company finds it almost impossible
to keep up with the demand for the Schumann pianos,
and this demand is from all parts of the Union.
Charles F. Trebar sailed for Europe on Tuesday
last and his embarkation was regretted by a host of
friends made here. He left behind him a splendid
record in the world of art and trade. He will be
missed by scores of artists, business men and his old
associates in the Steinway house which he served so
long and ably.
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 26, 1925.
ILLINOIS DEALERS
MEET NEXT WEEK
Rockford to Be Location of Third Annual
Convention of Illinois Music Merchants'
Association September 28 and 29, at
Which Big Attendance Is Assured.
DEALERS ENTHUSIASTIC
Music Merchants All Over the State Evince Spirit
Preached by President Lacey Since Last Meet-
ing of Body.
The third annual convention of the Illinois Music
Merchants' Association will be held at the Hotel Nel-
son, Rockford, on Monday and Tuesday (September
28 and 29) of next week, and officials of the organiza-
tion are assured of a big attendance to take part in
the attractive program of business events and social
functions to which latter the ladies of the trade have
been warmly invited. That the local arrangements
have been ably attended to is certain from the energy
of the chairman of the committee, L. I. Johnson,
secretary of the Haddorff Piano Co., Rockford, and
his associates.
The officers of the association are: James Lacey,
Peoria, president; J. E. Rice, Mt. Olive, vice-presi-
dent; R. J. Van Fossen, Beardstown, secretary, and
Lloyd L. Parker, Harrisburg, treasurer.
Enthusing Dealers.
The activities of President Lacey have brought
home to the dealers of the state the importance of
belonging to the associations and of taking an active
part in the events at Rockford next week. Mr.
Lacey's belief, frequently expressed throughout the
state, is that every dealer's good or bad methods
affect every other dealer.
Bad trade practices have an influence far outside
the town in which they occur, and good ones have a
beneficial effect on customers and dealers in a wide
radius. He is not indifferent to the big array of in-
teresting talkers invited to be present, but he wants
a great number of music merchants to avail them-
selves of the opportunity to express their views
freely on topics particularly interesting to Illinois
dealers.
Piano Club Enlisted.
At the noonday meeting and luncheon of the Piano
Club of Chicago, on Monday of this week, Mr. Lacey
was a guest of honor. It was an occasion devoted to
booming the gathering of the Illinois Music Mer-
chants' Association in Rockford next week. The
president of the Illinois Music Merchants' Associa-
t'on, in one of his earnest talks, gave his views of
the aims and functions of a state association. It was
a clear description of what constitutes a practical
organization for the removal or amelioration of trade
evils, where they exist, and the betterment generally
of the music business.
L. I. Johnson Talks.
Another guest of honor at the luncheon was L. I.
Johnson of the Haddorff Piano Co., of Rockford,
who as chairman of the Rockford committee in
charge of arrangements for the convention, formally
invited the full membership of the Piano Club of
Chicago to "come to Rockford next week and radiate
the enthusiasm for which you are nationally noted,"
as he so cheerfully expressed it.
"Your own Matt Kennedy will come to our conven-
tion to deliver an address on 'Why Music Merchants
Should Get Together,' and I know it will be a good
talk. Mr. Kennedy could show a convincing object
lesson to prove the benefits he is scheduled to speak
on, by inviting every Illinois music dealer to come to
a Piano Club luncheon and see the effects of dealers
mixing in a social way for the consideration of trade
problems."
Hoyne Wells, of the Schumann Piano Co., Rock-
ford, and a member of the entertainment committee
of the convention, added to Mr. Johnson's plea to
piano club members to come to Rockford, "both as
Illinois men of the music trade and fortunate mem-
bers of the most unique music trade organization—
the Piano Club of Chicago."
The Luncheon Feature.
Following the rule of music trade organizations in
their annual conventions, the Rockford convention
will have its Get-together Luncheon at noon each
day, at which vital trade topics will be discussed.
Lloyd L. Parker, of Harrisburg, will be chairman of
the Monday luncheon and Charles Burtzloff, chair-
man of the Tuesday event.
Among the scheduled addresses are "How Can I
He!p Make America Musical?" by Fred P. Watson,
Mt. Vernon; "Music Merchants and the National
Association," by Henry E. Weisert, Chicago, presi-
PRESTO
dent of the National Association of Music Merchants;
"Bait Advertising and the Illinois Statute," by Ros-
coe Herget, manager-counsel of the Better Business
Bureau of Peoria; "The Melody Way," by W. Otto
Miessner, president of the Miessner Piano Co., Mil-
waukee.
Others to talk arc Mr. Kennedy on the topic
already named; Harry D. Schoenwald, president of
the Piano Club of Chicago; Charles E. Byrne, vice-
president of the Steger & Sons Piano Mfg. Co., Chi-
cago; Rex B. Hyre, secretary of the Ohio Music
Dealers' Association, and Osborne McConathy, pro-
fessor of music at the Northwestern University.
The Golf Game.
For Sunday afternoon, Sept. 27, the day preceding
the convention of the Illinois Music Merchants' As-
sociation, at Rockford, arrangements have been made
for anyone who wishes to play golf at the Harlem
Hills Golf Club. L. I. Johnson, secretary of the
Haddorff Piano Company, or Hoyne Wells, of the
Schumann Piano Company, should be advised in
advance in case anyone wishes to play, and should
like to have this information as soon as possible so
as to accommodate the crowd.
It is the plan of the Rockford men of the trade
to make the golf tournament an enjoyable social
affair, including a golf dinner on Sunday at the Har-
lem Hills Golf Club.
Among Chicago players entered for the tourna-
ment are: K. C. Curtiss, Harry Bibb, J. T. Bristol,
Henry Hewitt, Harry Schoenwald and R. E. Waite.
AUGUST PIANO SALES
EXCEED PREVIOUS YEARS
That Is the Cheering Report of Lyon & Healy,
Chicago's Pioneer Music
House.
Retail piano sales at Lyon & Healy's for August
show a 47 per cent increase over last year, this being
an indication that the house will enjoy a very large
and satisfactory business during the balance of the
year.
The Lyon & Healy retail sales for August were
larger than any other August in previous years with
one exception.
OHIO DEALER DIES.
Daniel Thomas, music dealer of Barberton, O., died
recently from the effects of burns received when his
automobi'.e caught fire. Mr. Thomas had been suc-
cessful in the music business, which will be con-
tinued by his widow and son.
WHAT SOME DEALERS
IN DENVER ARE DOING
P. F. Sharp Quits, Denver Music Co. Has Big
Used Piano Sale, and Darrow Puts
Over "Clean Up."
By J. B. DILLON.
P. F. Sharp, president of the Sharp Music Com-
pany, 823 Fifteenth street, Denver, states that he is
unable to make satisfactory terms for the renewal of
bis lease; that his mining inte/ests demand more of
his attention, and that he will dispose of his entire
stock within a short time and retire from the music
business. Mr. Sharp has been a moving factor in the
music trades in Denver for about twenty-five years.
Denver Music Company in its annual fall sa'e
offers well known makes of pianos, "Used Pianos," at
50 per cent or more off, and: "We will exchange
any instrument, allowing you full purchase price, for
an instrument of the same or better grade, within
two years." The newspaper advertisement required
a tliree column width, twenty inch length, with cen-
ter illustration—the wife playing piano while husband
drops his paper to listen.
Darrow put on a "Clean Up" sale and advertised
slightly used pianos, radios and phonographs at 50
per cent and more off the original selling price, and
he "pulled off" a very cute advertising stunt when he
placed at various parts of the advertising pages the
little one column width, one inch length of bold black
type: "Wonderful Sale of Pianos and Playerpianos
Now On at The Darrow Music Company, Cor. 15th
and Stout." Every time I turned a page of the news-
paper I saw that little "interloper" and I thought,
"That will fetch 'em," and it did.
ACTIVITIES OF THE
NEW YORK ASSOCIATION
Plans Discussed for the Coming Meeting of
the N. Y. Piano Merchants' Association
on October 15.
The Executive Committee of the New York Piano
Merchants' Association met at the New York Re-
publican Club on September 17, to arrange for the
activities of the Association during the coming sea-
son.
The Committee had as a special guest E. Paul
Hamilton, the first president of the Association, and
now manager of Bamberger & Co. piano department
of Newark.
The first fall meeting of the New York Piano Mer-
chants' Association will be held on Thursday eve-
ning, October 15, at the Hotel Martinique.
At the meeting of the Executive Committee four
new members were admitted—Chickering & Sons
Piano Co., P. A. Starck Piano Co., Schmidt-Dauber
Co., Inc., and F. J. Bauer & Co. John J. Glynn.
president of the association, is active in promoting
pot only the affairs of the New York Piano Associa-
t'on, but the welfare of the trade generally.
The new Hotel Grim at Texarkana, Ark., has pur-
chased a Knabe grand piano from the H. V. Beasley
Music Co. of that city.
A Plan and
A Piano that
School Boards Favor
1\/T ^SIC is winning a bigger
-L'-l place in the public school
each year. More children are
getting their chance in music.
The Miessner sales plan fits
right in with modern music
teaching. It's a double-barreled
selling plan that gets action
from two sources. Interests
school board members—parents
too.
Sells the Miessner to
schools—to homes.
Dealers
who push the Miessner report
rapidly increasing piano sales.
Let us outline the Miessner
plan to you. Mail the coupon
today.
MIESSNER PIANO CO.
126 Reed St.
Milwaukee, Wis.
THE LITTLE PIANO WITH THE BIG T O N E
Miessner Piano Co.,
Tin Reed St., Milwaukee, Wis.
Gentlemen:
Send me full details on the Miessner Piano
and your successful plan of selling Miessners
to schools and homes.
Firm
Name
Address
Writer's Name
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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