Presto

Issue: 1925 2045

October 3, 1925.
PRESTO
TRADE NEWS FROM
THE OREGON FIELD
EEBURG
Newly
Designed
TYLE"L"
Piano and Mandolin
Dimensions
Height, 511"; Width, 36|"; Depth, 23J \tf
Its fine tone pleases,
Its beauty attracts,
Its size saves space,
Its PROFITS PROVE
MANUFACTURED ONLY BY
J. P. Seeburg
Piano Co.
"Leaders in the
Automatic Field"
1510 Dayton St.
Chicago
Address Department "E"
State Association of Music Dealers Active in
Sponsoring Movement Encouraging Music
Study in Schools—Other Late News.
The Oregon Music Trades Association held its
monthly luncheon meeting at the Chamber of Com-
merce, Portland, September 22, to which they in-
vited as guests C. A. Rice, superintendent of the
Portland public schools; Norman C. Thorn, assistant
superintendent, and Wm. H. Boyer, supervisor of
music in the Portland public schools. These gentle-
men addressed the meeting and gave their views on
the subject of "Music as a Recognized Study in Our
Schools and Colleges."
The Oregon association is sponsoring a movement
for the recognition of the state music credits by the
universities and colleges. The organization has had
a law passed giving six music credits out of the re-
quired 32 for graduation from the high schools. The
program of the association is to get the Oregon uni-
versities and colleges in line and then extend their
work for a national recognition of music in our
schools. The meeting was attended by 20 members,
G. F. Johnson, of the G. F. Johnson Piano Co. and
president of the association, presiding.
A branch store of Sherman, Clay & Co. has been
opened at Salem, Ore., according to announcement
by Frank M. Case, manager of the Portland, Ore.,
branch of Sherman, Clay & Co. The store will be a
complete music establishment, with all departments
being maintained and is located in a handsome new
building in the capital city of Oregon. R. E.
McClellan, supervisor of agencies of the firm has been
placed temporarily in charge, and Stanley Bayles, who
for several years was in charge of the sheet music
department of the McDougall-Conn Portland Co., has
charge of the sheet music department.
The musicians of Portland, Ore., held a golf tourna-
ment on the Eastmoreland links of that city Sep-
tember 20, which was participated in by 3'6 members
of the profession. Roy Hulbert, who plays a King
saxophone in the Council Crest Orchestra, won the
championship flight and was presented with a hand-
some trophy by the Seiberling, Lucas Music Co. This
trophy must be won three times before it becomes the
permanent property of the winner.
Weeks & Orr, the Wiley B. Allen representatives
of Medford, Ore., featured & Mason & Hamlin Am-
pico series of concerts at the county fair held at that
place September 16 to 20. Afternoon and evening
concerts were given from a large stage located in the
center of the main building. Miss Eva Richmond,
soprano and Ampico demonstrator of the G. F. John-
son Piano Co., of Portland, Ore., was secured for the
week's demonstration and these programs created a
sensation and were largely attended. The Ampico
was also used in connection with the style show which
was staged by the fair management as one of the
special features of the week.
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
AT LEIPZIG [FAIR
Numerous Exhibits of Pianos, Harmoniums,
and Musical Merchandise as Large and
Varied as Usual at Famous German Fair.
The Leipzig Fair, held August 30-September 5, as
far as musical instruments are concerned, was, as
usual, well patronized in the exhibition lists. The
contingent of piano exhibitors numbered 59; har-
moniums were shown by 21 firms; mechanical in-
struments by 19 firms, and small instruments by 22
firms. Makers of parts were present to the number
of 22, and talking machine makers made 14 in all.
Notwithstanding the persistent participation in the
Fair, hopes were not high amongst exhibitors as to
business, in view of the generally depressed economic
situation in Germany.
Amongst the most interesting of the pianos was
that of Wilhelm Schimmel, of Leipzig, all of whose
models on view were fitted with his patent "Muso-
phol" lighting arrangement, which the house is fit-
ting to all its pianos in obedience to a general de-
mand. The exhibit included a rich variety of original,
striking and beautiful models.
Other exhibitions of note were Grotrian Steinweg
with an interesting group of cottage and grand pianos;
Steinway & Sons, Reinhold Schrother, etc., the last-
named with a very varied exhibit, including extra
small-sized instruments. But novelty does not ap-
pear to have been a feature amongst the pianos. An
interesting fitting, however, may be mentioned in
connection with Richard Weber's exhibit, consisting
of the music-holder, fitted into the cover, which is
both easy to work and strong. Small grands were
in evidence in a number of exhibits.
Harmoniums were well in evidence. One exhibitor
in this group, Emil Miiller, in submitting a rich col-
lection of instruments, is able to state that in April of
this year he delivered his fifty-thousandth harmonium.
But the harmonium, like the piano series, was not
particularly distinguished by startling novelties.
In the list of accessories there was much that was
arresting, piano, harmonium, organ, etc., parts being
well represented.
Amongst the small musical instruments, Markneu-
krichen instruments, wind instruments, fiddles,
guitars, accordions, strings, and all manner of ac-
cessories, such as rosins, oils and so on, were on
view in richer variety than there is space available
to approximately particularize.
KURTZMANN SMALL GRAND
A SUCCESSFUL SELLER
Lively Indiana Piano Store Strongly Features
Instrument Achieves the Reward of
Numerous Sales.
The Kurtzmann small grand, made by C. Kurtz-
raann & Co., Buffalo, N. Y., is ably featured by the
Kokomo, Ind., branch of the Pearson Piano Co., In-
dianapolis. C. I. Shirley is the able manager of the
Kokomo store whicli has admirable facilities for
showing the pianos, at 318 North Main street.
A newspaper display this week shows the Kurtz-
mann small grand which is an amazingly lively
seller. This is said about it in the display:
"The Kurtzmann, Style B, small grand, represents
a new standard of piano values. It is a remarkable
instrument with an entirely new scale which greatly
enhances its tonal qualities. Beauty of case design
and finish also adds to its attractiveness. Can be
had in either figured or walnut mahogany."
"Our success with the Kurtzmann line is aided by
the fact that it is a complete one," said Mr. Shirley.
"The small grand is a surprising seller because the
Kurtzmann name is synonymous with tonal merit
and reliability. Our appeal is to the people who are
discriminative when it comes to the choice of a piano.
Its rare tone of high quality and exquisite beauty of
design makes for a popularity which is a just re-
ward."
LIVELY WISCONSIN FIRM
REPORTS BIG GRAND SALES
Satisfactory Feature of Fall Business Told by H. C.
Sparton, Alert Wausau Manager.
H. C. Spanton, manager of the Wausau branch of
the Mead Music House reports a very encouraging
piano business for the early fall weeks. A satisfac-
tory feature of the business is the spontaneous call
for grand pianos.
The line carried at the branch in Wausau is identi-
cal with that presented in the main store in Merrill,
where Mr. Sparton's partner, Fred L. Mead, is man-
ager. It is the irresistible array of the Cable Com-
pany, Chicago, and enthusiasm for the Conover,
Cable, Kingsbury and Wellington pianos and the
Carola and Euphona Inner-Player pianos stimulates
every worker in the two Wisconsin stores.
NEW INDIANA STORE.
Dewey Akers, a Lebanon, Ind., musician, has
opened a music store in that city, to be known as the
Baldwin Music Shop. Baldwin pianos, complete
lines of band and orchestra instruments, sheet music
and other musical merchandise will be carried in
stock. A formal opening of the shop took place
September 19.
DEALERS AT FAIR.
Exhibits of pianos, talking machines and radio were
made at the Stark County Fair in Canton, O., last
week by the William E. Zollinger Company, the
Custer Music House and the Rhines Edison Co. The
first named had a mixed display of music goods, but
the Custer Music House confined its energies to thV
showing of its piano lines.
SUCCESS WITH M. SCHULZ PIANO.
Ed Burbes, who recently opened up a piano store
in Chester, 111., is showing a fine line of players from
the M. Schulz Company, Chicago. Mr. Burbes has
been handling the Schulz pianos for several years and
has sold many in that vicinity.
F. W. Turpin has rented the Long Building in
Springdale, Ark., and will open a music store.
Kelley & Cowles, Hartford, Conn., recently held a
successful clearance sale of pianos and players.
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).
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PRESTO
Presto
THE AMERICAN MUSIC TRADE WEEKLY.
Published Every Saturday at 417 South Dearborn
Street, Chicago, Illinois.
C. A. D A N I E L L and F R A N K 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
departments to PRESTO PUBLISHING CO., 417 South
Dearborn Street, Chicago, III.
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1925.
REAL BOOSTERS
Whenever a great need develops it is almost
a certainty that nature—human or otherwise—•
seems ready to furnish it. Just now the
cause of music is, in general, in a sense, some-
what chaotic. Interferences and diversions
have twisted the public mind away from the
finer things of life, of which music and the
instruments of music are first.
And so the public needs something by
which to save it from losing the best influence
to pure enjoyment and refined happiness.
And the need is being supplied in a new way.
The state music trade associations are step-
ping into the breach and bringing back again
the enthusiasm and the vigor by which the
American people so long led the world of
music and will continue to lead it.
This year several of the state music trade
associations have met and the influence of
their energy has swept far and wide. The
Ohio convention, at Cincinnati, the Michigan
convention at Detroit, and this week's meet-
ing of Illinois music merchants at Rockford,
prove that there is no shadow of decline in
the enthusiasm of the men whose lives are
devoted to the spread of the instruments of
music.
And there is another factor in the state
meetings which Presto recognizes as of the
utmost importance. It is the personal activ-
ity of men prominent, as both manufacturers
and musicians, who have devoted time and re-
search to the cause of the perpetuation of the
music business as a help to public love and
understanding of the art and its benefits.
A fine illustration may be cited in the
thoughtful and practical address of Mr. W.
Otto Miessner, at Rockford, which is repro-
duced in this issue of Presto. It is by such
presentations of facts and figures as Mr.
Miessner's, by such straight-forward, clear-
cut statements of the purposes of music and
its influences upon the youth of the nation,
that the business of musical instrument mak-
ing and selling is preserved, encouraged and
kept where it must be kept if the art itself
is to remain and flourish.
We hope that no reader of Presto—and cer-
tainly no serious-minded music merchant—
will miss a word of Mr. Miessner's address.
As a musician, composer, director and teacher,
as well as a piano manufacturer, the gentle-
man from Milwaukee is entitled to no small
credit for what he is doing also for the piano
trade, no less than for the schools and music
loving public. Only a love of music can cre-
ate a demand for the instruments that produce
it.
TO ELIMINATE WASTE
The musical instrument industry is among
others in a survey of the Department of Com-
merce to probe charges of waste in manufac-
turing and selling processes. The depart-
ment is now investigating conditions in sev-
eral of the largest business centers. Matters
relating to the dimensions of the lumber used
in factories, and whether they are conducive
to waste in using them, will be subjects of in-
quiry in piano factories and other musical in-
strument manufacturing plants. It is the in-
tention of the government to make the survey
nation-wide.
The faults in marketing and retailing will
also be investigated in the survey, and an at-
tempt will be made to remedy the situation
by showing where services and expenses can
be pruned and the movement of goods from
the manufacturer to the consumer be expe-
dited and facilitated. It is pointed out by the
department that the largest field of waste is
in lack of information on the part of manufac-
turers and distributors, as to the require-
ments of the various sections of the United
States; a lack of knowledge of the problems
of race, occupations, habits, incomes, and pur-
chasing ability.
The result of the survey will be to enlighten
manufacturers and distributors as to the pur-
chasing power of each regional district, so
that sales executives will be able to plan mar-
keting campaigns "on the basis of knowledge
rather than of guesses."
The various regions will be analyzed in a
complete manner that will prove helpful to
the retail music merchant who will be en-
abled to set quotas and plan sales campaigns
in a manner to avert lost motion and blind
appeals to impossible prospects.
The Department of Commerce holds that
when the goods can be placed on the market
scientifically, instead of mechanically, the
market value of each article will show a profit
of proper proportions.
It seems quite possible that one result of
the inquiry may be to help standardize pianos
and accomplish, to a large extent, what the
fight against "stencil" pianos was meant to do
in the virtuous days of the old National Piano
Manufacturers' Association.
AN INVESTIGATION
It is not surprising that at last a public
spirited member of Congress proposes an in-
vestigation of the "music trust," as the Hon-
orable MacGregor, of Buffalo, calls the Amer-
ican Society of Composers, Authors and Pub-
lishers. The story of that combination is a
long one. Its purposes are, in the public
mind, confusing, complicated and contradic-
tory. It is time that a clearer understanding
of its methods and limitations—if it has any
should be exposed.
As to whether the often severely arbitrary
October 3, 1925.
rulings of the association have really done
any harm to the cause of art may be ques-
tioned. It is usually the so-called "popular"
kind of music that is affected, and perhaps the
public has been protected rather than hurt by
the free-handed system of taxation which has
been enforced or threatened on every possible
occasion.
But that there is something unfair and
coercive in the association has often been sug-
gested, and many hardships have been experi-
enced by promoters of the concert stage and
others. There is not much real genius in the
popular songs about which most of the copy-
right hue and cry is raised. The average com-
position is devoid of genuine originality, and
often to demand a tax for singing or playing
seems to border upon the grotesque.
Anyway, the trade will agree that for the
sake of the publishers themselves, no less than
the composers, the investigation of the Buf-
falo congressman may serve a good purpose.
At the worst it can do no harm.
Now history repeats itself in the piano
trade. There hasn't been a fall season in fifty
years in which there wasn't the comforting
asurance that "the dealers are getting tired
of crying 'no business/ and hustling for busi-
ness." And it's so this year.
* * *
The dealer who sells most pianos in the
average community between now and Christ-
mas will be the one who gets out after his
prospects in his own way and with the kind
of energy that real piano salesmen possess.
30 YEARS AGO IN THE TRADE
From the Files of Presto
(October 3, 1895.)
The day of the thump-box is already declining.
The painted case of tuneless wires must go.
J. L. Fredrico, a well-known repairer of church
organs, died suddenly, in Cincinnati, as a result of
excessive cigarette smoking.
We read of the "Wonderful Weber Tone," of the
"Crown-on-Top," of the "Marvelous Plectra-phone"
and other things, but none of them surpasses the
pleasant Sohmer smile which greets the wanderer at
Third avenue and Fourteenth street.
Speaking of piano trade in New York, I learned
at Steinway Hall that the aggregate sales of Steinway
pianos Tuesday this week amounted to $10,000. The
average price of Steinway pianos sold from the Stein-
way salesrooms is about $950 per instrument.
In Germany the trade in American pianos and
organs has not grown so rapidly as in England,
partly because there is not the market there, and
partly because the trade is slower to make changes
or to recognize the innovations and popular features
which characterize the American products.
20 YEARS AGO THIS WEEK
(From Presto, October 5, 1905.)
Arthur L. Wessell, of Wessell, Nickel & Gross was
married on Monday of last week to Miss Edith Rich-
ards of Newport.
A foolish man wears his life out trying to write
his name high on the scroll of fame, but the wise man
is satisfied to stencil it on the fall board of a high
grade piano.
All employes of Shimek Bros., organ manufactur-
ers, of 932 and 934 North Broadway, Baltimore, Md.,
went out on strike because their employers had cur-
tailed their daily allowance of beer.
The members of the New York Piano Manufac-
turers' Association received copies last week of the
demands of the union, the only real demand being
one for the closed shop, for which a general strike
was ordered, to go into effect October 1. They de-
cided to refuse the demands, and began preparations
at once for the strike.
E. W. Furbush, of Boston, was in Chicago Monday
and spent part of the time talking over business with
the manager, George J. Dowling. Mr. Furbush ad-
mits modestly that business is good all along the line.
He never tells what his routes are but it is probable
that Mr. Furbush will bob up in one of two other
cities before returning to Boston.
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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