Presto

Issue: 1927 2119

PRESTO-TIMES
to meet and rub elbows with such men is beyond
comprehension. And I have not mentioned the old
guard of traveling men who called on the trade in
those days—Frank King, P. J. Gildermeister, Fred
Lohr, De Volney Everett, E. W. Furbish and George
Dowling (both still in the game and going strong).
And I had several years in "Dear Old Boston," and
Life Story of a Hard Worker in the Trade am very thankful for the experience, for the knowl-
edge I gained in piano ethics, and something of
Who Has Found Enjoyment and Tonic-
financing, from my association with those sterling
Exhilaration in the Best Business
houses and men—Vose & Sons, the late Handel Pond
and my chief, Mark P. Campbell! (Ah, there's a
in the World.
man!)
I also got some good pointers in salesmanship
from the late Geo. W. Lyon, whom I consider the
best salesman I ever encountered. I said to my wife
today: "What a wonderful thing it is never to grow
Starting as a Retail Salesman, then Selling "On the old," drawing in my mind's eye that bunch of young
Road" and as Head of His Own House,
fellows, smoking, laughing and telling stories at the
Geo. P. Bent "dinner to old-time friends" at the Com-
the Lesson Is Instructive.
modore Hotel last June in New York.
On March 25, 1885, forty-two years ago, in Buffalo,
Mr. Bent himself, Mr. Parsons the toastmaster,
N. Y., the writer was among about twenty-five or Herman Leonard, Pat Conroy of St. Louis and many
more who answered an ad which read:
others. And it flashed upon me that I must have
"Wanted—Salesman, at 352 Main street; permanent caught some of their spirit or view of life, because
pisition to the right man."
in starting out for Texas this week to look the field
This writer got the job, which only paid $6 a week, over, with a view to establishing a winter home and
to open a shop there, I feel the same thrill I had
but was promised $12 a week if he sold a piano or
two organs in the three weeks to be "tried out." when as a boy I went on my first surveying expe-
Did I get out and dig? You can write your own dition. And I have only recently gotten out of the
hospital, but I sold two grand pianos—a Lester and
a Premier—and that is a good tonic.
MORETHAN 40 YEARS
AT PIANO SELLING
MEMOIRS OF E. A. FRANCIS
K. A. FRANCIS.
ticket, for 1 sold three Hallet & Davis pianos to
three school teachers, two of them being squares
and one an upright.
1 had never sold anything before, much less can-
vassed. I had been out on the prairies surveying
and riding the range for three years and went to
Buffalo to visit my mother and sister, going there
with the Buffalo Bill Wild West outfit.
Old "Sitting Bull," the Indian warrior, was on
the same train and there met Colonel Cody for the
first time since the Custer massacre.
Start in Life.
I was just turned 21 and had not seen much of
city life, so my mother and sister had not much diffi-
culty in persuading me to stay back East. I laid
aside my chaps, spurs, riding boots, with their high
heels, and the wide-brimmed Stetson, etc., and started
on what has proven to be a thrilling, interesting and
enjoyable life work. I have gotten a tremendous
kick out of the personal contact I've had through all
the years. I've met with such artists as Von Bulow,
Dr. Albert Tevessa, Carreno, Fannie Bloomfield Zeis-
ler, Paderewski, Florence Macbeth, Gaili Curci and
others. I've had more sport out of beating the other
fellow to a sale than I ever did in trying to stand
pat on a pair of deuces, and trying to look as though
I had four of them.
The old guard of real piano builders and traveling
salesmen that it was my privilege to know in the
earlier years are nearly all gone.
William Steinway, Earnest Knabe (second gen-
eration) of these celebrated houses, as well as Frank
Chickering. Mr. Keidel, the Knabe representative
in New York—Albert Weber, the Decker Bros.,
Frank Shaw—among the manufacturers—all passed
on, but the " good they did lives after them"—to
change Shakespeare around a bit.
Some Prominent Names.
Just how any one in the piano business can't fail
to be happy in it—when they have the opportunity
No Substitute for Work.
And say, folks, before closing I'd like to say that
all this propaganda, circulars and so-called "helps
to piano sales," conventions and "special sales," con-
ducted by men who don't know the first rules of the
piano game, are on a par with .the bald-headed bar-
ber selling his victim, who is also bald, a cure for
baldness. There is no substitute for work. These
grand piano sales made recently I worked on for the
last three years, calling at intervals and gradually
overcoming procrastination.
A "piano playing contest" may go over big in a big
cky, but never in a small one. I spoke to our super-
intendent of schools about one, and he replied that
"all the music teachers and music schools would be
fighting over it like Kilkenny cats inside of a week,"
that he had tried for years to arrange for credits for
pupils taking music lessons, but had found "nothing
but grief." Can you imagine the one or two dealers
in a small city getting together?
If you can, then you can write a book (fiction)
that will be a "best seller." And this is just the
rock that has so far and will still keep the "mer-
chants' association" beating the air as the majority
of the 7,000 merchants, dealers, or "what have you"
do business in the smaller cities. And none of the
"big boys," whether manufacturers, trade paper
writers, or members of the M. I. C. C. ever show
their noses in the Main street cities. But we manage
to "carry on" despite this neglect.
E. A. FRANCIS.
BALTIMORE'S BIG MUSIC
STORE, AND A NEW ONE
Kranz-Smith-Hammen-Levin Co. Has Three Ware-
rooms; New Concern in Maryland Music Co.
The Kranz-Smith-Hamman-Levin Company, large
Baltimore musical instrument dealers, has decided to
continue the store formerly occupied by the Ham-
man-Levin Company, 412 North Howard street, as
a branch store for an indefinite period. The Ham-
man-Levin Company merged, several months ago.
with Kranz-Smith, at which time it was planned to
discontinue the store operated by the former for the
past twenty years and to maintain only one store, at
Charles and Fayette streets.
The concern also operates the Sanders-Stayman
Company, former large musical instrument dealers at
308 North Charles street. Charles Levin is president
of the company and Joseph Fink vice-president.
A new musical house known as the Maryland Music
Company has opened for business at 501 North Haw-
ard street, Baltimore.
JOHN H. McKANNON DEAD.
John H. McKannon, president of the McKannon
Piano Company, Denver, Colo., died March 2 after a
long illness. He was 64. Mr. McKannon was a
native of Trenton, Me. He established his business
in Denver in 1906. He was known as an authority
on many musical instruments. His widow and one
daughter survive him.
The U. S. Forest Products Laboratory, Madison,
Wis., urges makers of benches and cabinets and
other wood using industries to buy more short length
yard lumber in the interest of wood economy.
March 12, 1927.
ITEMS IN THE TRADE
AT INDIANAPOLIS, IND.
Jesse French, Jr., Returns from West Indies,
and Other Incidents in the Stores
of the Capital City.
A matinee musicale was held in the warerootns of
the Starr Piano Company on Monday afternoon and
a complete demonstration of Starr instruments was
the principal feature. The new reproducing grand
played a very important part and was highly praised
by the audience. Mrs. R. S. Kinnaird rendered sev-
eral vocal numbers and was accompanied by Mrs.
S. K. Ruick. Both ladies are very prominent in
musical circles.
The Christena-Teague Company is conducting a
special campaign in which they are featuring the Gul-
bransen instrument. Musicales are given in order to
feature the possibilities of the popular piano, which
are proving very successful.
The Rose-Polly Technical Institute, of Terre
Haute, Ind., will open a broadcasting studio in the
Demming Hotel, which will be equipped with a Bald-
win style "K" grand piano. WFBM, Indianapolis
Light & Power Co. broadcasting station, recently
destroyed by fire, is now ready to open and has
chosen the Baldwin grand piano. The Taylor Uni-
versity, at Upland, has purchased a new Hamilton
piano to be used exclusively in the auditorium. The
Indiana Theater, at Washington. Tnrl., has bought
a Hamilton piano.
Jesse French, Jr., was in the city during the past
week, having just returned from his West Indies trip,
and presented Mr. Wilking. of the Wilking Music-
Co., with a cane made from the backbone of a man-
eating shark. Mr. French related many of his ex-
periences on his .trip and said he had a very enjoyable
time. The Wilking Music Company reports a very
good month during February, and made some excel-
lent sales of French instruments, among them several
style "S" grands.
BROUGHT FIRST PIANO
TO SPENCER CO., IND.
Items in the Trade of Southern Indiana Which
Show That Things Give Promise of
Good Spring Business.
Bert Burkhart, of Evansville, Indiana, who was
born and reared in Spencer county, a few miles east
of Evansville, recalled a few days ago that Uriah
McCoy was the first man to bring a piano into
Spencer county. Mr. Burkhart says this was very
many years ago. McCoy's daughter was the first
woman in Spencer county to learn to play the piano,
and her father was nicknamed "Piano Uriah" and
carried the name with him to the grave.
Henry Hudson, of the Hudson Music House,
Boonville, Ind., was in Evansville on business a
few days ago. He says trade conditions in Boonville
are holding up well and he is looking for a good
spring and summer trade. Mr. Hudson said, in spite
of the threatened strike of the coal miners in southern
Indiana after the first of April, that he is looking for
a very good business.
Miss Dilday. who is connected with the Harding &
Miller Music Company of Evansville, took part in
a recent entertainment at the West Side Nut Club,
playing the harmonica. She made a decided hit. W.
B. Miller, of the Harding & Miller Music Company,
is expected home from Miami, Fla., in a short time,
where he and his wife have spent several weeks.
A. J. Barclay, manager of the Warren Music Com-
pany of Evansville, and one of the pioneer dealers of
that city, is looking forward to the spring ceremonial
of Hadi Temple of Shriners of that city which will
be held in April.
VETERAN SALESMAN DIES.
Amon Buckley, a veteran of thirty years' service in
the retail piano department of Hardman, Peck & Co.,
New York, died last week from heart disease. Mr.
Buckley, whose successful activities extended over
the Metropolitan district, is survived by a son.
SCHILLER PIANO FOR SCHOOLS.
The Schiller Piano Company of Oregon, 111.,
through its Chicago office in the Republic Building,
State and Monroe streets, has again received orders
from the Chicago School Board for the little Schiller
School pianos, otherwise known as the Baby LTpright.
In seasons past Schiller pianos have been selected
each year for the Chicago schools, and the latest
requisition, on this year's orders, is for a supply of
small uprights for some of the new school buildings
which are now being occupied.
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/
March 12, 1927.
PRESTO-TIMES
CHRISTMAN
((
The First Touch Tells"
The CHRISTMAN
Studio Grand
is the "best seller" in the trade. It
easily outsells its nearest competitor.
Dealers who handle the Christman line
are equipped to do business and never
disappoint either their customers or
themselves.
The CHRISTMAN
Reproducing
Grand
Equipped With the
sions for the teacher. The presence in the commu-
nity of a piano teacher would be an inducement to
parents for the purchase of a piano; the example of
piano pupils would be an incentive to the children
holding back or being held from the lessons to en-
roll in the piano class.
The Compensation.
In Isolated Communities, Without Sufficient
Sometimes a school teacher with the ability to
Inducements to Music Teacher to Locate,
teach piano may be hard to induce to take up a
school in an isolated place. It may mean long
Ingenious and Active Piano Dealer May
periods away from even the smaller towns. It may
Introduce Effective Promotion Scheme.
mean giving up the occasional distractions of the
dry goods and millinery stores and the movies. But
the inducements of piano lesson money, and commis-
sions on pianos sold to pupils, may be made to com-
Desirable When Dealer Induces Local School Board pensate. The dealer should work his hardest to make
the sales the advantage of a piano teacher in the
to Employ Only a Schoolma'am with Ability
community
renders possible.
to Teach Piano.
Of course the dealer, in a case like this, should
Now, when the details of the big promotion plans have the first aid to sales—the Bowen Piano Loader
in the piano trade are well under way, with the and Carrier. With that competent and safe help, the
widely advertised contests exciting the city children, dealer takes the store right out to the farmhouse and
and the mass lessons in piano doing a proportionate gives his piano talk, with demonstrations. There are
share in increasing piano playing enthusiasm in the periods of the year too when his visit is a godsend.
smaller towns, it behooves the piano salesman on the The dealer himself knows no periods of indolence
rural routes to quadruple his efforts to bring home or indifference in that phase of piano selling. It has
the piano message to the children in the remote the compensating joys of an open air job.
farm houses.
And the country piano salesman's job in that
respect is no harder than ever before. Indeed the
broad national piano promotion plans, the influences
of which extend everywhere, should be helpful to
the buoyant piano salesman who carries the piano
Successful Event Fills Palace Theater at First Dem-
sample to the prospect's door on a Bowen Loader.
What to Do.
onstration of Efficiency of System.
How can the average piano dealer, in the smaller
Ten Miessner pianos made by the Miessner Piano
places, where the massed piano instruction plan is Company, Milwaukee, Wis., were used in the recital
not feasible, do his share in revitalizing the piano given by the first and second year pupils of the Class
business? Any piano dealer of that kind, or his rural Piano Department of the Dallas, Tex , public schools
route salesman, can give the answer to that question. at the Palace Theater March 1. The pianos were
If, by his influence he can induce local school boards provided by the Will A. W atkins Company, an active
to select teachers for the country schools who can representative of the Miessner in Dallas.
play the piano and possess enough of instructive
Twenty-eight schools were represented in the re-
ability to give piano pupils a start in the first prin- cital, which was presided over by Carrie Murger
ciples of piano playing, the dealer so circumstanced Long, director of class piano instruction, and Sadie L.
is doing a good share in the plans for piano promo- Williams, general supervisor of music, assisted by
tion. The board may make piano playing an optional the fifteen teachers of class piano instruction in the
study in the schools or the teacher may be left free schools.
to seek and instruct her own pupils as a side activity.
The main object is to provide a piano teacher for
OPENS IN AKRON, OHIO.
those isolated children.
The W. H. Stowe Piano Co., 128 South Main
Vacation Time Possibility.
street, Akron, Ohio, which recently took over the
It is even possible in the summer vacation days to
piano department of the George S. Dales Co., was
have the children brought together in the dealer's
store, or in some available place for programs, pro- formally opened recently. Most of the fine lines of
viding the teacher continues in the community. Very
pianos handled by the George S. Dales Co. will be
often the country school teacher is recruited from a
featured by the new company.
,
distance and departs when school is out. But if the
school teacher with the ability to teach piano is a
INCREASE MUSIC DEPARTMENT.
local girl, or resides not too far away, the continua-
tion of the piano lessons throughout the year is pos-
The store soon to be vacated by the Oliver Music
sible.
Store, Houston, Tex., has been acquired, on a three-
Of course the dealer and teacher would have the year lease, by the Haverty Furniture Co., to be used
old mutual interest in the creation and growth of the as a music department. It is the plan of the com-
piano playing desire in the pupils. Profitable sales pany to increase the lines now carried and add con-
of pianos would naturally mean tempting commis- siderably to the stock of musical goods.
PIANO PROMOTION
IN REMOTE PLACES
THE DOUBLE EQUIPMENT
RECITAL BY CLASS PIANO
PUPILS IN DALLAS, TEX.
PROGRESSIVE FLORIDA FIRM
Is the highest attainment in the instru-
ment that reproduces, with absolute
accuracy, the performances of the
World's Master Pianists. It is the
finest creation of Christman artistry,
in which is installed the most famous
of all piano-playing mechanisms.
Write for full particulars and illus-
trated catalogues.
"Tht First Touch Tells'
»•». U. •. Pat. O«.
ChrUtman Piano Co.
597 East 137th St.
New York
(LEFT TO RIGHT)—SALES FORCE OF DAVTS MUSIC HOFSE. MR. DAVIS TS THE MAN AT LEFT LEANING
ON THE PIANO. ATTRACTIVE ENTRANCE TO THE STORE. INVITING SALES ROOM.
The Davis Music House, Lakeland, Fla., recently
moved to larger quarters, interior and exterior views
of which are shown in the accompanying cut.
"'We now have the finest location in this city, and
we are out to smash all previous sales records," said
Arthur Davis, president of the company, "I attribute
my success to tying up my efforts with Baldwin
national advertising so that people in the community
who see it know that I am the local representative.
A piano dealer can't make the biggest success unless
he works with the advertising. I have been handling
Baldwin pianos for ten years and my many satisfied
customers are an absolute assurance of future success
and prosperity."
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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