Presto

Issue: 1927 2131

PRESTO-TIMES
"slowed up" as to suggest the approach of the
days of rest. And among them all many are
so widely loved, and so deeply respected, as
The American Music Trade Weekly
to possess, even in their shadowy present-
ments, a value beyond computation.
Published Every Saturday at 417 South Dearborn
Street, Chicago, Illinois.
And in the "morgue" are scores of photo-
C. A. DAN I ELL and FRANK D. ABBOTT
• Editors graphs showing the great trade gatherings
Telephones, Local and Long Distance, Harrison 234. which long ago passed into history. Beginning
Private Phones to all Departments. Cable Address (Com*
far back of the memorable first meeting of the
merclal Cable Co.'s Code), "PRESTO," Chicago.
piano
manufacturers, at Manhattan Beach, in
Entered as second -class matter Jan. 29, 1896, at the
Post Office, Chicago. Illinois, under Act of March 3, 1879.
1897, the group pictures include nearly all of
•ufeeerlptlon, $2 a year; 6 months, H; Foreign. 14.
the later meetings, including the one at Cabin
PayabjA in advance. No extra charge In United States
possessions, Cuba and Mexico. Rates for advertising on
John
Bridge in 1896. There is. too, the great
application.
semi-circular group taken at the World's Fair
Items of news and other matter are solicited and if
of general interest to the music trade will be paid for in Chicago in 1893.
at space rates. Usually piano merchants or salesmen
One of the groups which seems particularly
in the smaller cities are the best occasional corre-
memorable
and suggestive is that taken dur-
spondents, and their assistance is invited.
ing the third convention of the Manufactur-
Payment is not accepted for matter printed in the ers' Association in May, 1900. In the group
editorial or news columns of Presto-Times.
Where half-tones are made the actual cost of pro- were fifty-one prominent piano men nearly
duction will be charged if of commercial character, one-half of whom have since passed away.
or other than strictly news interest.
That notable group picture was taken at the
When electrotypes are sent for publication it is
requested that their subjects and senders be carefully Art Institute in Chicago, and it is very sug-
gestive of the brevity, even the uncertainty,
indicated.
of life. One group picture referred to may
Forms close at noon every Thursday. News mat-
be
found on another page in this issue of
ter should be in not later than eleven o'clock on the
same day. Advertising copy should be in hand before Presto-Times. And should any of the others
Tuesday, five p. m., to insure preferred position. Full
page display copy should be in hand by Monday noon be called for they also will be published.
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
epartnients to PRESTO PUBLISHING CO., 417 South
dearborn Street, Chicago. III.
IMPOSSIBLE POSSIBILITIES
Within the past two years there seem to
S
have been many impractical propositions set
forth for boosting the piano trade. It is not
SATURDAY, JUNE 4, 1927.
the purpose now to recall them all, and much
less to comment upon them. Most observing
The Miniature Edition of Presto-Times, the
members of the trade can catalogue them as
American Music Trade Weekly, will be dis- well as we can, and know that few of them
tributed freely, at the Convention of the Music have resulted in any substantial gain to the
Trade and Industry at the Stevens Hotel, Chi- music merchants.
cago, June 6-9. It is a sort of souvenir, or
But there are still a few of the impossible
reminder, of the 30th anniversary of the organ- possibilities which in some way have escaped
ization of the Piano Association of America. attention. Some of them have to do with the
Copies of the Miniature Edition will also be methods for getting rid of the worn-out
mailed to all in the trade who may apply for pianos, others pertain to fecund advertising
them. Copies of the Advance Convention Edi- schemes, and still more to means by which
tion of Presto-Times will also be sent to dealers greater crowds might be drawn to the annual
who desire them. The issues of Presto-Times conventions. No reference need be made to
will be found at the Hotel Stevens or upon plans for still further supplying needed funds
application to the office of Presto Publishing for the maintenance of the fast-increasing
Co., 417 South Dearborn street.
branches of the state and national associations.
That the organizations for supporting the
THE SHADOWY PAST
endless purposes of music are useful in mak-
Presto-Times has, in its "morgue"-—as the ing the world better no one can doubt. But that
big cabinet of photographs, old and new, is the more pressing needs of the music trade
termed—a vast number of pictures pertaining may be quickly supplied, why not have a gen-
to men and events associated with the music eral fund created for buying up all trade-ins,
trade in all of its phases. The pictures cover the fund to be the result of the exchange of
portraits of the men who have helped to build coupons, or certificates to the dealers who ac-
the business, in factory and store, as well as cept them in payment for these instruments ?
hundreds of groups taken at banquets and The certificates might be made acceptable by
other similar celebrations. There are pictures the makers of the trade-in as part payment
almost innumerable, of factories, some now for new instruments of identical manufacture.
extinct and many still active in the industry. Then the certificates could be bought by any
And there are scores of scenes pertaining to dealers who handle the same make of piano
events in the retail trade, including views in as the old one, at a liberal discount. The cash
foreign countries and of the interior glories result of the certificate sale to go into the
of world fair piano exhibits.
treasury of a national association formed for
The pictures alluded to run back in piano the purpose.
history for something like forty- years—in a
Do you follow? Perhaps not—and no won-
few instances more than that. And practically der.
all of them mark the steady onward march of
As to the plan of increasing convention at-
the instruments of music and the men who tendance, why not have a fund, or tax, con-
have made them.
tributed to by all exhibitors at a convention,
Necessarily the collection of portraits con- the sum fixed in proportion to the number of
tains vivid reminders of many men who were pianos displayed? The fund may be devoted
for a time familiar in the time of their mun- entirely to paying the railway fare of small
dane activities. There are also very many dealers, who otherwise could not attend the
youthful faces of men now far along in life, meetings. Thus the manufacturers could
and if not actually retired from labor, so far choose the dealers they wanted to see their ex-
June 4, 1927.
hibits, and the cost would presumably be easily
overcome by the excess of orders so resulting.
Only two of the impractical possibilities of
trade expansion have been touched upon. There
is no space for any more just now. But they
are almost endless and most of them fully as
fertile of real good to the actual work of sell-
ing pianos as many that are already being
placed before the trade and industry by earn-
est enthusiasts whose understanding of what
is needed is no more reasonable than the bon-
fire plan at Atlantic City or the later one of
sinking the old timers in Lake Michigan dur-
ing the annual conventions.
The annual convention suggests, in a measure, the
organized discipline of self-defense, is the official call
so clearly intimates. And therefore, also, it is a mat-
ter of more than the recreation, the events in the
Hotel Stevens promise. It is really a duty of every
music merchant to attend the gathering in Chicago,
and to thus show interest in his own welfare no less
than that of the industry collectively.
* * *
Salesmen will find indisputable arguments in the
article by Mr. W. H. Doyle in a recent issue of
Presto-Times. "Imagine," says Mr. Doyle, "some-
thing happening that would leave the world without
a single piano." As well the world without a ray of
sunshine. It is a strong suggestion of disaster with-
out precedent.
* * *
Selling anything, except the essentials of life which
sell themselves, calls for special ability. Selling
pianos demands something much like genius. It is
the genius of a sort involving personality, ingenuity,
eloquence, persistency, plausibility, specious informa-
tion and the almost nameless ability to interpret char-
acter at a glance.
* * *
A news item says that the sale of tea in this country
has increased $1,000,000 the first quarter of this year,
and all due to the quarter million dollar newspaper ad-
vertising appropriation. At that rate the $200,000 budget
for piano publicity should add about a million dollars'
worth of piano sales this year. Will it?
*

*
It is certain that the introduction of the period
design has served to stimulate the industry and trade.
It has served to enliven the warerooms and the home
desire to still further beauty, and it has brought an
added zest to the piano business, the effects of which
are widespread.
The new Stevens in Chicago is a pretty big tavern.
But even its three thousand rooms, all with baths at-
tached, will be taxed to the full if all the piano indus-
tries, and other musical instruments, that seem interested
clamor for space for displays.
* * *
If every piano man would get so busy selling
pianos that he couldn't find time in which to knock,
the business would soon be better than before in
many years.
* * *
Few piano dealers any longer say that they "don't
read the trade papers." Most of that kind are now
out of business or gradually getting out of it.
* * *
The piano manufacturers who persist in keeping
their names, and the names of their instruments, con-
spicuously before the trade are the wise ones who
will be first to feel the return of real prosperity.
AT THE BANQUET.
When the chairman called attention
To a motion to be heard.
Someone rose in the convention
And demanded just a word.
"First," he said, "before proceeding
With less vital things, I fear,
Tell us, ere we start the reading,
Is old Danny Luxton here."
"True," upspoke another brother,
"Nothing should be done until
Rolls are called, and many other
Of the boys their places fill.
I still miss some famous faces
That we all would like to see.
Where, I ask. in these vast spaces
Is old Henderson, J. C.?"
"And, I ask, while I am asking,
Where's Ben Janssen and his lyre?
Must we miss the joy of basking
In his lyric darts of fire?
But if some bright lights are lacking
There is compensation here,
And if not a cork is cracking
All our heads are cool and clear!
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/
June 4, 1927.
MANUFACTURERS' PLANS
INTEREST DEALERS
Annual Meeting of National Piano Manufac-
turers' Association More Interesting This
Year to Dealers Than Ever Before.
The National Association of Piano Manufacturers
will hold its annual convention for 1927 at the Stevens
Hotel, Chicago, June 6 and 7, at the final meeting of
W. E. GUYLEE,
First Vice-President N. A. of P. M.
which the election of officers for the new term will
take place..
The following are the officers elected at the con-
vention of 1926:
President, Max de Rochmont.
First vice-president, W. E. Guylee.
Second vice-president, C. D. Bond.
Secretary, Herbert Simpson.
Treasurer, Charles Jacob.
Their Own Problems.
The piano manufacturers have eternal problems to
discuss for their national association, involving some
effects of hoary evils scotched but not killed in early
days. Some of the problems of the men who make
the pianos interest the dealers only in an indirect
way. This year, however, the national piano pro-
motion plan, originated by the manufacturers, is of
the keenest interest to the men who retail the instru-
ments, and its discussion in the business sessions of
the manufacturers' association will mark the close
bond between the two phases of the piano business.
At the convention of the piano manufacturers last
For a
Bigger and Better
Business
There is nothing to compare
with the complete line ot
M. SCHULZ CO.
The Players are RIGHT in
everything t h a t means
money to the dealers and
satisfaction to the public
You will never do anything better
than when you get in touch with
M. SCHULZ CO.,
711 Milwaukee Avenue
CHICAGO
SOUTHERN BRANCH: 730 Candler Bldg., ATLANTA, GA.
PRESTO-TIMES
year the annual report of President de Rochmont was
devoted to suggestions for a practical way to increase
piano sales by dealers. They subsequently resulted
in the manufacturers' plan for national piano promo-
tion which has had such enthusiastic adoption and
co-operation in the trade.
NEWS OF THE TRADE
IN WISCONSIN STATE
THE MUSICAL SUPPLY
ASSOCIATION TO MEET
Active and Prominent National Organization
Will Hold Its Annual Convention at the
Hotel Stevens, June 6.
Items from Various Points Also Tell of Activi-
ties Which Relate to Advancement of
Music Generally.
The importance of the interests of the Musical
Supply Association makes it one of the foremost
associations making up the division membership of
the Chamber. While it is numerically small in mem-
bership, the prominence of the industries gives it a
foremost position in the group of units composing the
joint body. The association shows its keen interest
Alterations and remodeling work on the Music
Arts Building, Mason street and Broadway, Milwau-
kee, Wis., is well underway and the building, which
will house the stores of the Music Arts Corporation,
should be ready for occupancy within another month.
The Chris'tianson Brothers Company, Racine, Wis.,
recently sold out its entire stock of pianos. The store
has been sold, which forced them out of business.
Under a bill introduced in the assembly, the All-
Wisconsin American Legion band would be presented
next September. The provision is at the foot of a
bill for an official state band. The Wisconsin state
band would be selected annually through a contest
staged by the music department of the state univer-
sity. Until such contest is held under the bill, the
All-Wisconsin Legion band would be the official
musical unit of the state and as such would be sent to
the Legion France meeting.
The Wisconsin Piano Company, Milwaukee, Wis.,
has been formed here with a capital of $20,000 for
general merchandise and manufacturing business.
Members of the company are Charles Brussat, George
E. Samson and Cornelius D. Moynihan.
WILL AFFILIATE WITH
NATIONAL MERCHANTS BODY
New North Carolina State Association to Carry Out
Desirable Purpose Convention Week.
The new North Carolina State Association, organ-
ized in Greensboro recently will be affiliated with the
National Association of Music Merchants and it is
the purpose to go through the formalities during the
annual convention of the latter organization during
the week of June 6.
The officers of the new North Carolina State Asso-
ciation are: C. S. Andrews, Charlotte, president; C.
H. Stephenson, Raleigh, first vice-president; W. R.
Murray, Durham, second vice-president; W. S. Gard-
ner, Gastonia, secretary; H. A. Durham, Asheville,
treasurer. The directors are Jesse C. Boweu, Winston-
Salem; C. W. Parker, Charlotte; J. R. Maynard,
Salisbury, and J. S. McFadyen, Fayetteville.
The new association is a revival of an old organiza-
tion of state dealers formed several years ago, but
which was allowed to discontinue operations. The
president was Charles W. Parker of Charlotte, who
was one of the active ones in the organization of the
new body.
FISCHER AMPICO IS FEATURED.
Music Week was celebrated by the R. C. Bollinger
Music Co. of Fort Smith, Ark., by a recital given in
its Music Salons on Thursday evening, May 5. At
this successful observation of Music Week the Bollin-
ger Music Company presented Dora Hoffman,
soprano, and Clarence Burg, pianist. With the
Fischer Ampico Mr. Burg reenacted the playing of
the great pianists whose recordings were included.in
the program, and Mrs. Hoffman delighted the audi-
ence with her vocal numbers, one group of which was
sung to the Fischer Ampico accompaniment.
PIANO FOR NOTED AUTHOR.
The Fitzgerald Music Company, Los Angeles, re-
cently placed a Fischer Latin Ampico in the beautiful
Los Angeles house of Dr. Frank Crane, the noted
author. Dr. Crane has long been an Ampico admirer
and his gifted pen has more than once been used to
extol the instrument. It was he who said, in an
edifying article entitled "The Human Touch," "the
Ampico differs from the ordinary playerpiano as a
living, breathing man differs from a wax figure or a
carved statue."
ARTHUR L. WKSSELL,
Director, Musical Supply Association.
in affairs which concern its membership all through
the year, and the annual meeting is considered an
occasion for originating important plans carried out
during the succeeding months.
The Officers.
The following officers of the Musical Supply Asso-
ciation were chosen at the annual meeting of 1926
held at the Commodore Hotel, New York:
President—E. C. Johnson.
Vice-President—William C. Hess.
Secretary—A. L. Smith.
Treasurer—David A. Smith.
Directors—For three years, Arthur L. Wessell,
George L. Cheney, William C. Heaton, C. A. Mor-
gan. William C. Hess. For one year (to till vacan-
cies), Charles L. Me Hugh and A. L. Kelly.
INDIANA MUSIC EXPORTS.
Musical instruments in the $63,820,505 worth of
Indiana exports during the calendar year of 1926,
amounted to $1,058,065, according to the report of the
Bureau of Commerce, Washington. Dr. Julius Klein,
director, under whose supervision the figures were
compiled, said they are based primarily on through-
bills-of-lading and, therefore, in the case of some
states they reflect but a part of their total foreign
trade.
PROMINENT CHICKERING OWNER.
Mr. Joel O. Cheek of Nashville, Tenn., and a mem-
ber of the Cheek-Neal Company, manufacturers of
Maxwell House Coffee, has just purchased a Chick-
ering Ampico. This sale was made by the Claude
F. Street Piano Company, Chickering representative
at Nashville.
The Original Small Piano
Made and marketed by specialists in small
pianos. Valuable territory still open.
Write for our effective sales plan.
BEN PLATT IN CHICAGO.
Ben Platt, of the Platt Music Co., Los Angeles, is
expected to reach Chicago today, Saturday, from the
east, where he has been looking after purchases of
pianos and other lines of musical goods. After plac-
ing his Chicago orders Mr. Platt will continue on to
Los Angeles.
THE LITTLE PIANO WITH THE BIG TONE
MIESSNER PIANO COMPANY
126 Reed St.
Milwaukee, Wis.
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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