Presto

Issue: 1927 2145

PRESTO-TIMES
The American Music Trade Weekly
cu bvcry Saturday at 417 South UcarDoin
Street, Lhicago, 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), " P R E S T O , " 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.
Payabie, 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 snlesmen
in the smaller cities are the best occasional corre-
spondents, and their assistance is invited.
Payment is not accepted for matter printed in the
editorial or news columns of Presto-Times.
Where half-tones are made the actual cost of pro-
duction will be charged if of commercial character,
or other than strictly news interest.
When electrotypes are sent for publication it is
requested that their subjects and senders be carefully
indicated.
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 bustrifsp
rlepnrtments to PRESTO P U B L I S H I N G CO.. 417 South
Dearborn Street, Chicago. HI.
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1927.
The last form of Presto-Times goes to press
at 11 a. m. Thursday. Any news transpiring
after that hour cannot be expected in the cur-
rent issue. Nothing received at the office that
is not strictly news of importance can have
attention after 9 a. m. on Thursday. If they
concern the interests of manufacturers or
dealers such items will appear the week follow-
ing. Copy for advertising designed for the
current issue must reach the office not later
than Wednesday noon of each week.
MUSIC AND SCIENCE
the hurtful custom, according to an observant
music trade traveler. In the desire to make
the sale, the huckstering dealers will sacrifice
the necessary profit regardless of the impres-
sion it creates. The fact that their action de-
stroys confidence in the store in the minds of
the people does not seem to matter.
* * *
Music was used centuries ago for curing dis-
KNOWLEDGE OF COSTS
ease and relieving insomnia, said Dr. Agnes
Music trade paper editors occasionally hear Savill in a recent lecture at the Institute of
things from dealers or read them in their let- Hygiene, London, on "The Influence of the
ters that help the belief that many retailers Higher Emotions on Health." It was an
lack information about the cost of producing agency for linking man up to a whole gamut
pianos. That is they do not know essential of high emotions, and with the introduction of
things about the piano materials and the proc- wireless and phonographs there was no excuse
esses required in building them into finished for people not cultivating it, he said. There
instruments. Pianos might "jest grow" like was nothing like music for unravelling and set-
Topsy, for all they know or care. The ele- ting at peace all states of tension. The entire
ment of cost is negligible when they consider attitude towards life of a despondent or de-
a purchase. Every factory at some time or pressed individual could be changed to gaiety
other gets offers for big or little lots that and buoyancy by suitable music.
would be laughable if they were not deplor-
able.
It might even be well for the National Piano
Manufacturers' Association to provide printed
information about piano manufacturing costs
to dealers ignorant of necessary general in-
HENRY DREHER'S FRIENDS.
formation. Happily the ignorant ones are in
Few
men
in the piano trade have as large a list of
the minority, but that they exist is true. How friends as Henry
Dreher, head of the Dreher Piano
near does even the average piano dealer come Co., Cleveland, and Mr. Dreher's contacts have the
to having a fair idea of the actual cost to the human character that fosters enduring friendships.
program of the convention in Cleveland does
manufacturer of the cheapest instrument on The
not assign him official activity, but as chairman of
his floor? How much does the average dealer the Cleveland Golf Committee he automatically be-
suppose is the sum that represents the dif- comes one of the chief glad-hand we'eomers of the
ference, in actual cost, between his cheapest occasion.
Mr. Dreher is considered an ideal listener and the
and his best piano?
attentive manner in which he follows a monologue
We'll say it's a grand piano that is to be is very flattering. But his close friends like him best
when he dispenses an earful himself. That's a pleas-
considered, and that it is one the dealer thinks ure
they expect when he presides at the dinner at
he should get at a price to permit of his re- the Cedarhurst Country Club at the conclusion of
tailing it at less than he sold an upright for the golf tournament on the first day of the conven-
six years, or more, ago. How much does he tion next week.
* * *
suppose such a grand actually costs the manu-
HARRY T. SITE OBSERVES.
facturer to produce ? Ignorance of piano costs
Harry T. Sipe, general traveling ambassador for
emboldens the dealer in silly expectations to Adam Schaaf, Inc., Chicago, who has been making
buy "good grands" at medium grade upright an extensive Pacitic coast trip, is now traveling
homeward. He was in Colorado last week and
prices.
ducing piano and the radio receiving sets, while
appreciated, are viewed as things expected.
But when we stop to think, we know that the
results of scientific research accumulated in
many fields during the last twenty years or
so are the basis and source of these recent
marvelous advances.
JUST ABOUT SOME
MUSIC TRADE FOLK
Musical instruments have been notably de-
veloped and their uses extended in the prog-
ress of study of vibrations. Developing" knowl-
edge of mechanical vibrations has helped ad-
vance in electrical researches ; and vice versa,
methods that have been developed for study-
ing and controlling electrical vibrations have
most remarkably advanced knowledge of all
sorts of mechanically vibrating systems. Elec-
trical men have learned in this way new facts
about the diaphragms of telephone transmit-
ters, or those of loud speakers and phono-
graphs. By the application of scientific meth-
ods they have determined complex laws gov-
erning vibrations of columns of air such as you
find in the horn of a loud speaker or phono-
graph, and they have learned how to set up in
horns vibrations that will carry to the ears of
a listener all the notes and tones necessary for
the faithful reproduction of any sound of
music or speech. From fundamental studies in
telephone laboratories there have developed a
new art and a new technique.
The methods of scientific research have re-
placed the purely experimental methods of
earlier days. In these modern times one amaz-
ing development follows another so rapidly
that we are beginning to view them as the
commonplace occurrences of our normal life.
We generally accept them without a great
deal of thought as to how they were brought
about, or as to why these results had not been
obtained long before. The phonograph, repro-
September 10, 1927
The fall business season promises to be good,
according to a survey of the Chicago Tribune,
and the third quarter of this year, which w r ill
close on September 30, has witnessed a num-
ber of favorable developments since mid-
summer which gives promise of quickening the
tempo of commerce and of giving to it a
stronger tone than it has had so far this year.
"From which it should not be concluded that
trade has been poor," the review reads. "It
hasn't. In some lines sales have never been
larger, and certainly business can't be so bad
generally when one corporation is able to sell
$650,619,000 worth of luxury articles at a net
profit of $129,000,000" (referring, of course, to
General Motors).
* * *
Simplified practice cuts out waste. Less
waste means lower cost. Lower costs mean
lower selling prices. Lower prices mean larger
sales. Larger sales mean more work for the
factory, continuous operation, continuous em-
ployment, steady earnings, continued Inlying,
and therefore more sales !
*

*
A l t h o u g h many so-called neighborhood
stores have the advantage over the larger
stores in the center of the bigger cities in the
matter of overhead, they nullify it by con-
tinuing the old custom of huckstering. Many
small stores in country towns also continue
noted several of the high elevations the state is
remarkable for.
"Scenery affects me just as humans do. Among
people there are Pike's Peaks—extremes of frosty
reserve. You may try to get close to them with a
pikespeakorbust ambition, but you only get a chill
for your pains," writes Mr. Sipe.
"On the other hand there are frank fellows like
wide, open, breezy plains and sunny California val-
leys who evoke your warmth of feeling because they
dispense it themselves."
* * *
A GEORGE Q. CHASE VIEW.
George Q. Chase, president of Kohler & Chase,
San Francisco, is an enthusiastic proponent of piano
classes with an encouragingly low fee, but in en-
couraging the uses by the public of the classes
organized in the Kohler & Chase store, the induce-
ments are equally directed to adults and the young
folks. Mr. Chase believes that there are a great many
grown people responsive to the invitation to join a
piano class, considering it an opportunity to renew
ambition interrupted earlier in l'fe. He considers the
class announcement which does not invite adults falls
short of its purposes. Every adult, too, enrol'ed in
a piano class is not only a possible piano prospect,
but a probable one from the hour of the first lesson.
* * *
SHIRLEY WALKER'S MISSION.
Another Californian who sees the advantages of
piano playing contests and is free to express his
beliefs is Shiriey Walker, president of the Northern
California Music Trades Association. He has favored
the fostering of the contests and his action gives an
official character to his promotional efforts.
In a tour of northern California, Oregon and
Washington which he interrupted this week to jour-
ney to Cleveland to attend the convention of the
Ohio state association, he inaugurated movements
for piano playing contests in many places. Mr,
Walker convinces dealers with the effectiveness of
the contest for increasing sales by showing them
actual figures of results in sales from them.
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 10, 1927
P R E S T O-T I M E S
ANDERSON=SOWARDICO.
OPENS IN DAYTON, OHIO
Chester D. Anderson and Herbert Soward Join
Interests in Modern Store at 114
North Main Street.
Merging of the interests of Chester D. Anderson
with those of Herbert Soward gives Dayton, O., a
new music establishment with a preferred stock cap-
italization of $200,000, nearly all of which is sub-
scribed and paid in. This new firm will be knovn
strenuous than drive their 80-h.p. automobiles as the Anderson-Soward Co. and will have its head-
APPLE SAUCE
quarters at 114 North Main street, Dayton.
"It takes a colored porter on a Pullman sleeper into Pawhuska every once in awhile to collect the
to make the proper verbal amends for a mistake," periodic per capita contribution from the representa-
Seventy-seven years of laudable service have made
said Fred P. Watson, the Mt. Vernon, 111., dealer, tive of their kind and generous Great White Father, the Soward name well known in that vicinity in
who
is
one
and
the
same
as
your
own
Uncle
Samuel.
who recently stopped off in Chicago on his way
connection with the sale of musical instruments, music
It was the plan of the piano sale specialists to get and supplies in this line, and Mr. Anderson has been
home after a trip to Europe as a delegate to the
some
of
the
per
capita
stuff
away
from
the
Indians
International Convention of Rotary Clubs in
prominent in this business for 25 years. The com-
Ostend, Belgium. "In fact," added Mr. Watson, in exchange for pianos. The trouble was they didn't
bined sales of these two men during their period of
understand
the
territory
they
had
invaded.
There
''the amenities are personified in that functionary
service in this work is computed to amount to over
of the Pullman service. It is an object lesson for are several piano dealers in Oklahoma who do a $10,000,000.
good
business
with
the
Indians.
A
good
business
in
the temperamental white gentlemen of the piano
The Anderson-Soward Co. is exclusive representa-
good pianos. But they understand the nature of the
warerooms.
tive for Steinway, Steck, Stuyvesant, Weber and
"During a trip west from New York I reached trade. The invaders did not.
Ivers & Pond pianos, and the Duo-Art. The com-
To give the piano to be whooped up to the noble
out of my berth one morning to retrieve my shoes.
pany also distributes the Victor Orthophonic, Bruns-
and
supposedly
easy
red
man
an
Osage
flavor
it
was
To my surprise only one shoe was there. It glis-
wick Panatrope and Conn band instruments. In addi-
tened from the dauber and brush art of George decided to give it an Indian name. The choice was
tion to the above instruments, this firm also handles a
but its high finish failed to preserve my serenity. made by the chief of the whooperup staff, who
full line of radios, including Radiola, Zenith, Federal
ordered
the
next
two
carloads
of
pianos
from
his
I wanted a shining pair.
and Atwater Kent sets and radio accessories. This
supply
factory
to
be
stenciled
"Wahoosha."
He
" 'Here, George,' I called to the porter at the
store will be the headquarters of Miss Patricia
had invented the word while he wrote the order. It
end of the car. 'Where's my other shoe?'
O'Brien for the distribution of tickets for symphony
had
an
Indian
sound
and
was,
he
thought,
mean-
"A general reprimanded by the board of strat-
concerts and other musical events of note. There
ingless.
But
the
red
man
would
appreciate
the
com-
egy for an error in the offensive, couldn't feel
also various music clubs will hold their meetings, and
greater chagrin than George at my call-down. But pliment.
teachers will meet in the interests of music. A trip
When the first shipment of the "Wahoosha" pianos
no diplomatist could exhibit greater aplomb than
through the store reveals large stocks of musical
the Pullman attache after the first humble arrived one was taken from the box and displayed in
goods of wide variety and acknowledged merit. Re-
all
its
glossiness
on
the
sidewalk.
It
was
Saturday
moments.
hearsals for many of the best programs are held
and
Pawhuska
was
thronged
with
red
people
from
" 'Now, whadje know 'bout that yeah mistake,
there because of the ease of access to Steinway grand
the
adjacent
country.
suh!' he exclaimed with the broad ivory laugh
pianos and private rooms for practice.
The sales force in the store was attracted to a
of assurance as he applied the flattering unction to
The officers of this new concern are Chester D.
growing
group
around
the
piano
on
the
sidewalk.
my wounded feelings. 'I don' thought this yeah
Anderson, president; Herbert Soward, vice-president;
be'th was occupied by a handsome, clevah gen'el- Everybody was shoving for a peep at the piano, and
man with one laig who travels ovah this road. when each one got a peep he or she elbowed out of Joseph C. Bucher, treasurer, and Carl Banjerter,
secretary.
Yo' suttenly favor him, suh. That is in sma'tness the crowd to indulge in a laugh that was more Amer-
an' good looks,' he added in flattering particularity." ican than Indian in its heartiness.
The manager hurried out. His appearance was the
prompting for a howl of merriment from reds and
whites and blacks.
STENCIL SENSE.
"What's the matter with that piano? What's the
The plan of dealers getting their own names sten-
laugh
at?" asked the manager of the postmaster, who
ciled on pianos is one pretty generally practiced.
When a dependable dealer is well established in a had joined the group and was enjoying his laugh.
Chauncey Page Is Manager of Lively Store Which
"Oh, I guess the piano's all right. It's the name
community his name on a fallboard is a guarantee
Is Provided with More Facilities.
of the piano's worth. Some of the finest commer- Wa-hoo—," but before he could finish he gave way
cial pianos produced come to the ultimate consumers to another spell of laughter.
Final arrangements were made last week between
"The name! What's wrong with it?" gasped the
with the name of some local dealer as their distinc-
F. A. Roethlisberger, Sr., Holland, Mich., and the
manager.
tive mark.
Grinnell Music Company, Detroit, for the leasing of
"What's the matter with it? Why, Wa-hoo-sha in
It happens sometimes that ingenious special sales-
the store building just south of Grinnell's present
the
Osage
dialect
means
'Where
the
bugs
are,'
"
men or sales specialists adopt stencils for the cam-
location, to be used as the future location of the
answered
the
postmaster.
paign pianos that have a local flavor. It might be a
company's branch in Holland. A. J. Bruett of De-
* * *
city name, county name or the name of some celeb-
Curious Carrie—"Is your installment piano paid for troit, field manager for the Grinnell Music Company,
rity in the territory, dead or still living. A consid-
and Chauncey Page, local manager, made the ar-
yet?"
erable number of stenciled pianos have been named
rangements.
Frank Fanny—"Only one octave of it."
for mountains, rivers, congressmen, sheriffs, school
It is planned to make a number of major changes
* * *
superintendents and persons and things of compara-
tively local fame.
A composer of the modern French school, which, in the store building. The change was made neces-
A "crew" of whooperup piano salesmen operating let it be understood, is the last word in bizarre or sary by the purchase early this year of the building
through Oklahoma established headquarters at Paw- cubistical musical effects, has written something for occupied by the music store by the State Savings
huska recently. The town is in the old Osage Nation, which the hall has to be especially perfumed. It is some- and Loan Company, which plans to move into the
the home of the Osage Indians, known as being the thing different, understand, from our native musical building early this fall.
The music company plans to move into its new
richest (without working) per capita people in the comedy and smutical efforts which give off their own
location this week.
world. There the happy inhabitants do nothing more smells.
THINGS SAID O R SUGGESTED
GRINNELL MUSIC CO.
BUYS PIANO STOCK
BOWEN PIANO LOADER HELPS SALESMEN
Outside Salesmen must be equipped so as to "show the goods." The season for country piano selling is approaching. Help your sales-
men by furnishing them with the New Bowen Piano Loader, which serves as a wareroom far from the store. It is the only safe
delivery system for dealers, either in city or country. It costs little. Write for particulars.
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/

Download Page 6: PDF File | Image

Download Page 7 PDF File | Image

Future scanning projects are planned by the International Arcade Museum Library (IAML).

Pro Tip: You can flip pages on the issue easily by using the left and right arrow keys on your keyboard.