Presto

Issue: 1927 2147

September 24, 1927
PRESTO-TIMES
New!
Mxnm
Packard Style XX 5 ft. G r a n d -
Made in Mahogany, lacquered.
Bench to match.
..Hacked by a Real Sales Plan/
T i O T H winners! The new "Packard Free Piano Lesson" Adver-
vertising Service—and the Louis XVI Period Grand. T w o
first links in the Sales Plan—but mighty important ones! For
dealers who desire to quickly, effectively, inexpensively, yet surely
increase business, the Portfolio pictured here will prove a gold mine
of ideas and profitable sales material. And the Art Grand, with
Bench to match, exquisite, delightful—splendid tone and ample
volume in small size—priced but little higher than the regular 5 ft.
style, will be a real sales booster.
Write now for free Dealers' Portfolio and more about the new Art Grand
The Packard Piano Co.
HOBART M. CABLE WINS
MINNEAPOLIS BUYERS
Howard B. Morenus, General Manager of
Active La Porte, In.d., Industry, Tells of
Fine Results of Inauguration Sale.
H. B. Morenus, vice-president, secretary and gen-
eral manager of the Hobart M. Cable Company, La
Porte, Ind., has just returned from Minneapolis,
Minn., where he was the guest of R. O. Foster, head
of Foster & Waldo, the prominent music house,
which recently took on the representation of the
Hobart M. Cable line.
Foster & Waldo inaugurated the event with a spe-
cial sale which was advertised in the thorough man-
ner of the company. The selling efforts were par-
ticularly directed to the Hobart M. Cable uprights
and the amazing success of the sale has prompted
further special sales for other numbers in the line
of the active La Porte industry.
Foster & Waldo is now directing the attention of
the prospective piano buyers to the new five-foot,
two-inch Hobart M. Cable grand, an instrument
which has all the desirable features to attract dis-
criminating buyers. It has the purity and sweetness
of tone and the volume which satisfies the musician,
together with the superb case design and tasteful fin-
ish which distinguish Hobart M. Cable instruments.
ferent art models and finishes are shown from time
to time and have always been a big attraction to the
many people who pass this corner daily.
J. R. REED MUSIC CO.
BUYS AUSTIN BUILDING
Progressive Texas Firm Purchases Store Occupied
in Fine Location and Plans to Remodel It.
Walter Caldwell, owner of Caldwell's Orchestra
and prominent as a musician throughout the state of
Texas, has disposed of his interests in the organiza-
tion to join the J. R. Reed Music Co., Austin, with
which his brother, John S. Caldwell, the song writer,
has been associated for the past three years.
Last week J. R. Reed, head of the J. R. Reed Mu-
sic Co., concluded a deal for the purchase of the
building occupied by the company on Congress ave-
nue. The consideration was $40,000. Ambitious plans
for the remodeling of the building have been launched
by Mr. Reed, who has supreme faith in the advan-
tages of the location, which he believes to be the
most desirable in Austin. The purchase of the store
and the money appropriated for remodeling he con-
siders in the light of a good investment.
MOST VALUABLE ASSET
OF THE M. SCHULZ CO.
It Is the Personal Interest of the Schulz
Family in the Building of
Every Piano.
The M. Schulz Company, Chicago, is one of the
enterprising piano manufacturing concerns whose
wealth may be computed, its production facilities
estimated and its high degree of efficiency in piano
making plainly stated. The scope of its great busi-
ness is an evidence of its financial ability; the com-
prehensive character of its piano presentations and
the country-wide extent of its selling field are con-
vincing evidences of its facilities and the acceptance
of M. Schulz instruments by artists, musical people
generally and an exacting clientele of dealers is a not-
able testimonial to their technical and artistic cor-
rectness.
These are facts set down in booklets, catalogs, and
in ledgers in the offices and they constitute assets as
numerous as they are valuable. But an asset which
may not be found in print or writing in any of these
places is considered the most valuable by the M.
Schulz Company.
BUYS OKLAHOMA BUSINESS.
Last week the Wetumka Music Store, Wetumka.
That is something in the building of the pianos in
Okla., was bought by the Wewoka Music Store, of
which the personal equation enters in a marked de-
which Mr. H. O'Rear is proprietor. The already good
gree and assures the injection of an admirable M.
stock of musical instruments will be increased and he
Schulz characteristic into every instrument. The
will also add a line of radios. Mr. O'Rear is a successful most valuable asset in every M. Schulz piano is the
business man and believes he will find Wetumka a personal interest and attention which the members of
good place for his business. He will divide his time the Schulz family give to it. It is the desirable inci-
between his stores at Wetumka and Wewoka.
dent in the making of the pianos that has caused the
Al. Schulz Company to grow and prosper continu-
ously since the company was established close to
SETTERGREN FACTORY BUSY.
sixty years ago.
Pianos and Musical Merchandise Shown to
B. K. Settergren, president of the B. K. Setter-
The tone quality of M. Schulz pianos; the artistic
gren Co., BlufFton, Ind., was a visitor to Chicago
Public in Window Exhibits Prove Valu-
case work, the truth in design and the fineness of fin-
this week. Mr. Settergren naturally is gratified at
able Aid to Immediate Sales.
ish are things that the trade and the appreciative
the assurances of an active business for the fall and
factory is buyers expect. But all the qualities that make the
To Chicago dealers the coming of fall means more winter. The B. K. Settergren Company's
r
instruments desirable are assured by the personal
activity in showing the goods and many dealers who one of the fortunate ones now w orking with a night
interest of the Schulz family. That is a continuous
shift
to
produce
the
pianos
required
in
urgent
de-
are not in the habit of waiting for opportunity to
insistence on the production of the best; a family
walk in, are filling their windows with irresistible mands.
pride in making every M. Schulz instrument be rep-
lures. Window displays of late grand and upright
resentative of unswerving standards.
ASSIST AT PIANO SALE.
piano models provide attraction on Chicago's Piano
D. W. Carr, and E. L. Banks, of Indianapolis, both
Row and other trade centers in the city and suburbs. connected with the wholesale department of the
HENRY GENNETT'S VACATION.
Period art grands seem to predominate show win-
Indianapolis office of the Baldwin Piano Company,
dows and dealers report a brisk trade for those in- last week assisted Oscar G. Price of the Home Fur-
Henry Gennett, president of the Starr Piano Co.,
struments. Lyon & Healy, Inc., Wabash and Jack- niture Store, Columbus, Ind., in a piano sale.
Richmond. Ind., is in California, accompanied by
son, in exploiting the Steinway this week, presented
his family, and will remain there for two or three
one of the most artistic window displays ever seen
weeks longer before returning to Richmond. Fred
A. C. DANZ ON VACATION.
on Chicago's piano row. The piano was set in the
A. C. Danz, head of the A. C. Danz Music Co., Gennett, secretary of the company, is on a business
center of the large windows with beautiful tapestries
trip and sending in numerous orders which bear out
Los Angeles, is enjoying a well earned vacation at
encircling the wall. The tapestries were of a dark
Arrow Head Springs, Calif., a health resort consid- his bright anticipations of a lively fall and winter
weave which blended perfectly with the walnut finish erably favored by men of the music trade in southern business.
of the piano.
California.
The Cable Piano company has a perpetual display
The Royal Music & Instrument Co., 2164 Third
of the celebrated Mason & Hamlin grand in its
J. E. McKillip, of Bellevue, la., has opened a piano avenue, New York, will be moved this week to 2196
elaborate show window on Jackson boulevard. Dif- store in the Gillen Hotel, Anamosa, la.
Third avenue.
CHICAGO STORES MAKE
FALL MODEL DISPLAYS
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/
PRESTO-TIMES
cessities or luxuries which compete with the
piano in its appeal to the American family.
The stores are filled with them and the store
The American Music Trade Weekly
owners use efficient advertising talent and the
Published Every Saturday at 417 South Dearborn most insinuating means to present their claims
Street, Chicago, Illinois.
to the public.
C. A. DANIELL and FRANK D. ABBOTT • - Editors
Piano manufacturers through an activity of
Telephones, Local and Long Distance, Harrison 234
their national association see the absolute ne-
Private Phones to all Departments. Cable Address (Com.
merclal Cable Co.'s Code), "PRESTO," Chicago.
cessity for continuous advertising of the piano
Entered as second-class matter Jan. 29, 1896, at the in order to increase its uses. Individual piano
Post Office, Chicaeo, Illinois, under Act of March 3, 1879.
manufacturers do the same thing in directing
Subscription, $2 a year; 6 months, $1; Foreign, $4.
attention
to the merits of their particular
Payable In advance. No extra charge In United States
possessions. Cuba and Mexico. Rates for advertising on
pianos.
They
all do a big job of advertising
application.
for
the
dealer.
It is the dealer's duty to take
Items of news and other matter are solicited and if
of general interest to the music trade will be paid for advantage of every effort provided by the
at space rates. Usually piano merchants or salesmen manufacturers towards creating piano pur-
in the smaller cities are the best occasional corre-
chasing' desire in the minds of the public. It
spondents, and their assistance is invited.
is equally his duty to inaugurate publicity ef-
Payment is not accepted for matter printed in the
forts of his own and to make them continuous.
editorial or news columns of Presto-Times.
Where half-tones are made the actual cost of pro-
Because of the great number of other claims
duction will be charged if of commercial character, on the family purse the advertising of the
or other than strictly news interest.
When electrotypes are sent for publication it is piano by the dealer should be continuous.
requested that their subjects and senders be carefully There should be no let-up on circular adver-
indicated.
tising, direct by mail advertising, telephone
7
Forms close at noon every Thursday. News mat- talks to prospects, show window piano attrac-
ter should be in not later than eleven o'clock on the tions, well-announced piano demonstrations,
same day. Advertising copy should be in hand before
Tuesday, five p. m., to insure preferred position. Full newspaper advertising and house-to-house
page display copy should be in hand by Monday noon canvassing. Piano classes, either free or avail-
preceding publication day. Want ad vs. for current
week, to insure classification, must not be later than able with the payment of a nominal fee, are
Wednesday noon.
later forms of piano promotion whose effec-
Address all communications for the editorial or business
tiveness is easily seen. Every means of adver-
departments to PRESTO PUBLISHING CO., 417 South
dearborn Street, Chicago, III.
tising is powerful if it creates the desire to
buy
a piano.
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1927.
NEW PRESTO BUYER'S GUIDE
The widely expressed interest of piano deal-
ers and salesmen in PRESTO BUYER'S
GUIDE, following the announcement of prep-
aration of the new edition for 1928, is a tribute
to the usefulness of the book, owing to the
dependable character of its statements. The
attitude of the trade in expecting absolute cor-
rectness about the newer forms of grands,
playerpianos and reproducing pianos makes
the responsibilities attending the preparation
of the new edition for 1928 greater than ever
before in thirty-one years of publication.
The established considerations of tonal and
structural merit will govern statements in the
new book. It is designed primarily for the
use of retail merchants and their salesmen in
the guidance of customers who may be in
doubt as to the merits of any particular piano
which may be drawn to their attention.
PRESTO BUYER'S GUIDE has been
relied upon by thousands of intelligent piano
buyers and a large proportion of piano mer-
chants employ it for reassuring their custom-
ers and sustaining just claims set forth by
their salesmen. Every statement in PRESTO
BUYER'S GUIDE is sincere and estimates of
the qualities of the pianos, playerpianos and
reproducing pianos are based on the personal
knowledge of experts in the piano industry.
THE DEALER'S ADVERTISING
Publicity for the piano dealer today is more
a necessity than ever before because of the
greater number of commodities that create a
desire to buy. These are the real competi-
tors, of the piano merchant. There was a time
when the desire to own a piano came natural
to the average family. Every piano dealer
concedes that there are now more urgent de-
mands on the family's bank account. The
young people in the family weigh the advan-
tages of having a modern piano in the home
with those of possessing the latest model auto-
mobile. There are other things classed as ne-
THE GOLF TOURNAMENTS
'Hie golf tournament at the Cedarhurst
Country Club was a feature of the Convention
of the Ohio Music Merchants' Association in
Cleveland last week. It was an occasion for
the enjoyment of a hobby, the cultivation of
which shows the common sense of the players.
That a golf tournament has become a feature
of conventions in all phases of business is
significant of an understanding of some im-
portant facts by the business men.
Active and industrious business men should
be rewarded with periods of leisure, if they
would conserve their mental and physical pow-
ers. But leisure must be put to pleasant use
in order to be enjoyed. Enforced leisure, with
nothing to do, may become as burdensome as
a prison sentence. So sensible business men
see the desirability of cultivating in them-
selves the power to enjoy not idleness, but
time free of routine duties.
Hobbies are numerous and varied, but golt
seems to allure a great number. That fact
makes possible the golf tournaments which
ad:l so much to the joys of the trade, conven-
tions.
PIANO PROMOTION PLANS
It did not need the able talk of Edward C.
Boykin, executive secretary of the National
Piano Manufacturers' Association at the con-
vention of the Music Merchants' Association
of Ohio in Cleveland last week to convince the
merchants of the necessity of practical pro-
motion of piano sales, but his talk was a grati-
fying assurance that effective work in increas-
ing sales is being done. Mr. Boykin quoted
figures and explained data regarding the work
being done, but every word was interesting
because his address told of the success of a
desirable undertaking.
The National Piano Promotion Plan of the
National Piano Manufacturers' Association
should interest any organization of music mer-
chants. It provides an association with potent
September 24, 1927
means to promote state and regional activities
conducive to sales. Mr. Boykin was th.5 more
interesting in that he told of the success of a
concrete plan for promoting piano sales. But
he showed how merchants' associations can be
invaluable in promoting group instruction and
piano playing contests and in generally ampli-
fying the efforts emanating from the National
Piano Promotion Plan headquarters.
Two more important state association con-
ventions will take place in October, that of
Wisconsin on the fourth and sixth, and the
meeting of the Illinois state organization of
the music trade in the new Palmer House, Chi-
cago, on the eleventh and twelfth. The avowed
object of the latter is to make the association
the largest and most active organization of
the kind in the country. Trade cooperation
in efforts to effect more sales of music is the
commendable purpose of the Wisconsin body.
It involves individual dealer activity and joint
action in promoting piano classes and piano
playing contests.
Mr. B. R. Hunt, head of the B. R. Hunt
Manufacturing Company, Union City, Ind.,
manufacturers of musical instrument cases,
not only is an extensive traveler but a keen
observer as well. A condition noted in his
own particular business is one observed in the
various phases of the music trade: "Every
dealer seems to have had but one idea in mind
the past few months and that was to cut his
inventory. But now that most of the old stock
has been cleaned out a few days of brisk con-
sumer demand will start every one of these
dealers to buying," he said recently.
The action of the group of Chicago men
who were active in promoting the recent piano
playing tournament in connection with the
annual convention of the music trades, in urg-
ing Mayor Thompson to appoint a music
supervisor of the Board of Education, is a
helpful step towards the extension of piano
classes in the public schools. The music trade
realizes that the cause of music will be best
served by the presence of such an official in
the management of the schools.
In this day of piano promotion efforts every
means that aids in sales should be considered.
The Galperin Music Co., Charleston, \V. Ya.,
in a letter printed in this issue, says that since
it has provided its salesmen with Bowen piano
loaders its piano business has increased con-
siderably. It is a wise dealer who realizes that
the piano prospects have to be discovered and
that the quickest and most effective means of
doing so are the ones to be employed.
Experts of the Department of Commerce
who have analyzed the tariff figures in the
new Franco-German treaty, discovered that
American pianos and other musical instru-
ments exported to France will pay four times
the duty imposed upon similar imports from
Germany. Unless the situation is modified
American musical instrument manufacturers
will be practically excluded from the French
market.
* * *
No salesman fit for his job will stop ihe sell-
ing of a reproducing grand to tell about the
merits of a foot-playing upright. But neither
will a wise salesman hazard the delivery of an
upright in his enthusiasm to sell a grand.
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 5: PDF File | Image

Download Page 6 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.