Presto

Issue: 1927 2160

PRESTO-TIMES
The American Music Trade Weekly
Published Every Saturday at 417 South Dearborn
Street, Chicago, Illinois.
PRESTO P U B L I S H I N G CO., Publishers.
Editor
F R A N K D. A B B O T T
- - - - - - - -
(C. A. DAN I ELL—1904-1927.)
Managing Editor
J. FERGUS O'RYAN
Telephones, Local and Long Distance, Harrison 0234.
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, 111., under Act of March 3, 1879.
Subscription, $2 a year; 6 months, $1.25; 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 correspondents, and
their assistance is invited.
Payment is not accepted for matter printed in the edi-
torial or news columns of Presto-Times.
Where half-tones are made the actual cost of produc-
tion will be charged if of commercial character or other
than strictly news interest.
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quested that their subjects and senders be carefully indi-
cated.
Forms close at noon on Thursday. Late news matter
should be in not later than 11 o'clock on that day. Ad-
vertising copy should be in hand before Tuesday, 5 p. m.,
to insure preferred position. Pull page display copy
should be in hand by Tuesday noon preceding publication
day. Want advertisements for current week, to insure
classification, should be in by Wednesday noon.
Address all communications for the editorial or business
departments to PRESTO PUBLISHING CO., 417 South
Dearborn Street, Chicago, III.
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1927.
er's invitation to join the group piano classes.
All the other methods for spreading piano
study are inspiring and productive of the piano
buying desire. It is encouraging to young peo-
ple to invent easy means to musical under-
standing. But the piano dealer or salesman
who sits down to wait for the spontaneous
rush of piano customers prompted with the
eager desire to buy by any of the admirable
aids, does something that will tax his patience.
The piano promotion plan arms the sales-
man, but it is true that in most communities,
the piano salesmen must depend on their own
personal efforts to realize on the effects of the
promotion plans. The promotion plan makes
the struggle easier, but the trade must fight
for its piano sales. The men of the piano trade
must fight harder than the workers in new and
fascinating lines of business. The lack of music
desire in the public that makes piano selling
harder than before is not always because the
piano is less desirable. It is more often be-
cause the men who should sell pianos are
softer. The successful piano merchant of a
generation back made his way by hard knocks,
by persistent solicitation and continuous pros-
pect seeking. At this time when a convention
announcement says "each industry is lined up
against the music merchant," it is absolutely
necessary for the dealers to get back to first
principles and actually go out and dig for
sales.
December 24, 1927
nishes materials for the imagination, unmixed
with scientific or religious error which all the
acquired knowledge of ripe age can never
wholly eradicate.
Is self-assertiveness a national vice? No,
indeed. Self-assertiveness is that which has
made America great, but it must have a de-
gree of guidance, which doesn't mean that the
child must blindly obey. A child may fail, but
those who try and fail are entitled to more
regard than those who fail without trying.
We have nu>re in our world than is covered by
our hat.
To understand children we must realize that
they have a world of their own, in which they
attend school for ten months in a year for
twelve or fifteen years, with plenty of books
and pictures, good teachers, and all for noth-
ing. If they live in a city they have water
piped into their homes, which are electric-
lighted, and they ride daily on sreet cars, buses
or trains, frequently attend moving picture
plays, etc. Then why not extend their edu-
cation and delights further by making them
familiar with performing brilliant selections
of music on the piano? The ability to do this
is one of the grandest forms of self-expression
for either a boy or a girl.
Competition today is the rivalry for busi-
ness between industries. It is the effort of
one industry to secure public acceptance of its
commodity against the effort of many other
ONLY FAIR TO TUNER
industries, each seeking to do the same thing.
One of the most serious problems confront- It is the effort of the Jones-Smith Piano Co.,
ing the tuning profession today, in the opinion for example, to secure a decision from the
of many tuners, is the modern heating system Brown family to bring itself up to date by
in the modern home, with its rooms so ar- buying a baby grand piano, while at the same
ranged as to accommodate everything except time the Browns are being beset to buy a new
the piano. The only logical place for the in- radio, a new automobile, a new fur coat, or to
strument is occupied usually by a steam radi- join a country club. It is the effort of every
PIANOS AND RADIOS
ator or a hot-air register. The heat problem industry to bring the public to a proper knowl-
In an able address before the Radio Manu- is not only costly to the piano owner, but im- edge and appreciation of its products as a
facturers' Association in New York last week, poses a hardship on the tuner, and when people means to the greater consumption of them.
Mr. C. J. Roberts pointed out in a convincing do not understand the real cause of the con-
* * *
way the relation of the music merchant to dition of their instruments it reflects upon his
Nothing holds the disgusted gaze of the
radio. That, he said, used to be considered one ability.
average piano man more fixedly today than to
of the problems of the National Association of
It might be fair to the dealer himself and the see some talented teacher of music attempting
Music Merchants, but is so no longer. Radio, piano manufacturer if he were to raise that
to teach piano lessons to a promising pupil on
he pointed out, "is doing much to reestablish point of possible piano damage in his sales
a worn-out instrument. It is positively pain-
home life in America and an increased in- talks. Many a customer's kick may be avoided
ful to a music teacher to ruin the child's senses
terest in pianos is a result. When people re- by educating piano owners to a realization of
of both hearing and touch by using defective
vive the home entertainment habit, then will the vital importance of avoiding excessive heat
mechanism when there are so many almost
more and more pianos be purchased."
if they wish to keep their pianos in proper tune perfect instruments to be had for so little
Mr. Roberts sees a helpful association in and adjustment.
money and on such easy terms of payment.
radios and pianos, but it is clear his loyalty to
It is difficult to convince people, generally,
the latter is the predominating one. "Thank that heat is the principal cause of their pianos
No salesman fit for his job will stop the
God," he said to the radio men, "there is no not holding their proper tune and pitch, and
selling
of a reproducing grand to tell about
static in a good piano, although some of the they are prone to criticize the piano's con-
the
merits
of a foot-playing upright. But
poor ones emit sounds suggestive of the per- struction. The tuner also comes in for ad-
neither
will
a wise salesman hazard the de-
formance of a poor radio set under most un- verse criticism and piano owners suspect that
livery
of
an
upright
in his enthusiasm to sell
favorable conditions."
faults are due to his incompetency or careless-
a grand. The real salesman has the ability to
ness. They often feel, no doubt, that the tuner
measure accurately the kind of instrument that
uses the heat argument as an alibi.
TIME TO FIGHT
fits his prospect.
The piano promotion plan in any of its forms
* * *
does not mean that piano salesmen should
It
is
certain
that
the trade isn't getting all
PIANO PLAYING CONTESTS
lessen their efforts to seek out the prospec-
it
can
out
of
the
automatic
pianos. As now
The piano men of Chicago and other cities
tive buyers. The nationally wide scheme for
constructed,
and
considering
the
almost limit-
bringing the musical claims of the instrument who are promoting piano playing contests
less
field
it
affords,
the
automatic
and elec-
forward increases the opportunities of the among children of school age are not intrench-
dealers and their salesmen ; the public is being ing on the prerogatives of music teachers or trically operated piano should be a source of
made more receptive of the piano talk. The breaking into the line of pedagogics. They large profits to the dealers almost everywhere.
piano is pitted against a host of things that are helping the teachers of music by furnish-
Now is the time for piano dealers to arrange
allure to money of the public and the piano ing them with recruits.
salesmen have nothing to do but fight.
The men who are doing this work are picked for their lines for the year beginning. A great
It is helpful when piano study is included in men, for it requires genius to point out to the name on the leader reflects also upon the char-
the curriculum of a school. It helps piano awakening mind the lines of beauty and duty acter of the lesser known in the line in any
popularity when children respond to the deal- which it henceforth must follow. Music fur- store. Have a great leader, if possible.
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
(han Wednesday noon of each week.
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/
P R E S T O-T I M E S
December 24, 1927
DAY AND NIGHT WORK
IN STRAUBE FACTORY
Dealers' Activities Are Making This a Big
Year for the Straube Piano Company,
Hammond, Ind.
THINGS SAID OR SUGGESTED
GOT HIS GOAT
We recently heard of a general storekeeper in
Pioche, Nev., who regularly collects a bag of gold
dust as the installment payment on a playerpiano
sold to a group of temperamental miners in the
mountains. It is a nice, clean medium of payment.
Some time ago, too, you possibly read the account
of the Oregon dealer who exchanged his pianos for
blushing apples, the kind the real estate men and
railroad people so temptingly display among the
other allurements for creating interest in that blessed
state. Also another acceptable form of installment
payments.
Both the Nevada and Oregon methods alluded to
are odd but not distressing, like the odd payment
once passed to Ion Arnold when he was manager of
F. G. Thearle & Co.'s branch at 455 63rd street,
Chicago.
Mr. Arnold sold a piano to Phelim Dougherty, a
Bridgeport resident employed as a puddler in the
rolling mills. The marriage of Phelim's only daugh-
ter was the occasion of the purchase. The gift of
the piano was a duty, he considered, although his
mind was tilled with misgivings at the maiden's
choice.
Phelim's son-in-law was a bird of passage, bril-
liant of plumage and gay of song. He was a phony
cowboy in an amusement park attraction who
couldn't distinguish a maverick from a muley cow
and whose experiences with the branding iron were
had in a box factory in Grand Rapids. Phelim's
instinctive fears for his girl's happiness were realized.
Too soon the phony cowboy showed his yellow
streak. Mean traits that invite the lead cure among
real cowmen soon evoked the objections of r the
rugged and manly old puddler. One morning words
were followed by blows and at the conclusion of a
short but primitive combat the fake cowboy, blinded,
battered and beaten, took the count.
When Phelim returned from work that evening,
prepared for the renewal of hostilities, no lights
from the battlements burned. The enemy and his
wife had evacuated. It was a complete change of
base. The furniture was gone, and with it the piano
recently bought on the installment plan from Mr,
Arnold.
Then, filled with the unsatisfied lust of battle,
Phelim launched upon an elemental toot; a frenzied,
truculent, scrap-filled period, at the end of which
he was moneyless and jobless. The affair of the
piano troubled him sorely. The disappearance of the
instrument shamed him and his inability to pay he
considered a blot on the escutcheon of the clan
Dougherty.
"I haven't a red cint to give ye 'till I get work,
Mr. Arnold,"' he explained to the piano man, "but
ye can have me lasht goat right today.''
"Nix on the live stock!" was the protest. "Keep
the goat. I know you enough. Phelim, to trust you
until you get back at the puddling."
Phelim, however, disregarded the protests. As
Mr, Arnold approached the store next morning he
saw a crowd that blocked traffic 011 63d street. Tied
to a telegraph pole in front of the piano store was
Phelim Dougherty's installment on the bridal gift
piano. It was a goat to be proud of, too, from the
goat fancier's point of view. Not a meek and placid
milk-giving nanny, but a goat of the sterner sex.
Tn short, a billygoat, big, strong masterful, aggres-
sive, with wild flowing whiskers and smelling to high
heaven with an odor that was pungent, acrid and
sneeze-compelling.
A colored man informed Mr. Arnold that Phelim
had tied the installment to the telegraph pole on
his way to Gary, Ind., to take a new puddling job.
Mr. Arnold was naturally embarrassed. The goat,
too, resented being used as currency. At intervals
he would drag himself to the full length of the rope,
lower his proud head and butt the telegraph pole
with a whack that made the wires buzz musically
like an aeolian harp. That performance he varied
by standing on his hind legs and dancing a tango
with himself or in turning handsprings and cart-
wheels for an ever-increasing crowd that whooped
encouragingly.
It was a plainly impossible payment. The fair
cashier shrieked at the bare suggestion of handling
it. The editor of the Englewood Times personally
presented public opinion and demanded that the
odorous credit amount be either locked in the safe
or lodged in the bank. The traffic of a busy thor-
oughfare couldn't be blocked because somebody paid
a piano installment.
Mr. Arnold thereupon decided to remove the
horned currency from circulation in the neighbor-
hood. He hired the colored citizen to man the rope
and two others to steer with a hold on the horns
and thereby take Billy away up back o' the yards
and lose him.
* * *
A splendid thing about the artist-made reproducing
piano roll is that it has no temperament and so is
always agreeable when required for use.
Before going into business in a turbulent belt equip
yourself with a mud guard.
* * *
The trouble is when the piano customer discovers
he is a piano victim.
BUYS IN SOUTH BEND, IND.
Gail E. Rush and Russell F. Moran have pur-
chased the Wurlitzer Musical agency at 128 North
Michigan street, South Bend, Ind., and will operate
the business under the name of Rush & Morau. They
will incorporate a company under the incorporating
laws of Indiana to deal in pianos and other musical
instruments. The new company will be the repre-
sentative of the well known Wurlitzer musical in-
struments.
Straube distributors are receiving a letter dictated
by H. A. Stuart, sales manager of the Straube Piano
Company, Hammond, Ind., which reads as follows:
To Straube Distributors:
Gentlemen-—Orders for the balance of 1927 re-
quirements should be placed now.
Many of our departments are working overtime
and a night force has for several weeks been in active
operation.
We want to take proper care of all our merchants.
We want no one to be disappointed. If you need
goods or will need goods shortly, please tell us now;
write, or wire at our expense.
If you have orders entered for which there is an
immediate rush, please notify us of the emergency,
as we want to cooperate.
Your activity is making this a big year for Straube.
Straube national advertising appears in the Decem-
ber issues of the following great magazines, which
combined, are known throughout America as the
"Quality Group":
The Atlantic Monthly, the Golden Book, Harper's
Magazine, Review of Reviews, Scribner's and World's
Work. Mr. Stuart says:
Tn these magazines we tell the people about the
Straube and now we want to cooperate with you to
tell them that you are the one in your vicinity who
handles the Straube they are reading about.
Great big reprints of these ads have been sent to
you for window and store display. If you can use
more, advise us.
We will send you newspaper mats or electros,
gratis, already set up ready for insertion just like
the enclosed samples. These newspaper cuts tie
up with Straube December advertising; they carry
the same message and they will have your name on
them.
The Straube Piano Company is busy this week
getting out rush orders, while not neglecting to take
care of others who are not in so much of a hurry.
OPENS IN GUTHRIE, OKLA.
E. A. Andrews and Ross Doolittle have joined part-
nership in the formation of a new music store 111
Guthrie, Okla., which will be known as The Guthrie
Music Company, and will be located at 110 South
First, in the west room of the Fitzpatrick building.
The partners are well known all over the county.
Guthrie is their home, and it is their intention to ex-
tend to the community a musical service in musical
instruments and sheet music that will meet the public
needs. Mr. Doolittle is a natural born musician and
his talent is applied to almost every instrument.
OPENS IN WASHINGTON
Francis S. Harris, widely known in the music
trade, has opened a finely-equipped store at 2900
Fourteenth street, X. W., Washington, D. C, under
the name of F. S. Harris Co., Inc. Mr. Harris has
been in charge of the store of the Mount Pleasant
Music Shop, 3310 Fourteenth street, N. W., since its
inception several years ago, prior to which he was
Washington representative of Cohen & Hughes,
Victrola wholesalers, of Baltimore.
James Hare, an Englishman, was the first patentee
of a music stool in England. The date was 1852.
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. Tt 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/

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