Presto

Issue: 1928 2185

June 16, 1928
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.
F R A N K D. A B B O T T - - - - - - - - - -
(C. A . D A N I ELL—1904-1927.)
J. FERGUS O ' R Y A N
_ _ _ _ _ Managing
Editor
Editor
Telephones, Local and Long Distance, Harrison 0234.
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. 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.
When electrotypes are sent for publication it is re-
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. Full 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, JUNE 16, 1928.
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
Wednesday noon of each week.
and a fair price of labor will allow it to be
made and that from the highest-priced instru-
ment to the cheapest and research is con-
stantly employed whereby the manufacturers
can lower the cost of production without sac-
rificing quality. Impressively, Mr. Irion said:
"To assume that our merchants—and there
are a great many of them here from the entire
United States, are remiss in studying their
markets is a mere assumption, Mr. Shibley, to
which I heartily think you are entitled. We
have very large merchants here, and to pre-
sume that they are not keen and alert busi-
ness men is unfair. They study their markets.
They tell us six and eight months in advance
what their requirements for the year will be
and we guide our production very much in
accordance with it.
"I wish to go on record very strongly, Mr.
Shibley, because I do not want Wall Street
to get a wrong idea of our industry. We are
not asleep. We are not unalert of things that
are going on, and what has overcome us for
the moment is what has overcome others
through industrial changes that have taken
place among other industries for the time being
and in due course they will adjust themselves
to the new condition of things, and that, Mr.
Shibley, is true in our industry, and that
thought I hope you will take back to your peo-
ple downtown so that they will not get the
wrong idea of what is going on here."
THE NEW ERA
The principal work of the manufacturers'
convention was in promoting ideals to inspire
the dealers and salesmen everywhere to get
out and really sell pianos. This is. why the
men who attended this intensive four-hour
session were impressed with the idea that this
was absolutely the greatest piano convention
ever held in America. It has inspired the be-
CORRECTING MR. SHIBLEY
lief that something very necessary and needed
Thirty-eight piano manufacturing companies long ago, has been set in motion. The germ
had displays of their products at two hotels of a greater, bigger, finer and grander piano
during the week of the convention and number business came into existence at this conven-
of others had special displays at warerooms tion, and was launched ceremonially on what
and factory display rooms in the city. Four we all hope will be a very far-reaching career.
piano supply houses had displays at the head-
Whether we realize it or not, we are living
quarters hotel and some of the most important in a go-ahead generation. The. young people
makers of piano actions, keys and essential who have taken hold of things today are as
parts had attractive shows of their products different from the preceding generation as
and demonstrations of their merits at their day is from night; and older ones are slow if
plants.
they fail to recognize that fact.
The displays were the evidences of the opti-
It also is a new progressive era. Heads of
mistic attitude of the owners whose activities progressive industrial plants and commercial
are always governed by their ability to ob- institutions now recognize that some of their
serve conditions and estimate possibilities.
employees may once in a while have an idea
While the piano manufacturers are not in- that is worth trying out in practice.
different to the industrial setback that has
And this convention stands forth unique in
affected this country during the past few years, exploiting this idea: Play the game fair, but
they make it plain that they do not consider play it with all of your ability.
its influences in the piano business of a perma-
nent character. The splendid displays of in-
DISPROVING FOOL THEORIES
struments during the convention carried the
Certain people in the music trade are af-
message of progressiveness in production not fected by the old tradition that Presidential
only to the dealers but to the public as well.
election years are "bad for business," but the
The displays, the manufacturers who pre- number who so view the possibilities of that
sented them and the alert piano merchants time is far less than formerly. The Industrial
who delightedly observed them, all provided Conference Board reports on the basis of eco-
Mr. Hermann Irion with convincing illustra- nomic tests, that other influences have far
tions in his eloquent corrective comment on overshadowed that of the political contest in
Mr. Shibley's wrong estimate of the piano in- the past forty-eight years. The bugaboo of
dustry. The displays were the manufacturers' the "summer slumps,'' in a lesser way, still per-
responses to the expressed requirements of sists in the music trade, although a few- active
the piano merchants whose commercial safety piano houses have disproved that erroneous
depends on keen observation of the trend of belief by active and systematic pursuit of piano
taste in the piano buying public.
sales in the summer months.
Mr. Irion pointed out that the piano is made
As to the business of Presidential years,
as economically as the cost of raw materials when allowance is made, in the electoral years
from 1880 to 1924 inclusive, for "cyclical ten-
dencies" and wars, it is fairly to be inferred
that business in such years, according to the
Industrial Conference Board, "is not affected
in any definite or regular way by the fact of
Presidential elections."
The report says that 1872, 1880. 1892, 1900,
1912, 1916 were all years of rampant prosper-
ity. Only 1876, 1884' 1896 and 1908 were years
of downright depression. Of the remaining
four Presidential election years, 1888 showed
a slight recession from prosperity; 1904
started with a mild depression which turned
to revival in the autumn ; 1920 started on the
very crest of the post-war boom and ended
in depression ; 1924 repeated the story of 1904.
The live piano houses which have organized
sales forces of unusual size, evidently do not
accept the theory that the Presidential year
of 1928 is bad for business. Their aim is to
disprove the hoary view in the same manner
that they put the summer slump in the fool
phrase cannery.
How to override sentiment and make final
disposition of old pianos was one of the sub-
jects discussed more in asides to the conven-
tion than in the convention proper. Sentiment
is a power—the desire to hang on to old things,
heirlooms, flags, insignia, old letters, old vio-
lins, old pianos.
'WAY BACK IN PRESTO
(From Presto of June 19, 1890.)
The Root & Sons Music Company of this city
have, in the Everett piano for which they are factors
in sale, one of the best instruments in this country
and a piano produced in one of the best of organized
factories wherein everything is conducted with the
utmost care and precision. The Everett piano is, as
announced in their catalog, "in all essential points
pre-eminent."
The new Kimball grand (baby grand) was used
for the first time in public at the Perroti-Liebling
concert in Milwaukee last week. All modern im-
provements are used in the plant and machinery.
Mr. Adam Schneider of J. Bauer & Co. has recently
been filling the responsible position of juryman in
Justice Somebody's court.
Mr. C. C. Curtiss, who arrived in New York May
20 from his European trip, will probably arrive at
Chicago this week.
Geo. P. Bent, Chicago, has issued a pamphlet illus-
trating the new "Crown" piano manufactured by him.
At present four different cases (uprights) are manu-
factured, to be known as styles K, L and M. We
shall refer at length to the "Crown" later on.
The piano department of the firm of Lyon & HeaJy
is highly successful. One morning last week four
Knabe pianos were sold before Mr. Healy's arrival
at the office.
Mr. Harry E. Freund has been visiting Chicago
and other Western cities in the interests of his paper.
The W. W. Kimball Company will, in all proba-
bility, remove their warerooms next year to a com-
modious building on Wabash avenue, where they will
also have a large music hall.
Mr. Henry Mason, president of the Mason &
Hamlin O. and P. Company, who died in Boston
May 10th, was an experienced business man and
highly respected in the trade and widely known. He
was also an accomplished musician. The deceased
gentleman was in his 59th year. For 36 years he
devoted his energies to the welfare of his house and
was the originator of most of the improvements of
the cabinet organ. Mr. Mason was the youngest son
of Dr. Lowell Mason, the hymn writer, and a brother
of Dr. Wm. Mason, the eminent pianoforte instructor
of New York City.
There are few pianoforte manufacturing com-
panies in the trade who make a more honest piano-
forte or do business with less ostentation or more
thoroughness than Messrs. Jewett & Co., Leominster,
Mass. The visitor to the factory will always be
cordially received and treated with courteousness
more than ordinary.
Story & Clark have just shipped to Germany a
large consignment of organs. Their catalog has been
translated into German, and trade on the Continent is
being rapidly developed.
Who will be the next European pianist to make his
first concert tour in this country? Paderewski?
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 16, 1928
PREST 0-T I M E S
SALES GOOD AT THE
WURLITZER EXHIBIT
Company, with Comprehensive Array of
Musical Instruments, Pleased with Re-
sults in Publicity and Actual Sales.
At the Wurlitzer display rooms in the Commodore
Hotel, New York, during the convention, Farny Wur-
litzer, head of the company, met the visiting dealers.
In that pleasant business he was assisted by Gordon
Laughead, sales manager at Chicago for the Wur-
Through his new pair of specs he saw the black and
litzer Grand Piano Company, of De Kalb, 111.;
white proposition to exchange the mighty dollar for William B. Word and M. R. Williams, Wurlitzer
fifty cents. He hobbled to the bank, where he had wholesale men. Also in the party was E. H. Petering,
a savings account, and drew out the balance of $45 head of the sales department of Wurlitzer's at the
in 90 half dollars. These he carried to the piano great factory in North Tonowanda, N. Y. "At the
store and demanded 90 mighty whole ones in ex- North Tonawanda factories," said Mr. Petering, "we
change as per invitation on sign.
manufacture pianos, player pianos, reproducing play-
The most difficult bit of talking that the special ers, organs, our production including harps and auto-
sales promoter ever had to do was in convincing the matic instruments of different descriptions."
literal interpreter of his sign that the words "The
The Rudolph Wurlitzer aggregation, Cincinnati,
Mighty Dollar for Fifty Cents," was qualified by the North Tonawanda, De Kalb and New York, feels
phrase that followed, which read: "All $500 Pianos amply repaid for its exhibit and attendance at the
Now $250."
New York convention. J. C. Henderson, New York
"Radts!" shouted the old inhabitant wrathfully. "I wholesale piano sales manager, says that they sold as
see a chance to make mein money double, und poof! many instruments as they had planned to dispose of,
it was someding else alretty. Mein Ungluck! Radts!" met on a pleasant footing many of their old cus-
tomers, and made several desirable new connections
* * *
Henry Ford did a little modest boosting for the during the period of the convention. "Selling goods
sales plans of the Ford Motor Co. in an unofficial is not the primary purpose of a convention," said Mr.
talk in London. Now let him officially prove his Henderson at his office in the Wurlitzer New York
headquarters, West 42nd street, on Saturday, "but to
claims by selling a flock of new lizzies in Venice.
get together, show our samples and advertise to the
* * *
people the progress we are making. In this sense
The man who analyzes piano tones has sound judg- the convention to us measured up to a greaT~S"irctess,
ment, of course.
and we were delighted to meet so many enthusiastic
* * •
friends of the great house of Wurlitzer from these
BAD COMPANY.
United States and other countries."
When prohibition officers raided the saloon at 25th
and Cambria streets, Philadelphia, last week they
failed to find anything with a kick to it in the bar-
room. It was only when they reached the second
floor in their sniffing quest that they sensed the
presence of the contraband stuff.
One of the officers, who claimed to be an ex-piano Mrs. Rosalie Barker Frye Purchases Instrument from
salesman, had made a wall-tapping circuit of the
Platt Music Co., Los Angeles.
room. Then after a keen appraisal of the floor for a
hiding place, paused, baffled, at the piano. He peeked
Mrs. Rosalie Barker Frye. who has been honored
behind the instrument and saw no hiding place in the as the only soloist to sing at the Los Angeles Music
wall or possible place of concealment in the back of
Festival, has just purchased a Knabe grand piano
the piano. Facing the instrument, he scooped from from the Platt Music Company of Los Angeles. Mrs.
the keyboard what should be good handfuls of har- Frye was selected by the Resident Artists' Audition
monious chords.
Board.
'"Aha," and then. "Hobo!" he exclaimed at the re-
Mrs. Frye "will sing August 31. She is a contralto
sultant sound. "This is where we do a job at piano and, although born in England, has lived in America
tuning and regulating," he added after a glance inside since her fourteenth year. All of her training has
the case. "No piano action can operate when inter-
been received in this country. Following her debut
fered with by a double row of quarts of booze."
at the Plaza Hotel in New York, she was successfully
* * *
received as a concert artist. She was soloist of the
Brick Presbyterian Church, Fifth avenue, New York,
Selling 'em has ceased to be a piano parlor gar'e.
Outdoor sales weather is here and the old buzz- and for the past three years has occupied a similar
wagon with the Bowen Loader attachment is in order. position with the First Presbyterian Church of Hol-
lvwood.
* * *
But you will find, if you are prone to investigation,
that the gay boy who leads a double life is never the
WISCONSIN DEALER IN EAST.
one who does double work in the store or office.
J. E. Meaghcr of the Forbes-Meagher Music Com-
* * *
pany of Madison, VVis., attended the annual conven-
Killing time is the easy way of becoming a dead tion of the National Association of Music Merchants
in New York City, June 4 to 8. Mr. Meagher also
one.
visited at Camden, N. J., on a tour of inspection of
* * *
the Victor Talking Machine Company.
Silence is the wisest argument for the poor piano.
THINGS SAID O R SUGGESTED
BUCK UP!
Say, why do you repine and spill
The briny tears of woe?
Why do you sobfully deplore,
That sales are few and slow?
Why do you chatter vain regrets,
Sad, doleful, wring your hands,
And urge to wet activity
Your lachrymosal glands?
Why do you weep when you should work?
Tush! Dry this tearful whine
And cease the vain regretful words
And thoughts that pump the brine.
Go forth where prospects wait for you
Luck follows those who dare!
While hookworm whiners wait inert.
Tear-marked with black despair.
Have faith in your endeavors while
The brave task you're about,
And swat the big black cloud and turn
The silver lining out.
You're master of your destiny;
Old Fate and you are pards.
Here, quit the measly game you play,
The weak tears blur your cards.
* * *
THE PROOF
"Is that a select neighborhood?" asked the flat
chaser, shrewdly.
"Select!" said the enthusiastic renting agent. "Well.
I should say so. Why, there are twenty-seven baby
grand pianos in the block."
* # .*.
TOO
LITERAL
A special piano sale promoter whose methods are
theatrical, makes frequent use of flaring signs with
phrases that compel attention. Whatever may be
the impression of his signs on the trade, influenced
by the ethical commandments, they at least produce
a thrill on the public.
Some time ago, in furtherance of a sale for a Wis-
consin house, he had a sign, "The Mighty Dollar for
Fifty Cents," painted on a strip of muslin that ob-
scured the show window.
It was a triumph in something-for-nothing come-
alongs and it worked to perfection in the manner
desired. It made talk and prompted inquiry, two
things the ballyhoo should do.
But one old fellow with an eye for a good chance,
took the wording in a literal sense. The special sale
artist with characteristic poetic license makes free
use of metaphor. The average reader allows gener-
ous discounts on ballyhoo statements. The real estate
man, the auctioneer and special piano sale promoter
are generally permitted the privileges of figurative
statement.
The thrifty old resident was unaware of the usages.
KNABE GRAND PIANO
BOUGHT BY SOLOIST
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/

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