Presto

Issue: 1928 2195

August 25, 1928
PRESTO-TIMES
Minos
"ADAM" StyUX Grand. A
wonderful new 5 ft. Art Grand
with bench to match. Surpris-
ing value — Packard Quality
throughout.
..Hacked by a RealSa/es Planf
H
ERE'S another sales winner! A beautiful Adam Grand with bench
to match in the popular 5 ft. size at a remarkably attractive price.
And "winning sales plans too! You've always known the quality of Pack-
ard instruments—now you can cash in. This idea closed $7000 worth of
piano business, 12 sales in a town of less than 5000 population in just 21
days. Prospects actually ask your salesmen to call—resistance is removed.
It works! Want to know more about it?
Write today for details!
THE PACKARD PIANO COMPANY
3335 Packard Avenue
Fort Wayne, Indiana
old pianos are better than those built today. Call
attention to the new styles as you have seen them.
Periods — colors — minuets — grands — roll played —
reproducing, registering.
Frequent Tuning Needed.
Work to have the public realize the piano needs
regular care. Mr. A. G. Gulbransen has for many
The Public Needs This Consciousness, Says years insisted that we include in our national ad:
"The National Association of Piano Tuners recom-
John S. Gorman in a Message from
mends tuning at least two to four times each year.
A. G. Gulbransen to
Keep the fine tone of your piano with this care."
the Tuners.
May we suggest that the tuners cooperate with the
The following was a talk by John S. Gorman, vice- piano manufacturers. Don't put back on the factory
president and sales manager of the Gulbransen Co. to anything and everything that happens to the piano as
the National Association of Piano Tuners, Thursday, a factory defect. Let the owner know the facts. If
you know positively it is a factory defect all well and
at Cleveland, August 16.
good—say so.
I am to give a message from Mr. A. G. Gulbransen
Don't Always Blame Factory.
to his friends and fellow workers—the tuners of
However, more frequently the difficulty is not up to
our great piano industry. It has been my privilege to
manifest and represent Mr. A. G. Gulbransen in seven the factory. Explain the ordinary causes of trouble—
regional meetings of dealers throughout the country, climatic changes, heating arrangements in the home-—
also before the manufacturing association and now exposure to open doors and windows, excess of dry
temperature. All those causes which you men well
again here in Cleveland with the tuners.
The piano industry, like all other industries, has know. But the piano out of adjustment—a piano that
been going through the readjustment period. The has seen years of service should not be considered as
piano has not been rejected by the public. Mr. Gul- having factory defect.
Working together we can win back lost position.
bransen believes, and we have evidence of this fact,
"that the public properly approached will buy pianos." The fight is from the outside not from within. Let
It is your part in this public approach that we would us pledge ourselves to our industry. May we all have
like to talk over with you. You can do a great deal, a code of ethics, a manual of arms—all of us working
in fact you have a great responsibility placed on your together contributing our part toward rebuilding this
shoulders. You have the entree to the American industry to which so many of you have given so much
home. When you enter the home you are accepted of your lives. Encourage young men to come into
as a professional man, just the same as the doctor, the this business.
lawyer, the music teacher.
Need 100,000 Retail Men.
The great need of this industry is 100,000 retail
Tuner Gets Confidence of Home.
You have and are given the confidence of that salesmen. May your organization become a recruiting
home. They look to your experience in your partic- ground for this great army of men.
May I leave this thought, that if business is to be
ular line as a valuable worth-while viewpoint. Con-
sequently you are placed in a position where you can good business for anyone in particular—it must be
be a great force and a great asset to your profession good for all of us. So let us consider ourselves fellow
members of a great industry, fellow manufacturers—
and to the industry you represent.
"The public rejects all obsolete merchandise except fellow salesmen—fellow dealers and fellow tuners.
the piano." We all have our individual part to play
in correcting public opinion. What can the tuner do? "DAWN" FILM COMING TO CHICAGO.
May we offer a few suggestions? Already you are
After months of negotiations, the management of
doing a great material work. Any contribution toward The Playhouse, 410 South Michigan boulevard, has
making the home h^ppy is worth while. Keeping finally succeeded in obtaining the most discussed film
pianos in tune is a real service. But there are a few of two continents—"Dawn," the story of Nurse Edith
other things you can do which will be for the good Cavell. The celluloid story is without war scenes
of all. The future of the piano industry is wrapped and sets forth a simple, direct and dramatic tale of
up in the child of today.
the life of "England's Joan of Arc." "Dawn" is to
be presented at The Playhouse for a limited engage-
Music Helps Other Studying.
Educators have developed facts proving that chil- ment beginning on Sunday, September 2, and it has
dren that study music advance more rapidly in other been decided to make no advance in prices for this
studies. Children that play the pano seldom get out engagement.
of bounds—they can be handled more easily. Rarely
are they in the juvenile courts. The study of p'ano
PLAYS PIANO 82 HOURS.
and music helps to stabilize emotions of the growing
An associated Press dispatch from Bunzlau, Ger-
boy and girl. Recently Chicago public schools many, says that Eduard Kemp, a native of Berlin,
adopted class instruction.
You can leave these has won a $2,000 prize and a free trip to the United
thoughts in homes where there are children.
States, by playing a piano for eighty-two hours
It is necessary to make the public beauty conscious thereby establishing what is claimed to be a world
on pianos the same as on other lines—autos, etc. record. Kemp is a pianomaker. He was given an
Encourage the public to own a modern piano. If interval of fifteen minutes every three hours to take
everything else in the home is modern and new—why nourishment and to have his hands and head mas-
not the piano? Do not encourage the idea that the saged.
BEAUTY CONSCIOUS
ABOUT PIANOS
MRS. C0RINNA MELVILLE
A FAMOUS MUSIC GUIDE
Organizer of Bands and Orchestras Goes to
Elkhart This Week to Attend Conn
Band Leaders Meet.
Mrs. M. Corinna Melville, organizer of musical
groups, chatted with a Presto-Times representative
this week in Chicago before she started for Elkhart,
Ind., where she attends the C. G. Conn band instru-
ment leaders' convention.
Mrs. Melville needs no introduction in the Central
West or in the South Central States, for she is widely
MRS.
M. CORINNA MELVILLE.
known as an active promoter and organizer of bauds,
orchestras, church groups, glee clubs and dramatic
clubs.
In Chicago she makes her headquarters at the Conn
National School of Music, Inc., 506 South Wabash ave-
nue. After leaving Elkhart she will delight Memphis
with the Dixie Peaches, a group of nine talented
young musicians who appear under the auspices of
the Spanish-American war veterans. In the South
she works under the favor of the O. K. Houck Piano
Co. of Memphis.
Mrs. Melville has just organized the Memphis
Chick Band, with young girl members. After leaving
Memphis she expects to go to Birmingham, Ala., to
put the Police Band on its feet. In Chicago Mrs.
Melville organized bands in the great department
stores, which then purchased and used Conn instru-
ments.
Harry Edward Freund, formerly publisher of a
piano trade paper in New York but for many years
past a resident of Chicago, still writes for the press.
A signed article from his pen in the Chicago Daily
News of August 15 asked for united support for the
Chicago World's Fair Centennial Celebration of 1933.
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
known, finds its climax in the period grands
which are just now attracting public attention
and serving to greatly stimulate trade.
The American Music Trade Weekly
All of these beautiful architectural designs
have
grown in upon twentieth century Amer-
Published Every Saturday at 417 South Dearborn
Street, Chicago, Illinois.
ican pianos. They have transformed the se-
PRESTO P U B L I S H I N G CO., Publishers.
verely elegant grands into the most elaborate
F R A N K D. A B B O T T
- - - - - - - - -
models since the piano came into being. And
Editor
(C. A. DAN I ELL—1904-1927.)
the elegance with which the epoch-making ef-
J. FERGUS O'RYAN
_ _ _ _ _ Managing Editor
fects fit into piano decoration proves, at a
Telephones, Local and Long Distance, Harrison 0234.
Private Phones to all Departments. Cable Address (Com-
glance, the wisdom of the American piano
mercial Cable Co.'s Code), " P R E S T O , " Chicago.
Entered as second-class matter Jan. 29, 1896, at the manufacturers in applying them to the king of
Post Office, Chicago, 111., under Act of March 3, 1879.
musical instruments. Period-furniture has long
Subscription, $2 a year; 6 months, $1.25; Foreign, $4.
Payable in advance. No extra charge in United States been conspicuous in modern American homes
possessions, Cuba and Mexico. Rates for advertising on of refinement. Charming designs of the old
application.
Items of news and other matter are solicited and if of schools have appealed to the great mass of
general interest to the music trade will be paid for at American people and the trend in the piano
space rates. Usually piano merchants or salesmen in the
smaller cities are the best occasional correspondents, and trade in period grands is a natural sequence.
their assistance is invited.
The first appearance of period art grands
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- were of the more conservative schools, Queen
tion will be charged if of commercial character or other
Anne, modified Louis XVI, William and Mary,
than strictly news interest.
When electrotypes are sent for publication it is re-
quested that their subjects and senders be carefully indi- and Hepplewhite, but as manufacturers saw
cated.
the increasing demand for these artistic in-
Forms close at noon on Thursday. Late news matter
struments,
models characterizing the art of
should be in not later than 11 o'clock on that day. Ad-
vertising copy should be in hand before Tuesday, 5 p. m., the Italians and Spanish during the Renais-
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 sance periods were produced. Gothic and Ori-
classification, should be in by Wednesday noon.
ental decorative models were also added to the
Address all communications for the editorial or business now extensive group of period instruments.
departments to PRESTO PUBLISHING CO., 417 South
Dearborn Street. Chicago, III.
SATURDAY, AUGUST 25, 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
f han Wednesday noon of each week.
PIANO EVOLUTION
Even if the piano is not one of the really old
instruments of music, its history will show a
Jarge number of changes, and a story of evo-
lution more varied in its interest than any
Dther. The instruments of antiquity which
still persist, and often are as essential today as
of old, display no structural changes from the
time of their birth, which time is too obscure
to permit of reliable data.
The harp has changed but slightly from the
day of Jubal. The violin is just as it was in
the time of Isaiah, and the first guitar, of
Greek origin, imported into the East, remains
as in Biblical days except that instead of four
strings it now has six strings. But the piano
has developed in every part of its construction
since the day of Cristofori.
And the "basic instrument," as we like to
call it, will keep on changing. If it remains
almost stationary in its principal features, it
will develop modifications, or amplifications,
in its tonal characteristics. And it will display
almost periodic changes in its outward designs.
It is not so very long ago. that the parlor
grand w r as a sensation, followed by the still
larger problem of the small or baby grand. As
recently as 1900 a fierce dispute arose in Bos-
ton, between celebrated piano experts, over the
question of a grand piano so small as five feet.
That question was quickly settled by the Chick-
ering quarter grand, and the "babies" have
been coming ever since, smaller and smaller,
until less than four feet in length has even
proved a possibility.
The prevailing determination of the Amer-
ican manufacturers to produce more beautiful
grand pianos than the world has heretofore
INSTALMENT DEBTORS
There is probably no form of instalment
payment note more generally respected than
that given against the deferred payments for
a piano. It may also be said that the instal-
ment plan was invented for the benefit of fam-
ilies of moderate means whose cultural long-
ings prompted them to undertake the purchase
of a piano even though they might have to
save systematically for a year or tAVo to pay
for it.
; .!•• i |j
As a rule, piano companies find American
families very honest debtors. Last year one
company reported that thirty-six out of every
one hundred customers paid cash for their
pianos and sixty-four bought on the instal-
ment plan. The thirty-six were in the main
the purchasers of the expensive pianos. The
sixty-four were persons of more limited means.
More than half of the purchasers paid for
their pianos within a year.
Another fifth
within eighteen months and only one took
more than thirty months to make his pay-
ments.
August 25, 1928
ing his art, today the assemblages are more
interested in the music offered than in the in-
dividual artists.
While t h e advertising piano dealer is mak-
ing a successful effort to sell the pianos he may
not be putting enough emphasis on selling t h e
store as a store. That is, he may be putting
practically all his advertising energy into t h e
selling of the goods alone. But he will find it
profitable to capitalize the aspect of the house
as an institution—its history, aims, policies
and advantages. The good store has a good
story worthy of newspaper advertising.
* * *
THIRTY YEARS AGO
Thirty Years Ago—Presto of August 25, 1898.
Everything looks bright for the future, says Col.
James A. Guest of Burlington, Iowa. And this is the
report from all along the line. It is certain that if
this fall does not make amends for the slack summer
it will be the dealers' fault.
E. C. Davies had an excellent exhibition of Pack-
ard, .Schiller and Hamilton pianos and Wilcox &
White Symphonies, at the annual County Fairs at
Dodgeville and Mineral Point, Iowa County, Wis ,
and several sales were made.
Mr. Phil Starck, manager of the Story & Clark city
store, is at South Haven, Mich. He is living at the
Sleepy Hollow Hotel.
F. W. Hedgeland, superintendent of the W. W.
Kimball Company's organ department, is in Wash-
ington, D. C, overseeing the placing of the great
four manual pipe organ in the Jewish synagogue.
There is a suggestive portrait group on Presto's
title page this week. Three generations are repre-
sented in the group, and the experience, skill and
energy of them all are crystalized in the famous
piano that bears the name of Vose.
"We haven't had so many orders in any summer
month in the lr'story of the house as this August has
produced," said Mr. E. H. Story to a Presto repre-
sentative one day last week. "It isn't a question of
demand with us just now, but of supply. We are
shipping as fast as possible and still our order book
shows a long line to be caught up with."
J. B. Thiery & Co. is the name of a firm that is to
conduct a new music house at 416 Broadway, repre-
senting the W. W. Kimball Company of Chicago,"
says the Milwaukee Sentinel.
These are t : mes when the trade editor realizes his
limitations ami longs for the broader latitude of the
general newspaper. With the "pomp of war" and the
glow of victory about him, it is hard for the trade
editor to confine himself to the things of music, and
to continue to plod the path he has already packed
hard in the endeavor to induce the forward movement
in the industry for which he labors, or to force as'de
the lurking ills which may, in his mind, beset the
dealers. There is not much opportunity for the trade
journalist to get loose the gatling guns of his patriot-
The dealer who organizes his selling activi- ism or to set free the eagles of his eloquence. He
ties sets down in detail the. descriptions of his must confine himself to the most peaceful of pursuits,
prospective buyers. Alert piano sales mana- and content himself with an occasional cheer in verse
or a side-long glance at the men of the music trade
gers distinguish the piano prospect from the who have dropped for the time the pitch-pipe and the
piano customer, but the differences are not so keyboard and grasped the musket or machete!
great. T h e prospect is a prospective buyer
There are few things more detrimental to the spread
until he actually pays his full price or his first of the American export trade than the unbending
installment o nhis chosen instrument; the cus- self-satisfaction which will not permit a manufacturer
to see things as others see them. This characteristic
tomer never ceases to be a prospect. In fact, is not so pronounced among American piano manufac-
observant managers have learned that many turers as in those of some other countries, and still
piano owners are the most likely prospects for there is loo much of it even here. It should be taken
into consideration that the bias custom—of habit and
further sales.
local prejudice—is hard to eradicate. It does not
* * *
matter that we feel sure that our own ideas and tastes
In spite of the itinerant jazz bands, the num- in piano construction are the best. It is a very un-
profitable order of musical missionary work to try to
ber of "jazz acts" in vaudeville and the usual convince the buyers of the other countries that it is so
character of the music, of the small town mo- if they do not seem disposed to become converts.
tion picture theaters, t h e people in the smaller We must bend to the wishes of customers if we would
succeed, and then finally we may lead also in the
places are becoming more and more appreci- matter of "setting the styles" and fixing the minor
ative of good music. The interesting f a c t, details for the piano buyers in other lands.
plainly concerns the music dealer. Whereas in
POOR PAPA.
the past a concert or recital by some famous
"And
is
there
any
instrument that you play?" asked
singer or musician was treated simply as the
the woman, who was pressing her guests into service
appearance of a great person and audiences to provide entertainment.
were made up of curious folk who w r ere more
"Not away from home," Jenkins replied.
"Oh, that's queer. What do you play at home?"
desirous of seeing the celebritv than of hear-
"Second fiddle."—Chicago Daily News.
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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