Presto

Issue: 1928 2207

November 17, 1928
P R E S T O-T 1 M E S
Qtortetma*
•ffifls twfackard
two newest Packard Instruments,
the Louis XVI, Style XX, Art Grand
and the Louis XVI, Style B, Upright,
have brought real Christmas Profits to
all Packard Dealers.
HTHE Packard Free Piano Lesson Ser-
vice is helping to make every month
of the year as good as the Christmas
Season. It works all year.
^ I ,
,_. ftV—
3335 Packard Avenue
The Packard Piano Co.
THE PIANO FLAG
IS STILL WAVING
Scares About Other Things Supplanting It
May Come and Scares May Go, But
the Good Old Piano Goes
On Forever.
A piano man in Chicago who reads Presto-Times
regularly commented one day this week on the re-
marks of W. M Shailer printed in this paper last
week telling how the piano industry was harder hit
in the great panic of 1893' than at any other time.
The Chicago man recalled many periods of fright—
childish shudderings at bugaboos that some dealers
declared had entered the arena to utterly destroy the
piano business and wipe it off the face of the earth.
In his reminiscences he went back as far as the
velocipede, which he said did not seriously ride
against the piano business and make slashes at its
throat with a rusty tin sword. But the outgrowth of
the old high-wheel—the modern bicycle—did take
away a good deal of the cash that otherwise would
have been expended for musical instruments. Yet
the piano business did not go down or lose ground.
Original Fear of the Phonograph.
The next goblin that made faces at the piano busi-
ness was the phonograph, in its various forms. Well,
"after all is said and done," to use a phrase from the
Hill Billy idioms, the phonograph helped rather than
hindered the piano trade.
Then came the playerpiano—first as an attachment
to wheel up to the piano; later as part and parcel
of the instrument itself. Here was a Siamese twin
that had. a new set of vitals in its abdomen—a heart,
a gizzard, a medulla oblongata, an esophagus, a
larynx and a pharynx, lungs and anastomosing ves-
sels—and oh, my! this was to take the place of every
upright piano in the universe. It sold well; it contin-
ues to sell well, and it has been wonderfully improved.
But its great popularity has only served to increase
the call for upright instruments.
Radio an Educator.
And now the radio has been pronounced by some
not correctly informed persons as inimical to the
continuance of the piano as the master instrument.
But is it hurtful? The man who skimmed over the
ground of the past says it is helpful, ever so helpful.
And why? Because every listener to radio, how-
ever ignorant on the start, gets education from it.
He believes that the gain in intelligence just from
hearing orators using good language in the recent
political campaign would run something like 2y 2 to
,3 per cent. Every notch gained in intelligence by the
masses is an aid to good music and ultimately to the
sale of pianos.
Not So Many Sales, but More Dollars.
The average price at which pianos are sold today
is two or three times as high as in the 70's or 80's.
In those days the average piano sold at from $250 to
$350, while today, as the greatest trade is in grands,
Fort Wayne, Indiana
sales run all the way from $550 to $750 and even
up to $2,500. The units of sales are not so many,
but the dollars are more.
The gist of the arguments used in this article is
that the piano flag is still waving victoriously in the
breeze; that there is trade for the man who gets out
and hustles; that the man who is unwilling to get out
and hustle must step aside.
NEW WISCONSIN FIRM
IS INCORPORATED
O'Connor-Lazar, Inc., Milwaukee, to Deal in
Music Goods and Radio—Fond du
Lac Firm Expands
A new Wisconsin corporation is O'Connor-Lazar,
Inc., with headquarters in Milwaukee. The company
will deal in musical instruments and radios. Signers
of the articles of incorporation are A. B. O'Connor,
vice-president of the Music Arts corporation; W. T.
Lazar and Leon E. Kaumheimer.
The Sandee Music Shop at Fond du Lac, Wis., has
been forced to enlarge its quarters because of in-
creased business. The enlarged quarters became
necessary, acording to James Sandee, when the store
decided to offer a larger line of pianos and other
musical instruments.
Sales of the company last year totaled approxi-
mately $60,000. In addition to now occupying the
entire first floor in its present location, the store has
a service department on the second floor. The sales
force has been added to and all general facilities have
been increased.
O. C. Jones, who for many years conducted a piano
and music store at Randolph, Wis., has discontinued
the music business.
Irving Zuelke, Appleton, is financing the erection
of a 10-story store and office building to be erected
in that city and which will replace the building de-
stroyed by fire last January. Mr. Zuelke has operated
a music and piano store in Appleton for many years
and since the fire, the company has been located in
temporary quarters. The new structure will cost be-
tween $350,000 and $400,000 and will be known as the
Irving Zuelke building. It is expected to be com-
pleted and ready for occupancy in about eight or nine
months.
BANK 'ROUND THE CORNER.
"Next Door to Music's Greatest Trading Center."
is the heading of an ad of the Straus National Bank
& Trust Co., Chicago, printed in newspapers this
week. This is said: "Less than two minutes from
Grand Headquarters of the Music Trade to a friendly
bank that is eager to extend to all within the Chicago
Zone the finest banking service they have ever had.
If you are one of the thousands whose work calls you
daily to the Lyon & Healy Building, the Steger Build-
ing, the Cable Building, the Kimball Building, or
any of the other nearby buildings dedicated to the
advancement of music, plan today to pay us a little
visit—because we ARE so accessible—and thus save
time and countless unnecessary steps by making us
PIANO AND ORGAN
ASSOCIATION MEETS
Retiring President Roger O'Connor Tells of
of the Work Done in Group Instruction
in Chicago Schools, and Other Inci-
dents Add Interest to Event.
Last week's meeting of the Chicago Piano &
Organ Association, in addition to electing the officers,
reported in last week's Presto-Times, was fraught
with enterprise and good cheer. Not a moment was
wasted in pifiie-paffle not a thought projected that
would suggest Grover Cleveland's famous phrase,
"innocuous desuetude."
Roger O'Connor, retiring president, spoke of the
great amount of work that had been done in group
instruction activities in the schools of Chicago and
among children generally who wanted to learn to
play the piano, and said that much of this work did
not appear on the surface. The organization re-
gretted the loss by death during the year of two of
its members—J. O. Twichell and F. S. Spofford.
Letter of Thanks.
Mr. O'Connor read a letter from L. Schoenwald,
manager of the Chicago establishment of the Amer-
ican Piano Company, thanking the Chicago Piano &
Organ Association for sending a great bunch of beau-
tiful flowers to welcome it into the Chicago trade
at its opening week. The flowers were on display in
the front window of the new store during opening
week. Mr. Schoenewald said in the letter that he'd
be glad to join the association. A few minutes later
L. Schoenewald of the American Piano Company,
and R. A. Burke, of the Story & Clark Piano Com-
pany, were voted into membership in the association.
An obstacle to carrying on the work of teaching
piano lessons in the Chicago schools was found in the
lack of pianos for the pupils to practice upon. This
difficulty had been obviated by the promise of 150
pianos to be loaned by local piano men.
The report of the treasurer, Adam Schneider,
showed a balance of $1,703.17 in the treasury.
Promotion Committee Reports.
A report by the special piano promotional com-
mittee was given by Eugene Whalen, who told of
work done to ultimately impress the parents of pros-
pective piano players and of the increased interest they
had begun to show.
Walter Kiehn, of Gulbransen's, also complimented
the daily papers for services rendered and spoke of
the good work done by the Group Piano Instruction
Committee and B. B. Ayres, its chairman.
Henry E. Weisert, of the Bissell-Weisert Piano
Company, called attention to the smallness of space
the daily newspapers devoted to piano "news" in pro-
portion to the "news" given the automobile industry.
This, Mr. Weisert said, was a comment on the pro-
portion as compared with the amount of paid adver-
tising space of the two industries. A committee will
call upon the newspapers to ask for more write-up
matter.
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
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 - - - - - - - - - -
Editor
(C. A. DAN I ELL—1904-1927.)
J. FERGUS O'RYAN
- - - - -
Managing Editor
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 Stat«s>
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
fhould 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, NOVEMBER 17, 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
than Wednesday noon of each week.
RADIO=MUSIC CO=OPERATION
The position of radio in the music store is
no longer a matter for doubt. Instead, the as-
sociation of music and radio in a store is one
of admitted mutual advantage. "PVom the
radio manufacturers' standpoint, the music
merchant is a logical distributor of radio and
music merchants will develop the radio busi-
ness intelligently." That is an estimate of the
situation and its possibilities recently voiced
by Hermann Irion, president of the Music In-
dustries Chamber of Commerce.
Mr. Irion holds that the music merchant's
understanding of musical tone, his experience
in selling high grade home furnishings and
his skill in conducting an installment business
should qualify him as a successful merchan-
diser of radio. He recalls music trade history
to point to the adoption of the phonograph by
the music merchant and the successful out-
come of the association. Besides the reduction
of overhead in adding radio to his music goods
lines, the music merchant he says, should en-
joy other benefits affecting down payments,
size of installment payments and terms.
In this issue C. J. Roberts, president of the
National Association of Music Merchants also
comments on the reciprocal character of the
relations between the radio manufacturers and
the music dealers. The proportion of music
merchants handling radio has grown so great
it makes plain the fact that the music dealer
who does not yet include radio in his lines is a
good prospect for the radio manufacturer.
It was in view of the fact that music mer-
chants handling radio are vitally interested in
keeping pace with the progress of the trade,
that the date of the convention of the Na-
tional Association Music Merchants in Chi-
cago in June was made to coincide with that
of the Radio Manufacturers. Mr. Roberts be-
lieves that the possibilities of the conventions
occurring simultaneously in the same city are
great for the piano manufacturer, musical in-
strument manufacturer, phonograph manufac-
turer and radio manufacturer and the retail
merchants handling Jieir various manufac-
tured products. The development of the joint
business in music and radio so far has been
mutually beneficial to the music and radio in-
terests and the continuation of the condition is
pleasant to contemplate.
NEW TEACHERS' ATTITUDE
That the hostile attitude of music teachers
to the piano class instruction in schools and
retail music stores is being removed is satisfac-
tory news sent out by C. M. Tremaine, director
of the National Bureau for the Advancement
of Music. Indifference to and even marked an-
tagonism for the group piano lessons have
marked the stand of the teachers from the be-
ginning of the movement to revitalize interest
in the piano as a means to the making of mu-
sic.
It was an unreasonable position from the
fact that parents generally had become indif-
ferent to the value of piano lessons as a means
towards a cultural education for their children.
A prominent music school head in Chicago re-
cently stated that were it not for the children
given a start at piano playing in the parochial
schools, the pupils enrolled in the more ad-
vanced classes of private teachers and music
schools would be smaller in number than they
are.
Mr. Tremaine states that the indifference of
the music teachers is being changed to sym-
pathy and support and the change is due to the
persistent action of the Bureau in impressing
the music teaching body that the group classes
are really helpful agencies for the furtherance
of piano study. Teaching group classes as an
active phase of teachers' work is suggested by
the propaganda of the Bureau. A booklet
"Guide for Conducting Piano Classes in the
Schools," distributed by the Bureau is declared
particularly potent in evoking the new attitude
of the teachers. This booklet was prepared by
the piano committee of the Music Supervisors'
National Conference.
November 17, 1928
house may be productive of good results, but
no dealer minimizes the importance of the out-
side salesman, both for finding prospects and
converting them into customers.
* * *
It is heartening to the piano trade to know
that active houses after results are getting
them. The methods of bright sales managers
in other industries should suggest new sales
processes to those of the piano trade.
* * *
An obvious opportunity for piano dealers is
that all Period styles in furniture and nearly
every piano manufacturer can, if desired, fin-
ish his instruments to suit any color scheme in
a room.
* * *
The pianos that are thrown at the public
seldom make a hit.
THIRTY-FIVE YEARS AGO
(From Presto, Nov. 17, 1893.)
Mr.
Irving
L. Holt, who represented the W. W.
K : mball Co. so ably at the World's Fair, has gone on
a trip to Oregon, Washington, and the Pacific Coast.
Mr. John Boyd Thacher and the Awards Commit-
tee have recently been the recipients of instructions
from the Executive Committee of the National Com-
mission which practically mean a revision of the sys-
tem of awards.
Mr. E. W. Furbush, representative of the Vose &
Sons Piano Co., left Chicago on Sunday last for a
trip East.
Mr. E. E. Todd, secretary of the National Associa-
tion of Piano Tuners, of Illinois, left Chicago on
Tuesday cf this week for an indefinite sojourn in Ari-
zona.
If you wish to see a man who is at peace with the
world go over and see J. V. Steger. He is manufac-
turing pianos that sell and he is selling them.
Weser Bros, have just introduced in their piano a
patent "counter balancing music duet desk" which
will without doubt meet the approbation of the trade.
Mr. A. M. Sweetland, representing the Newman
Bros. Co., startc out this week on a trip through Ohio
in the interests of his house.
Among the recent contributors of stock to the new
Columbian Museum were Lyon & Healy, who on
Thursday last gave five hundred shares.
The Story & Clark Organ Co. have issued a cir-
cular with the text of their great World's Fair award
and the comments cf the leading music trade papers
upon that award.
As will be seen elsewhere in this issue Lyon &
Healy, ever alert, are mak : ng use of a new advertise-
ment calling attention to the unprecedented honors
that fell to that house at the World's Fair.
A walk down Chestnut St., Philadelphia, shows that
there is a great deal of enterprise among the p ; ano
houses in advertising (he honors secured by their
respective panos at the World's Fair. Heie on
Chestnut St. are represented all the great pianos and
organs made in the United States and two-fifths of
S. ERNEST PHILPITT & SON
the entire list of pianos manufactured in this country.
Here in the more northern sections of the
The Lester Piano Co. did rot close their factory
country we have become used to depressing entirely at any time during the summer. They
three days in the week until October when
news stories from Florida. Harrowing ac- worked
they began running four days and are continuing that
counts of tempest and flood followed one an- now. They think their prospects are beg'mvng to
other for more than a year until we have look very brght and hope soon to be going along at
come to associate the state with discouraging their eld rate.
is scarcely necessary to dwell at any length upon
events. It is particularly pleasant this week to the It conditions
of the music trade generally this sea-
print the story of the grand opening of the son. Business has averaged up about 45 per cent of
new store of S. Ernest Philpitt & Son in St. last year's business. Some houses have passed that
somewhat, of course. These figures are based
Petersburg, a happening at which the entire mark
upon the bookings of orders cf a year ago, and to-
city rejoiced and congratulations from all over day ty four large manufacturing concerns, in New
York.
the country came pouring in.
Mr. A. C. Cox, one of the Steinway bright young
The opening of a larger store than that pre-
men, has received a deserved promotion. He will be
viously occupied in the famous resort city ex- the
assistant to Mr. Nafrum Stetson in both wholesale
presses the faith of the company in the future and retail departments.
Wanted—A
good position
in piano factory or with
of the state and it particularly shows the spirit
:
:
and energy of S. Ernest Philpitt in creating a some rel able firm as p ano tuner. Can furnish good
reference. Address, E. M. Babb, Herbst, Ind.
long chain of retail stores, each one a means
Why not form a Section I club? Some day, maybe
of music culture diffusion in its community.
twenty years hence, or longer, a gathering of those
who were in attendance at the Piano section of the
Columbian exposition, day in and day out, during
Prospect finding systems depending on the this Summer of 1893, will want to get together again
advertising and follow-up methods of a piano for a reunion.
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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