Presto

Issue: 1929 2225

MUSICAL
TIMES
PRESTO
Established
1884
Established
1881
THE AMERICAN MUSIC TRADE JOURNAL
10 Cents a Copy
1 Year
$1.25
10 Months. . .$1.00
6 Months. . 75 cents
CHICAGO, ILL., APRIL 15, 1929
Issued Semi-Monthly
Flr*t and Third Saturdays
Convention Interest Increases
Annual Conventions of the National As-
sociations of the Music Trades and
Kxhibition of Music Goods, Drake Hotel,
Chicago, Week of June 3.
As the date of the annual convention of the Music
Trade at the Drake Hotel, Chicago, beginning June 3
and continuing for the greater part of the week, the
anticipations grow brighter for a successful meeting,
both in attendance and beneficial character of the
gathering. The annual meeting this year will be
unusual in procedure in a great many ways.
Joint Session Planned.
On Tuesday morning the Music Merchants' Na-
tional Association will have a most important part
in the joint session which will include in its program
representation from all branches of the music in-
dustry. One of the most prominent members of the
Merchants' Association will present a graphic de-
scription of the manner in which the various import-
ant promotional activities of the various branches
of the industry are being translated into actual sales
by his own retail organization.
At the Wednesday morning meeting at which Pres-
ident Roberts will preside there will be at least three
prominent speakers, two from outside of the industry,
and there will also be an open forum to be opened
by one of the vice-presidents of the Music Merchants'
National Association. At this open forum opportu-
nity will be offered for any one to ask questions or to
discuss any subject which he may feel to be important
to the industry.
Election Set for Tuesday.
The Thursday morning session will be devoted to
the election of officers and the transaction of regular
convention business. Another interesting social event
will be a luncheon on Tuesday sponsored by the
Chicago Piano and Organ Association, at which all
delegates and guests will be welcome.
The annual banquet of the National Association of
Music Merchants will take place on Thursday eve-
ning. The program is not yet completed but assur-
ance is given by the banquet committee that there
will be as a principal speaker a man of nation-wide
prominence and that in addition there will be, in all
probability, a humorist and an interesting entertain-
ment to be followed by dancing.
The Opening Event.
The annual "get-together" luncheon at the Drake
Hotel on Monday, June 3, at 12:30, will start the ball
rolling for what is to be the "biggest yet" of all the
big conventions held in recent years by the music
industries.
Roger O'Conner, president of the Piano Club of
Chicago and chairman of the General Arrangement
Committee, will welcome the delegates to Chicago
on behalf of the Piano Club. Following this Her-
mann Irion, president of the Music Industries Cham-
ber of Commerce, will review the activities of the
Chamber for the preceding year.
Something- unusual in the way of entertainment is
promised by Mr. O'Conner, the details of which will
be given out a little later. Tickets for the mass meet-
ing and luncheon will be sold as usual during the
morning.
Homer Buckley to Speak.
Homer J. Buckley, who will be one of the prin-
cipal speakers at the business session on Wednesday,
June 5, during Convention Week at the Hotel Drake,
Chicago, is a former president of the Advertising
Council of Chicago, president of the International
Direct Mail Advertising Association, president of the
National Council of Business Mail Users, president of
the West Central Association, and president of the
Travelers' Aid Society of Chicago. He is now chair
man of the Committee on Public Information of the
Chicago World's Fair Centennial Celebration to be
held in 1933, and is director of the Chicago Better
Business Bureau, Association of Commerce in Chicago,
and the International Advertising Association. He is
a lecturer on the staff of the University of Illinois,
Notre Dame, Y. M. C. A., Cleveland Advertising
School and the New York Advertising School, and he
is the author of "Science of Marketing by Mail."
Incidentally, perhaps, from a business standpoint of
more importance, is the fact that he is president of
Buckley, Dement & Co., direct mail specialists of
Chicago.
Joseph E. Maddy to Speak.
An important feature of the Tuesday session of the
Music Trades Convention in Chicago during the week
CALL BY HERMANN IRION
N
EVER at any time in the history of the music business has-there been such
widespread activity in the promotion of sales as there is today. Immense
strides are being- made in the public school, the concert field, the radio, the
private music teacher, the motion picture and the press. Everywhere the public
is bem^ reached as never before. The Tuesday session of the June music indus-
tries convention will o-i ve the dealer a splendid opportunity to hear at first hand
about the accomplishments of these various promotional age'neies. Such vital sub-
jects as piano promotion, band contests, school orchestras and National Music
Week will be discussed by a representative of the National bureau for the Ad-
vancement of Music; instrumental work in the schools will be explained by J. E.
Maddy, chairman of the Committee on Instrumental affairs of the Music Super-
visors' National Conference: the story of the Piano Promotion Committee and its
important work will be told by Edward C. Boykin, executive secretary; radio will
be discussed by large operators in that industry and the entire session will be sum-
marized by a prominent dealer in the music field who will tell how he has suc-
cessfully converted these activities into profits. Following this an open forum
will be held to permit question and discussions from the floor.
Can anybody in the industry, manufacturers and jobbers not excepted, afford
to miss this most important session? It is my opinion that they cannot and I hope
that dealers all over the country will come prepared to carry away a new and val-
uable inspiration.
HERMANN IRION.
Annual Conventions of National Organi-
zations in Radio Industry and Exhibits
of Products, Stevens Hotel, Chicago,
Week of June 3.
of June 3-7 is the address of Joseph E. Maddy, chair-
man of the Committee on Instrumental Affairs of the
Music Supervisors' National Conference.
Mr. Maddy needs no introduction to the music
trades as his work with the National High School
Orchestra, of which he was the organizer and founder,
is well known. From that activity it was a natural
step for him to organize the National High School
Orchestra Camp which was described recently as one
of the most remarkable things in the music education
of young people ever undertaken.
Mr. Maddy is also head of the public school music
department, University School of Music and super-
visor of instrumental music, Ann Arbor, Mich. He
is a member of the Minneapolis Symphony Orches-
tra, instructor University of Southern California and
Teachers' College, Columbia University.
Mr. Maddy's work is of great value to the music
merchant as he is promo:ing in the public schools of
the country just the things that are calculated to be
of the greatest assistance to the whole promotion pro-
gram of the industry.
Talk by Kenneth S. Clark.
The Tuesday session of the convention will have as
one of the speakers Kenneth S. Clark of the National
Bureau for the Advancement of Music, who is the
head of the Civic and Community division of the
Bureau. He will describe the promotional activities
of the Bureau and will at the same time outline the
many ways in which the dealer can tie-up in his own
section of community.
MAKE HOTEL RESERVATIONS NOW.
The wisdom of making early arrangements for
hotel accommodations during the week of the conven-
tion the week of June 3 is obvious and Henry Hew-
itt, chairman of the Hotel Committee of the National
Association of Music Merchants, has compiled infor-
mation about accommodations and rates of the Drake
Hotel, convention headquarters, and other hotels in
that section and others in the loop.
The Drake.
The rates at the Drake, Lake Short Drive and
Upper Michigan Avenue: Single rooms with bath,
$4, $5, $6, $7 and $8 a day.
Double rooms each with twin beds and bath, $8,
$10 and $14 per day per room; suites consisting of
parlor with double bedroom, bath, $20 to $36 per day.
The above rates on parlor suites are the same for
both sleeping and exhibition purposes.
Thirteen single display rooms at $14; 27 at $16; two
at $18, and four at $20.
Lake Shore Drive Hotel.
Next door to The Drake, at 181 Lake Shore Drive,
will have available for convention visitors approxi-
mately thirty single and double rooms. They quote
special rates as follows: Single rooms, $5.00 per day;
double rooms, $7 per day.
Hotel Knickerbocker.
This hotel is at Walton Place at Michigan avenue,
directly opposite The Drake. The following are the
rates: S : ngle rooms, $3.50 per day; double rooms,
$5.00 per day. All rooms equipped with combination
tub and shower.
Lake Shore Athletic Club.
Situated at 850 Lake Shore Drive. Special rates:
Single rooms with bath. $4.00 per day; double rooms
with bath, $6.00 per day. Nearly all rooms have a
direct view of the lake The club offers many inter-
esting features including a fully equipped bath depart-
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/
April 15, 1929
P R E S T O-T I M E S
And Another Small Grand
Style R Grand—A feet,
7 inches long. Popular
size, beautiful case.
Real Packard Quality.
Finished in mahogany.
by a 7{ealSales Plan/
AGAIN Packard points the way in increased volume in Grand Piano
«**• sales. The Style R Small Grand, at a particularly low price, offers
Packard dealers unusual sales advantages that can be used to develop
new business. It is in the extremely popular 4 foot 7 inch size but
with all the full rounded tone beauty and volume you expect of Packard
instruments. The mahogany case is splendidly built, beautifully finished.
Get Packard plan behind you—get Packard values on your floors. Write us.
THE PACKARD PIANO COMPANY
3335 Packard Avenue.
meat with swimming pool; a billiard room; bowling
alley; exercise room, etc.
Pearson Hotel.
At 190 East Pearson street, one block east of North
Michigan avenue. This is just a short distance from
the Drake. Visitors may secure accommodations at
the following rates:
Single rooms, $3.50 to $6 per day; double rooms.
$5 to $7 per day; suites, $10 to $14 per day. All
rooms with private bath.
The Seneca.
At 200 East Chestnut street: Single room with bath.
$3.50 per day; double room with bath, $5 per day;
suites for two persons, $8 to $10 per day.
Hotel Maryland.
At 900 Rush street at Delaware Place. Ideally con-
venient for anyone attending the Convention. Room
with bath, one person, $3 to $4 per day; two persons,
$4 to $5 per day; twin beds, $5 per day.
Hotel Ambassador.
At North State street at Goethe, just a five-minute
pleasant walk from The Drake: Room with bath, one
person, $3.50, $4 and $5 per day; two persons, double
or with twin beds, $5, $6 and $7. Also suites from $6
to $20 per day.
Ambassador East.
Management and location same as The Hotel
Ambassador offer the following rates: Single room
with bath, $5 per day; double room with bath, $8
per day.
Loop Hotels.
Some convention visitors prefer to live in the Loop
while in Chicago and because of the many conven-
tions which will be held in the city at the same time
the Hotel Committee has obtained so far, informa-
tion from two which are easily accessible.
Palmer House.
Palmer House, State and Monroe streets: Room
with private bath, one person, $4 to $10 per day; two
persons (twin beds), $7 to $12 per day; suites for
one or two persons, $9 to $11 per day.
Morrison Hotel, Clark and Madison streets: Single
rooms, $2.50, $3, $3.50, $4 and $5 per day; double
rooms, double bed. $5, $6 and $7 per day; twin beds,
$7 and $8 per day. All rooms with bath.
MORRIS METCALF SAYS "GO"
Reasons why every radio dealer and jobber should
attend the Fifth Annual RMA Convention and Trade
Show at Chicago beginning June 3 next are detailed
in a statement just issued by Morris Metcalf of
Springfield, Mass., chairman of the RMA show com-
mittee, in charge of arrangements for the annual in-
dustry exhibition and conclave at the Hotels Stevens,
Blackstone and Congress. The largest radio gather-
ing and the largest display of radio merchandise,
frim which dealers and jobbers will choose their new
sales lines, were predicted by Chairman Metcalf.
"The trade show offers dealers and distributors the
opportunity to view new merchandise, styles and
trends, to become posted on manufacturing and tech-
nical developments, to make personal contacts, get
the gossip of the trade, and even buy and sell," said
Mr. Metcalf. "It enables the entire selling organiza-
tion to do in one week what would overwise take
many months."
Fort Wayne, Indiana
QEORQE D. TURNER AND
MRS. TURNER HONORED
Popular Paragon Piano Plate Company Repre-
sentative and Wife Celebrate Fiftieth
Anniversary of Their Marriage.
George D. Turner, representative of the Paragon
Piano Plate Company. Oregon, 111., and Mrs. Turner,
who recently celebrated the fiftieth anniversary of
by music merchants and other stores. The various
items of Music Week publicity material available to
the trade from the National Music Week Committee,
45 West 45th street, New York, are the following:
Music Week Seals, per 100, 50 cents (special dis-
counts for larger quantities); window display card, 15
cents; round hanger, 10 cents; billboard poster, 15
cents; windshield sticker. 1 cent; envelope stuffers,
$3.00 per 1,000; music week buttons, $3.00 per 100.
FEATURING THE ADAM
SCHAAF IN CHICAGO
History of Fine Old House Combined with
Meritorious Factts in Attractive Dis-
play in Newspapers.
GEORGE D. TURNER AND MRS. TURNER.
their marriage, learned on the occasion how numerous
were their friends. Gifts, flowers, telegrams, cables,
letters and cards from many places showed the
warmth of feeling in the senders.
Two hundred and twenty-eight guests were pres-
ent at their home at Wade Park Manor, Cleveland.
A dedicatory poem by Mr. Turner's cousin. Rev.
M. M. Adams of North Carolina, was read and
speeches were delivered by Rev. F. D. Butchart and
Rev. H. B. Ernsberger of Cleveland. Mr. Turner's
sister from Cadillac, Mich., gave many amusing in-
cidents of his childhood days. Turner A. Davies and
Thos. A. Davies, 13 and 12 respectively, gave a hu-
morous impersonation of the celebrants. Thos. A.
Davies, son-in-law, arranged the reception and pre-
sided over the festivities.
MUSIC WEEK PREPARATIONS
Hundreds of added communities are preparing to
join the ranks of those participating in the National
Music Week, with their special plans for the observ-
ance on May 5-11. The National Music Week Com-
mittee announces that the total of towns participating
will far exceed the 3.010 of last May and will probably
reach 2,500. Much of this increase is due, explains
Mr. Tremaine, to the appeal of the keynote of this
sixth annual observance—a greater degree of active
participation in music by people in general.
One of the steps recommended for Music Week
tie-up by the trade is a Music Week window display
The Adam Schaaf piano, made by Adam Schaaf.
Chicago, was attractively advertised in Chicago news-
papers this week. History of the fine old piano in-
dustry of Adam Schaaf, founded in 1873, was min-
gled with the statements of merit for the piano:
"For fifty years the Adam Schaaf piano has been
the product of one family. Creative artists—con-
scientious craftsmen—their best effort has resulted
in an instrument remarkable for its fine tone qualities
and beauty of workmanship, yet one extremely mod-
erate in price.
"A few hours, or only a few minutes, of relaxa-
tion spent playing an Adam Schaaf piano can do
wonders to banish the petty cares of every-day life.
Music, especially when it is also self-expression, is a
part of genuine happiness.''
The ad contains a caution to prospective piano
buyers:
"Caution: We are in no way connected with any
other firm bearing a similar name to ours. Only a
genuine Adam Schaaf piano will prove satisfactory."
CONGRATULATIONS FOR MAX
KRAMM
Among the "Many Happy Returns" of the Day" in
the Chicago Herald-Examiner for April 1, one birth-
day anniversary was that of Max Kramm, the well
known teacher and pianist of the Chicago Musical
College. Mr. Kramm's birthplace is given as "near
Weimar," Germany. Mr. Kramm is well known
in the piano trade and has been of valuable service
to some of Chicago's piano houses.
AN OPPORTUNITY.
A well known music house in an important city
west of the Missouri River desires to turn oved its
business to a man well able to manage an active-
going music business. Excellent terms could be
made for purchase outright or for carrying on the
business on a commission basis. Communications
may be addressed to "Western House," care Presto-
Times, Chicago, 111.
LOUIS SOLAR CHAIRMAN.
Louis Solar of the Solar Music Company, 3946
West Twenty-sixth street, Chicago, was chairman of
the executive committee in the celebration from April
2 to 17 of the completion of the 34th great year as a
business center of Twenty-sixth street.
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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