Presto

Issue: 1929 2228

June 1, 1929
PRESTO-TIMES
RADIO MEN'S CONVENTION
(Continued from page 6.)
annual R. M. A. Banquet at the Stevens Hotel, Chi-
cago. The program will be broadcast through the
courtesy of the National Broadcasting Company and
about sixty-five associated stations on a National
hook-up from the Atlantic to the Pacific Coasts,
through the key station of WJZ.
The broadcast will be from 9:30 p. m. Chicago day-
light saving time (8:30 p. m. Central Standard Time),
until 11 p. m. Chicago time on Wednesday evening,
June 5.
The program and announcements will be in charge
of the broadcasting favorite, Phillips Carlin of New
York, of the staff of the National Broadcasting Com-
pany.
The R. M. A. banquet at the Stevens Hotel will be
attended by about 2,500 to 3,000 persons. It is a fea-
ture of the great annual gathering of the radio indus-
try, the largest industrial assemblage of the year, for
the annual R. M. A. convention, about 25,000 per-
sons interested in the manufacture and distribution of
radio products being expected at Chicago during the
week of June 3.
R. M. A. special trains from New York, New Eng-
land, Texas and the southwest and also from the
Pacific Coast will be run to Chicago.
SPECIAL TRAINS GALORE
TO RADIO GATHERING
Nineteen Cars in the Special From New York
—Observation Cars From New
England.
Railroad facilities and schedules will be taxed to
carry the 25,000 radio visitors expected at the annual
convention of the Radio Manufacturers' Association
and related industrial organizations at Chicago,
June 3-7.
From both the Atlantic and Pacific Coasts and
the south as well as from near-by .central and north-
ern cities, special de luxe trains are being organized
to carry throngs to the radio industrial events and
during the same week, June 3, the music industry will
hold its annual convention in Chicago.
The New England Special train starting at Boston
and picking up radio and tpusic industry travellers to
Chicago from Worcester, Springfield, Pittslield, Mas-
sachusetts and Albany, New York, is being organized
by C. C. Colby of Canton. Mass., former president
of the Radio Manufacturers' Association, and W. F.
Merrill, secretary of the New England. Trade Asso-
ciation.
This New England Special of the Boston and
Albany Railroad will have club, observation and pri-
vate dining cars with entertainment en route for
the radio and music travellers. It will leave Boston
Saturday, June 1, at 9:30 a. m. standard Eastern time,
arriving at Chicago at 9:00 a m. daylight saving time,
on Sunday, June 2.
The New England Special and also the R. M. A.
special train from New York on the New York Cen-
tral and another special train on the Pennsylvania
line, and other spec'al trains to the radio and music
center at Chicago, will be welcomed upon arrival by
the R. M. A. and other reception committees.
The R. M. A. Special from New York, in charge
of Leonard C. Welling and Dudley H. Cohen, is
expected to be the largest train, of nineteen cars, ever
run on the New York Central.
Other special trains to the R. M. A. and music in-
dustrial events at Chicago are being arranged at Los
Angeles. San Francisco, from the Pacific Northwest,
Denver and Texas.
A FRIENDLY INVITATION
STIMULATING PUBLIC
INTEREST IN MUSIC
ffi. Cable (Umnpaiitj
Sheet Music Dealers Also Hold Their Conven-
tion Next Week in Chicago and Are
Enthusiastic About It.
announce i\\t afjofcring of
The annual convention of the National Music In-
dustries during the week of June 3rd, at the Drake
Hotel, Chicago, will mark a departure from the old
method of procedure. This year all the branches of
the music industry will convene in a joint session.
Prominent speakers will outline the promotional
activities that are now in operation. New projects
will be considered with a view to further stimulating
the public interest in music. Jay Grinnell, of Grinnell
Brothers, Detroit, will give an illuminating summary
to demonstrate how these activities may be success-
fully turned into sales.
Superintendent William J. Bogan of the Chicago
Board of Education, and Joseph Maddy, chairman of
the Committee on Instrumental Music of the Music
Supervisors' National Conference, will deliver ad-
dresses on music in the public schools. Music is
coming into its own as a factor in education.
Louis A. Crittenton. a sales expert, will speak on
"The Sunny Side of Selling." Homer J. Buckley,
one of the country's greatest advertising men, will
speak on "What Must I Do to Stay in Business and
Meet the New Competition" There will be a gen-
eral open discussion on important trade topics.
The above-mentioned events are scheduled for
Tuesday and Wednesday. The Nat : onal Association
of Sheet Musx Dealers will open its convention on
Monday morning at 9 o'clock and will continue all
day. On Tuesday and Wednesday evenings there
will be meetings at which will be considered ways
and means whereby the fullest cooperation can be
rendered by the sheet music trade towards the pro-
motion of music in all its branches.
OLD NEW YORK STORE SOLD.
McCombcrs, Inc., Fulton, N. Y., has purchased the
Schilling Music Store at 158 West First Street,
Oswego, N. Y. The Schilling store is the oldest
music store in northern New York and has been in
the Schilling family for more than fifty years. It
was founded by the late Frank Schilling, in his day
a fine musician and leader of the famous Kingsfords
Band, the pride of Thomson Kingsford, the million-
aire starch manufacturer. It is understood that after
the present stock is auctioned off McCombers, Inc.,
will continue the store in Oswego.
And Another Small Grand
mnm
by a Real Sales Plan/
PIANO CLUB HEARS REPORTS.
Carl Weber, chairman of the banquet committee,
told the Piano Club of Chicago at its noonday lunch-
eon on May 20 of its plans. He said they had
secured Charles Milton Newcomb, a very humorous
speaker, for the occasion, who would interest the
women as well as the men on "The Psychology of
Laughter." Miss Nina Morgano of the Metropolitan
Opera Company, would sing, and through the cour-
tesy of the Steinways and Mr. Brownell they would
®Iieir Complete J^Iuc ^tbbmt Jihxt
^
a ^Beautiful Netu ^
©wring (Emtuenttcm JUbek nf
ao, 3|mte Wyxb to <3June j&xth
at i\\t Brake ^otd,
$
401-402
$ u b a r t %\.
foelcmue ooit nub appreciate ymir frisit
have Rudolf Ganz on the program. From 10:00 p. m.
until 2:00 a. m. the Victor Recording Orchestra
vocal numbers would be broadcasted. The dinner
would start promptly at 7:00 so as to be through
eating at 8:30 when the general program would be-
gin. This great banquet is to be served Thursday
night, June 6; price, $7.50 a plate. Henry Hewitt,
chairman of the reservation and display committee,
said the personal reservations were up to normal at the
Drake Hotel and arrangements had also been made
for the overflow at the Knickerbocker and the Pear-
son hotels, these three hostelries giving reasonable
rates to the conventioners.
NAME CHANGED AT GREEN BAY, WIS.
"Green Bay's Music Center," known as the Tem-
ple Music Company, Inc., since its foundation on
May 1, 1926, will be known in the future as "Vanden-
berg's Temple of Music." Frank A. Vandenberg is
president, Anton Stiller, Jr., treasurer, and A. Mai-
gatter general manager.
Style. R Grand—4 feet,
7 inches long. Popular
size, beautiful case.
Real Packard Quality.
Finished in mahogany.
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
govern
Fort Wayne, Indiana
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 1, 1929
PRESTO-TIMES
ISSUED THE FIRST AND THIRD
SATURDAY IN EACH
MONTH
F R A N K D. A B B O T T
- - - - - - - -
(C. A . D A N I ELL—1904-1927.)
PRESTO PUBLISHING CO.
Publishers
417 So. Dearborn St.
Chicago, 111.
The American Music Trade Journal
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, HI., under Act of March 3. 1879.
Subscription. $1.25 a year; 10 months, $1.00; 6 months,
75c; foreign. $3.00. 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 merohents 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 preceding date of
publication. T-atest news mntter and telegraphic com-
munications should be in not later than 11 o'clock on
that day. Advertising copy should be in hand before
Tuesday, 5 p. m., before publication day to insure pre-
ferred position. Full page display copy should be ip hand
by Tuesday noon preceding publication day. Want ad-
vertisements for current week, to insure classification
should be in by Wednesday noon.
Address all communications for the editorial or business
departments to PRESTO P U B L I S H I N G CO.. 417 South
Dearborn Street. Chicago, III.
Tho last form of Presto-Times goes to press at 11 a. m.
Thursday preceding publication day. Any news trans-
piring after that hour cannot be expected in the current
issue. Nothing received at the office that is not strictly
news of importance can have attention after 9 a. m. of
Thursday. If they concern the interests of manufactur-
ers or dealers such items will appear the issue following.
CHICAGO, JUNE 1, 1929
RECENT ECONOMIC CHANGES
In referring to recent economic changes in the United States,
the United States Department of Commerce, in its elimination of
waste series just released, says that the distinctive character of the
years from 1922 to 1929 owes less to fundamental change than to
intensified activity.
But while the period from 1922 to 1929 has been one of intense
activity, the committee noted that this activity has been "spotty."
Certain groups have been more active than other groups: certain
industries busier than their neighbor industries, and certain geograph-
ical areas more prosperous than other areas. The Pacific States
have made an extraordinary advance ; the South has rapidly devel-
oped as a manufacturing area: the East North-Central Division has
grown; while the New England States, and to some extent the Mid-
dle Atlantic section, have developed less rapidly and have experienced
some difficulties in adapting their older industries to new conditions.
While industrial, agricultural, and commercial activity has been
"spotty," the broad social advantages of our accelerated activity
flowed out over the land. For example, the highway-building pro-
grams throughout the nation were not limited to the intensely active
areas ; good roads were extended in all directions, serving the whole
population. The same might be said for educational advantages,
piano and radio entertainment, personal mobility made possible by
low-priced motor cars, swift and dependable transportation and com-
munication, and numerous other facilities and services making for
comfort and well-being, beyond the elemental requirements of food,
clothing and shelter.
This spread of higher living standards has been characteristic of
our national life practically throughout our history. As a phenom-
enon it is not new, but in its degree and scope it has taken on a
new importance.
REBIRTH OF THE TRADE
There are no evidences of decay in the piano business. The best
is yet to be. The recent slump in the piano trade is not the death
warrant of the piano, but its rebirth. It is now in order to erect a
headstone for the buried spirit of profiteering. Profitism by mis-
representation is a corpse. The edict has gone forth that no longer
shall this attitude and this misunderstanding between piano men and
the suspicious public continue. As the world changes, everybody
changes with it. Universal good will cannot be achieved by preach-
ing, nor can the next turn in business be guessed by a conjecture on
last year's successes or failures.
MIRAGES, NOT CLOUDS
A pessimist of the piano trade declared at the beginning of this
year that he saw a cloud arising over the piano business near the
horizon in the form of a bear, another in the zenith with the head of
an ass, and a third to the westward with claws like a dragon, and all
we could agree upon was that the clouds were there but that I was
grossly mistaken in the zoography and topography of them. It is
very hard to make up a tolerable assembly of these threatening
clouds without including the majority of them. An upper current
of air began to reshape them, so that the first took on the face of
an advertising manager who had decided that the principal cause of
lower piano income was wholly due to what his firm had paid out
to the trade press ; the second cloud took on the form of a deserter
from the piano salesmen's ranks and who is now a house-to-house
man for washing machines, while the dragon-clawed cloud turned
to look like the pessimist himself.
VALUE OF CONVENTION WORK
Men get out of their pettiness who attend conventions. Partial
judges that we are of our own excellencies and of other men's de-
faults, our breadth of mind is apt to dwindle away to a degree most
woeful to behold, unless we mingle with other men. There are no
dragons' teeth so prolific as mutual misunderstandings. It is not
enough to know what the other fellow is doing in the distance. The
trade must have living friends. The hopes of men must constantly be
rekindled, and only those who live active lives can rekindle them. At
this convention the seed of good will will be sown with copious hands.
Those who stay away because they fear they cannot learn anything
are putting up the arguments of truants. Men often attribute far
too little to their instruction, and too much to their own inherent
qualities. The qualities of resourcefulness and adaptability are what
we most need.
TALENT ON THE PLATFORM
The men who take the lead in convention work in the piano and
radio trade do not consider themselves the seven wise men of Greece,
nor is the cleverest speaker to be looked upon as a beautiful panther,
so bright of eve, so sleek of coat. No need to feel like William Tell,
refusing to salute the cap of Gessler because another is taking the
lead. In the late World's War men of great prominence in the busi-
ness world became private soldiers, and their action did not prevent
the procession of the equinoxes or take any of the resin of scammony
out of anybody else's system. Just now, if the piano trade can get
life out of anybody with a talent for speaking or acting or diversion
of the assemblages it seems a duty to put them to work, if not ex-
clusively at least predominantly. The men and women employed or
engaged in any capacity for the good of the trade are also serving.
MAKING PRICES STICK
Establishing standard prices for pianos and getting them is a
task that calls for courage and skill, if effectively performed. This
might call for two general classifications of pianos—those with an
unsurpassed standard of excellence and those that cost less but are
perfectly safe pianos to buy. It would require courage to convince
each manufacturer of the class in which his instruments belong and
skill to adjust wholesale prices that would satisfy him and to which
he must stick.
PRE-CONVENTION STAG PARTY.
GEO. H. SNYDER TRAVELING.
The pre-convention stag party and big whopee
event, held at the Medinah Athletic Club in Chicago
last Monday night, May 27, was an informal affair
of much mirth and some business in completing plans
for the big meetings at the Drake this week. Promi-
nent in the activities of the affa : r were Harry Bibb,
Gordon Laughead, Henry Hewitt, Harry Schoene-
wald, Roger O'Connor and Carl Weber.
George H. Snyder, hustling piano man, is now trav-
eling for the D. L. Whittle Music Company, of
Dallas, Texas, and he told a Presto correspondent
that their business is improving, but they are working
it harder. He blames the dealers for the principal
slackness in the piano trade, saying: "Pianos never
have and never will be sold from behind a mahogany
desk, with poorly-paid or all low-commission sales-
men." And he says he believes the manufacturers
ought to hurry and bury any of their makes that have
died. Mr. Snyder's address is 5935 Prospect avenue,
Dallas, Texas.
Business houses have manifested much interest in
Kenneth S. Clark's book, "Music in Industry," pub-
lished by the National Bureau for the Advancement
of Music.
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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