Presto

Issue: 1930 2242

January, 1930
P R E S T O-T I M E S
ISSUED THE
FIFTEENTH IN EACH
MONTH
F R A N K D. A B B O T T
- - - - - - - -
(C. A. D A M ELL—1904-1927.)
PRESTO PUBLISHING CO.
Publishers
417 So. Dearborn St.
Chicago, I1L
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, III., under Act of March 3, 1879.
Subscription, $1.25 a year; 6 months, 75 cents; foreign.
$3.00. Payable in advance. No extra charge in United
States possessions, Cuba and Mexico. Rates for adver-
tising' 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.
lication day to insure preferred position. Full page dis-
play copy should be in hand three days preceding publi-
cation day. Want advertisements for current issue, to
insure classification, should be in three days in advance
of publication.
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 three days preceding date of pub-
lication. Latest news matter and telegraphic communica-
tions should be in not later than 11 o'clock on that day.
Advertising copy should be in hand four days before pub-
Address all communications for the editorial or business
departments to PRESTO PUBLISHING CO., 417 South
Dearborn Street, Chicago, III.
The last form of Presto-Times goes to press at 11 a. m.
three days 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
that date. If they concern the interests of manufactur-
ers or dealers such items will appear the isBue following.
CHICAGO, JANUARY, 1930
PEERING INTO THE FUTURE
As the bells and whistles, the horns and other screechers rang
in the new year—1930—the thoughts of men and women flew forward
peering into the future. It was like peering into an upper New York
Bay fog, as the arriving immigrant sometimes does to try to get a
glimpse of the United States—everything a promise, nothing def-
inite. Every year when speculated about in advance is uncognizant
to the individual, and the believer in predestination ought to be the
happiest although no surer of what will happen than anybody else.
Every new year promises resumption of activities that may have
been drooping at the close of the old year. Here is hope. What if
production is slightly shorter in actual quantity; if prices are good
there will be more time to manufacture the goods right. There are
oceans of possibilities for sales in the new year. It is January—the
time of year for the salesman who imagines himself an eagle to fly
down from his aerie and pick up a living along the surface of the
valleys.
NEW YEAR RESOLUTIONS
Those who made resolutions to bind themselves to do better
work during 1930 might profit by following a plan of the boy scouts
—do one good deed every day. The boy scouts have found this to be
a great advantage in fixing character and in inducing activities in
their complex lives. It gives a stimulus to attention; it puts mental
activity in operation. Doing one good deed each day requires per-
sistent attention, directed by will. It creates new activities; it pre-
vents falling into a subconscious cellar or expecting a hit-or-miss
coincidence to save the day. By taking one forward step every day
the habit becomes more surely automatic. With piano men the good
resolution might be extended to one week—be sure to sell at least
one piano every week. With house-to-house men, the good resolu-
tion is twenty contacts daily.
TURNOVER AND UPTURN
Too many men of late years have been passing out gems of
sarcasm at the way "the other fellow" conducts his business, instead
of studying how to better their own. Shafts of ridicule freely passed
out about rivals in the piano or radio trade have in some instances
brought back boomerang darts and arrows to pierce the heart of
their own trade and cause its life-blood to gush forth. The power
for success is- in a man himself and he ought to realize his own possi-
bilities. By his own superior adaptation to his surroundings a man
can build up a business almost anywhere, and he will find that what-
SHERWIN MURPHY'S NEW JOB.
Sherwin Murphy, who five years ago was assistant
advertising manager for Steger & Sons Piano Manu-
facturing Co., has joined the copy and merchandising
staff of Buckley, Dement & Co.. the direct mail ad-
vertising house, 1300 West Jackson boulevard, Chi-
cago.
LEIPZIG SPRING FAIR.
The International Leipzig Trade Fair will hold its
Spring sessions from March 2 to 12, according to an
announcement from the New York representatives
of the fair. More than 100 important products of
American industry will be included in the 10,000 or
more exhibits to be shown. The average attendance
ever measure of success he attains is due to this adaptation and is
not to be found elsewhere. He certainly stands to lose when he
starts slamming his rivals. There is no such thing as a cheerful
idiot; no such this as a fool-proof business. But a merchant who
looks upon his rivals cheerfully and is a pleasant fellow-townsman to
all, frequently is surprised at the way his business lifts him; it bom-
bards him into unfoldment, as light bombards the seed and makes it
sprout. His weekly turnover is so great that he tells all his friends
that business is on the upturn.
RADIO AND PROGRESSIVENESS
There are more wonders in the world than have been reduced
to absurdity in Yale, Harvard, Princeton, Ann Arbor, Stanford or
the University of Chicago. Years ago, professors contented them-
selves with discovering, arranging and classifying the heavenly
bodies, the fauna and flora of the earth and its rocks and chemicals,
but today their work is to help men to try to explain things which
they had previously been content to describe and arrange. The prog-
ress of civilization is the record of displacement of animal excellences
by human ones and of savage virtues by civilized ones. Man is now
trying to arrange the facts to fit his theories, and all reasoning is of
the nature of explanation. A readjustment of our prejudices is neces-
sary before much progress can be made. We are too apt to count
the man best educated who can best do his own small fraction of
the world's work, but this is reasoning like an insect, as Mutt would
say to Jeff. Radio is showing the world at large how little it knew r
before. It is tearing the mask off conceited persons. It is democrat-
izing the snobs of great cities and small towns. It is staring the
ignorant and indifferent and the illiterate to think. In short, it is
working as an element of enlightenment and progress.
THE COURAGE OF HABIT
Habit is ten times nature and the courage of habit is ten times
habit. Courage makes a man sincere and loyal to the essential spirit
of habit. Courage comes into existence in the interactions of inborn
mechanisms or those that are later acquired. The courageous piano
or radio salesman never crawled under a bed, nor became a parlor
snake. The successful salesman was not always courageous. Per-
haps when he began years ago he was the most timid and retiring of
men. But try, try again was his method, without thinking of chang-
ing the formula to test, test once more or up and at them, Andy.
Now he is a firm believer in the law of averages for any territory
whatever.
of 185,000 buyers drawn from forty nations is ex-
pected to increase materially this Spring. An addi-
tional great hall has been erected on the grounds for
the display of the building fair.
PROFITING BY EXPERIENCE.
If you find, through experience, that some loss is
due to lack of proper care on your part, you can help
to avoid further losses by the exercise of care, though
the circumstances differ in each succeeding instance.
This is what is meant by learning from experience,
not that we should wait for an exact duplicate of the
conditions, but that we should apply to any similar
experience the basic principle involved in the original
one.—Exchange.
DISK RECORD INVENTOR DIES.
William B. Hollingshead, a recluse, who, early in
this century owned a metallurgical factory in Bronx-
ville, N. Y., was found dead on Christmas Eve on
the steps of his modest home at 9 Seift avenue, East
Chester, by a passing milkman. He was 81 years
old. Friends say Mr. Hollingshead was acclaimed
years ago as the original inventor of the disk phono-
graph record and that at one time his fortune, derived
from successful experiments in metallurgy, exceeded
$500,000. It is understood that he was penniless at
his death. He is credited by his friends with pos-
sessing a medal from the Franklin Institute of Phila-
delphia for devices aiding in the development of
printing.
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/
January, 1930
P R E S T O-T I M E S
YEARS AGO IN THE PRESTO
Ten Years Ago
large number of additional workers are to be em-
ployed in all departments.
Twenty-Five Years Ago
(From The Presto, January 15, 1920.)
PRESTO is always glad to receive news of the
trade—all kinds of news except personal slander and
stories of petty misdeeds by individuals. P R E S T O
will print the names of correspondents who send in
"Good Stuff" or are on the regular staff. Don't send
any pretty sketches, literary articles or "Pen-Pictures."
Just plain news about the trade; not about concerts
or amateur musical entertainments, but about the men
who make musical instruments and those who sell
them. Reports of new stores and the men who make
records as salesmen are good. Often piano salesmen
are the best correspondents because they know what
they like to read and have the opportunities for find-
ing out what is "doing" in the trade in their vicinity.
Send in the news—all you can get of it—especially
about your own business.
Said of W. C. Hcaton, nozv Sales Manager of
Zenith Radio Corporation:
(From The Presto, January 12, 1905.)
Said of One of America s Fine Pianos:
William C. Heaton, vice-president of the Auto-
Pneumatic Action Co., New York, is at present on a
trip visiting the playerpiano manufacturers of the
Middle West. Mr. Heaton has been confined very
closely to the factory since taking over his new
duties as vice-president, this being the first visit to
the manufacturers he has been able to make since
July.
The most notable feature of Strich & Zeidler prog-
ress during the year has been the production of the
Strich & Zeidler Diminutive Grand. Messrs. Strich
& Zeidler, who have made nothing but artistic pianos
since the inception of their business, have evolved
and developed a grand scale that has received enough
sincere prar'se to gratify the most exalted ambitions of
men producing objects of art.
Said of The R. C. Boilinger Music Co.:
Said of a Present-Day Reliable Piano:
The R. C. Bollinger Music Co., Fort Smith, Ark.,
in a newspaper display this week appeals to parents
to provide a musical education and the means to
music for their children. It says in part, "Children
love music. Parents are quick to realize the value
of music in their children's lives.
The dawn of the present year finds the Laffargue
piano stronger than ever before. The business was
incorporated under the name of The Laffargue Co.
during the year past and has shown substantial
growth over the business of any previous year in the
history of the piano.
Said of Mark P. Campbell:
Said of Familiar Men in the Chicago Trade:
"It was the wise manufacturer who followed the
popular demand. There is nothing in bucking the
tide, as figures show," writer Mark P. Campbell,
president of the Brambach Piano Co., New York.
Mr. Campbell cleverly discusses the history and for-
tunes of the upright piano and sees significance in
the exclusive factories for grands and players.
The Chicago Piano & Organ Association appointed
William M. Bauer chairman of the reception commit-
tee for the annual reception and banquet of the organ-
ization which is to be held at the Auditorium hotel,
Chicago, next Thursday evening, January 19. Mr.
Bauer was instructed to choose the other members
of his committee and he selected Platt P. Gibbs,
E. B. Bartlett, Joseph T. Leimert, Adam Schneider
and Joel Miller.
Said of R. S. Howard:
If there is any man who is posted on events in the
piano industry, Mr. R. S. Howard of the New York
industry that bears his name, is all of that.
Said of ihe (/rent house of Brcckwoldt & Son:
The Julius Breckwoldt Co., Dolgeville, N. Y., has
adopted the group insurance plan. It is an instance
of the satisfactory labor conditions in that city and
the pleasant relations between the company and its
employees.
Said of a Live Wisconsin Music Firm:
The Daly Music Co., Grand Rapids, Wis., has plans
for the erection of a new store for its business. The
new building will have a frontage of 66 feet, a depth
of 132 feet, and will be two stories high.
Said of a IVell-Known Today Piano Man:
Guy L. Mclntyre, Kohler & Campbell representa-
tive, is back in New York after a holiday trip to
Richmond, Va.
Said of a Well-Known Today Piano Maker:
Ernest Leins is one of the younger members of
the old guard of New York piano makers. He has
been actively engaged in the industry for so long a
time that he attended the first banquet of the Na-
tional Association of Piano Manufacturers of America,
and he has known all the famous men of the metropo-
lis, as well as numbering among his personal fr'ends
some of the most distinguished citizens of Man-
hattan, in both financial and scientific circles.
Said of The American Piano Co.:
American Piano Co., New York, declared an initial
cash dividend of iy 2 per cent on common stock, also
stock dividend of 5 per cent, payable Jan. 1 to stock
of record Dec. 24. Usual quarterly dividend of $1.75
on preferred will be paid Jan. 2 to stock of record
Dec. 24.
Said of The Chicago Piano & Organ Association:
The Chicago Piano & Organ Association will give
its annual banquet this evening at The La Salle hotel.
The affair will be informal. The principal speaker
of the evening will be Charles H. Wacker, whose
talk on "The Chicago Plan" will be illustrated by
stereopticon views.
Said of The Bowen Piano Loader Co.:
The Bowen Piano Co., Winston-Salem, N. C , was
established in 1894 by R. J. Bowen. The house is
strictly one-price and persistent advertising has made
it known to people beyond the confines of North
Carolina.
"The best stock of playerpianos and
player rolls in the South" is claimed by the active
store on Courthouse square.
Said of the Vicc-Pres. of the 0 R S Dc Vry Co.:
Albert N. Page, assistant treasurer and secretary
of the Q R S Co., Chicago, returned on Wednesday
morning from a trip to New York. He says the new
eastern factory of the company in the Bronx, New
York, is approaching completion. It will be under
roof by the end of the week. Nothing but good busi-
ness is looming up ahead of the Q R S Co.
Said of Gulbransen:
The Gulbransen-Dickinson Co., Chicago, gave each
of its employees a Christmas check, accompanied by
a Christmas and New Year card. The check and
card are shown in the accompanying engravings.
Said of a Present Day Live Piano and Radio
Manufacturing Concern:
The Jesse French & Sons Piano Co., New Castle,
Ind., is pushing preparations to vastly increase the
output of its factory in 1920. In the last six months
the output of the plant has doubled and it is planned
to continue this speeding up until a steady output,
double the size of the present, is established. Much
new machinery is being installed at the factory and a
Twenty Years Ago
Said of One of America's Good Pianos:
(From The Presto, January 13, 1910.)
Said of a House Greater Today Than in 1910:
Good fellowship and loyalty were expressed at the
banquet tendered last Thursday by the Cable-Nelson
Piano Co., to employees in the factory at South
Haven, Mich. South Haven is getting its money's
worth from the Cable-Nelson Piano Co., according to
the statement of Mayor Johnson at the banquet.
Said of the Present-Day Great House of Cable:
All the travelers of The Cable Co. were in Chicago
last week for a January round-up. They feel that a
good year's work is ahead of them in all territories.
Seme of them left Tuesday for their selling fields;
others left Wednesday.
Said of J. B. Thicry, Who Died at
Conn., Dc ember, 1929:
Hartford,
A change of much importance has just been effected
in Milwaukee. J. B. Thiery, who represented the
Kimball up to about four years ago when his mail
order business demanded his entire attention, has
again taken up this line and Andrews-Schubert &
Co., which succeeded him, will go out of business.
It is an item of general trade interest to notice
with what regularity of opinion dealers all over the
country advertise the Hobart M. Cable piano as
"Our Leader." That means something. It is sugges-
tive of the fact that real merit will win, and win
fast. Whether in large cit ; es or small, the result is
always the same. The dealers know that their trade
is helped by pushing a good line.
Said of a Well-Known Piano Man Who Passed
Away Last Month:
I. N. Rice is probably known as widely as any
piano man in this country. He has been a dealer, a
manufacturer, a general representative—the first of
the so-called "middle-men," we believe, and also a
traveler. He knows nearly all dealers of any im-
portance from Maine to California. He is fertile in
plans for promoting the piano trade and he has a
record for hustling and doing things that is better
than an ordinary fortune.
Said of Kohlcr-Cam-pbell Enterprises:
The John A. Jones Music Co., Huntington, W.
Va., advertise: "We want one hundred second hand
pianos."
As announced in a recent issue of The Presto,
Kohler & Campbell will soon commence the erection
of another big addit : on to their already immense plant
at the corner of Fiftieth street and Eleventh avenue,
New York. The new building will go up between
the present building and the river, facing on Fiftieth
street. It will cost $60,000 and will contain 75,000
square feet of floor space.
Said of Tzvo Present-Day
Chicago City Council:
Said of the Will of IV. W. Kimball, Deceased:
Said of a Live Piano House of That Time:
Celebrities in the
"The stout and stubby fingers of Aid. John J.
Coughlin are to be taught to pick their way over the
fretted neck of a 'swell' gu'tar presented to him by
his loving friend, Michael Kenna."
Said of a Dealer Still in Business:
The winner of the North Pole puzzle of J. D.
Pope's piano store at Little Rock, Ark., was N. C.
Withrow, 209 West Tenth street, Little Rock. Mrs.
S. J. Farmer, 1110 Thayer avenue, Little Rock, was
second best; and Miss Helen Perkins, 3122 West
Fourteenth street, third.
Said of One Who Is Still Working at the Same
Place:
Edwin G. Tonk of William Tonk & Bro., is making
a trip among the New England trade of that firm, and
advices received from him show that the trade in
that section is in the market for instruments, par-
ticularly player pianos, for which he has booked a
large number of orders.
Oscar J. Wigell has purchased the sheet music
business and also the fixtures of the store of Harry
Rawson on North Wyman street, Rockford, 111. The
Rawson stock will be added to that in the Wigell
store on West State street within a few days.
The New York Mail doesn't give its authority for
the following figures: "New York manufactured
sixty-one per cent of all the p ! anos turned out this
year in the United States, its greatest business being
in the high-grade instruments; which brings the value
of the city's piano output up to 70 per cent of the
country's production."
The testator left to his brother, David W. Kimball,
Wentworth, Iowa, $20,000; to another brother, Virgil
D. Kimball, $20,000; to a sister, Lucy Ann Lufkin,
Rumford, Me., $20,000; and to another sister, Eliza-
beth Gleason, Mexico, Me., $20,000. Provision to the
extent of $10,000 is also made for the benefit of the
widow and children of Mrs. Gleason's son, Harry
Gleason. Twenty thousand dollars is left to Columbia
Kimball, Rumford, Me., a sister of the testator, and
to Virgil W. Kimball, now of Chicago, and son of
the testator's nephew, are bequeathed 200 shares of
the capital stock of the Kimball Company, to be de-
livered to him when he reaches the age of 21. To
each of the nephews and nieces not otherwise pro-
vided for, the testator leaves $10,000. All the rest of
the estate is to go in equal shares to the widow, Eva
Salisbury, Curtis Kimball and Wallace Lufkin. The
will is dated Jan. 30, 1902, and names the nephew,
Curtis N. Kimball, as executor.
Said of One of America's Leading Pianos:
The latest Mathushek envelope slip to arrive at
The Presto office from The Mathushek Piano Manu-
facturing Co., New Haven, Conn., reads as follows:
"The Mathushek piano from a standpoint of durabil-
ity, coupled with the highest excellence in every de-
tail of material, construction and finish, has no equal
in the world. The richness and beauty of tone and
sympathetic responsive action have won the admira-
t ; on and approval of the highest musical authorities.
It is one of the very few pianos in the country made
wholly in its own factory."
A. Arnold, the world-renowned tone regulator of
the Steinway piano, came with Paderewski to care
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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