Music Trade Review

Issue: 1907 Vol. 44 N. 3

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
ROW
J4UJICTOADE
VOL. XLIV. No. 3 .
Published Every Saturday by Edward Lyman Bill at 1 MadisonAve., New York, January 19,1907
PIANOS AND GOOD ROADS.
Wherever Road Improvement Has Been Under-
taken Piano Dealers Report Better Trade—
How This Is Effected—Why the Piano Manu-
facturers and Dealers' Associations Should
Urge Support of Movement.
"There is one question that does not seem to
interest the members of the piano trade, except
such as possess automobiles, but which is vitally
important to their business," said a prominent
representative of that profession to The Review
during the past week, "and that is good roads.
Pianos are being distributed through the rural
districts in greater quantities than ever, and it
is essential not only to have them arrive at their
destination in good condition, but to make deliv-
eries quickly. A rough or muddy road is not
conducive to comfort, and where a delivery is
to be made at a distance and under unfavorable
conditions, it is often postponed until the pros-
pective buyers have got, t6 use a common expres-
sion, cold feet, and the sale is called off. I can
well remember the time when as a dealer I have
waited from two to five weeks on account of the
bad condition of the loadsto make the delivery of
a square, but in those days people did not do things
in the rush that attends the modern business
transaction. Good roads also tend to bring buyers
to the trade centres, and during the fall and win-
ter I have noticed that the rural sections that
boasted of good roads sent in the largest contin-
gents, while sections that were compelled to ride
over ruts or through spring holes only made the
trip when necessity demanded.
"It is for the interest of every piano dealer in
the country to secure as many visitors as possi-
ble to his warerooms, and as the present popu-
lation are averse to putting up with inconve-
niences that their forefathers did, it is necessary
to smooth their path as much as possible. There
is another point to be taken in consideration,
and that is the road salesman of the dealer. In
these days of keen competition it is necessary
for him to call on prospects quickly and as many
as possible in a give,n time. Give him a good
road as against a poor one and he can double his
work. In years gone by I would start out with
a snow shovel and two planks in my wagon or
sleigh. The planks were to put under the horse's
hoofs in case he got in a spring hole in event
of an unexpected thaw and enable him to get
on a firm foundation again. Many is the time
when the wheels would be up to the hubs in
mud for a mile at a stretch and twenty-five miles
was a big day's journey.
"As for making a delivery, it would have been
out of the question. At the present time, in the
same section of country, I can drive fifty miles
a day at any time of the year, and make a de-
livery within twenty-four hours after receiving
the order. There are still thousands of miles of
unimproved roads running through the richest
and most populous farming districts of the coun-
try; and the agitation in behalf of repairing or
rebuilding them should be taken up by all trades,
and the piano trade in particular. The piano
manufacturers, both as individuals and as an as-
sociation, could take this matter up, both with
profit to themselves and to their dealers. The
better facilities afforded the latter, the more
sales by the former, and at the same time the
benefit to the community as a whole means bet-
ter times and more money in circulation. Any
country that is interwoven with easily passable
thoroughfares becomes the best producer, be-
cause of the ease of marketing its wares, and
the consequent prosperity is the inevitable re-
sult. I hope that the next convention will make
this subject a point of discussion, and as a body
co-operate with those members of the trade who
have already taken it up."
SINGLE COPIES. 10 CENTS.
$2.00 PER YEAR.
employes of the firm, in honor of their first year's
business in Winnipeg. Twelve sat down to a
sumptuous dinner, after which speeches and songs
held sway. E. C. Scythes, western manager of
the Williams Piano Co., acted as toastmaster.
DINE THEIR COMPETITORS.
Whitney & Currier Co. Show a Broad Fraternal
Spirit.
Buys the Stock and Business of the Treat &
Shepard Co., of New Haven, and Assumes
the Agency for the Mathushek Pianos.
The Whitney & Currier Co., the Toledo, O.,
piano dealers, set a precedent in piano trade cir-
cles in that city recently, when they entertained
their competitors at a rather elaborate dinner
at the Cafe Spitzer. The affair was purely of a
social nature and is expected to go far toward
promoting a more friendly feeling among the
Toledo music dealers.
(Special to The Review.)
BRAZIL'S TARIFF ON PIANOS.
C. H. LOOMIS' BIG PURCHASE.
New Haven, Conn., January 16, 1907.
A quite important trade change has occurred
in this city, Charles H. Loomis, the well-known
piano dealer, having purchased the stock and
business heretofore conducted at 837 Chapel
street by the Treat & Shepard Co. Mr. Loomis
took possession on the 15th of this month and
will conduct the agency of the Mathushek pianos
so long sold by the Treat & Shepard Co. About
$50,000 is involved in the taking over of this
business.
It is an interesting coincidence that just twen-
ty years ago the Treat & Shepard Co. was or-
ganized by the late John L. Treat and the late
Professor Thomas Shepard and Peter T. Rey-
nolds, all of whom were connected with Charles
H. Loomis and his father, the late Clark M.
Lcomis, in the same line of business, which was
then known as Loomis Temple of Music. On the
twentieth anniversary of the Treat & Shepard
Co. Mr. Loomis takes back the business which
originated in his own.
RECENT INCORPORATIONS.
The Standard School of Music, Chicago! has
been incorporated, with a capital of $500,000, for
the purpose of publishing music among other
things. Incorporators, C. H. Wilson, J. B. Schall
and Dan. J. Tyrell.
* * * *
The Monarch Instrument Co., Cleveland, O.,
has been incorporated, with a capital of $10,000.
Directors, J. A. Alburn, C. A. Terrell, W. B.
Droun, B. G. Guthery and E. C. Gessner.
* * * *
The Plymouth County Piano Co. is the name of
a new concern, with warerooms at 28% Main
street, Brockton, Mass. They handle the James
& Holmstrom, Braumuller, Jacob Bros, and R. S.
Howard pianos.
CANADIAN DEALERS CELEBRATE.
A dispatch from Rio de Janeiro states that the
Brazilian Congress, before disbanding on Dec. 31,
authorized the continuance of the 20 per cent,
preferential tariff reduction in favor of certain
products from the United States, among which
pianos are included.
TUNERS SCARCE IN MILWAUKEE.
According to many Milwaukee piano dealers
there is a decided scarcity of competent piano
tuners in that city, owing to the fact that many
of the really good tuners spend a large portion
of their time free-lancing throughout different
sections of the State, much to their individual
profit.
CHAS. L. WILLERD HONORED.
Chas. L. Willerd, the prominent piano dealer
of Buffalo, N. Y., has been elected president of the
East Side Business Men's and Taxpayers' Asso-
ciation of that city. He was instrumental in per-
suading the railroads entering Buffalo to choose
a union station site in the East Side instead of
the downtown section of the city.
THOMPSON PIANO CO.'S NEW FACTORY.
The contract has been let for the new factory
building of the Thompson Piano Co., Genoa, 111.
It will be 50 x 200 feet and two stories high, of
brick construction.
SPERRY AGAIN IN HARNESS.
W. A. Sperry, whose talking machine store at
85 Pratt street, Hartford, Conn., was destroyed
by fire recently, has reopened at 77 Pearl street,
that city, with a complete new line of both Edi-
son and Victor goods.
HOLZAPFEL IN NEW QUARTERS.
(Special to The Review.)
Winnipeg, Man., Jan. 11, 1907.
A very pleasant evening was recently spent by
the members of the firm of Cross, Goulding &
Skinner, representatives of the New Scale Will-
iams piano, and a few immediate friends and
Carl C. Holzapfel, who recently succeeded
Holzapfel & Beitel, music dealers, of Baltimore,
Md., has removed the stock of pianos, musical
merchandise and sheet music to new quarters at
306 North Howard street, that city.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
MUSIC TRADE
RIYBW
EDWARD LYMAN BILL, - Editor and Proprietor
J. B. SPILLANE, Managing Editor
Executive and Reportorlal Staff:
GBO. B. KmiitJit.
W. N. TYLER.
F. H. THOMPSON.
EMILJB FHANCBS BADBB.
L. B. BOWERS. B. BHITTAIN WILSON, WM. B. WHITH. L. J. CHAMBERLIN. A. J. NICKLIN.
BOSTON OFFICE:
CHICAGO OFFICE:
B. P. VAN HAHLINOBN, 195-107 Wabasb Aye.
TELEPHONES : Central 414 ; Automatic 8643
MINNEAPOLIS and ST. PAUL:
ST. LOUIS:
L. WAITT, 278A Tremont St.
PHILADELPHIA :
R. W. KATJFPMAN.
A. W. SHAW.
CHAS. N. VAN BDRBN.
SAN FRANCISCO: S. II. GUAY, 2407 Sacramento St.
CINCINNATI. O.: NINA PUQH-SMITH.
BALTIMORE, MD.: PAUL T. LOCKWOOD.
LONDON, ENGLAND:
69 Basinghall St., K. C.
W. Lionel Sturdy, Manager.
Published Every Saturday at 1 Madison Avenue, New York.
Entered at the New York Post Office as Second Class Matter.
SUBSCRIPTION. (Including postage), United States, Mexico, and Canada, $2.00 per
year; all otber countries, $4.00.
ADVERTISEMENTS. 12.00 per Inch, single column, per Insertion. On quarterly or
yearly contracts a special discount is allowed. Advertising Pages, $60.00; opposite
reading matter, $75.00.
REMITTANCES, in otber tban currency form, should be made payable to Bdward
Lymnn Bill.
Directory ol Plaao
Manufacturers
The directory of piano manufacturing firms and corporations
found on another page will be of great value, as a reference
for dealers and others.
Exposition Honors Won by The Review
ty'and Prix
Paris Exposition, 1900 Silver Medal. Charleston Exposition, 1902
Diploma.Pan-American Exposition, 1901
Gold Medal..St. Louis Exposition, 1904
Oold A/eriflt.Lewls-Clark Exposition, 1905
LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE—NUMBER 1745 GRAMERCY
Cable a d d r e s s : " E l b l l l N e w York."
NEW YORK, JANUARY 19, 1907
~ ~
REVIEW
before the House Committee that the chief result from the adop-
tion of Postmaster Madden's suggestions would be to reduce the
postage bills of the catalogue houses at the expense of the Treasury,
and therefore of the taxpayers at large.
It should be understood that the publishers will not be the only
ones whose interests will be seriously jeopardized if Mr. Madden's
suggestions ever become a law. The legitimate business interests
of the country will suffer because it will at once create an oppor-
tunity for the catalogue house people to put forth tons of advertis-
ing matter which under the present postal rules they cannot do—
all of the house organs having been thrown out of second-class
privileges.
I
T is said that the mail order people are behind the parcels post
bill. This is being advocated by some of the representatives
of the catalogue house in the guise of reformers. They are do-
ing quiet work along lines which favor the parcels post scheme,
because they see an opportunity to cut down the cost of delivering
their catalogues. These catalogues are said to cost about 40 cents,
while the postage on each is 26 cents. They will be sent to any one
on receipt of 15 cents, so that the mailing of each copy involves a
loss of 50 cents. One house is credited with sending out 2,000,000
copies, thus making an annual net loss of $1,000,000. The P>ristow
plan would permit these catalogues to be sent by freight to dis-
tributing offices in rural free delivery districts and 9 cents postage
would carry them to their ultimate destination. Allowing 1 cent
per copy for freight and cost of transfer to the mails, this would
mean a saving of 16 cents per copy, or $320,000 on the annual edi-
tion of a single catalogue house. The figures quoted are not esti-
mates, but are taken from a statistical article, the material for which
was painstakingly gathered in Chicago, and largely furnished by
the catalogue houses.
O
NE of the most dangerous, because apparently harmless, pro-
jects of the postal reformers that will be strongly urged upon
the committee during the next fortnight is the post check, or postal
currency plan, which even the Post Office Department has been
EDITORIAL
induced to favor. The tendency of all catalogue house legislation
is along two lines: First, to get the farmer's money most easily
and conveniently, and second, to deliver- goods through the mails
T is plain that the piano business is conducted on cleaner lines
at the lowest possible cost for postage. The very reasonable safe-
than ever before. This is evidenced in the fact that the griev-
guards thrown around the postal money order system operate to
ance committee of the Dealers' Association has reported that there
are no matters of dispute which have been referred to it, and the some extent to protect the local retailer by aiding him in holding
gentlemen composing- this committee feel that the trade is to be his trade. The postal currency would simply facilitate the sending
of money away from home and, while theoretically unobjectionable,
congratulated upon this freedom from evil practices which have
in practice it could not fail to work great injury to local merchants
been conspicuously noticeable in days agone. At this rate the
everywhere. The manner in which sentiment in favor of the so-
grievance committee will not have active employment, but the very
called
post check currency system has been worked up for several
existence of this committee has, perhaps, a deterring influence upon
years
past
by a paid lobby of ex-post office officials stationed in
some of those who are not at all times inclined to respect the feel-
Washington
was fully exposed last April. All the cost of advo-
ings of their brother merchants in their stool pigeon games, or
cating
this
particular
project has been paid by a millionaire manu-
slaughter price schemes.
facturer
of
breakfast
foods,
who has "worked" the press of the en-
Whether or not, claims are brought before this committee, its
tire
country
in
a
very
ingenious,
if not altogether legitimate, manner.
existence is helpful to general trade interests.
It is all very well for the piano men to pass resolutions con-
demning the catalogue house practices, but such resolutions will be
MATTER of importance which was discussed at the recent
trade meeting in Cincinnati was the constant menace to the useless unless followed by work.
entire piano and organ trade from what seems to be unwarranted
OULD it not be wise to go a step further and use a little
exaggerations on the part of a number of so-called mail order and
pressure to sidetrack one of these catalogue house schemes
catalogue houses. A committee was appointed to investigate all
for depleting the National Treasury ? The piano trade should seize
such complaints and secure evidence showing where and how this
the present opportunity to bring its views to the attention of the
misrepresentation is made.
In connection with the mail order business, the members of House Post Office Committee at what might prove the psycholog-
ical moment.
the music trade presumably are not familiar with a plan which has
Congress should hear from this trade, and every other trade
been brought up before the postal committee at Washington, and
which may be acted upon by Congress. If this scheme becomes a in no uncertain tones, within the next fortnight. A little energetic
work now may save millions of local trade which may be speedily
law it wall assist the mail order houses greatly.
lost if any of these schemes should go through. The piano men
Third Assistant Postmaster-General Madden evidently does not
in Cincinnati felt that a dishonest scheme was being worked by the
view the newspapers of the country as great educational factors, for
catalogue houses. Why not, now, try and render it impossible to
he believes in increasing the mailing price four times on second-class
matter and making it possible for the catalogue houses then to put have these companies conduct their enterprises at the expense of
out their own periodicals on the same basis as legitimate publica- the United States Government?
tions.
HE membership of the Dealers' Association is larger than ever
HE business men of the country should know how far-reaching
before, and President Byrne proposes to put forth strenuous
this revision of postal laws would go. Chairman Overstreet,
efforts to increase the list materially before the Convention in Chi-
of Indiana, stated recently, when this subject was under discussion
cago next June.
I
A
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