Music Trade Review

Issue: 1908 Vol. 46 N. 6

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
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THE: MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
whose methods have not been above suspicion. When all of this is
accomplished it will be better for the legitimate business interests
in every line. There, is in every trade, and banking is a trade, cer-
tain abuses which have crept in which should be eliminated and the
fllLflC TIRADE
quicker the better for all.
An important member of the piano industry remarked last week
that some housecleaning was necessary in this particular industry.
We have been housecleaning for some time and therefore at the
present
time there is not as much of an accumulation of unhealthy
EDWARD LYMAN BILL - Editor and Proprietor
germs
as
would have been found a few years ago. Business is run
J. B. SPILLANE, Managing Editor
on sounder lines and there is everywhere a desire to seek quality
Executive and Reportorlal Staff:
trade rather than quantity trade.
G » 0 . B . JTWT.T.1HT1,
W. H. DTKES,
F. H. THOMPSON.
J. HAYDEN CLARENDON.
A. J. NICKLIN.
L. S. BOWEBS,
A leading manufacturer said to The Review last week that he
B. BBITTAIN WILSON,
L. J. CHAMBERLIN,
BOSTON OFFICE:
CHICAGO OFFICE:
had concluded to shorten the time on which his pianos have been
B. P. VAN HARLINGKN. 105-197 Wabash Art.
BBNXST L. WAITT, 278A Tremont Bt
TELEPHONES : Central 414; Automatic 8645.
sold at wholesale. Of course if an unwise curtailment of time
PHILADELPHIA:
MINNEAPOLIS mmd ST. PAUL:
ST. LOUIS:
should be adopted generally it could end in no other way than in a
R. W. KAUJTMAN.
ADOLF EDBTBN.
CHAS. N. VAN BURBN.
SAN FRANCISCO: S. H. GHAT, 2407 Sacramento St.
great
reduction of trade. A judicious rearrangement of credit,
CINCINNATI, O.: NINA PUGH-SMITH.
wherever the time limit has exceeded good judgment, should be in
BALTIMORE. MO.: A. ROBERT FRENCH.
LONDON, ENGLAND:
69 Baslnghall S t , B. C. W. Lionel Sturdy, Manager.
order because some manufacturers in granting an jmusual length
Published Every Saturday at 1 Madison Avenue, New York of time to their dealers have helped to bring about an unhealthy
system o'f competition. To illustrate: If an alluring proposition
Entered at the Ntw York Post Offict ms Second Class Matter.
is held out to a particular dealer whose line is already full, to take
SUBSCRIPTION, (including postage). United States and Mexico, 92.00 per year;
Canada, $3.50 ; all other countries, $4.00.
on another piano with the understanding that he is to have a liberal
ADVERTISEMENTS, $2.00 per Inch, single column, per Insertion. On quarterly or
yearly contracts a special discount 1B allowed. Advertising Pages, $60.00; opposite
dating on his purchases far exceeding the regular credit, it becomes
reading matter, $75.00.
REMITTANCES, In other than currency form, should be made payable to Edward
at once an inducement for him to purchase. The dealer figures that
Lyman Bill.
if his bills do not fall due until a good many mo'nths have elapsed
Directory ol Plaao
The directory of piano manufacturing firms and corporation!
found on another page will be of great value, as a reference
he may under these conditions take on certain pianos to his line
MHuUttnrcri
f or dealers and others.
which otherwise he would not do. Then he is unwisely influ-
Exposition Honors Won by The Review
enced to put these same instruments out on ridiculously small
Grand Pria
Paris Exposition, 1900 Silver Medal. Charleston Exposition 1902
Diploma.Pan-American Exposition, 1901
GoldMedaI.. . S t Louis Exposition, 1904
monthly payments simply because he purchased them on such easy
Gold Medal. ... LewlB-Clark Exposition, 1905.
,
terms
that sound business principles were abrogated. Wherever
LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONES-NUMBERS 4677 and 4«78 GRAMERCY
Connecting all Department*.
too long time has been granted a readjustment should be in
Cable addreaw: "Elblll New York."
order. Pianos should be settled for within a reasonable period the
NEW YORK, FEBRUARY 8, l»O8
same as other merchandise and they should not be placed out by
retail merchants on terms which carry the deferred payments past
a period of three years. To go beyond that is to throw go'od busi-
ness prudence to the winds. Every dealer should figure to increase
EDITORIAL
the amount of his deferred payments on pianos. There is no sounder
principle to adopt during the new year. Then they should demand
RADE has been growing steadily better and the special Review larger deferred payments on every piano sale. If this plan were
reports indicate an improved condition in the various cities adopted generally and fixed business rules became the outcome of
throughout the Union. Of course there has not been a sudden such a policy the industry itself would be stronger and better. There
springing back to normal conditions, but there is an unmistakable is no better way to make housecleaning thorough than to adopt
trend towards better things. Men are constantly being put back to rules which mean a strengthening of the business structure and
work in the great industrial centers and every workman who is render it capable of standing any shock even of a sudden cyclonic
drawing wages is at once a distributing medium.
nature which it may encounter in days to come. Houseclean by all
Financial conditions are steadily improving but we are still means and let every business man put his house in the best kind of
having a little cleaning up in New York. The announcement last order. It will pay.
week that two of our local banks would not open their doors was
received by the public with indifference that at once testifies to the
SUBSCRIBER in writing to The Review asks among other
fact that the community has completely recovered from its financial
things, "Do" you believe all this nervous wear and tear inci-
scare, and is able to estimate such incidents at their true value.
dent to the piano business is worth the price we pay for it in worry
Housecleaning will not stop in New York until the last one of and shortened lives ?" It is a question for the individual to answer.
those great speculators who used banks as pawns in their great Some successful business men do not worry and they do not stick
gambling games are removed from power. Their names have too 1 close to their desks. There are some men, however, who are
tainted the reputation of the institutions with which they have been so constituted that they can't help fretting, and they are built on
connected. The kind of housecleaning which is going on here will such extremely nervous lines that they wear themselves out by un-
not cause the slightest disturbance and will leave the conservative necessary strain long before their time. The piano business is no
banking institutions stronger than ever. We may expect that after more wearing than any other, but we are in many cases paying too
the harvest comes the aftermath—after storm there is wreckage high a price for our commercial success.
and weakened edifices that must be strengthened or razed to the
There is a lesson and a warning for business men in the increase
ground.
of deaths from heart disease and nervous trouble. While the
The closing of the banks at this time is due to* a financial average duration of human life has been lengthened three or four
system which had not strengthened its forces and it was realized in years during the present generation, the number of deaths from
financial circles that the closing of these institutions was inevitable. heart disease in New York and other American cities is steadily
The collapse of these banks was due wholly to the fact that the con- increasing. This is admittedly due to the strain of modern living,
duct of those who were previously controlling them was not above and more than all, to the worry which exists among business men.
suspicion. Their suspension had been anticipated because in bank- The deaths from heart trouble have been accentuated during the
ing circles it was believed that the elimination of unsound banking past few months no doubt by the anxiety and strain caused by
methods must be complete. There is no fear that the depositors will recent monetary troubles. Heavy financial losses in so'me cases,
lose in the slightest, for these institutions will be quickly rehabili- in others worry over apprehended disasters that never occur, loss of
tated and placed on a sound footing.
appetite and sleeplessness and a general lowering of vitality have
rendered the subject an easy prey to any prevailing disease, and. if
T must be clear to the entire world that New York has begun the heart be weakened by improper living it gives way. Many a
this financial housecleaning proposition with a firm resolve not good man in the piano trade has gone down 'before his time be-
to stop until the financial structure is pretty well cleared of all men cause of lack of attention to the protection of health.
THE
T
A
I
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE:
MUSIC TRADE:
REVIEIW
P
HYSICIANS have long been preaching the doctrine that
American business men live too' fast. With the telegraph,
ocean cable, telephone, wireless and other modern facilities the man
of affairs can do in one hour work that formerly would have occu-
pied six. It might be thought that his working hours wduld be
correspondingly shortened. Nothing of the sort, these things have
simply accelerated his pace and he not only works harder, but more
hours than ever, with, of course, a corresponding increase of busi-
ness and added responsibilities. To keep up this energy he eats too 1
much. Sometimes he drinks too much for a man who spends most
of his working hours at the desk and takes too little outdoor exer-
cise. Health is invaluable when a period of more than usual strain
and anxiety arrives. A day's shooting, yachting, golfing, riding or
an occasional change of scene gives new strength and vitality and
a clearer brain. In perfect health and in possession of all his facul-
ties a man is entirely suited to" direct his affairs and can accomplish
more than if he spent the whole time in his office with his nose to
the grindstone. A man who does this preserves his health and is not
in the slightest alarmed at the specters and unhealthy visions
which otherwise would worry him into his grave, and he will be
alive, active and prosperous long after his unwise colleagues have
passed into a wretched, enfeebled old age.
We know men in the piano industry who have large responsi-
bilities, but with clear heads, excellent developed minds, and,
through good care of their physical make-up, they treat them lightly.
We know others who' are constantly worrying about the things
which never happen. They become dyspeptic, nervous and wretched.
They are paying too high a price for the success which they win.
What the American business man must learn is to slow down—
take wholesome exercise and quit worrying even over real trou-
bles when they come. Worry never accomplished anything but to
break down the man who insisted upon letting it permeate his
entire make-up. Men who are bound to be pessimistic worry over
troubles that never come. A well-balanced man usually takes some
form of recreation which keeps his head clear and his body health-
ful. He then grapples with the evcry-day problems of life as he
enters the golf links, in a pleasant frame of mind and determined
to get what comfort he can out of life.
R
ESOLUTIONS are absolutely meaningless unless there is a
spirit behind them which favors their rigid adoption. Any
association, whether in music trade or any other line, which passes
resolutions that many of its members do not believe in or do not
propose to adopt in their business careers, is useless. There is not
a trade problem in this industry which cannot be successfully solved
through associated effort if there is sincerity back of the move, but
the question is will the men in any industry, either manufacturers
or dealers, hold together for the successful adoption of radical rules.
A careful study of the association field in a variety of trades causes
us to believe that radicalism does not enter into the association
policy. One great trouble is this: The men who compose the
various industrial organizations are active competitors and they
consider it unwise to agree to concerted action which will in the
slightest threaten their own business independence. They prefer on
the whole to go it alone, believing that their own judgment backed
by the energy which has built the business is better to continue that
enterprise than to adopt general rules to which all of their com-
petitors agree. Then in the matter of credits there is a disposition
to make personal arrangements rather than to enter into an iron-
clad agreement as to dating and terms.
The same may be said of the creation of the special brand
piands. There are some men who have made a good deal of money
by the manufacture of special brand instruments. They figure that
there will always be a demand for pianos of this character and they
propose to supply that call to the best of their resources. The whole
proposition could be easily regulated if a sufficient number of men
entered seriously upon the adjustment of this problem.
At a recent meeting of the Executive Committee of the Piano
Manufacturers' Association here in this city there were some warm
arguments made regarding the adoption of similar resolutions to
those passed by the Dealers' Association to the effect that every
piano should have the name of the firm or corporation manufactur-
ing it indelibly stamped upon it at some easily observable point. In
other words, to establish its identity no matter what name might
appear an its fallboard.
The man who fails has another chance—the benefit of experience.
The wealth of the world constantly increases. Are you getting your
;
share of it?
Don't perform any radical action without taking the probable conse-
quences into account.
Are you wasting the opportunities that life is made up of? Are you
annihilating the chances of success?
Every minute devoted to improving the quality of your selling talk
will save hours of labor in getting orders.
Sometimes the prospect is impressed by the manner of saying a thing
as well as by the substance of what you say.
It pays to keep one's eyes open. There may be pointers gained that
might help improve business even in unexpected places.
Who buys your product, the piano dealers or the people in the homes?
Is it the distributer or the consumer that you are after?
It may be a good plan to sympathize with your customers when they
tell you their troubles, but for Heaven's sake don't ask for sympathy from
them. You don't want condolences—you want orders.
THE BUTLER.—"We've got a burglar in the kitchen, sir."
The Professor (absent mindedly).—"Ask him to come again. I'm
busy just now."
STARTING IT.—"Your wife is very fond of animals, is she not?"
"Indeed, she is!"
"Loves you devotedly, I suppose?"
ALL HE HAD.—Wife—What do you mean by bringing those muddy
feet in here?
Husband—'Scuse me, m'dear (hie); did'n' have any othersh t'bring.
Had hard time gettin' theesh in.
NO WONDER.—"When Burroughs first came into the neighborhood
he was very sociable, but now he seems to want to keep everybody at a
distance."
"That's natural enough; everybody is a creditor of his now."
AN APPROVAL OF THE IDLE.—"Everybody should be made to work
in this life," remarked the political economist.
"I don't agree with you," answered Miss Cayenne; "there are too many
people who, when they try to work merely succeed in getting in the way."
A GOOD LISTENER.—"Oh, yes. Mr. Meekton and Miss Gabble are
very fond of each other."
"Why, I heard he didn't speak to her at all."
"That's just why she likes him. He doesn't attempt to get a word
in edgewise."
A SURE SIGN.—"No," said he; "I never met her, but she must be very
charming."
"The idea!" she exclaimed. "Who told you that?"
"No one, but all you other girls admit that she'd be all right if she
wasn't so horribly conceited."
GETTING HIM SQUARE.—"Dear uncle," wrote the young man who
was trying to make a touch without coming right out and asking for the
money. "I have pawned my watch to get a postage stamp to write to you."
"Dear nephew," replied the hard of heart relative, "I enclose you 2
cents. Get your watch redeemed and write to me on a postal card next
time."
PLAIN TEXTS.—Strange dat we ain't slick 'nuff ter dodge lightnin'
an' we let de thunder skeer us half ter death.
It's all right ter help de heathen 'cross de water, but so many er us
fergits de heathen what camps right in our own settlement.
Many a man lays up treasure in heaven an' den sits down an' waits
for heaven to pay him interest on it.
IN SOCIETY.—Prof. Von Bulltong, the distinguished sociologist, lec-
tured before the Mothers' Club yesterday and presented a very ingenious
argument to the effect that babies are not necessarily an obstacle to di-
vorce. He was enthusiastically applauded.
On Thursday Mrs. Brown Jones and Mr. Brown celebrated the tenth
anniversary of their divorce. The happy pair were the recipients of warm
congratulations and many costly gifts.
Mrs. Smith-Robinson, a prospective divorcee of the near future, is to
be given the usual showers by her innumerable friends.
Mr. Smith, who is to be divorced from Mrs. Brown-Smith the coming
week, entertained h}s married friends at a stag dinner last evening.

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