Music Trade Review

Issue: 1910 Vol. 50 N. 14

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
MUSIC TRADE
The World Renowned
REVIEW
7THE QUALITIES of leadership
W were never better emphasized
than in the SOHMER PIANO of
to - day.
SOHMER
VOSE PIANOS
BOSTON.
They have a reputation of over
It is built to satisfy the most
cultivated tastes.
FIFTY YEARS
for superiority in those qualities which
are most essential In a First-class Piano.
The advantage of such a piano
appeals at once to the discriminat-
ing intelligence of leading dealers.
VOSE & SONS PIANO CO.
Sobmer & Co.
THE
WAREROOMS
Corner Fifth Avenue and 32d Street,
K
Pianos
New York
PIANOS
MANUFACTURERS' HEADQUARTERS
WABA8H
AVBNUE
CHICAOO, ILL.
GRAND AND UPRIGHT
QUALITY, STYLE, and GEN-
ERAL CONSTRUCTION.
THE
customer and dealer.
RIGHT IN EVERY WAY
Bush & Lane Piano Co.
Received Highest Award at the United States
Centennial Exhibition, 1876, and are admitted to
b* th« most Celebrated Instruments of the Age.
Guaranteed for five years. $W Illustrated Cata-
logue furnished on application. Price reasonable.
Terms favorable.
BUSH & LANE
Cf The Piano for your Best Trade.
BAUER
Norn. 28O283
BOSTON, MASS.
Warerooms: 237 E. 23d St.
B. H. JANSSEN
Factory : from 233 to 245 E. 23d St., N. Y. 132d St. and Brown Place, NEW YORK
DAVENPORT & TREACY
Pianos are conceded to embody rare values. They are the result
of over three decades of acquaintance with trade needs. They
are attractive- externally, possess a pure musical tone and are sold
at prices which at once make the agency valuable to the dealer.
FACTORY-1901-1907 PARK AVENUE, NEW YORK, N.Y.
Factory and Sales Olflces,
Holland, Michigan
FRKMEFLE
CHICAGO
PIANOS
CONCEDED TO BE THE
NEW
ARTISTIC STANDARD
It is with pardonable pride that we refer to the unanimity with which the
Greatest Artists, Brightest Critics and Best Musicians have accepted EVERETT
Pianos as the new Artistic Standard. Progressive dealers are fast providing
themselves with " T h e Everett" as a leader.
The John Church Co.
CINCINNATI
NEW YORK
\ An/,'/:•/A-
I '///. V. VA//V />/
HADDORFF
CLARENDON PIANOS
IB'
Novel and artistic case
designs.
Splendid tonal qualities.
Possess surprising value
apparent to all.
Manufactured by the
HADDORFF PIANO CO.,
Rockford, - - Illinois
LINDEmN
AND SONS
PIANOS
40 1-467 W . 4 0 t h St.
NEW YORK.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
REVIEW
THE
flUJIC TIRADE
V O L . L. N o . 14
Published Every Saturday by Edward Lyman Bill at 1 Madison Ave., New York, April 2, 1910
S1NG
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I
l t t-^lL
H E N President Taft was the guest of the New York Press Club last week, he was much
affected when the club song, "Then Scatter Seeds of Kindness," was rendered.
And, after all, why should we not all endeavor to scatter seeds of kindness for the
reaping bye and bye?
There is not half the enmity existing between men which some are prone to believe and half of
the attacks which are made even upon politicians are made without serious intent on the part of the writer
of offensive articles.
They are passing whims—there is no real feeling behind them. I may say that they are forgotten
by the man who penned the lines long before they have passed out of the memory of the man whose pur-
pose or principles was the object of the attack.
Yes, indeed! The world is getting better—we see it in every division of life.
There is an obvious desire to run business on cleaner, better and broader lines, and it is apparent
that employers are taking a greater interest than ever before in the welfare of those who are associated
with them.
There is a strong vein of sympathy running from man to man.
A good employer is a man who never allows his stock of sympathy to run low.
Sympathy is nothing more than the ability to place yourself in the other fellow's place. With it
the employer stands at the elbow of every worker in the place at the same time.
Appreciation is the foundation upon which hearty co-operation rests.
Co-operation means efficiency and in the end profits.
Sympathy is the only thing which can smooth the rough spots in the patli that the worker has to
travel.

A good boss is a man who can get rid of the idea that he is doing a favor for the man to whom he
gives a job.
Specifically a good employer is a man with heart enough to admit that his prosperity is not wholly
a thing of his own making and with sense enough to put that admission into such form that it will bind
his workers closely to him.
Such an employer will go about speaking words of commendation whenever there is an opportun-
ity to do so.
Such an employer will realize that workmen are human, for they are as eager as he to feel that they
are of some importance in the running of the business house.
Sympathy!
Yes—the more that is encouraged the farther away we will get from all kinds of social disorders.
It will pay us all, whether employer or employe, to scatter seeds of kindness for there is a reaping
time coming.
. . . \ \ . .
.
No man can work his best unless his heart is in his work, and no man's heart is in his work that is
not appreciated.
-
.

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