Music Trade Review

Issue: 1912 Vol. 55 N. 14

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
THE PARCELS POST AND THE MUSIC TRADE INDUSTRY.
Evident That a Large Proportion of Men in the Music Trade Have Not Yet Awakened
to a Realization of How the Parcels Post Will Further Their Interests—Will Be of
Special Utility in Supplying Stock to Dealers Who Handle Small Musical Instru-
ments as Well as Player-Piano Rolls, Talking Machine Records, Sheet Music, Etc.—
Interesting Analysis of the Situation Written for The Review by Waldon Fawcett.
The new United States Parcels Post is to begin
operations on January 1 next and the interim be-
fore that date is none too long for the prepara-
tions of manufacturers and merchants who desire
to take advantage in the fullest measure of this
important new method of distribution. The very
system on which the parcels post is to operate—
Transferring
Parcel Mail from
Trolley Car.
Wagon to
rates varying as to distances—will necessitate a
close study of local and national geography by
firms and individuals that desire to make the most
advantageous use of the new institution, whereas
a close comparison of parcels post rates with ex-
isting express rates will be essential if a shipper is
to put himself in a position to pick the most econ-
omical service at all times.
Music Trade Not Yet Awakened.
There is reason to suspect that a large propor-
tion of the men in the music trade have not as yet
awakened to a realization of how much the parcels
post can do to further their interests. Irdeed,
some piano merchants have bee;i heard to say that
stricts himself absolutely to the piano line. Ad-
mittedly the parcels post as it is inaugurated can
do nothing to further the delivery of instruments
but who knows what may happen some day, if the
plan is the success that is anticipated. In some
foreign countries parcels post packages are al-
lowed in all weights up to 110 pounds and should
the limit be thus extended here and manufacturers
meanwhile pursue their present policy to produce
smaller and smaller organs and baDy grand pianos
and boudoir players for use in flats and apart-
ments who can predict what may come to pass
some day. But seriously, in the meantime, the
exclusive piano dealer can receive much aid from
the parcels post. It will afford quicker and more
economical carriage for all manner of small parts
and for player piano rolls and it will facilitate in-
terchange on these items not only between dealer
and customer but also between dealer and factory.
Great Help in Emergency Wants.
This last is one of the significant possibilities of
the parcels post and one that seems to have been
strangely overlooked by the business community in
general. You will find plenty of people in vari-
ous lines of trade who are enthusiastic over the
9
possible and the parcels post is going to serve as
the next best thing.
It is a foregone conclusion that for such emer-
gency wants the new postal carrier system is going
to prove speedier than the express route. Espe-
cially is this likely to be the case during "rush
seasons'' such as the Christmas holiday when,
with all due respect, the postal service of the
Tri-Car for Postal Delivery.
country does not get quite as hopelessly congested
as the express service. Furthermore the fact that
city post offices are open at almost all hours of
the day and night will facilitate the dispatch of
such emergency orders as compared with the rou-
tine that would be followed were it necessary to
await the collection of the parcels by an express-
man on his regular round of the business district
where the shipment originates. And while on the
jobber-wholesale end of the proposition it may be
added that the parcels post is liable in many in-
stances to have an advantage over express service
as a means of placing in the hands of the dealers
Farcel Postal Delivery in Winter.
prospects of the parcels post as a marketer of
manufactured goods, either direct from producer
to consumer or via the usual manufacturer-jobber-
retailer channel, but comparatively few have awak-
ened to the aid that the parcels post can give as a
connecting link between" manufacturer or jobber
on the one hand and retailer or sales agent on the
other. And it is just here that the music trade
stands to be especially benefited. The very char-
Modern Mailing Room for Packing and Mailing
acter of many musical commodities is such as
Parcels.
cause the customer to be impatient for prompt de-
livery. A new string for a violin; the latest popu- bundles of circulars or catalogs designed for
local distribution. Especially will this be the case
lar "hit" in sheet music, talking machine record
with reference to special circulars, new lists of
or player-roll form; an operatic libretto; an instru-
music, etc., which it is desired to get into the
hands of the buying public just as promptly as
Postman with Parcel Mail.
possible after they come from the hands of the
printer.
since the parcels post with its eleven-pound limit
As has been said the obvious mission of the par-
cannot handle pianos or player-pianos, nor yet any
cels post is as a distributor of merchandise to the
of the principal individual parts that enter into
"ultimate consumers." And many music men will
the manufacture of these instruments, they can-
he surprised when they discover what a variety
not see how the new postal utility can be of much
use to them. Now this is an erroneous and short-
sighted view of the situation, even in the case of a
dealer handling only pianos and players. And
how many dealers thus restrict themselves in this
progressive age? Nine chances out of ten your
representative dealer handles in addition to pianos
and players, one or more of the important sup-
plementary lines, such as small instruments, talk-
ing machines, disc and cylinder-records, player-
piano rolls, sheet and folio music, etc., etc. And if The Postoffice Department at Washington, D. C.
any or all of these are carried, either as side lines
—Headquarters of New Parcels Post.
or as the main stock, it ought not to take half an
eye to foresee how the parcels post is going to ment to complete a hand outfit—all these and a
Delivery of Parcels by Post.
benefit the purveyor in the music trade.
dozen other classes of articles of everyday de-
Shipments of Piano Parts and Player Rolls.
mand are in the category that most emphatically of their standard items of trade may be trans-
But let us look at the situation first, supposedly, are wanted when they are wanted. Theoretically, mitted in this fashion. Violins, mandolins, gui-
from the most unfavorable angle and take as a of course, the dealer ought to have all these in tars, horns, drums, flutes, all the smaller models of
case in point the situation of a retailer who re- •stock all the time but practically it is all but im-
(Continued on page 10.}
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
10
with radius respectively of 50, 150, 300, 600,
THE PARCELS POST AND THE MUSIC TRADE INDUSTRY. zones
1,000, 1,400 and 1,800 miles. In reality, though
(Continued from page 9.)
talking machines, light-weight piano stools, music
racks, etc., are a few of the eligibles in addition
to the already-mentioned indispensables—rolls, rec-
ords, folios and sheet music. All thse latte have
heretofore been admissible to the mails in weights
up to four pounds, but under the new system
there will be a proportionate saving in the cost of
carriage and the tremendous convenience of being
able to place in one package all the items of any
ordinary order.
Parcel Post as Sales Aid to Trade.
Considered as a sales aid in the music trade the
greatest virtue of the parcels post lies not so much
in what it will do as in where it will go, if it may
be expressed in that way. The new system ought
to convert into live customers throughout the
year millions of people whose purchasing power
has been more or less dormant for weeks or
months at a time. Reference is made, of course,
to the farming class of the community, particu-
larly the rural residents not located in close prox-
imity to any town, and to such more or less iso-
lated music lovers as miners, lumbermen, ranchers,
etc.—persons who have money to buy what they
want if only they had the opportunity to make
purchases. It has been easy enough since the
establishment of rural free delivery, for most of
these persons to order by mail any small instru-
ments, music, rolls or records that might be de-
sired to help beguile the weary hours of winter
isolation. But to get possession of purchases has
usually been quite another matter. If the weight
of the musical merchandise ordered exceeded four
pounds it could not be transmitted by mail but
must needs come by express. This latter is apt
to mean all sorts of inconvenience. In the coun-
try districts or in the sparsely settled districts (for
example in the South and West) the nearest ex-
press office is likely to be located many miles from
the home of the long-range musical customer and
to secure a package that has come by express thus
involves a long, cold drive—an ordeal that may,
worse yet, devolve into a fruitless quest if the cus-
tomer has been misinformed as to the time an ex-
press package should arrive. In many localities
the country roads are virtually impassable for long
periods so that a trip to the express office is out
of the question whereas on the other hand dur-
ing active season such as the spring planting time
and the autumn harvest season all hands are so
busy that it is equally out of the question to spare
time or the use of a team for a trip to the express
office.
Getting Close to the "Ultimate Consumer."
The result of these conditions, as many musical
men well realize, is that farmers have simply given
up the attempt to order staples such as rolls and
records at the very time when their interest would
be keenest and when, having the most leisure to
enjoy mechanical music, they might be expected to
order most liberally. But with the advent of the
parcels post a transformation should be worked.
This means an era of mail delivery as well as mail-
order business, With the farmer, the rancher, the
miner, the lumberman or other isolated resident
RUDOLF
PIANOS
are conscientiously made, good
instruments; in other words,
the sweetest things out.
RUDOLF PIANO CO.
347-349 Rider Ave.
NEW YORK
there are nine zones, for everything outside the
1,800 mile zone (including the Philippines and all
our new possessions) forms another zone added to
those above listed and there is a special low rate
for delivery within the limits of the city where a
parcel is mailed or delivery on any rural mail
route leading out from such city so that each
local community in the country will, in effect, con-
stitute a parcels post "zone" for the business men
of that particular locality.
This special rate of five cents for the first pound
and one cent per pound for additional pounds for
local delivery is likely to prove a boon to local
music houses everwhere and particularly those
having a heavy trade in the agricultural districts
surrounding their city. Just by way of suggestion
of the possibilities imagine what it will mean to
both
farmer and dealer when the former can call
What the parcels post will do to encourage a
mail trade in winter in the farming and isolated up the latter on the rural or long-distance tele-
districts it will acomplish in like measure in the phone in the morning and receive by parcels post
resort region and the vacation country in sum- that same afternoon a package of talking machine
mer. Musical instruments have, thanks to the lib- records or player-piano rolls, selections which, may-
eral advertising of the past few seasons, been hap have been decided upon in equally up-to-date
placed in the position of indespensables for sum- manner, namely by listening to them over the
mer camps and cottages and yachts and house- telephone when the order was given in the morn-
boats. Only heretofore, the dealer has usually ing. Some dealers, in anticipation of the parcels
had to content himself with such business as could post are already preparing special cartons or con-
be garnered ere the vacationist set out for his tainers to be used as receptacles for parcels post
summer headquarters. Not so in future, however. packages and the idea is assuredly an excellent one.
The parcels post will carry musical merchandise to esecially when, as in the music trades, the com-
the depths of the wilderness; into the mountain modities would be liable to damage in transit un-
fastnesses or to the most remote seashore village; less properly prepared.
enjoying the boon of the delivery of his purchases
at his very door, there will be no reason why his
indulgence in this line should not extend to the
limitations of his pocketbook, provided the mer-
chants in the music trades will reach out after
such business. And to help this new trade cause
there is the circumstance that the parcels post
system is to have the C. O. D. feature. Hereto-
fore all business of this kind had to be done on
the cash in advance plan but under the parcels
post scheme a customer need not pay until the
goods are delivered at his door. Uncle Sam will
charge a little extra for this service, but it will be
well worth it to the merchant if it stimulates trade,
as it undoubtedly will.
Helps Trade at Winter and Summer Resorts.
and a steady flow of orders may be expected if
the exiles on pleasure bent be kept informed of
the "new things" that appear during the dog days.
Specializing on Rules and Conditions.
There can be no doubt but that every music
house which expects to do a volume of business
worthy of the name under the parcels post system
will do well to detail one or more employes to
specialize on the rules, regulations and conditions
obtaining in this new field. For there will be
many pitfalls for the unwary, the penalty of which
will be those delays in delivery which are almost
as serious as an outright loss of trade. By way
of illustration of the points to be borne in mind
by shippers it may be pointed out that aside from
the general rule that no parcel shall exceed 72
inches in length and girth combined, there will be
regulations regarding the amount and character
of packing that can be used. These latter regu-
lations have not as yet been formulated by the
postal officials, but will be in due course. It will
also be exacted that metal parts, etc., can be sent
by parcels post only when so wrapped that there
is no possibility that they will do injury to any
postal employe or to other pieces of mail in
transit. Yet another point to be watched is that
the regular issues of postage stamps must not be
used on parcel mail. Special parcels post stamps
are to be placed on sale at the opening of the new
year and these must be affixed to parcels deposited
in the mails. Shippers will also be called upon to
decide in the case of each parcel dispatched
whether or not it is desired to insure the p;ck-
age. The parcels post law provides that Uncle
Sam may reimburse shippers for articles lost br
damaged in transit but at this writing the postal
officials incline to the belief that a small addi-
tional fee should be charged for this insurance
feature, just as in the case of registered mail at
present, .and consequently it will be up to the ship-
per to decide in each instance whether or not to
invoke the safeguard.
Some Suggestions Worth Noting.
Aside from all these details to be ever borne
in mind the parcels post shipper should have always
before him a large scale map, or, better yet, n
mental map, that will familiarize him with limita-
tions of the various "zones" of our parcels post
territory. For, as all bur readers doubtless know,
the parcels post is not to be operated on a flat
rate per pound basis as is the case in so many
foreign countries but on a zone plan whereby the
postage charge on each package will be determined
not only by the weight but also by the distance it
is to be transported. The law prescribes seven
KNIGHT-CAMPBELLCO.TO TAKE PART.
(Special to The Review.)
Denver, Colo., Sept. 30, 1912.
The Knight-Campbell Music Co., and the other
prominent piano and music houses of this city
will take an active part in the Festival of Moun-
tain and Plain, which will be held in this city on
Oct. 15-18, and have arranged to have attractive
floats in the parade to be held during the celebra-
tion.
COTE CO. DECLARES DIVIDEND.
The Cote Piano Manufacturing Co., has de-
clared an initial quarterly dividend of 1% per
cent, on the $250,000 cumulative preferred stock
of the company, to be paid on Oct. 1 to stock-
holders of record on Sept. 19.
BEALE&CO.,Ltd.
ANNANDALE, near Sydney
AUSTRALIA
PIANO MAKERS, largest piano factories in
the British Empire.
VENEER MANUFACTURERS from choice
Australian and other woods, for export.
IMPORTERS of Music and Musical Instru-
ments, and Talking Machines.
IMPORTERS of Interior Players for Pianos.
MAKERS of fine Cabinet work.
The only musical-instrument firm having
its own branches in every State of the
Commonwealth.
Particulars of anything connected with the
above lines, and of labor-saving methods and
machinery, always welcome. Give fullest de-
tails in your first letter, so as to save time.
For the guidance of intending suppliers, illus-
trations of our factories, with full description
of the work and method, may be inspected at
the office of our Agents upon presentation of
business card.
AGENTS IN U. S. A.:
ILSLEY-DOUBLEDAY & CO.
Front Street
NEW YORK

Download Page 9: PDF File | Image

Download Page 10 PDF File | Image

Future scanning projects are planned by the International Arcade Museum Library (IAML).

Pro Tip: You can flip pages on the issue easily by using the left and right arrow keys on your keyboard.