Music Trade Review

Issue: 1913 Vol. 56 N. 1

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
8
THE
MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
TRANSCONTINENTAL RATE ADVANCES HELD UP.
OF INTEREST TO EXPORTERS.
Interstate Commerce Commission Again Postpones Date Upon Which New Freight Rates Are
to Go Into Effect—How the New Tariffs Will Differ from the Old.
Trade Conditions in South America Described
in Detail in Instructive Books Prepared by
the Pan-American Union.
(Special to The Review.)
lieves would increase the freight rates on many
commodities an average of about 10 per cent.
The Merchants' Association has just received for,
At present there is a blanket rate from all ter-
filing
in its reference library a number of books
ritory east of the Missouri river to the Pacific
Coast. The new tariff would retain this system .descriptive of Latin America which will be of in-
for a number of commodities, but eliminate it in terest to New York manufacturers exporting to
South and Central America and the West Indies.
the case of other shipments. An example is found
Most of these books are published by the Pan-
in the proposed rates on shipments of automobiles
to the Pacific Coast. The present rate is three American Union, under the direction of the Hon.
John Barrett, and all are distributed through the
dollars a hundred pounds from all points east of
agency of the International Bureau of American
the Missouri River to San Francisco and other
Republics.
Coast cities. Under this arrangement New York,
The titles of some of the books received are as
Pittsburgh and Detroit automobile shippers enjoy
follows:
the same rate. The new tariffs propose to give
"Latin America—The Land of Opportunity."
Detroit a rate of $3.10, Pittsburgh $3.20 and New
"Traveling Notes in Central America."
York $3.30 for automobiles shipped in car-load
"Panama—Method of Acquiring Public Land."
lots to San Francisco. This would mean an in-
"Rubber and Its Relatives."
crease of thirty cents a hundred pounds for New
"Tobacco."
York shippers, as against an increase of twenty
"Cotton, the Most Widely Used Staple in the
cents for Pittsburgh shippers and only ten cents
World."
for Detroit shippers.
The Hon. John Barrett, the Director-General of
In another way the tariffs would raise the level
The Pan-American Union, has also forwarded to
by increasing the number of pounds considered as
the association for the information of the mem-
a minimum carload to obtain a certain rate.
bers consulting the library:
"Chili; an Account of Its Wealth and Progress,"
says the man who has never been a quality dealer.
GET A QUALITY REPUTATION.
"Every town is different from every other town, by Julio Perez Canto.
"Brazil in 1911," by J. C. Oakenfuil, and
Quality Goods Can Be Sold Anywhere in the but the people are pretty much the same the world
"Guide to Modern Peru; Its Great Advantages
over. They have a liking for quality. 'But they
Wide World To-Day If There Is Energy and
won't pay the price,' says Mr. Cheap John. How and Vast Opportunities," by A. de Clairmont, M.D.
Enthusiasm Behind Them—Some Pointers
These publications are especially important in
do you know? Simply because you have now and
Well Worth Consideration of the Trade.
view
of the approaching completion of the Panama
then purchased a high-priced piano, and then from
Canal and the keen interest which is now being
the
sale
of
that
instrument
concluded
that
your
An excellent subject to talk of the opening week
taken in trade extension in Central and South
of the New Year is piano quality, and this topic is trade did not want high grade pianos?
America. A somewhat similar series of books
"Quality goods can be sold anywhere in the
handled so illuminatively and interestingly in the
dealing with the industries of the Netherlands was
wide world to-day. Paste that in your hat so no
latest issue of The Arrow that it is well worth
recently added to the library and catalogued in
one can make you forget it. The man who is
reproducing for careful consideration.
last week's Greater New York. These books are
"Many a man would be on the high road to building for the future is the one who is not only
available for consultation by the members of the
fortune who is now pegging along three miles be- making 'sales,' but building up a reputation for
Merchants' Association.
hind the band-wagon, if there were not so much honesty and square dealing by selling dependable
painful ignorance as to kind of people he has for pianos at just and fair prices. Better paste this
W. W. Smiley has added attractive player and
customers. T can't advertise and push quality beside the other, too, for they're both the truth.
Victrola rooms to his quarters in Atlantic, Iowa.
"Sell good goods, advertise them, talk them,-
goods like so and so does; my trade is different,'
create the quality impression and then back it up
with quality.
"For certain reasons, the National Piano Co.,
of Boston, Mass., is in a position to render very
valuable assistance to the man with the desire to
sell a 'quality line.' "
Washington, D. C, Dec. 30, 1912.
Announcement was made to-day by the Inter-
state Commerce Commission that it had entered an
order further suspending from December 31 until
June 30, 1913, a series of fifteen new rates for
westbound shipments over the transcontinental
trunk lines from Eastern points to Pacific Coast
terminals and adjacent points in California, Ore-
gon, Washington and British Columbia. The new
rates, which would advance the cost of transporta-
tion of many commodities, would have gone into
effect next Tuesday.
The commission announced that there would be
a meeting of representatives of the transcontinental
railroads in January 8 in the office of R. H. Coun-
tiss at Chicago, where an effort would be made to
reach an agreement with shippers on the attempt
to raise rates. The commission had been told by
Mr. Countiss that the railroads would be pleased
to have any shippers present their complaints for
its consideration.
More than 200 railroads are parties to the new
transcontinental tariffs which the commission be-
LAUTEfi-HDMANA
WANT ORDEROFTRANSFER.
(.Special to The Review.)
Louisville, Ky., Dec. 30, 1912.
Following the sale of certain patent rights
among the assets of the American Piano-Player
Co., bankrupt, to J. B. Dant and O. H. Wathen,
and the refusal of the patent office in Washington
to recognize the new owners of the rights, owing
to the fact that no formal order of transfer was
made by the trustee, a petition asking for the re-
opening of the case has been filed with the Federal
Court and has been taken under advisement by
Judge Walter Evans. The petition was filed with
the court in order that the trustee may have the
opportunity of making «uch a formal order.
BEHNING GRAND PUBLICITY.
9 Q X HEW YORK, '
GRIGflGO
BOSTOR*
Helming grands are featured in the recent Behn-
ing advertisements, and these instruments are suit-
ably presented to the public in small space, used
in all of the leading daily newspapers. The char-
acter of this publicity is in accordance with the
standing of the name of Behning, and the following
extract from a current advertisement will give
some idea of the text of this publicity:
"From the creation of our first piano, over 50
years ago, Behning pianos are gracing the homes
of the first, second and third generations of many
families—self-evident proof that a fascinating inti-
macy has developed between the instrument and
the finer senses of the possessors."
The Edward T. Bates Co., which was estab-
lished thirty-two years ago, in Meadville, Pa., has
moved to new quarters in that city.
" In the Lauter-Humana you make the best selling
proposition in the trade. Your player is a winner with
me, and I am building up a bin player business such
as 1 believe I could do with no other ".
These are the words of as keen
a piano-seller as there is in the
United States. They are also,
in effect, the words of scores of
other piano-sellers who, like him,
appreciate the m a g n i f i c e n t
quality of the L A U T E R -
HUMANA.
Let us tell you more. Fullest
details on request.
LAUTER CO.
NEWARK, NEW JERSEY
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
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THE: MUSIC TRADE: REVIEW
DESTRUCTIVE PIANO ADVERTISING CONDEMNED.
Prominent Piano Merchants of Detroit Uphold The Review in Its Assailment of a Class of
Publicity Which Is Undermining the Faith of the Public in the Piano Business—The
Comments of Messrs. Grinnell, Ling and And ews Are Pertinent and Most Interesting.
(Special to The Review.)
Detroit, Mich., Dec. 31, 1912.
The editorial in The Review of last week re-
garding destructive piano advertising, in which
the case of Grinnell Bros, discontinuing purchasing
instruments of one of its prominent representations
because that piano had been advertised by a cut-
throat concern at a cut-throat price, was cited as
a concrete example, was universally praised by the
leading piano dealers of Detroit.
Coincidentally, an item which appeared in an-
other publication was roundly condemned. It was
one of personal felicitation to the head of a firm
which is advertising in almost every large city
in the country the high-grade goods of other
manufacturers at from one-fifth to one-tenth their
value, such as a Vose for one hundred dollars, a
Smith & Barnes for fifty-eight dollars, an Emerson
for twenty-eight dollars, etc., as was done in De-
troit last week. At the end of the item was the
following: "The company is a strong factor in
the retail business wherever it is represented. Its
advertising and merchandising methods are closely
studied by dealers everywhere."
"Yes, they are. Not only closely studied, but
righteously damned," said C. A. Grinnell. "That
publication is getting the advertising support of
dozens of reputable manufacturers whose business
is being preyed upon and retarded, if it is not
actually being destroyed, by the methods of this
institution, and how it can extol such destructive
methods in that manner and hope to hold the sup-
port of the manufacturers who are the victims is
more than I can guess.
"The course of The Review is directly the op-
posite and highly commendable. It never hesi-
tates to condemn that sort of business. Appar-
ently it does not hold the price of an advertise-
ment above the welfare of the entire piano
business.
"If the establishments who indulge in this pirat-
ical business would devote equal energy and money
to legitimate channels they could build up much
larger institutions on firm ground, and build for
the future; help the piano business instead of
killing it. They are killing it by destroying the
confidence of the people in the business."
"The Review is right in denouncing that method
of business," said J. Henry Ling. "I had the same
experience here this month that Mr. Grinnell did.
An officer of a piano manufacturing company, who
is a personal friend, called and ask.ed me to take
his line. It is a high-grade line; one that would
be an asset to any dealer if handled right. 1
don't care to mention the name, for this firm has
enough trouble already through the methods of
these stool pigeon folks. I would like to handle
his line, but I couldn't, simply because one or two
of the pianos had fallen into the hands of this cut-
price establishment and had been advertised for
fifty dollars or so. When a firm tells the public
in half-page advertisements and big black type that
such-and-such a piano is worth fifty dollars, how
could I convince my prospects that it was worth
eight times that much?"
"Such methods are robbing the piano business
of all semblance of dignity," said E. P. Andrews,
"and with the loss of dignity disappears, of course,
prestige and the profits that accrue to prestige.
That kind of work and advertising cannot be too
strongly condemned. It is a shame that any pub-
lication supposedly devoted to the uplift of the
music trade should even tacitly condone this value-
destroying business by saying: 'Its advertising and
merchandising methods are closely studied by
dealers everywhere.'
"As far as the actual damage they are doing our
business in particular is concerned, I don't think
it amounts to much, for the sort of people who will
be lured by an advertisement of a piano for fifty-
eight or twenty-eight dollars would not buy a high-
grade piano anyway. Deceiving them is a crime in
another way, however. It is inducing people who
cannot afford it, to forego some actual necessity
for the sake of having a piano in their home for
a while, even if they lose it. The real damage to
the business is in the destruction of dignity and
prestige, and evidently it is worse in other cities
than here. Mr. Farrand went to Chicago last
week and returned sick at heart at what he saw
in the windows there—every piano dealer appar-
ently was endeavoring solely to knock his com-
petitors rather than to boost his own lines."
Half a dozen other store managers talked in
similar vein. They all commended The Review
for its campaign against destructive methods and
excoriated the companies which indulge in mislead-
ing advertising and publications which accept ad-
vertising from such concerns.
A CABLE COMPANY REMINDER.
CONSIGNED PIANOS NOT ASSETS.
Interesting and Important Decision to That
Effect Handed Down by Special Commis-
sioner in Ambuhl Case.
Piano manufacturers, as well as merchants in
other lines who send goods out to dealers on con-
signment should be particularly interested in the
important decision handed down by W. R. Blair,
a special commissioner appointed by the United
States District Court to render an opinion on the
claims of the Sterling Co. and the Huntington
Piano Co. against the receiver for the Ambuhl
Bros. Piano Co., bankrupts, of Pittsburgh, in which
it was held by the commissioner that goods sent
on consignment were not part of the assets of
the bankrupt company.
The Sterling and Huntington companies had
been supplying pianos on consignment to the Am-
buhl Bros. Piano Co. under an agreement entered
into in 1904, whereby the manufacturers controlled
the leases and received the payments as made, the
Ambuhl company receiving as its share any amount
over the wholesale price of the instruments.
Following some financial difficulty, the Sterling
and Huntington companies agreed to take over
their property and leases and organized the Sterling
Piano Co., with R. C. Ambuhl as manager, to take
care of the business.
When the Ambuhl concern went into bank-
ruptcy the receiver brought action to recover the
goods turned over to the two manufacturers
named. The commissioner, however, upheld every
contention made by the Sterling and Huntington
companies and decided that they were within their
rights in taking back pianos sent out on consign-
ment and in which the title rested with them.
Another matter of interest to come up later will
be the question of the profits that may accrue
through payments on the leases.
INSTALLING KIMBALL PIPE ORGAN
In the Home of J. W . Holland, the Prominent
Organist and Choir Director of Detroit.
(Special to The Review.)
Attractive Calendar Mailed to Trade Friends of
Chicago Company.
Detroit, Mich., Dec. 31, 1912.
The W. W. Kimball Co., of Chicago, is installing
in the studio of J. W. Holland, the well-known
The Cable Company, Chicago, has sent to its organist and choir director, of Detroit, a pipe
representatives and friends in the trade an attrac- organ costing more than $2,500. While on a re-
tive calendar for 1913 bearing a picture of a pretty
cital tour of the West last spring Mr. Holland
young lady playing the Conover Inner-player. The played upon the organ in the Mormon Tabernacle
picture gives the effect of one looking through
in Salt Lake City, which is a Kimball product.
an open window into the room where the young
He was so much pleased with it that he decided
lady is performing. The envelope in which the to have one like it. He built a special room for it
calendar is mailed bears in one corner the mess-
in an addition to his studio.
age, "Wishing You a Prosperous New Year."
It is a two-manual organ with chimes, tubular
pneumatic action and electric blower, having about
TO HANDLE THEJCNABE PIANO.
500 pipes. Its weight is about three tons.
The Western Piano and Music Co., which was
recently organized in Saskatoon, Can., has opened
The Hawley Music Co., of which Isaac Hawley
handsome warerooms at 140 First avenue, North,
is proprietor, has moved its headquarters from
that city, where the Willis and Knabe pianos will
Earlham to Red Oak, Iowa, and opened the new
be handled.
quarters in the latter city this week.
you hear this persuasion used:
As good as the Schmidt hammer"
just think what it means!
"
It is an open acknowledgment that the Schmidt
hammer stands supreme; with every similar com-
parison boosting it a notch higher.
"As good as the Schmidt hammer' 1 sounds fine to
us, because it tells the live manufacturer just
what hammer to buy in order to secure the best.
DAVID
H. SCHMIDT CO., Poughkeepsie, N. Y.

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