Music Trade Review

Issue: 1913 Vol. 57 N. 24

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
RMEW
EDWARD LYMAN BILL - Editor and Proprietor
J. B. SPILLANE, Managing Editor
Executive »nd Reportorlal Stall:
B. BRITTAIN WILSON,
A. J. NICKLIN,
CARLETON CHACE,
AUGUST J. TIMPE,
L. M. ROBINSON,
WM. B. WHITE,
BOSTON OFFICE:
GLAD HENDERSON,
L. E. BOWERS.
CHICAGO OFFICE:
JOHN H. WIUOH. SJ4 Washington St.
^
VAN H ^ K C ^ T
South Wabash Ave.
Telephone, Mam 69oO.
Telephone, Central 414.
R o o m 80 6.
PHILADELPHIA:
MINNEAPOLIS and &T.1PAUL:
ST. LOUIS:
R. W. KAUFFMAN.
ADOLF EDSTEN.
CLYDE JENNINGS,
SAN FRANCISCO: S. H. GRAY, 88 First St.
DETROIT, MICH.: MORRIS J. WHITE.
CINCINNATI, O.: JACOB W. WALTERS.
BALTIMORE, MD.: A. ROBERT FRENCH.
INDIANAPOLIS,IND.: STANLEY H. SMITH.
MILWAUKEE, WIS.: L. E. MEYER.
KANSAS CITY, MO.; E. P. ALLEN.
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Published Every Saturday at 373 Fourth Avenue, New York
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REMITTANCES, In other than currency forms, should be made payable to Edward
Lyman Bill.
Departments conducted by an expert wherein all ques-
tions of a technical nature relating to the tuning, regu-
lating and repairing of pianos and player-pianos are
dealt with, will be found in another section of this
paper. We also publish a number of reliable technical works, information concerning which
will be cheerfully given upon request.
Player-Piano and
Technical Departments.
Exposition BoDors Won by The Review
Grand Prix.
Paris Exposition, 1900 Silver Medal.. .Charleston Exposition, 1902
Diploma
Pan-American Exposition, 1901 Gold Medal
St. Louis Exposition, 1904
Gold Medal. .Lewis-Clark Exposition, 1905
DISTANCE TELEPHONES—NUMBERS 5982—5983 MADISON BQ.
Connecting' all Departments
Cable address: "Elbill, New York."
N E W Y ORK, DECEMB ER 1 3 , 1 9 1 3
EDITORIAL
C
ONTINUED agitation and the menace of hostile legislation is
hurtful to the business interests of the country, and everyone
interested in commercial enterprises realizes that we do not want
further weight added to the present strain.
The long-harried business men of the country, whose confi-
dence and enterprise have been depressed not only by continued
evidences of governmental hostility to industrial and commercial
enterprises on a large scale, but by a failure to mark out plainly
the course which the great, legitimate business interests may follow
without fear of attack by the Government, will read with feelings
of mingled hope and anxiety this part of President Wilson's ad-
dress to Congress:
"It is of capital importance that the business men of this coun-
try should be relieved of all uncertainties of law with regard to
their enterprises and investments, and a clear path indicated which
they can travel without anxiety.
"It is as important that they should be relieved of embarrass-
ment' and set free to prosper as that private monopoly should be
destroyed. The ways of action should be thrown wide open."
If the President can persuade the hitherto reckless radicals of
his party in Congress that the strain of uncertainty is fatal to busi-
ness prosperity, and that private enterprise, industrial, financial and
commercial, is entitled to reasonable consideration and stable con-
ditions, he will earn the thanks of the whole nation and will prepare
the way for better times.
What the honest business men of the United States want to
know is how business may lawfully be carried on and extended,
not how business may be hampered or destroyed.
It is not helpful to confidence or enterprise, for instance, to
have the Attorney-General of the United States propose to penalize
efficiency by putting a graduated tax on manufacturers increasing
in weight with the increase of production.
Nor can the wheels of progress be reversed by any device in-
tended to destroy business on a large scale,
Wise and reasonable supervision and regulation by National
authority offers the most practical way to deal with attempted
monopoly or any of the evils attending the great private organiza-
tions and combinations made necessary by modern conditions of
production and distribution.
Business is keenly sensitive to any" influence; and every man,
no matter whether he is manufacturing pianos or selling them—no
matter whether he is interested in shoes or clothing—is naturally
interested in having conditions settled with us.
O
NE of the most successful salesmen in this country has stated
that the three chief elements of salesmanship are ideas,
knowledge of goods and persistence. Either of these essentials is
a powerful factor, but it is a combination of the three that insures
a man being a winner. This same man is credited with the saying
that salesmanship comprises 75 parts of ideas and 25 parts of minor
ingredients. He affirms graphically and cruelly that these words
"should be painted on a board and then laid on a salesman's head
and hammered into his brains."
This abstruse plan of mental rejuvenation as presented should
precede that which is popularly termed "salesmanship polish,'- and
which, although overdone by those who "teach salesmanship,"' is
sometimes very necessary. For the salesman's personal atmosphere,
his ability to make a neat, well rounded argument, and all the fine
points that make selling an intricate game of the wits, deserve close
study. But polish will never insure success in its broad significance,
for it is the ideas that sell goods.
Next to ideas the one vital secret of success centers in a knowl-
edge of the manufacture of the goods that are sold. The salesman
who knows his goods from the raw material to the finished product
is like the school teacher who knows his arithmetic from addition
to cube root. You can't ring in the wrong answer on him. He
has got the talking points right on the end of his tongue. Talking
points are genuine salesmanship, because—if they are really talking
points—they make the customer eager to buy goods. Sometimes
when the talking point has been figured out carefully enough in the
home establishment or factory the public actually gets clamorous to
buy. Yet there are salesmen who go along indefinitely without
knowing that their goods have any talking points.
Another factor which unquestionably has a strong influence on
success as a salesman is persistence. There should be no such
word as fail in the vocabulary of the salesman. He has to sur-
mount the most unheard of obstacles and do so diplomatically. As
Edward M. Wooley so strikingly expresses it: "I want to urge
on salesmen the truth that salesmanship lies in getting under the
skin of the customer in some way that really redounds to his bene-
fit. Whether you approach him with the pianissimo stop on, or
the tremolo gurgle going, or the forte pedal jammed down hard,
makes little difference in the long run. Your success will be pro-
portioned to the number of times you have really benefited him."
There is still another phase of the salesmanship question. It
is not only necessary for a salesman to sell the goods his firm
makes, but he must possess the ability to give service, which is just
as important as the line of goods he carries. A manufacturer may
make a line of goods up to date, fairly priced and well in the front
ranks for value; but what does it all amount to if, through lack of
intelligence on the part of some shallow-minded salesman, service
is not rendered when the line is shown ?
Those who design the styles and the finish cannot make up
for the lack of salesmanship. The power of a machine comes from
without and is supplied by engine or dynamo; but the power of a
man comes from within and must be developed by training and
education.
To be a salesman, a man need not be a graduate of some famous
college, for that is not the full meaning of the word education as
applied to salesmen; but he must know true value giving in mer-
chandise cannot be without service. In other words, a salesman
must mix goods with good service.
The salesman has other duties to perform than selling. He
must mix brains with his work. A salesman is no bigger than the
order he can secure. Some men have the impression that an invi-
tation to a dinner, a cigar, or some like favor extended, means
service; but that is a mistake. Service is just what its name im-
plies. It is merely the result of a man's active desire to be of
use to his firm., to his customers and to all with whom he deals,
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
The Workmen's Compensation Act.
P
IANO manufacturers and all employers of labor in New York
State are interested in the new proposed State labor legisla-
tion. The payments provided for in the workmen's compensation
bill prepared at the recent Albany conference, and which is
scheduled for introduction when the Legislature meets this week are
higher than in any State or country that has adopted a compensa-
tion system in respect to victims of industrial accidents.
The injured employe, in case of total disability, is to receive
66^3 per cent, of his wages during his life, and in case of permanent
partial disability 66 2 /$ per cent, of his wages for various periods—for
fifteen weeks for the loss of a little finger up to 312 weeks for the
loss of an arm. The maximum weekly compensation, however, is
not to exceed $15, and the minimum, no matter what the wages, is to
be $5 weekly. In case of death within two years after the accident
the dependents, if there are any, are to receive the full benefit for ten
years, with a maximum of $5,000 and a minimum of $1,500. Medi-
cal attendance is allowed for, and the compensation in case of death
is the flat sum of $5,000.
These rates are much higher than the rates of adjacent and
competing States. The National Association of Manufacturers,
which regards them as too high, estimates that under the bill the
cost to the employers of New York will be double the cost of com-
pensation provided for by the laws of Massachusetts, Rhode Island,
Connecticut and New Jersey; that the cost here will be 85 per cent,
more than in Michigan, 30 per cent, more than in ultra-progressive
California, and 20 per cent, higher than in Ohio, which now has the
highest rates.
How far New York can go in pushing compensation above
that in other States is a matter for the most careful consideration.
It is obvious that if too heavy a burden is placed on an employer,
which he can lighten by moving his plant to another jurisdiction, a
blow will be struck at New York's prosperity. It is not feasible
to confer benefits materially higher than those conferred elsewhere.
This fixed economic fact may not be ignored by the Governor and
the Legislature. The compensation should be adequate, but it
should not be enough seriously to penalize manufacturing in New
York. Governor Glynn made the following statement on Monday,
outlining the Workmen's Compensation Act:
"The bill which I have finally determined to submit to the
Legislature is the result of careful study of the rights of all con-
cerned. Following are its essentials :
"All employes in hazardous trades must be insured by their
employers. These employers may insure in any one of four ways,
all of which will be on a parity—self-insurance, mutual company
insurance and insurance in a State fund. The insurance through
the State fund will be on precisely the same plane as in any other
way. The provisions of the act will be administered by a State
board of five commissioners, which will pass upon all claims. Ap-
peal may be taken, however, from their decision to the Appellate
Division and Court of Appeals.
"The State Treasurer is made custodian of the State insurance
fund, and it may be invested subject to the same regulations as the
investments of saving banks.
"Provision is made for accumulating a surplus by the applica-
tion of 10 per cent, of the premiums until a surplus of $100,000 has
been accumulated, and thereafter 5 per cent, until the commission is
satisfied the surplus is sufficient to cover the 'catastrophe hazard.'
"To make the State insurance fund self-supporting in its
administration and maintenance all penalties collected are to be
used for the payment of these expenses.
"One new feature is the classification of employers in related
industries. This will permit the formation of associations for the
prevention of accidents.
"One of the most striking characteristics of the measure is the
promjnence given to accident prevention. Those who have partici-
pated in the conferences are convinced it will put New York in the
forefront of the nation-wide movement to reduce the enormous
loss in maimed limbs which has burdened American industry."
Closer Credits In the Piano Trade.
F
EW things have made such a strong appeal to piano manufac-
turers at large as the interview with George W. Gittins, presi-
dent of Kohler & Campbell, which appeared in The Review last
week and in which he came out flaf-footed in favor of closer credits
in the piano trade and of limiting dealers' credit to twelve months.
The opinions of Mr. Gittins are not those of a theorist, but rather
those of a practical and live piano man who is in close touch with
the situation throughout the country and is in a position to speak
with authority and from facts. The appeal for closer credits is not
simply a piece of advice offered for the sake of having something
to say that will create talk, but the plan is being put into actual
practice by Kohler & Campbell and it is stated that the twelve
months' limit will be strictly enforced after the opening of the new
year with the few accounts that at present extend over that period.
Whether general business conditions are due to the high cost
of living or the cost of high living, the fact remains that the piano
manufacturers, everyone of them, have been brought face to face
with increased expense in every department of their business. The
cost of materials of every sort have gone up higher, wages are
higher, the cost of maintaining plants in the matter of taxes, in-
creased valuation, the restrictions and demands of factory laws,
has advanced. All these factors add to the actual cost of the fin-
ished piano an amount that is far from being covered by the slight
advances in wholesale prices that have been made by some manu-
facturers. The result is that the profits of the piano business, as
Mr. Gittins states, are cut down to a very low point, and to require
the manufacturers to carry their dealers for a lengthy period under
such conditions is in the nature of a direct imposition.
The drawing in of credits to the twelve month limit will not
have the disastrous effect on the retail trade that some pessimists
are fond of predicting, for when the dealer has his time of credit
cut clown he wiJJ naturally be inclined to put his own house iri order
to place his business on a basis that will permit him to meet the
obligation to his manufacturer with promptness. If the final result
is the cutting down of retail credits to a two-year period the result
will be wholly desirable rather than the reverse. As a matter of
fact it has been predicted that the recognized two-year limit on in-
stalment sales will make its appearance in the piano trade at an
early date, although the terms at which pianos, and especially
player-pianos, are being sold at present seems to indicate that the
two-year instalment period is a long way off.
Closer credits will have the direct effect of forcing the dealer
to so handfe his business as to meet his obligations, and therefore
keep his business in better shape. Every failure of a retail house
within the past couple of years has served to prove on the surface
of it that the trouble was not through the limiting of credits, but
rather through the loose methods of extending credit for indefinite
periods. If Mr. Gittins' advice is put into practice by other manu-
facturers, just as he is doing it, the volume of business may be
slightly curtailed, but the great volume that remains will be clean,
wholesome and healthy business.
E
ACH year, each holiday season, serves to bring to the atten-
tion of the piano merchants more strongly than ever the
fact that the days when the bulk of the piano sales of the year
were made at holiday time has passed. At the present time there
is, of course, a slight increase in business about Christmas time,
but the dealers have been selling since summer and are prepared
to handle the holiday trade as an incident. The purchasing of
pianos and player-pianos nowadays does not depend on the
season of the year, but rather upon the ability or the inclination
of the prospect to buy at any particular time, and if the psycho-
logical moment occurs in July why wait until December to
close the sale?

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