Music Trade Review

Issue: 1914 Vol. 59 N. 14

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
EDWARD LYMAN BILL - Editor and Proprietor
J. B. SPILLANE, Managing Editor
Executive and Reportorlal Stall:
B. BRITTAIN WILSON,
A. J. NICKLIN,
CARLETON CHACE,
AUGUST J. TIMPE,
L. M. ROBINSON,
W M . B. WHITE,
GLAD HENDBKSON,
L. E. BOWERS.
BOSTON OFFICE
CHICAGO OFFICE:
FOHK H. WILSON, 184 Washington St.
E- £• VAN HARLINGIN Consumers' Building.
220
„ , , , » , . „
So. State Street. Telephone, Wabash 5774.
Telephone, Mam 8950.
HENRY S. KINGWILL, Associate,
LONDON, ENGLAND: 1 Gresham Buildings, Basinghall St., £. C.
NEWS SERVICE I S SUPPLIED WEEKLY BY OUR CORRESPONDENTS
LOCATED IN THE LEADING CITIES THROUGHOUT AMERICA.
Published Every Saturday at 373 Fourth Avenue, New York
Entered at the New York Post Office as Second Class Matter.
SUBSCRIPTION (including postage), United States and Mexico, $2.00 per year; Canada,
$8.50; all other countries, $5.00.
ADVERTISEMENTS, $3.50 per inch, single column, per insertion. On quarterly or
yearly contracts, a special discount is allowed. Advertising pages $110.00.
REMITTANCES, In other than currency forms, should be made payable to Edward
Lyman Bill.
P1 Departments conducted by an expert wherein all ques-
1 1OJC1 • lallV ailU
t i o n s o f a technical nature relating to the tuning, regu
1*01*11 IIIf*91 Flpnartmpnfc
lating and repairing of pianos and player-pianos are
ICi.UUli.ai VCUdl UllCllia. d e a ] t w j t h > w i u b e f o u n d i n a n o t h e r s e c tion of this
paper. W« also publish a number of reliable technical works, information concerning which
will be cheerfully given upon request.
Exposition Honors Won by The Review
Grand Prix
Diploma
Paris Exposition, 1900
Silver Medal.. .Charleston Exposition, 1908
Pan-American Exposition, 1901
Gold Medal
St. Louis Exposition, 1904
Gold Medal..Lewis-Clark Exposition, 1905
LOVO DISTANCE TELEPHONES—NUMBERS 5982—5983 MADISON SQ.
Connecting 1 all Departments
Cable address: "Elbill, New York."
NEW
YORK,
OCTOBER
3 , 1914
EDITORIAL
RDER is slowly but surely replacing the chaotic conditions
which have prevailed in the world of commerce since the
war between the great nations of Europe started. There has been
a general tendency to proceed cautiously and wisely in the plan to
divert the commerce of warring nations to this country. Even
without effort to gain new markets orders are being placed with
the United States from entirely unexpected places and mostly all
lines of trade have reported a decided impetus in the matter of
orders within the past ten days.
This activity is not confined to the orders from foreign points,
but throughout the country merchants are realizing that the do-
mestic requirements of a hundred million people are of such mag-
nitude as to compel them to stock up to meet the demands of their
customers.
Merchants have been ordering cautiously for the past three
years, owing to the unsettlement of business due to the unfavor-
able legislation in Washington, and stocks in all lines at present are
very low. With the farming community getting large prices for
their products, and with more money to spend, dealers are seeing
an opportunity for trade that has not hitherto existed, hence the
improved outlook.
In this connection piano merchants must bear in mind that
American .farmers will have an immense sum of money to spend this
year as proceeds of their record crops, and a proper share of this
should find its way into the piano factories of the country, provided
the piano men are alive to the opportunities that exist.
The development of piano trade in small towns in the farm-
ing communities is well worthy of cultivation. The manufacturer
who sells the many small dealers in the farming sections—men who
retail on good terms and get good large first payments, if not all
cash—is quite as well off as where he sells a merchant in a
large city, who has to cultivate his territory a,t long distance, and
where he is not so intimately acquainted with his customers, or
with their financial condition.
During a recent trip through some of the small towns in the
agricultural sections of Northern New York State, the writer was
O
really surprised at the amount of business done by piano dealers in
very small towns. The annual total sales were not enormous, but
they were good sales, and enabled the dealer to pay the manufac-
turer from whom he bought the goods in a comparatively short
time. This is not the case of one, but a half dozen instances that
came under observation, and it bears out what a prominent manu-
facturer said to The Review recently:
"The small dealers whom we have been cultivating for a great
many years are really the backbone of our business," said this gen-
tleman; "we have the pleasantest relations with them because they
invariably pay their bills when promised. The individual annual
sales are small, but when we have thirty of these dealers through-
out the country doing a healthy business with an increasing output
it gives us a class of trade that is a pleasure to handle."
E
DISON gives American business men a timely text: "Act—
don't talk." When dislocation of foreign trade shut off his
supply of carbolic acid, Edison set day and night gangs to build a
plant where he could manufacture a substitute.
Too much inertia exists in trade circles, when opportunities sel-
dom equaled wait for the nod of recognition. The "laissez faire"
attitude will not win the rewards of this year or next. It seems
easier, when foreign supplies are unavailable, to shut shop and let
employes go rather than to think out a means of escape from tem-
porary conditions.
Members of Congress, too, are stumbling over ant hills when
they ought to be scaling mountains. The pettiness of some of the
legislative suggestions of the day, when the greatest fiscal and eco-
nomic problems of all times are to be met, passes belief.
May not the indifference of capital and trade to the favors of
the times be due to an ingrained fear that, with the war ended, our
foreign competitors will be backed by their governments in policies
that encourage expansion, while legislative energy here continues to
wear itself out in iconoclastic measures?
The foregoing from The Evening Mail is right to the point.
There is one thing sure, if permanent success is to be achieved in
the development of our foreign or domestic trade, there must be a
more sympathetic attitude on the part of the legislative department
of the Government than has been hitherto manifested.
The foreign countries that have expanded industrially are those
that have had the hearty support of their governments in all of their
undertakings, while here we are harassing business enterprises and
undermining the financial equilibrium by antagonistic legislation
which does anything but encourage business men to engage in new
enterprises.
Isn't it time to call a halt and have everyone put their shoulders
to the wheel of American industrial progress both at home and
abroad?
N
OW is the season of the year when the piano merchants of
the smaller towns as well as many of those in metropolitan
centers take advantage of the opportunity to exhibit their prod-
ucts at the various State and county fairs, and the fact that the
practice of exhibiting is followed year after year indicates that the
merchant who gives the matter sufficient attention is not forced to
regard the expenditure of time and money necessary to make and
take care of a suitable piano display as a waste.
The various country or State fairs come at a time when the
bulk of the harvesting is supposed to have been finished. The
farming element are in a position to realize just what the year's
work has accomplished and when crops have proven satisfactory,
as is generally the case this year, they are in a mood to be separated
from some of their money without great difficulty.
Piano merchants who make exhibits at the county and State
fair in an energetic manner frequently make sufficient profit on
actual sales on the fair grounds to more than cover the expenses of
the exhibit and in addition compile a live list of prospects.
With the advent of the player-piano and the talking machine
the dealer who exhibits finds that it is possible to have music almost
constantly and without inconvenience, and music is a wonderful
factor in attracting attention. Those who attend these small affairs
have often remarked that the greatest crowds appear to be in the
vicinity of booths wherein the piano and talking machine were
being exhibited and played, Such interest will pay dividends to
the dealer.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
FIGHTING FOR THE BONE.
(Continued from page 3.)
very business life was by tolerance. He lacked the brains and blinded himself to the changing con-
ditions.
Every man should realize that life and activity are about him. We see it from the vegetable
creation straight up to the highest animal type—man.
The ancestor of the present cactus was a different type from the plant of to-day, but in order
to shield itself from its enemies produced a series of tiny bayonets.
The man who figures that by inactivity, by failure to do things, he is entitled to a living had
better eliminate such a thought from his cranium, and the quicker the better!
Business is more scientific—hence more relentless, and it cannot permit disorganized effort to
long resist it.
The day of the small man who uses with his fundamental honesty, brains, courage and adhe-
siveness is here to-day as it always has been in the past and will always remain in the future. The
small man of to-day will become the big man of to-morrow; but for the small man who sees noth-
ing but defeat and failure is gone already. His mental attitude has doomed him to business death,
and probably an unappreciative world will never even put up a marker over his grave.
The world wants small men if they are of the right composition. They may not all wear the
shoulder straps of command, but there is a place for all of them on the firing line.
When Mr. Tausig talks about big business taking all the stone walls away, it is the stone walls
behind which the timid wish to hide. They are the wallflowers of the trade world. Instead of
standing out manfully, meeting the attack of competition, they sulk behind the breastworks and
complain about big business.
Big business has been created by master minds, and those enterprises which are energetically,
scientifically and intellectually handled, have a crushing power, no doubt of that, but they do not
mean the annihilation of the honest man. On the contrary, they need the support of the honest
man.
Every individual and every organization is dependent upon the success of the business health
of communities.
_. .
The prosperity of the farmer means the prosperity of manufacturer and merchant.
The prosperity of the merchant is dependent upon the prosperity of the people in his particu-
lar vicinage. If the factories are humming with industry it means the distribution of money through
large payrolls.
Replying to the latter question of Mr. Tausig. There is no such thing as "spinelessness in
activity," because activity in itself shows that the individual possesses no chocolate eclair vertebra.
It shows that he possesses some backbone support, and is willing to go out in the world and meet
men and conditions manfully, bravely. He is not inclined to sit down and moon in a corner over
the desperate conditions which mean his absorption and extinction.
Of course, everything is not to our liking, and never w r ill be, in this old world of ours, and
if the whole thing were changed to-morrow there would be just as much fault finding next year
as there is to-day.
We must accommodate ourselves to conditions and make the most of them.
Some men will tell you that there are too many piano factories—that there is a forcing out of
pianos in an unsound way upon the public. But what man is going to close his factory obligingly
to accommodate his competitors?
Others will tell you that there are too many piano merchants, but everyone is struggling for a
position.
Too liberal credits are granted. Yes, undoubtedly.
Too many trade papers, some will say. Yes, of a kind.
Some will say that manufacturers spend too much money in trade paper advertising—money
which ought to be paid in concessions to dealers. Ah! but that is a selfish viewpoint again.
The nations,of Europe kept crying peace, and yet they were preparing for war! Rank insin-
cerity somewhere, was there not?
^
Of course, there is much to criticise in this world, but when we criticise do not let us retire
into the inner shell and bemoan our sad fate; because when we crawl out again we will find that
the world will have progressed and that we will have been left in the procession.
It is true that the master dog may get the bone, but invariably he has to fight for it; and if
there is anything that comes easy in life I do not know just exactly how to name it. Even criticism
requires some effort, and that is~ about the easiest thing that comes to my mind at this writing. In
the meanwhile most of us with red blood in our veins are fighting for the bone, neither seeking
nor asking protection.
"Fortune, the great commander of the world,
Hath divers ways to advance her followers;
To some she gives honor without deserving,
To others, some deserving, without honors.** ,

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