Music Trade Review

Issue: 1914 Vol. 59 N. 17

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
REVIEW
EDWARD LYMAN BILL - Editor and Proprietor
J. B. SPILLANE, Managing Editor
Executive and Reportorlal Staff:
B. BKITTAIN WILSON,
A. J. NICKLIN,
CABLET ON CHACE,
AUGUST J. TIMPB,
L. M. ROBINSON,
W M . B. WHITE,
GLAD HENDHSON,
L. E. BOWERS.
BOSTON OFFICE
CHICAGO OFFICE:
TOMK H WILSON M4 Washington St
*" p - V A N HARLINGEN, Consumers' Building.
«• WILSOM, i i 4 yvasninpon at.
820 g o S u t e Street
Te ,
h
W a b a s h 5774.
Telephone, Main «950.
HENRY S. KINGWILL, Associate,
LONDON, ENGLAND: 1 Gresham Buildings, Basinghall St., E. C.
NEWS SERVICE IS 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, $3.00 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.
Player-Piano and
Technical Departments.
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.
Exposition Honors Won by The Review
Grand Prix
Diploma
Paris Exposition, 1900
Silver Medal...Charleston Exposition, 190»
Pan-American Exposition, 1901
Gold Medal
St. Louis Exposition, 1904
Gold Medml.. Lewis-Clark Exposition, 1906
(LONG DIBTAJTCX TZLZPEO5E8—NUMBERS 5982—5983 XADISON BQ.
Connecting' all Departments
Cable address: "ElbiU, New York."
NEW
YORK,
OCTOBER
24,
1914
EDITORIAL
E
NCOURAGING signs of returning adjustment of international
relations continue to be presented in growing daily exports
from New York. Exports for the last four days of last week
were $14,375,739, a s compared with $11,675,276 in the four similar
days of the preceding week and $10,608,756 for the same period
last year, and this situation is duplicated throughout the country.
The effect of the increase of exports thus depicted will be
gradually to create a balance on which the United States can draw
in offsetting or paying its obligations abroad without the transfer
of gold. If the balance is now, as believed by many, reaching a
new level of about $1,000,000 daily in favor of this country, this
would mean in round figures $25,000,000 to $30,000,000 monthly
for November and December and, allowing for growth in rate,
might in three months create a fund of $100,000,000 upon which
reliance could be placed in meeting debts.
The figure is likely to be higher rather than lower than this
level judging from present indications, inasmuch as Europe is now
beginning to depend upon oversea supplies of food, clothing and war
material. The large orders recently placed with American manu-
facturers in many lines have not yet begun to exert their influence.
because they have not yet resulted in large shipments of actual
goods, so that their influence on the figures has not been heavily
exerted. The trade which is developing may even carry the export
balance a good deal higher than is now predicted by most persons.
No accurate forecast can, however, be made for so long a period
as three months in advance owing to the wholly unusual and excep-
tional condition of international relationships.
P
IANO merchants throughout the country should co-operate
heartily with those merchants in other lines of trade
who are planning to hold, at an early date, a "Made in U. S.
Week." This will afford an excellent means of emphasizing not
only the industrial resources of this country, but it will bring mer-
chants together and result in the stimulation of business which has
been retarded or overshadowed by the European war.
The "Made in U. S. Week" affords splendid opportunities for
piano dealers not only to make special window displays, of their
own, but to assist in placing the pianos or players they handle in
the windows of those large emporiums where these products are not
handled, and whose managers are seeking co-operation in their ef-
forts to produce the most effective results in the form of display,
so as to attract purchasers from the large radius of country sur-
rounding them.
The "Made in U. S. Week" furnishes special means for adver-
tising window and interior displays—in fact all forms of activity.
In some cases it is planned to have parades showing the industrial
resources of the town or city in which the event occurs—an excel-
lent proposition, and one that should do much to concentrate atten-
tion on the merits of* American-made products, especially pianos,
player-pianos and musical instruments of all kinds.
It is wise for the piano merchants in any move of this kind to
be alive to the opportunity for publicity.
NE of the most important changes in the retail trade during
the past few years has been the evolution of the show win-
dow. From being an unimportant feature of the store it has grown
to be a factor of great importance along the lines of publicity, sup-
plementing the efforts of the advertising man most effectively.
The attention that is now being given to show windows by the
retail merchant is almost as great in the small towns as in the large
cities, and this is especially noticeable not alone in the improved
fronts of piano warerooms, but especially in talking machine stores,
where window and wareroom display are factors which have been
assiduously cultivated.
The recent improvements in store fronts and windows as de-
signed by specialists in this work have assisted materially in creat-
ing better results in the matter of showing and selling musical in-
struments of all kinds. The show windows are higher and deeper,
admirably lighted, and care is "taken to keep them free from un-
sightly interfering columns or posts.
The improved window fronts in the piano trade, particularly
in the smaller cities, can be attributed in a measure to the great
possibilities for display afforded by the talking machine. Piano
dealers who handle these remarkable promoters of musical knowl-
edge have been educated by such concerns as the Victor Co. and
other manufacturers to install special window displays which have
been arranged for them, and which attract the public to the window
and store where they are displayed in a manner that has awakened
the dealer to a new conception of the value of window display—
something he had hitherto overlooked.
Hence it is that show windows are now being utilized by all
progressive merchants to acquaint the passing public both day and
night with the goods handled, as well as their especial merits and
prices—acting as a quality advertisement at a small cost.
O
A
MOST interesting announcement has been issued by the Cleve-
land (O.) Board of Education in connection with asking for
bids for supplying pianos to the schools of that city. A section of
the formal announcement by the Board reads:
"Bids shall be considered only upon pianos of standard manu-
facture. The term 'standard manufacture' shall be understood to
mean that the piano is, and has been for at least ten years, manu-
factured and sold under a trade name, which name is the exclusive
property of the manufacturer and is registered by the manufacturer
with the United States Patent Office."
The stand of the Cleveland school authorities indicates that
they, in company with officials of other cities, have reached the con-
clusion that cheapness does not always mean economy and that the
children in the schools are entitled to the use of pianos of recog-
nized standing. It drags the buying of school pianos out of dark-
ness into the light.
O
NE of the most interesting conclusions reached by the Latin-
American Trade Committee appointed by Secretary of Com-
merce Redfield to investigate conditions in the republics to the south
of us is that, despite what may have already been said to the con-
trary, the greatest opportunity for expansion of trade with Central
and South America lies in systematic preparation for extension of
this trade when peace restores normal conditions, rather than in a
hasty invasion of those markets.
The report of the committee, which was made public Monday,
shows how the dependence upon London banking facilities is hin-
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
HELPING THE CAUSE OF MUSIC.
(Continued from page 3.)
The greater the musical education of the people, the greater the demand for musical instru-
ments. Hence, a truly musical America would mean a vastly increased call for pianos.
We spend annually vast sums of money in advertising, which, of course, is educational work,
in that it interests the public; but why not a reasonable amount of time and energy in the early
educational work of the young?
Why should not the men who are financially interested in the musical institutions of our people
figure that their energies should be expended in an educational effort which must mean larger
returns to them as the years roll on?
Why should not the two National Associations take up this subject in the broadest possible
way?
If piano merchants in every town throughout the United States
co-operated with the Boards of Education, and made their influence
felt in promoting musical education, there is no question but that their
efforts would be immediately rewarded.
The Value of Getting Together Demonstrated.
N organization that should prove an excellent model for oth-
A
ers of its kind throughout the piano trade is the Progress
Club, made up of the officials, department heads and others con-
nected with the Kohler & Campbell industries. The Progress Club
throughout the season holds meetings monthly, and after" a social
dinner the members listen to an address or two on general business
or special trade matters by some authority. They then make and
discuss suggestions regarding the betterment of their own business.
There is room for such an organization in every piano fac-
tory of the country, for there is much to be gained when com-
pany officials and factory heads, gathering informally, can feel
free to discuss their business from various angles. The Progress
Club, for instance, has a suggestion box, where every member
of the club may deposit a draft of any ideas between meetings,
and the suggestion is taken up at the next meeting for general
discussion. That this feature is a success is indicated by the
fact that during the two months preceding the last meeting of
the Progress Club over 200 suggestions were filed.
Many of these suggestions are, of course, impracticable. Some
of them are radical in character and must be tabled for future
reference, but among the many received there are always a large
number that can be put to actual test, and after having been gone
over carefully by the entire membership of the club, suggestions
that do not prove worthy of consideration are few indeed.
In the piano factory during business hours these department
heads and sub-heads are so busy in the handling of their own
departments that they have not the time to discuss the broad
field of business problems with their colleagues. Should a meet-
ing of an organization, however, afford the opportunity after busi-
ness, and in leisure hours to develop and present any ideas they
may have, it may be.found frequently that such ideas .serve to solve
problems that have long been present in the business. The man
who is afraid to impart his knowledge or ideas to his fellow-worker
is not one who makes for business progress. He forgets that while
he is giving up his knowledge he is also receiving an even greater
amount of help and information from his co-workers.
Buying Public Becomes More Discriminating.
""TTIAT there is a distinct revival of interest in quality pianos
1- among the purchasing public is evident from the pleasing re-
ports made by salesmen "throughout the country. The general public
is displaying a keener discrimination in the matter of selecting in-
struments, and all this has helped to make the demand for pianos
made by reputable, well-known manufacturers more pronounced.
This is an encouraging sign. Discussing this matter of quality re-
cently in System, Edwin W. Morse said: "The hardest thing that
I know of in selling is to show a customer that first cost is not last
cost; to make him understand that while the prices of goods may
be much lower in the beginning they are almost invariably dearer
in the end; to show him that almost always an article is worth just
what it costs; in short, to impress him with the meaning of 'quality.'
"No word in the vocabulary of business is mare pregnant with
significance than that one word 'quality.' You may apply it to
goods, to service, to ability; this one truth is universally the same—
no extravagant assertion of present advantage, no false logic or
economy can long make headway against downright merit in mer-
chandise or men.
"Who are the biggest men in the world to-day?
"They are the men who recognize the value of reaching the
highest standard of efficiency, whether it be in the manufacture of
a commodity or the rendering of a professional service. They may
call themselves bankers, lawyers, engineers or ministers. As a mat-
ter of fact, they are selling for themselves or some one else, and the
best salesman gets the highest price. They have stepped beyond
the dividing line of quality that marks off the great from the me-
diocre. They know that the great salesman sells his commodity
at his own price; the 'medium good' man sells his at the customers'
price. True it is that the great are few, the mediocre many; but the
few who have scored highest in the business game are the men who
have built on 'quality.' "
dering trade with those countries which American exporters are try-
ing to convert into better markets for American products, and it
shows how those countries arc turning to the financiers of the
United States for funds with which to carry on important industrial
developments, funds which in the past came chiefly from European
sources. It also recommends a plan by which it is believed that the
present disorganization of the trade of this country with Latin Amer-
ica may be remedied and placed on a permanently satisfactory basis.
This plan calls, first, for the establishment of a dollar exchange
through the ultimate creation of a discount market and, pending the
establishment of a discount market, by the extension of adequate ac-
commodation by banking institutions and the establishment of re-
ciprocal balances in this country and in Latin America for financing
trade between the two. Secondly, the plan calls for the perfection
of our selling machinery by furnishing additional support to commis-
sion houses familiar with Latin-American business, by forming
associations of merchants and manufacturers to be jointly repre-
sented in Latin America, and by obtaining information as to the
possibilities of developing retail stores in, large Latin-American
centers.

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