Music Trade Review

Issue: 1915 Vol. 61 N. 12

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
the outlook for the future is much brighter. During the last few
months we have witnessed the reconstruction of many businesses.
The mistakes of the past are being corrected and business is on a
sounder basis now than at any time during the last decade. The
Federal Reserve System has exercised a quieting influence, and the
fact that the people understand the banking system better than ever
before has been largely-instrumental in maintaining confidence in
our ability to successfully solve the problems of the day. The
bankers and business men of the country are co-operating as never
before in the upbuilding of our industries. They foresee the
approach of a period of peace, prosperity and plenty."
Executive and Reportorial Staff:
B. BRITTAIH WILSON,
A. J. NiCKLiN,
CARLETON CHACE,
L. M. ROBINSON,
AUGUST J. TIMPE,
WM. B. WHITE,
BOSTON O F F I C E :
JOHK H. WILSON, 324 Washington St.
Telephone, Main 6950
GLAD HSNDEKSOK,
L. E. BOWERS.
CHICAGO O F F I C E :
£. P. VAN HARLINGEN
Consumers' Building,
^20 So. State Street. Telephone, Wabash 5774.
HENRY S. KINGWILL, Associate.
LONDON, ENGLAND: 1 Gresham Buildings, Basinghall St., E. C.
NEWS SERVICE IS SUPPLIED W E E K L Y BY OUR CORRESPONDENTS
LOCATED IN T H E 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, $3.50; 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.
HUMrri'AIVCES, in other than currency forms, should be made payable to Edward
Lyman Bill.
Player-Piano and
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
T
«
dealt with, will be found in another section o this
paper. We also publish a number of reliable technical works, information cone rning
which will be cheerfully given upon request.
Exposition Honors 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.
1 0 » O DISTANCE TELEPHONES—NUMBERS 5982—5983 MADISON SQ.
Connecting 1 all Departments
.
Cable iiddreM: "ElbiU, New York."
NEW Y O R K ,
SEPTEMBER
18, 1 9 1 5
EDITORIAL
NE of the most convincing signs of improved business condi-
tions is to be found in the reports made by the leading rail-
roads, particularly the Pennsylvania and New York Central, within
the past week, of the increased earnings for July, and the fact that
traveling men who have returned recently from the West report
that hundreds of smokestacks which have been idle for months are
spreading prosperity broadcast along these lines between New York
and Chicago.
In connection with the Pennsylvania's good report came also
the statement that practically every piece of equipment on the
Pennsylvania lines East and West is in use. Several months ago
the Pennsylvania reported 75.000 idle cars. In spite of this, the
company with its usual confidence in the future, ordered new
equipment.
While the basic movement underlying the freight increases is
due in some measure to the production of war supplies which must
be moved to the seaboard, yet every indication points to a steady
improvement in industrial conditions, and an increasing output in
all branches of manufactures. Tt must be remembered that more
than 22,000,000 persons, or nearly one-fourth of the entire popula-
tion of the United States, depend directly for their support upon
manufacturing industries. The total investment in industrial plants
in this country is $24,000,000,000. and their annual product is
$28,000,000,000.
In this connection it is worth noting that the American Ex-
change National Bank has just summed up business conditions,
based upon the general outlook as reported by more than a thou-
sand representative bankers and business men. This information
is summarized as follows:
"Taking the country as a whole, it is in a prosperous condition.
There is convincing testimony as to this in almost every report from
which we quote. It looks as though we will continue gradually
into better times. The distribution of the money received from
abroad covers a great range of territory. Our farms, mines and
forests have all been drawn upon to supply the needed material.
People in all parts of the country must share in the profits derived
from our export trade. The railroad situation is improved and
O
I
T becomes more and more apparent that advertisements must
not be misleading in character.
State after State has passed laws which will make the path
of the man who misrepresents advertising more and more difficult.
The Legislative Committee of the Association of Piano Mer-
chants of America has gone squarely on record as opposed to mis-
leading advertising, and it has recommended that the association
use its influence toward the incorporation in the Federal statutes
of a strict law against all forms of false and misleading advertising.
All other associations are going into this matter broadly, so
that it is only a question of a comparatively little time before every
State will have, through its Legislature, passed laws making mis-
leading advertising illegal.
Some of the important publications have taken up a campaign
against deceptive advertising, notably The New York Tribune.
This publication has put an expert on the trail of various adver-
tisers and has published a series of articles showing up the methods
adopted by some local concerns in their advertising policy.
Such work no doubt has had a deterrent effect and it does not
require a great stretch of the imagination to see advertising in all
lines purified within the very near future. It certainly is a move
in the right direction, and piano merchants all over the country
should hail the day with joy when deceptive advertising is com-
pletely eliminated.
Abusive advertising, while not in the same class with deceptive
advertising, is harmful to a degree, and it is not conducive to build-
ing up the business establishment which adopts such a policy in any
community.
We have seen some kinds of publicity put forth by piano mer-
chants which amounts to nothing more or less than an attack upon
competitors. This kind is out of date, and should be abandoned
entirely.
There are still places in America where the coupon, prize
offering style of advertising is followed up, but not to any appre-
ciable extent.
We received a communication recently from a Montana dealer
in which he made some statements which are now being looked
into concerning the method of advertising adopted by a competing
house. Whether or not this move will bring them into conflict
with the Government authorities later on is yet to be determined.
Men cannot make all kinds of declarations in their advertising
matter as* in days of yore.
.
-"
I
N view of the successful campaign being waged against "fake"
advertising in the piano and other trades, and the passage of
remedial laws by many of our State legislatures, it is interesting to
note that the German law against unfair competition contains some
unique provisions. For example, it is not generally known that in
Germany such expressions in advertisements as "best and cheapest
place to buy," "sold at factory prices," etc., are inadmissible unless
true; that actions have been sustained against merchants who dis-
played signs "English spoken here" when the assertion was not in
accordance with fact; that it is unlawful to attempt to entice away
prospective customers standing in front of a competitor's windows;
and that the owner of a factory may be enjoined from describing
his establishment as "first class" when he pays his workers accord-
ing to the fourth class in the scale of wages of the local guild.
T
HE days of sudden opportunities for great business may be
over, according to logical business reasoning, but you can't
always tell. We thought the days of great wars were over and
suddenly all logic and reasoning had gone to the winds, and the
same thing may happen to business opportunities.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
THORNS OR ROSES—WHICH?
(Continued from page 3.)
sense. New York to-day is the money market of the world. For the first time the dollar of Uncle
Sam has become the money yardstick by which the world's currency is measured.
Success of any kind is due to the exercise of certain mental qualities, almost all of which may
be easily acquired.
The most important of all is a strong will power, for without it one could scarcely hope to
succeed.
As a practice to strengthening the will, nothing could be better than the act of doing things that
require a certain amount of mental pressure.
Agreeable things are cheerfully performed. In pleasant duties one acts almost intuitively,
because there is no mental opposition to the act; but disagreeable tasks—tasks which we fear—are
usually approached in the wrong mental attitude, and we develop a feeling of fear which defeats
success every time. It is always thorns for the man full of fear.
Now, then, if we fear a certain defeat in business, it would be a mighty good practice to perform
our tasks regardless, and fear will be shortly overcome.
By training the will men acquire a mastery over themselves so that they are able to make an
impression upon the world, and will power is a powerful factor in the success of a business
enterprise.
The man who is developing will power is cultivating the roses which will bloom later and charm
him with their fragrance.
Why not develop the will power as applied to business development? The conditions are favor-
able, and if the individual will cast out fear from his heart and go ahead and perform his business
tasks with determination and vigor he will win. No doubt of it.
With the country so rich in varied resources, success is always
possible for the individual. Likewise defeat — always defeat for the
man who can see nothing but thorns in his path when there are roses
to be culled at every step. Which is it, thorns or roses?
Approve Review's National Advertising Campaign.
T
HE Review seed has been scattered on fertile soil and is begin-
ning to show results.
It will be recalled that last year three State associations passed
resolutions favoring the position taken by The Music Trade Review
in the advocacy of a national policy towards pianos taken in ex-
change, or, what The Review colloquially termed, "trade-ins."
This was a high compliment to this trade paper, because no
other paper to our knowledge had ever taken up in detail and han-
dled the trade-in issue before The Review, and months of advocacy
of the new policy toward traded-in stock resulted in the three State
associations of piano merchants indor.-ing T h : Review policy.
It is known that the editor of The Review for months past has
suggested a broad educational advertising campaign which should
be formed for the purpose of promoting the education of millions
of people in the entertaining powers of the piano and player-piano.
This paper has urged the creation of a fund of approximately
a quarter of a million for the purpose of advertising T H E piano—
not any particular piano—but a strictly impersonal campaign con-
ducted for the purpose of reviving interest in the piano, by impress-
ing upon readers everywhere the necessity of owning a piano for
personal and family enjoyment.
Communications received at this office from leading manufac-
turers have favored this move, and it will also be recalled that this
plan has been suggested by no other trade publication.
Last week at the convention of the Ohio Piano Merchants'
Association, held in Cincinnati, J. G. Corley. the recently elected
president of the National Association of Piano Merchants, indorsed
the policy of The Review in the strongest possible terms. He said:
"Tt is a fact that we are drifting away from the piano, and it
is a fact that the talking machine is being pushed very strenuously.
You can go up and down any street and find the pianos on the second
floors, with the main floor windows devoted to talking machines,
that is, in nine out of ten ca-es. Let us do both. Don't kill the
game. We have lived on it for a long time and it can be continued
in a prosperous manner.
"Here's my proposition. I would like to see a national cam-
paign of advertising conducted three years on the player-piano and
we will eliminate all reference to names "of manufacturers. It won't
be Smith's, Jones' or any other, but when you pick up a publication
have the ads read to the effect that 'you should have a player-piano
in your home,' and then tell them something about the piano. As
soon as that national advertising campaign has started and it soaks
in, you are going to find the piano business come back and the
player following up that demand, and you will find it entirely dif-
ferent, and I hope some day we will do it."
It will be seen that The Review advocacy of this important
matter has received the serious attention of piano merchants who
realize the good that would come to them through a revival of in-
terest in the piano and player-piano, and that this is the logical way
to bring it about—to create a national educational fund.
President "Reinkamp of the Ohio Dealers' Association also in-
dorsed The Review policy when at the conclusion of President Cor-
ley's address he said that he believed in the sam ' policy of creating
a fund for the purpose of advertising the player-piano, and dealers
and manufacturers should subscribe to a national advertising cam-
paign in magazines, or something of that sort, to place the piano in
its proper position before the public.
Resolutions were also passed favoring the policy outlined.
When Philip T. Clay, former president of the National Asso-
.ciation of Piano Merchants, prepared his annual report for the July
. convention, he called attention to the serious phase that is now con-
fronting piano merchants, and he said that he was not prepared to
sav that concerted action should not be taken bv the association to
stimulate public interest in creating a desire on the part of the pur-
chasing public to own a piano, and later in his statement he touched
upon the very arguments which had been advocated by The Review.

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