Music Trade Review

Issue: 1915 Vol. 61 N. 5

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 Reportorial Staff:
B. BKITTAIN WILSON,
A. J. NICKLIN,
CARLKTOH CHACK,
AUGUST J. TIMPE,
BOSTON O F F I C E :
JOHK H. WILSON, 324 Washington St.
Telephone, Main 6950
L. M. ROBINSON,
W M . B. WHITE,
GLAD HBNDZXSOH,
L. E. BOWMS.
CHICAGO O F F I C E :
'
£ *• VAN HARLINGEN Consumers' BuildinB,
? T20 S o - e S t a te Street. Telephone, Wabash 5774.
HENRY S. KINGWILL, Associate.
LONDON, ENGLAND: l Gresham Buildings, Basinghall St., E. C.
N E W S S E R V I C E IS S U P P L I E D 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.
-r)
SUBSCRIPTION (including postage). United States and Mexico, $2.00 per year;,
Canada, $3.60; all other countries, $5.00.
,
A D V E R T I S E M E N T S , $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.
PJJIflA anil
Departments conducted by an expert wherein all que*-
I laitv aiiu
t j O p S o f a technical nature relating to the tuning, refu-
PnnrfmPIlte
'ating and repairing of pianos and player-pianos are
e p a n n r c i l l b . d e a i t 6 w i th, 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
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—HUMBEBS 5982—5983 MADISON SQ.
Connecting- all Departments
Cable address: "ElblU, New Tork."
>
NEW YORK, JULY 31, 1915
EDITORIAL
HE trend toward simplicity and purity of architecture in piano
case designing is becoming more evident every day. Manu-
facturers and dealers alike are a unit in declaring that it is the
piano of simple design, accurately proportioned, that is most popu-
lar with the majority of purchasers, although other styles are made
of course to meet the varying tastes of the public. For the best
ideals in designing we are going back to the severer forms of
earlier days when the French and the English, and later our own
Colonial ancestors, set an example of severe and simple lines, that
we of to-day are only too glad to follow. To escape from the
commonplace some have taken refuge in freaky designs which
defeat their own ends and lead inevitably to a reaction that ends
in the one satisfying resource—that of simplicity. This is logical,
because in the last analysis beauty underlies simplicity. And this
is signally true in the designing of piano cases. Absence of the
old-time over-elaboration, which, crudely conceived, resulted in
some monstrous examples of designing, is a joy to those who have
at heart a higher place in the art sphere for the piano and player-
piano not alone as musical instruments, but as architectural crea-
tions, conceived along the lines of crystal purity.
T
HE earning power of a piano salesman—his ability to make
friends, customers and close sales quickly—is an omnipresent
subject with those who discuss successful members of the trade in
the domain of salesmanship. As H. J. Barrett, the prominent
writer, says: "If the psychological secret of successful selling were
readily ascertainable, we'd all be earning $20,000 a year. Most
salesmen of the first rank are hopeless subjects for the interviewer.
They can throw little light on the mental processes involved.
"But one point is well established. They are utterly lacking
in self-consciousness. Only two factors enter into their problem:
The goods and the prospect. The infusion of the third factor,
itself, is what spoils many an otherwise good salesman.
"Many salesmen can sell one line and fail miserably in
handling another which, intrinsically, is far easier to handle. For
instance, the writer is personally acquainted with a man who
averages two sales a day of Long Island lots located on the inacces-
T
sible fastnesses of some remote dune. The price is $100 per lot.
Armed only with a map and his consummate nerve, he bowls over
his victims regularly. But shifting once for the sake of variety
to magazine subscription work, he scored a flat and utter failure.
There is but one answer to this puzzle—the man's own mental
attitude. He believes he can sell the real estate, he is afraid of
the magazine proposition.
"To what extent selling is the result of the deliberate influence
of one man's will upon another's; in other words, to what degree
it savors of hypnotism, is a moot point. One thing is certain, every
successful salesman seeks to meet and hold the prospect's eye
throughout the interview. And almost every salesman of the first
rank is conscious of the exertion of some psychic force in the
delivery of his canvass. Hence the need of superabundant vitality.
"The most phenomenal solicitor ever put in the field by a
certain weekly of national fame admitted that his efforts were
purely hypnotic. He worked only two hours a day, the strain
upon his vitality precluding the possibility of longer hours. He
claimed that once he got his eye, he never missed a victim, except
in cases of an interruption to break the subtle spell. Finally, this
man's nervous system collapsed under the strain; he became a
drunkard and is now heard of no more. But his amazing records
are still discussed among the ranks of magazine solicitors."
HE value of having a practical business man on the Federal
Trade Commission is evident in the very important construc-
tive suggestions which have been made from time to time by
Edward M. Hurley, vice-president of that organization. Among
the latest plans set forth Mr. Hurley emphasizes two methods
which are of particular interest. One of these is to aid the busi-
ness men of the country in obtaining the additional credits to which
their business operations may entitle them; the second is to aid
in establishing a standard system of bookkeeping and cost account-
ing. The two are interdependent.
The commission has in mind a plan of dividing the country
into zones and maintaining in each experts in accounting, costs
and manufacturng upon whom manufacturers, merchants and busi-
ness men generally may call for advice and assistance in establish-
ing economies.
It is pointed out that the small manufacturer and the small
retail merchant as a rule do not get all the banks' credit they ought
to receive, owing to the fact that they are unable to present balance
sheets in accordance with good business practices. These men are
just as good business men in ma'ny respects as those of larger
operations. They have brains, ability, knowledge of their wares
and of their customers, but they do not speak the language of the
banker in that they are not able to present a statement showing
their true assets and reliabilities.
The Federal Trade Commission is taking a step here that
obviously will be of immense value. It is along the lines of edu-
cating the business men to a better knowledge of ordinary commer-
cial requirements—at least those who are not familiar with the
practices of financial institutions—and the best plan of conducting
business along profitable lines.
It is a well-known fact that in the piano trade many small
manufacturers and dealers do not know what it costs them to do
business. It seems a simple matter; but. as a matter of fact, the
statements presented have been found largely inaccurate and in-
adequate. There are charges in connection with manufacturing
and retailing which are too often overlooked.
Any move, governmental or otherwise, which will tend to give
merchants and manufacturers assistance, as well as a clearer idea
of how they may be able to present the condition of their affairs
when soliciting credit, is a move that will meet with hearty ap-
proval—one along educational lines which should be welcome.
T
N a recent issue of The Review reference was made to the
common sense and timely talk on the upbuilding of export trade
by B. Olney Hough, editor of The American Exporter, in which
he pointed out that a great many of the supposed obstructions to
the development of our trade with foreign countries, were not as
serious as imagined.
A further illuminating contribution to this subject was the
I
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
FROM THE EXPOSITION CITY.
(Continued from page 3.)
So far as the expositions are concerned, since 1876 I have visited the great expositions held in
this country and in Europe and I have never seen, in point of aesthetic coloring and artistic
grouping, such an array of buildings anywhere which combines to a degree the qualities of beauty,
adaptability and convenience, as those of the Panama-Pacific Exposition.
The view facing north across the sparkling waters of the bay is entrancing. It is rimmed around
by mountains, with haughty Tamalpais towering over all. It is, under the turquoise California sky,
a scene at once exquisitely beautiful and solemnly majestic.
The men who have seen California for the first time have been most enthusiastic in their praise,
and many, like myself, who have not visited here for years, are amazed at the wonderful develop-
ment which has taken place since last we saw this wonder land.
The Pre-Convention Number of The Review, which was published on July 3, presented in a
comprehensive form many special features of the musical and music trade developments of
the Pacific Coast, the early history of music and sketches of the men who have built up the leading
music trade institutions in this land. Therefore, it is considered that this number should deal more
particularly with the plain business affairs of the convention, thus presenting to Review readers
virtually what amounts to two convention numbers.
The convention story told in our columns will give to far-away readers a correct idea of this first
music trade gathering across the Rockies.
The music trade conventions have gone from the Atlantic to the Pacific, and all who have
journeyed to the convention city of 1915 will treasure delightful memo-
ries of the sights and scenes of the trip, and they will have become more
I'll
intimately acquainted with America's varied wonders and will entertain
greater respect for her vast resources in every line.
The experience has truly been a broadening one.
San Urancisco, July 23, 1915.
address last week before the Philadelphia Chamber of Commerce
on Trade Possibilities in South America by ex-Senator Theodore
E. Burton, of Ohio, who has lately made a tour of the Latin-
American Republics in which he discussed two of the prevailing
notions which have done much to prevent Americans from em-
barking in trade with the nations south of us. Long credits, Mr.
Burton insisted, are not essential to successful commercial inter-
course with South America, and he declared also that South Amer-
ican merchants do not insist that goods shall "conform to their
style," that they must be packed in certain ways, and the prejudice
of the customer considered in every sale. On the contrary, he
believes that the South American is quick to buy new things when
they are properly brought to his attention. That is to say, trade in
South America is like trade everywhere else. Good salesmanship
is essential and the goods must be worth buying.
English is not commonly spoken in South America. No mat-
ter how expert a salesman may be, if he has not a command of
both the Spanish and Portuguese languages, he should remain at
home. Mr. Burton's observations in South America led him to
infer that "we have not bothered ourselves about foreign trade
except in articles that are sold with ease." In other words, we have
not as yet bothered about it at all, and it is well worth bothering
about. Combination of interests is necessary to the upbuilding of
export trade. Small manufacturers cannot often gain success in
strange markets. South American trade is a big thing and we
must go after it with large ideas and the means to carry them out.
UDGING from letters received by The Review there is consid-
erable dissatisfaction in the trade at the methods used by
people rendering notes in settlement of goods, inasmuch as nearly
80 per cent, of these notes are without the revenue stamp. Dealers
leave them off when sending notes to piano manufacturers, and
manufacturers in turn leave them off the notes sent to the supply
J
WINTER & CO.
220 SOUTHERN BOULEVARD, N E W YORK
trade. What is desired by the piano manufacturers is that the
dealers will put these stamps on, and the same desire is expressed
by the supply people in relation to the same action on the part of
the manufacturers. No one evidently relishes the burden of stamp-
ing the stampless notes.
FFORTS of freight shippers to secure transportation service
from the railroads on through interstate traffic at less than
through rates, by first billing their shipments to an intermediate
point within the intrastate rate limits' and then rebilling to the in-
tended destination in an adjoining State, have been declared unlaw-
ful by a ruling just announced by the Interstate Commerce Com-
mission.
Traffic managers of large corporations, whose duty it is con-
stantly to seek ways of economizing on freight bills, are greatly
interested in the ruling, inasmuch as it may affect practices of
reconsigning freight from this city to many points in the South-
east and Southwest territories. The Commission holds, in brief,
that a shipper has no legal right to evade the lawfully established
and published through rate on a shipment moving between points
in adjoining States by arranging to bill the shipment on the local
rates to and from an intermediate point, instead of using through
billing to an ultimate destination.
E
ALESMEN must be competitors, but credit men should all be
partners. Credit men should not even try to stand alone.
To paraphrase a little: They should share each other's woes, each
other's burden bear, and each should always be ready to help the
other swear.
If a fellow will avoid being the same kind of a fool twice he
stands a ten-to-one chance of being numbered among the sane and
sensible, even though he may have been several kinds of fool dur-
ing the course of his career.
S
Manufacturers of
Superior Pianos
and Player Pianos

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