Music Trade Review

Issue: 1918 Vol. 67 N. 23

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
MUSIC
TRADE
REVILW
PUBLISHED BY EDWARD LYMAN BILL, Inc
President and Treasurer, C. L. Bill, 373 Fourth Ave., New York; Vice-President, J. B.
Spillane, 373 Fourth Ave., New York; Second Vice-President, J. Raymond Bill, 373
[Fourth Ave., New York^ Assistant Treasurer, Win. A. Low.
!
\]
J . B. SPILLANE, Editor
J . RAYMOND BILL, Associate Editor
Executive a n d Reportorial Staff:
'
BOSTON OFFICE:
JOHN H. WILSON,
324 Washington
CHICAGO OFFICE:
St.
E.
P.
VAN HARLINGEN,
Republic
DECEMBER 7, 1918
The export business has a tremendous effect upon domestic
commerce, for it. means an increase in importations to keep up the
trade balance, and, by increasing the output of factories, servesito
reduce manufacturing costs proportionately, and to regulate domestic
supplies by taking the surplus production beyond the borders instead
of dumping it in our own country with possible price cutting as a
result. The reconstruction plans of the Government call for con-
siderable attention to the question of export business, and it is a
question that should receive the earnest consideration and encour-
agement, of every one who wants to see American business grow
and prosper in the future.
• i ;
T
B. BBITTAIN WILSON, CARLETON CHACE, L. M. ROBINSON, WILSON D. BUSH, V. D. WALSH,
W K . BRAID WHITE (Technical Editor), E. B. MUNCH, A. J. NICKLIN, L. E. BOWERS
'
REVIEW
Building,
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NEWS SERVICE IS SUPPLIED WEEKLY BY OUR CORRESPONDENTS
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under the Act of March 3, 1879.
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REMITTANCES, in other than currency forms, should be made payable to Edward
Lyman Bill, Inc.
Departments conducted by an expert wherein all ques-
tions of a technical nature relating to the tuning,
regulating 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 concern-
ing which will be cheerfully given upon request.
a a l n i i U l
Exposition Honors Won by The Review
Grand Prix..
Paris Exposition, 1900 Silver Medal. .Charleston Exposition, 1902
Diploma.. .Pan-American Exposition. 1901
Gold Medal. . . . S t . Louis Exposition, 1904
Gold Medal. .Lewis-Clark Exposition, 1905
H E movement just launched in Kansas City to provide a
musical memorial for the men from that city who, as members
of the American Expeditionary Forces, gave their lives in the cause
of democracy, is not only interesting, but worthy of the thorough
support of trade and professional musical interests, as well as of
the citizens generally. The idea as set forth in T H E REVIEW last
week is to raise a fund to place a $100,000 pipe organ in a suitable
building and give free concerts daily, thus doing constant honor
to the memory of the city's heroes.
The granite shaft is pleasing to the eye, and stands out as an
impressive memorial, but its material value is practically nil. A
memorial such as that proposed in Kansas City, original as it is, by
bringing music to the masses in the name of those whom it is de-
signed to honor accomplishes the purpose that is worthy an ideal,
and it is to be hoped that the idea is not only carried out to final
consummation in Kansas City, but is accepted as a model in other
cities who likewise desire to honor those of their citizens who have
fallen in the war. Nothing more worthy can be conceived than that
the memory of the nation's heroes should be honored with music—
in itself one of the noblest of the arts.
LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONES—NUMBERS 5983—5983 MADISON SQ.
Connecting all Departments
Cable address: "Elbill, New York."
O K R V I C E to the public and profit to the enterprise—are these
^ not, broadly speaking, the two chief ends of business? There
Vol. LXVII
NEW YORK, DECEMBER 7, 1918
No. 23 are periods when no special skill is required in the operation of
business to attain at least profit making, but again and generally,
skill is required in holding the enterprise to the two chief ends,
and probably at no period of our industrial history has skill been
so definitely and clearly demanded as right now.
In this connection, the point that calls for the closest sort
F there ever was a time for earnest consideration of retail credits
of study on the part of every credit man is the turnover, that
and the using of extreme care in the granting of terms on retail
it be just as rapid as possible. The manufacturer aims to make
sales, the present is that time.
each machine unit as efficient as possible. It must be made to
.
During actual war conditions the piano retailer had an excuse
j for demanding cash and short terms, due to the fact that he re- turn out the maximum production, else it is an unprofitable ma-
chine. W h y isn't the same thing true of merchandise? Other
quired hard cash to carry on his business, discount his bills and
things being equal, every day added to the carrying of the stock
secure his proper share of available new stock.
increases its cost and diminishes the possible profit. The stock
'
The possibility of a freer market, however, has brought to
must be kept revolving, must be kept as liquid as possible, and
light the fact that the status of many prospective purchasers has
liquid here means always on the point of selling. And the same
been entirely changed. While there was plenty of war work going
on, millions of men were drawing unheard-of wages, and for the is even more true of accounts. The longer they are carried, the
less productive they can be made, the less profit we can get out
time being represented excellent credit risks.
of them.
The coming of peace, however, according to authority, will
i result in a reallocation of practically six million workers, and it
This frequent turnover goes hand in hand with short sales
may mean that the man who was in the $4,000 class a few months
terms. And as J. 11. Tregoe, the prominent authority on credits,
ago.is now, or will soon be, in the $1,500 or $2,000 class. Not only
points ouf: "The credit man himself ought talk, act, and live
will his credit value to the piano merchant be materially reduced.
dollar efficiency. Doing so, he serves his own concern best, and
, but the fact that he will have to adjust his living according to his his customer best. It is poor policy to be lenient. That policy
new scale of income will mean that he will have practically no free
hurts him who extends and him who receives the supposed favor.
money until such adjustment is finally brought about.
The change from a policy of leniency to one of businesslike accu-
Protection for the piano merchant, therefore, is to demand
racy in making the dollar as represented in stock and accounts
short terms in any case, and to be very particular as to the per- highly efficient means disciplining the customer, in all tact and
manent status of the customer to whom he sells, for that customer's
persuasiveness of course, but it means a greater self-disciplining
ability to pay depends not only upon his present income, but upon
for the credit man who is handling the situation."
his income as it is likely to be after the readjustment takes place.
But these are days calling for discipline in civil and military
life, and the conditions are ripe to make all understand; so let
HE development of the American Merchant Marine as a war us make the dollar do its full day's work every day, whether
represented in accounts receivable or stock, which means short,
measure has served to direct an unusual amount of interest to
definite terms, rapid turnover, with the result of economies in
a peacetime utilization of this immense fleet of ships already built,
and in process of building, that will carry the American flag on the business which will make business serve the better.
seven seas. This situation emphasizes the earnest development of
export trade about which so much has been said and written.
NDICATIONS point to the fact that the coining Christmas season
will be-a musical one to a greater degree than ever before. Wise
This matter of export business is of vital interest not only to
the piano manufacturer but to the piano merchant, whether or not piano dealers will take advantage of this fact, and lay their mer-
chandising plans accordingly.
he is directly interested in shipping pianos to foreign parts.
EDITORIAL
I
T
I
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
DECEMBER 7, 1918
THE MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
The General Trade Situation as Viewed in Washington
Latest Developments in Problems of National Import Indicate that the Music
Trade, as well as All Other Industries, Will Be Helped Rather Than Ham-
pered in Future Expansion, Says the Washington Correspondent of the Review
WASHINGTON, D. C, December 4.—From the
standpoint of music trade interests the situation
in official quarters at Washington is clearing
much more rapidly than most persons would
have believed possible. Leaving out of consid-
eration certain possibilities in the labor situation
(which are beyond official jurisdiction) there
would appear to be nothing to prevent prompt
response to a "Full Speed Ahead" signal in
every branch of the music trades.
One of the developments that will bring about
immediate favorable reaction in the trade is, of
course, the removal by the Council of National
Defense of its ban on Christmas giving. Re-
ports coming to Washington have indicated that
from the date that righting ceased the major
portion of the consuming public has regarded
the recommendation against Christmas buying
as automatically removed. However, the for-
mal action by the National Council is wel-
come in that is absolves all merchants from
their promise not to employ additional salesmen
or saleswomen during the holidays and not to
lengthen the regular or normal store hours. The
removal of all restrictions as to store hours, to-
gether with the abolishment in most districts of
the "lightless nights," will allow all merchants
who desire to do so to adopt the "Open Eve-
nings" practice.
Equally to the point in restoring the music
trade to a normal peace basis is the action of
the Pulp and Paper Section of the War Indus-
tries Board in wiping out at one swoop all re-
strictions and regulations that have operated to
limit the use of book paper for catalogs, sup-
plements, circulars, house organs, etc. This
means that music tradesmen will no longer be
restricted in the tints or colors of paper that
they employ for advertising and that piano
manufacturers will not be held down in the
weight of the paper stock employed for advertis-
ing inserts in trade journals and popular maga-
zines. Similarly the sheet music industry is
freed from all injunctions to economize that had
been laid upon it and a music merchant need
give no further heed—unless his own pocketbook
counsels it—to the paper conservation program
that was recently issued from Washington and
which called for economy in the use of station-
ery, avoidance of double wrappings in packaging
goods, etc., etc. Finally, the conservation of
metal no longer being necessary the trade will
not be called upon to keep its promise to order
no metal signs other than of zinc and to cease
the distribution of metal display racks for talk-
ing machine records, etc.
With so many of the hampering restrictions
upon trade a thing of the past and most of the
others on the way out, the thoughts of many
tradesmen in the music field will naturally turn
to the tax situation. Here, too, there are pros-
p-ects of relief, due to the recognition at the
Capital that it will not be necessary to raise as
much money as it would have been had the war
continued. The Senate Finance Committee has,
in its redraft of the bill, wiped out the "occupa-
tional" tax, eliminated the tax on bank checks,
put letter postage back to the 2-cent basis, and
granted other concessions in addition to the ac-
tion with respect to floor taxes., etc., already
reported.
However, it is only honest to admonish that
even with this encouragement the trade is not
out of the woods because the House of Repre-
sentatives—notoriously more drastic in its ideas
of taxation—will have to be brought to accept
the Senate Committee's readjustments. Thus,
even if the Upper House of Congress agrees
without a tremor to the modified program, there
will be many points of divergence to be threshed
out in conference. Most dubious of all is the
outlook as to just when the new tax measure
will finally be enacted and what plan of taxation
will be followed in the meantime, presuming
that 1919 is ushered in with no prospect of an
agreement at the Capital as to what is what in
taxes.
As the curtain goes up on the final session of
the present Congress, Republicans and Demo-
crats in Congress are far apart in their ideas
on certain features of the tax program, notably
the proposal to mortgage the future by making
the tax bill of 1919 also applicable, under cer-
tain conditions, to 1920. The U. S. Bureau of
Internal Revenue must proceed not later than
January 15 with the collection of 1919 taxes. At
this writing the chances seem to be all against
the passage of the new bill by that date and
some experienced observers at Washington are
predicting that an agreement on taxes cannot
be reached by March 3, and that the whole issue
would thus be thrown over to the new Congress
which would presumably have to be summoned
;
in extra session to dispose of it. If anything of
this kind comes to pass music tradesmen may be
expected to be called upon to pay taxes under
the old law heretofore in force. ;
Meanwhile, everyday business men in the
music industries are likely to be prompted by
circumstances to take more than a passing in-
terest in the issue of Government ownership of
railroads, telegraphs and telephones which is
shortly going to be disclosed as one of the big
questions that loom just ahead in the pathway
of national progress. The recently announced
increase in express rates is calculated to impress
the business man with the fact that this issue
is. to a considerable extent, his nut to crack.
So likewise is the admission at Washington
that the discontinuance of additional passage
charge for travel in sleeping and parlor cars can-
not be taken to forecast that there will be any
remission of the increase in freight rates that
went into effect when the Government took over
the railroads.
Incidentally, it may be noted that there is lit-
tle ground for hope that Congress will get
around at this short session to consideration of
the Stephens bill, for all that Chairman Colver,
of the Federal Trade Commission, has pointed
out anew that specific legislation is the only
remedy for price cutting on merchandise.
G. W. POUND PROTESTS TAX ON PIANOS AND ORGANS
In Forceful Letter to the Senate Finance Committee, the General Counsel of the Music Industries
Chamber of Commerce Points Out the Hardships Which the Proposed Tax Will Work
A number of members of the trade have made
inquiry of George W. Pound, general counsel of
the Music Industries Chamber of Commerce, re-
garding his attitude in the matter of the War
Revenue bill, as redrafted by the Senate Finance
Committee, and particularly his views on the
question of including pianos and organs in the
taxable list, in addition to piano players as in
the present law. The inquiries of the trade are
best answered by referring to the following let-
ter which was sent by Mr. Pound to Senator
Reed Smoot, of the Senate Finance Committee,
under date of November 30, wherein he pro-
tests against the tax on pianos and organs. The
letter reads:
"I wish to urge the elimination by the Senate
P'inance Committee of the proposed tax upon
pianos and organs, otherwise this Section—
900(4)—is satisfactory to our industry.
"The present act taxes 'piano players.' We
have adjusted our business for the past year and
for the future to meet that language, and the
proposed addition of the words 'pianos and or-
gans' would be very confusing and a real hard-
ship.
"We have had a hard struggle to preserve
our industry and our factory organizations dur-
ing these days of war and industrial menace.
We cannot compete in wage prices with war-
products plants. The ban on labor, on rail and
ocean shipping, on exports, on almost every
phase of our industrial activity, has been a se-
vere trial to us. But we have tried to meet the
enforced, and as we concede the necessary, cur-
tailments of a time of war with equanimity and
with courage, and we have 'carried on' to the
best of our ability without complaint.
"And permit me to! say in passing that at all
times we have had an abiding faith in the pa-
WINTER & CO.
PIANOS AND PLAYER-PIANOS
tient determination and good-will of the Sen-
ate Committee on Finance to so impose this
burden of taxation as to lay as light a hand as
possible upon industry in general and upon our
industry in particular.
"We have responded whole-heartedly and
without stint to the call of the Government for
help in maintaining the morale of the soldier
and of the people in these times of stress. To
every trench, to every camp "Somewhere in
France," to every camp and j cantonment in
America, we responded gladly and freely to the
constant demand for music and always more
music. In the last Liberty Loan drive, here in
New York City alone, we raised $6,617,000.
"In all things helpful to our country in these
days of peril, we tried earnestly to do our part.
We are entirely willing and hope to do our
part always. We only ask that you so impose
our tax as to make the least disturbance in our
business.
"It is not alone the actual amount of the
tax. Far more is it the confusion and hardship
of changed conditions. Our contracts for future
delivery have long been made and upon the
basis of the language of the present act, that
is upon the 'piano player.'
"It would be a hardship for us to be put upon
with another and wholly different tax just at a
time when our business is attempting to readjust
itself to changed conditions, and when we are
hoping to go out into the markets of the world
and there forced to come into the keen and
long-prepared competition in our trades with
England and Germany."
• George Rocker, at one time an employe of
Sohmer & Co., passed away recently at his home
in Brooklyn, aged fifty-two years.
RUDOLF
PIANOS AND PLAYER-PIANOS
22O SOUTHERN BOULEVARD, NEW YORK

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