Music Trade Review

Issue: 1922 Vol. 74 N. 13

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
MUSIC
TRADE
REVIEW
PUBLISHED BY EDWARD LYMAN BILL, Inc.
President and Treasurer. C. L. Bill, 373 Fourth Ave., New York; Vice-President,
T. B. Spillane, 373 Fourth Ave.. New York; Second Vice-President, Raymond Bill, 373
Fourth Ave., New York; Secretary, Edward Lyman Bill, 373 Fourth Ave., New York;
Assistant Treasurer, Wm. A. Low.
J. B. SPILLANE, Editor
RAY BILL, B. B. WILSON, BRAID WHITE, Associate Editors
WILSON D. BUSH, Managing Editor
CARLETON CHACE, Business Manager
. .
L. E. BOWERS, Circulation Manager
Executive and Reportorial Staff
EDWAKD VAM HAKLINGEN, V. D. WALSH, E. B. MUNCH, LEE ROBINSON, C. R. TIGHE,
EDWAXD LYMAN BILL, SCOTT KINGWILL, THOS. W. BRESNAHAN, A. J. NICKLIN
W E S T E R N DIVISION*
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N E W S SERVICE IS S U P P L I E D WEEKLY BY OUR CORRESPONDENTS
LOCATED I N T H E LEADING CITIES THROUGHOUT AMERICA.
Published Every Saturday at 373 Fourth Avenue, New York
Sntertd as second-class matter September 10, 1892, at the post office at New York, N. Y.,
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 concerning
which will be cheerfully given upon request.
Player-Piano and
Technical Departments
Exposition Honors Won by The Review
Grand Prix
Diploma
Paris Exposition, 1900 Silver Medal
Charleston Exposition, 190-2
Pan-American Exposition, 1901
Gold Medal
St. Louis Exposition, 1904
Gold Medal—Lewis-Clark Exposition, 1905
LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONES—NUMBERS 5982—6983 MADISON SQ.
Connecting (til Departments
Cable Address: "Elbill, New York"
Vol. LXX1V
NEW YORK, APRIL 1, 1922
No. 13
INTENSIVE WORK BRINGS RESULTS
T
H E R E are a number of piano manufacturers who have realized
that the question of distributing their product is not entirely one
of getting a few dealers to take large numbers of pianos each year,
but that great possibilities lie in the line-up of numerous small dealers
who, taking only comparatively few pianos each year, build up a most
substantial total through their aggregate purchases. The situation
resolves itself into a question of either placing all the eggs in one
basket or dividing them into several baskets. When a dozen large
retailers, taking an average of a hundred pianos a year, cut orders
50 per cent it means a sudden drop of 600 instruments. On the
other hand, if there are sixty dealers, averaging twenty pianos a year
each, the likelihood of all of them making a 50 per cent cut is remote,
for there is business still to be done in many sections of this broad
country.
A wholesale representative from the West, who visited New York
recently, had figures to prove that he was disposing at wholesale of
about 200 pianos per month, averaging fifty instruments monthly,
from each of five manufacturers. This piano man covers a large ter-
ritory and each month gets in touch with close to three-score dealers,
some of them large but the majority small. With a well-balanced
line at his command, however, he keeps up his quota without any-
great difficulty.
Manufacturers have taken occasion in the past few months to
advise dealers who put forth intensive effort to go over their terri-
tory with a fine-tooth comb. It might be well for some manufac-
turers to follow the same advice. More than one producer of pianos
in the past has discovered there is a lot of business to be had in small
towns that are not included in the regular itinerary of Pullman
jumps.
IMPROVING PATENT OFFICE CONDITIONS
T
H E signing by the President of the bill providing for increased
salaries for patent office employes, together with slight increases
in patent fees, is of general interest to business men, for it marks the
REVIEW
APRIL 1, 1922
first step toward bringing the patent office out of the muddle in which
it has been for some time past and enabling the office staff to catch
up with its work. It is unfortunate that a government department of
such vital importance to the business interests of the country should
have been neglected so long, and it is to be hoped, with the new law
as a precedent, steps will be taken to put the patent office on a modern,
efficient basis and keep it there.
There is no question but that millions of dollars have been lost
to inventors and industrial concerns through delays in patent office
searches and in the handling of patent applications, due, not to the
carelessness of the patent office workers, but to the inability of the
officials to recruit and maintain a sufficient staff to carry on the work
under the existing salary scale. Even under the new law, the salaries
paid patent office experts will be far below those that could be de-
manded in the general business field for work of the same sort and
requiring an equal amount of intelligence and training. The slight
increase in fees will be more than offset by the saving accruing to
inventors and business men generally as a result of the greater speed
and efficiency in obtaining patent rights.
THE MEMBERSHIP DRIVE
T
H E results of the drive for new members just inaugurated by the
National Association of Music Merchants will be watched with
considerable interest, for the drive has started under the most favor-
able conditions, following so soon after the transcontinental trip of
President DeForeest.
The progress of the National Association in the matter of mem-
bership has been steady, even though slow, but the effort that is being
put behind the present drive, coupled with the stimulating effect of
the prizes offered to the various individuals and organizations for
bringing in the greatest number of new members, should serve to
accomplish much in extending the rolls of that organization within
the next few weeks.
There has been considerable discussion during the present year
as to the evident lack of interest in association work on the part of
the lay members of various industries being a reflection of the busi-
ness conditions, retailers being too much engrossed with their own
affairs to have a proper regard for the affairs of the industry of
which they are members. As a matter of fact, with conditions as
they are, this is the most opportune time to take increased interest
in the association movement, from the fact that the present program
calls for the sort of constructive service from association headquarters
that will aid retailers materially in meeting and solving existing sales
problems.
The day is past for the association to exist simply for the pur-
pose of giving trade members an excuse to get together once a year
for a general jollification. Association members demand something
more than just a good time for the effort and money they invest in
organization work, something more than the reading of dry papers
and making of set speeches at the annual session. In the music in-
dustry this fact has been realized and efforts are being made to
develop the Merchants' Association, and for that matter all trade
associations, into a value-giving proposition from the standpoint of
the individual member.
AUCTION SALES OF PIANOS
DEALER in Baltimore who desired to get rid of surplus stock
quickly on the plea of moving to new quarters solved the prob-
lem by bringing an auctioneer and disposing of most of the instru-
ments on his floors to the highest bidders. This is one of the first
instances which have come to the attention of the trade where such
a policy has been adopted, and the probable developments may be
interesting. From the standpoint of the competitor, it is a question
whether the disposal of a stock of instruments suddenly and at auc-
tion is not less harmful to regular trade than the practice of carrying
on an extended "closing out" sale with sensational advertising, bar-
gain prices and low terms. When pianos are sold at auction the
bidder buys, not according to his idea of what the instrument is worth,
but according to his ability to get it at a low bid. When sales are
advertised, the prices quoted are too often accepted by a goodly por-
tion of prospective customers as representative of all piano prices.
The practice of closing out stocks at auction may not become general
in the trade, but it has a number of interesting phases which may
well be considered.
"
A
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
APRIL 1,
1922
THE
MUSIC
TRADE
REVIEW
TH1RTYTW0 YEARS A PIANO MAKER FREIGHT AND TAXES TWIN PROBLEMS
Oscar L. Kindler Started in 1880 in Decker Bros.
Plant—Formed Kindler & Collins in 1911,
Which Firm Has Since Manufactured Instru-
ments Bearing That and the Needham Name
On Friday, March 24, Oscar L. Kindler, of
Kindler & Collins, New York, celebrated the
thirty-second anniversary of his entering the
piano industry, having started to learn the busi-
Oscar L. Kindler
ness when fourteen years old in the factory of
Decker Bros., which was then located on Thirty-
fourth street, where the Manhattan Opera House
now stands. In those days to learn the piano
business a boy had to work a year for nothing
and during the second year received $1.50 per
week.
Mr. Kindler's first position was in the finishing
department and later he learned every branch
of piano making. He became connected with
Gildermeister & Kroeger, with whom he re-
mained until 1898. From there he went to the
factory of Paul G. Mehlin & Sons and later en-
tered the factory of Jacob Bros., at the time
that Jacob Becker was superintendent of the
Jacob factory. Leaving the Jacob factory he
worked for some time in the factory of Steinway
& Sons and when Jacob Becker went into busi-
ness for himself he returned to the Jacob fac-
tory as superintendent. He remained there until
1911, when the partnership of Kindler & Col-
lins was formed, and then commenced manufac-
turing at Forty-fourth street and Tenth avenue.
Since that time they have purchased the Need-
ham Piano Co. and. have moved into a thor-
oughly modern plant at 524 West Forty-eighth
street, which they have occupied for some years
and have continued successfully to manufacture
the Kindler & Collins and Needham pianos and
player-pianos.
MEXICAN CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
The Mexican Chamber of the United States
has been incorporated under the laws of New
York, with headquarters in the Woolworth
Building, for the purpose of promoting closer
commercial relations between Mexico and the
United States. Among the directors of the new
chamber are Elbert H. Gary, chairman of the
board of the United States Steel Corp., and
James W. Gerard, formerly United States Am-
bassador to Germany.
NEW SHONINQER BRANCH ON COAST
OAKLAND, CAL., March 27.—The B. Shoninger
Co., through its Western representative, Arleigh
A. Brown, has established headquarters in this
city. The new branch will have charge of dis-
tribution throughout the entire Coast territory.
Distribution will be handled by rail and water.
Canadian Music Trades Seeking Lower Freight
Rates and Protest Personal Property Tax
VICTORIA, B. C, March 27.—One of the biggest
handicaps that the music trades is faced with
just now is the extremely high cost of railroad
freight transportation. Premier John Oliver and
a delegation of Coast business men are now in
Ottawa fighting for a reduction of rates and there
are indications that some important changes may
be made. In the meantime, however, Pacific
Coast interests believe they have found a way
to cut the cost of transportation without worrying
the railroads at all by shipping by water instead
of by rail.
Representative piano dealers formed a com-
mittee which was recently appointed to confer
with the management of the Canadian Govern-
ment mercantile marine with a view to arrang-
ing for shipment of pianos and other heavy stock
by way of the Panama Canal on the steamships
already being regularly operated on that route.
The piano rate quoted is said to be $1.45 a hun-
dred pounds by steamship from New York via
the Panama Canal, while the carload rate over
the American railroads is $3.35 a hundred. The
difference in time involved will be negligible, as
it is believed that steamship freight can be laid
down here twenty-five days after leaving New
York, while it takes nearly three weeks to ship
out by rail.
At a meeting of piano dealers held recently
it was resolved to lodge a strong protest with the
Provincial Government against the enforcement
of the personal property tax, which, under present
plans, will become effective some time in March.
The tax amounts to a levy of 1 per cent on stock-
in-trade and book accounts and hits the piano
trade particularly hard on account of the exten-
sive credit that must naturally accompany theii
business, as well as the fact that, as compared
with other lines, the turnover is not rapid. A
committee composed of J. H. Fletcher, of
Fletcher Bros., and Herbert Kent, of Kent's Edi-
son Store, will wait on the Government to urge
that the tax plan be amended or its enforcement
suspended.
NEW MOVE TO HELP FOREIGN TRADE
Personnel and Offices of Bureau of Foreign and
Domestic Commerce to Be Materially In-
creased, Beginning on July 1, 1922
WASHINGTON, D. C., March 27.—Increases in both
personnel and the number of offices of the Bureau
of Foreign and Domestic Commerce will take
place shortly after the beginning of the fiscal year
1923, on July 1, next, as a result of the increased
appropriations w r hich have been granted the Bu-
reau by Congress.
The Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Com-
merce, which is charged with the promotion of
the foreign and domestic commerce of the United
States, will take on between fifty and seventy-five
additional employes, it was said at the depart-
ment, made necessary by the expansion in the
foreign and domestic offices (if the Bureau.
The number of foreign and home offices will
be increased, but the principal expansion will be
in the commodity divisions of the Department of
Commerce, of which there are now a number
especially equipped to aid foreign trade with
American firms. Tentative plans already drawn
up call for the establishment of three additional
commodity divisions, which will probably be
called the chemicals division, the division of for-
eign investments and finance and the export tech-
nique division.
During the current fiscal year the Bureau is
spending about $1,200,000, while for the next
fiscal year, beginning July 1, the appropriation,
is a little less than $1,600,000.
Addition of more district and field officers of
the Bureau in the United States and abroad will
increase the work of the home office in Washing-
ton, making an increase in the clerical force neces-
sary, while there probably will be a few more
offices of the Bureau located in foreign lands.
NOW PREMIER CORP. SECRETARY
Louis C. Kauling, One of the Organizers of Pre-
mier Grand Piano Corp., Elected at Annual
Meeting—Company Has Had Rapid Growth
At the recent annual meeting of the Premier
Grand Piano Corp., New York, Louis C. Kauling
was elected secretary. Mr. Kauling has taken a
most active part in the company's manufacturing
activities and development since the inception of
Louis C. Kauling
this institution, having been one of its original
organizers.
Mr. Kauling's many years of experience in
piano making, the past ten years of which have
been devoted to grand pianos exclusively, have
enabled him to draw from that experience in the
constructive work he has done in the Premier in-
stitution. The Premier Grand Piano Corp., manu-
facturing baby grand pianos exclusively, is being
conducted on a most comprehensive scale, and a
large market has been developed. The Premier
grand, now a well-known product, is being sold
throughout the United States and handled by the
most representative houses in the various com-
munities.
DEATH OF HORACE J. BOULTER
Old-time Canadian Piano Man Passes Away in
Toronto After Long Illness
TORONTO, ONT., March 27.—After an illness of
about two months Horace J. Boulter, for some
eight years with the Nordheimer Piano & Music
Co., in Hamilton, and during' the last year man-
ager of the Heintzman & Co. branch in Gait, has
passed away at his residence in Hamilton, 232
St. James street, North. Mr. Boulter, who was
fifty-four years old, left, besides his widow, one
daughter and a stepson.
NEW YORK CONCERN CHARTERED
The firm of Charles H. Murray, of New York
City, has been granted a charter of incorpora-
tion, under the laws of New York State, to deal
in musical instruments, with a capital of $10,000.
Incorporators are: C. H. Chapman, C. A. Slo-
cum and W. W. Westall.
OTTO GRAU CO. BECOMES AGENT
The Otto Grau Piano Co., of Cincinnati, O., has
been appointed agent for the Ampico in the Mar-
shall & Wendell, according to an announcement
by the Foster-Armstrong Co., of Rochester, N. Y.
The tenth anniversary of the opening of the
Henry F. Miller & Sons Piano Co., at Portland,
Me., recently was celebrated by a dinner and
theatre party at which members and employes of
the firm were present.

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