Music Trade Review

Issue: 1923 Vol. 76 N. 15

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
REVIEW
fUJJIC TIRADE
VOL. LXXVI. No. 15 Published Every Saturday by Edward Lyman Bill, Inc., 373 4th Ave., New York, N. Y.
April 14, 1923
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Manufacturers 9 Exhibits and Dealers' Responsibility
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EFERRING to the reports coming- from Chicago, a very substantial number of manufacturers are
arranging to have more or less elaborate displays of their products at the Drake during the period of
the convention in June, and it is expected that a number of new things of general interest to the retail
trade will be exhibited and demonstrated.
The exhibits are being made by the manufacturers with the full consent and, in a measure, at the sug-
gestion of the merchants themselves in the belief that it is to the advantage of both the producers and dis-
tributors to have the convention delegates become familiar with the new products.
The question now arises as to how much serious attention will be given the exhibits by those dealers
who go to Chicago. By serious attention is not meant simply a cursory glance or a passing comment. The
exhibits are made at considerable expense and with the idea primarily that they will be productive of sufficient,
immediate and future business to make them worth while. It is admitted that the dealer cannot buy everything
that is offered him, but he can, if he knows his requirements and the prospects of business in his territory,
place orders that will help to solve his stock problem during the Fall and Winter months and save the manufac-
turer considerable selling expense.
In fact, one member of the trade, who as the result of experience is not entirely sold on the exhibit idea,
advances the suggestion that retailers coming from Chicago and likely to be interested in the new lines ex-
hibited should come prepared to place definite orders sufficient to meet their requirements until the first of the
new year, if for no other reason than they can thus cut down selling costs by making it unnecessary for the
manufacturer to send his traveling men for their orders and leaving the latter free to go after business in new
fields.
Some manufacturers have in the past received results in the way of orders from exhibits, but a close
scrutiny of most of the orders indicated that they were woefully small and were valuable more for the fact
that they represented a new account on the books and future business development than a paying business at
the outset.
There have been cases where dealers have taken up the time of salesmen at exhibits for an entire morn-
ing or afternoon and then endeavored to tie up a substantial territory for the lines on the basis of an order
for two or three instruments. In other cases dealers have been known to place orders for two or three dozen
instruments of various makes in a desire to prove friendly and obliging and then cancel about 80 per cent of the
orders as soon as they reached home.
The retailers who attend the convention evidently want exhibits—in fact, they have given their endorse-
ment to exhibits on several occasions. But if the idea is worth carrying out at all it is worthy of serious
attention. The average dealer will find among the lines exhibited at least one or two which he carries regularly.
He knows what the product is worth from the sales standpoint, and he expects to sell some of them during the
coming months. He can thus save a trip to the factory and still have the advantage of buying with the sample
before him by coming to the convention with buying in his mind.
Certain dealers have declared that they hesitated to buy at conventions owing to the feeling that they
were being rushed into placing an order and did not have a full opportunity for weighing the matter. As a
matter of fact, the retailer has a better chance to pause and ponder over the average convention exhibit than
he ever has in the factory showroom.
The main point is that the displays will be made at the convention. The retailers have endorsed that
phase of convention activities, and if those who are in a position to order as generously as possible with a view
to meeting their requirements for the balance of the year will do so the industry as a whole will effect sub-
stantial savings both in sales cost and in more economic factory operation.
R
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
(Registered in the U. S. Patent Office)
PUBLISHED BY EDWARD LYMAN BILL, Inc.
President and Treasurer, C. L. Bill, 373 Fourth Ave., New York;
Vice-President,
. B. Spillane, 373 Fourth Ave., New York; Second Vice-President, Raymond Bill, 373
ourth Ave., New York; Secretary, Edward Lyman Bill, 373 Fourth Ave., New York;
i Assistant
Treasurer, W o . A. Low.
J. B. SPILLANE, Editor
RAY BILL, B. B. WILSON, bRAID WHITE, Associate Editors
WM. H. McCLEARY, Managing Editor
CARLETON CHACE, Business Manager
L. E. BOWERS, Circulation Manager
Executive and Reportorial Staff
E. B. MUNCH, ARTHUR NEALY, V. D. WALSH. EDWARD VAN HARLINGKN, LEE ROBINSON,
JOB. A. MULDOON, THOS. A. BRKSNAHAN, E. J. NEALY, C. R. TIGHE, A. J. NICKLIN
WESTERN DIVISION:
BOSTON OFFICK:
Republic Bldg., 209 So. State St., Chicago
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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 C O R R E S P O N D E N T S
LOCATED IN T H E L E A D I N G CITIES THROUGHOUT AMERICA
Published Every Saturday at 373 Fourth Avenue, New York
Entered 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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countries, $5.00.
ADVERTISEMENTS, rates on request
REMITTANCES, should be made payable to Edward Lyman Bill, Inc.
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
TELEPHONES—MADI8ON
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Cable Address: "Elbill, N e w York"
Vol. LXXVI
NEW YORK, APRIL 14, 1923
No. 15
CO-OPERATION NECESSARY FOR EVEN ORDERING
HE REVIEW has for some time past emphasized consistently
T
the wisdom of music merchants averaging their orders as
evenly as possible throughout the year in order to keep their stock
on a more secure basis and enable the manufacturer to operate his
plant with greater regularity and consequently on a sounder
economic basis.
That the doctrine of regular ordering is sound is indicated in
the report issued recently as a result of the Conference on Un-
employment, in the course of which the question was studied from
all angles for over a year. It was the consensus of opinion of the
committee that the unemployment problem was due in no small
measure to the practice of retailers in ordering heavily during boom
periods and stopping their buying entirely during periods of depres-
sion, rather than averaging their orders so as to run along evenly
during good and bad periods, thus being willing to carry some stock
on hand and possibly stand a fair proportion of losses during the
off-time in business.
This question of keeping the industry sound and balancing de-
mand and production as far as possible to the greatest advantage
of all concerned is one that rests with both the manufacturer and
the retailer on practically an even basis. The manufacturer cannot
be expected to do all the gambling and carry heavy reserve stocks
for the sake of protecting the dealer who is afraid to trust his
business future and order ahead, nor can the retailer be expected
to load up heavily to oblige the manufacturer. It is by co-operation
that the problem will be solved.
THE FOUR SUBJECTS AT THE CONVENTION
N announcing the four principal subjects that will be discussed
at the coming convention in Chicago the officials of the National
Association of Music Merchants have succeeded in covering a wide
territory and if full advantage is taken of the possibilities of the
questions involved material of distinct value to music merchants
generally should come out of the meeting.
The subjects so far announced include salesmanship, the
trade-in problem, the better homes movement and music advance-
ment. The first subject, salesmanship, is naturally dominant in
the trade at all times, and has to do with the actual distribution of
I
APRIL 14,
192.*
the products of the factories. The trade-in problem, as has been
pointed out by The Review on several "occasions, is also a vital
one, as it has to do with receiving proper profits under conditions
where much of the business consists of replacements rather than
of straight outright sales. In supporitng the better homes move-
ment the music merchants are working directly toward the develop-
ment of new fields for the sale of the goods they have to offer.
The support of the music advancement propaganda is logical
because it is calculated to increase the possible number of customers
for the future.
If the four subjects listed are discussed thoroughly from all
angles they, coupled with the routine convention proceedings,
should serve to provide material for a number of distinctly inter-
esting and helpful sessions.
THE BETTER HOMES MOVEMENT AND MUSIC
might be well for music merchants generally to watch the
I view T progress
of the "Better Homes in America" movement with a
to taking full advantage of the opportunities that may be found
in better homes celebration in their own sections of the country.
As a matter of fact, plans are now being prepared for a "Better
Homes Demonstration Week" to be held from June 4 to 10, and,
as a result of pertinent suggestions made by the Music Industries
Chamber of Commerce, the necessity of music in the home will
be strongly emphasized during the week.
Last year 961 towns and cities participated in the week's cele-
bration, and over 500 model homes were equipped and .exhibited
to the public. This year the total will be much larger and it is
expected that in every model home musical instruments will find
a place. As a matter of fact, Mrs. Lucille Lyon, of Fort Worth,
Texas, president of the National Federation of Music Clubs, will
have charge of the music feature of the display as a member of
the Advisory Council of "Better Homes in America," and spe-
cial literature on music in the home is being prepared.
While it is true that the increasing number of movements for
the propagation of this or that idea are calculated to prove con-
fusing and on occasions embarrassing to business men as well as
individuals, the trade as a whole cannot afford to overlook an
opportunity for hooking up music with the ideal home such as is
presented by this forthcoming "Better Homes" Week. The ex-
pense should be slight in any case, and the results worth while.
ASKS FOR MODIFICATION OF IMMIGRATION LAW
of piano manufacturers will be much interested
A in NUMBER
the preliminary report of the Immigration Committee of
the Chamber of Commerce of the United States in which it is urged
that Congress take early action to supplement present immigration
restriction methods by extending authority to the President to test
out a flexible system of selection of immigrants on the basis of
demonstrated social and economic needs of the country.
The president of the National Piano Manufacturers' Associa-
tion, together with various members of that body, has for some
time urged that the immigration bars be lifted to the extent of
admitting to the country European workers of training and ability
to fill the serious vacancies that continue to exist in factory organi-
zations, and it would seem as though the recommendation of the
United States Chamber of Commerce Committee is a forward
step in providing a solution of the problem of labor scarcity. Now,
it remains to be seen what action the Government will take on the
recommendation.
A NATIONAL RETAIL SALESMEN'S ASSOCIATION?
suggestion of H. van Sweringen made in a letter to The
T HE Review
and printed on another page, to the effect that there
seems to be room for a National Retail Piano Salesmen's Associa-
tion for the purpose of increasing the interest of the salesmen in
the development of musical appreciation and bringing about more
intelligent selling effort, is at least interesting.
Mr. van Sweringen declares that there are several fields open
for piano selling that have apparently been overlooked by the
majority of music merchants and their salesmen, such as the placing
of instruments in schools, libraries and the rest rooms of industrial
establishments. As a matter of fact, there are organized efforts
made in various quarters to cover those fields and the efforts have
met with a full measure of success.

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