1896 ***


Transcriber’s Notes:

Text enclosed by underscores is in italics (_italics_).

Additional Transcriber’s Notes are at the end.

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PRICE 5 CENTS.




HOW TO CONDUCT A SMALL MAIL ORDER BUSINESS.


  HINTS AND HELPS BY
  W. E. SKINNER.

  MULTUM IN PARVO LIBRARY.

  Entered at Boston Post Office as second
  class matter. Published by A. B. Courtney,
  Room 74, 45 Milk Street, Boston.

  Vol. 3. MARCH, 1896. Published Monthly. No. 27

  Subscription Price, 50 Cents Per Year.




HINTS ON CONDUCTING --A SMALL-- MAIL ORDER BUSINESS.


There are, in the United States and Canada, hundreds of concerns
who obtain their revenue almost exclusively by means of transacting
business through the mails. In addition to these, many regular city
retailers have of late opened departments for mail order trade.

The habit of purchasing by mail is rapidly assuming enormous
proportions in this country, and the custom has been catered to, in
such a manner, that the ranchman on the plains may wear a latest style
metropolitan custom-made suit, while his daughters may equip herself
_a la_ Fifth Avenue--all by inspection of a catalogue, a postal money
order and a letter.




Good Postal System.


These facilities have been brought about by the general march of
improvement, and, perhaps, more particularly on account of the greatly
improved postal system. Almost every intelligent person has had more
or less experience in buying through the mails, but the object of this
little book is to show how a small business can be profitably conducted
for this purpose.




Start Right.


One of the most essential things to start with is an attractive article
or line of goods. Shall it be in the nature of a staple or a novelty?
The difficulty in handling staple goods in a small way is the lack of
profit.




Staple Goods.


Staple goods are handled by retailers everywhere, and, people will not
readily send away for that which they can procure at home. Of course,
there is always more or less mail trade on specialties in the line of
staples, such as Plymouth Rock Pants, Douglas’ Shoes, etc., but even
then, manufacturers tell me that there is no profit in the mail orders,
they are handled merely for the sake of augmenting regular trade by
making the goods popular.

Perhaps I might make an exception in the staple list of watches,
silverware and jewelry. These are good mail order sellers.




Numerous Novelties.


In the line of novelties, there are hundreds of things such as books,
toys, games, photographs, perfumery, etc.

Small toys, not easily broken, and of light weight when packed, sell in
immense quantities if advertised in November and December. Of course,
the advertisement must be properly arranged, good journals used, and
the price of the toy should be small.




“Frozen Perfumery.”


Millions of perfumed cakes of Plaster-Paris, put in small ornamented
tin boxes, have been sold during the past ten years. These goods cost
about 4 cents each, can be sold at ten cents, give satisfaction if well
made and can be mailed at a cost of a cent each for postage, which will
admit of the “wonder stone” being wrapped in a quantity of advertising
circulars.

One or two ingenious advertisers put up packages of sachet powder and
sell them as “Love Powders.” They are said to enable the recipient to
“gain and maintain the love of another.”




Several Saleable Specialties.


Cheap books usually sell well if they are attractively written up and
advertised in the right kind of papers. Millions of copies of certain
books have been sold at ten cents through the mails. Of the MULTUM IN
PARVO LIBRARY, of which this little treatise is one, several millions
have been sold at ten cents per set of twelve titles.

People readily buy Japanese napkins, sometimes advertised as
handkerchiefs, (which they really are), but the great sale may be due
somewhat to the fact that our country cousins do not really know what
a Japanese _crepe_ handkerchief is and fondly imagine that they are to
get a fifteen inch pure silk affair. These goods can be procured of
Japanese importers in New York, Chicago, San Francisco and other cities.

Cheap jewelry, such as rings, chains and the like, generally sell well.
The prices should be low and the description must be strong, to attract
trade, however.




Watches by Mail.


The watch mail order business is very large. As a rule, Swiss watches
are the sort dealt in. The values of American watches are quite well
known, and they are on sale everywhere; but the Swiss watches can be
described in cash attracting adjectives and when sold the margin of
profit is fairly good.




Indecent Advertising.


Avoid the temptation to sell obscene goods, or to sell any sort of
stuff by so-called suggestive announcements. This kind of business
is profitable while it lasts, but it usually ends in bringing the
advertiser into disrepute and imprisonment.




Don’t Lie.


In writing a description of your goods, do not misrepresent them. A
dash of adjectives now and then is customary and acceptable, for mild
exaggeration is expected. Nevertheless you must not say that a ring has
a diamond setting if it is only glass.




Send Circulars.


Have a catalogue or set of circulars advertising various specialties,
and send this printed matter out with every package. If your first
filling of an order gives satisfaction, you are quite sure to get a
second order, and possibly several subsequent orders.




Letters are Valuable.


The letters that you receive from country customers are more or less
valuable. Other dealers will purchase them of you for purpose of using
the addresses in sending out their own catalogues.




Good Sellers.


Cheap books with attractive titles are usually fast selling property,
and if contents are as advertised, always give satisfaction. The
Keystone Book and News Co., 1111 Arch St., Philadelphia, are among the
leading wholesalers. They send trade circulars only to persons who
prove themselves to be regularly engaged in the mail order business.




Medical Business.


It is surprising to note what a vast amount of medicine is sent through
the mails. There are remedies for all diseases to which the flesh is
heir. If you have a good tonic, blood purifier, skin beautifier or
other preparation which you wish to push the sale of, the better way
to get “points” is to answer the advertisements of other concerns
advertising similar specialties and learn their methods. But do not
copy other concerns’ literature; simply pick out a few good ideas and
combine them with your own originality.




Advertising Agencies.


A large proportion of advertising is placed through so-called agents.
They are a legion. About a dozen make a specialty of mail order
advertising. You can get further information by reading a copy of _Our
Silent Partner_, which you can obtain free by writing to Fred Terry,
Waterville, Maine. There are a large number of publications that pay
for mail order advertising, and a much larger number which do not pay
the advertiser.




Not Tolerated.


The U. S. and Canadian postal officials do not encourage so-called
“work at home” schemes which usually take money out of poor people’s
pockets. Many alleged offenders have been prosecuted for doing this
sort of business.




Watch Your Mailing.


If you are doing a large mailing don’t neglect to make it a part of
your duties to step in and watch the operations of your mailing clerks
frequently. An employe sometimes forgets postal rates and wastes a
great deal of money. We know an advertiser whose clerk sent out six
thousand packages with four cents postage on each when the packages,
consisting of printing matter, could have traveled at two cents. Most
of the successful mail order advertisers keep their eyes on such
details and they save money thereby.




Not Good Criterion.


The so-called “cost and result” schedules are usually only valuable to
the advertiser who prepares them as a result of his own experience. To
all others who consider them, they are a delusion and a snare. Suppose
an advertisement of an inch is placed in a list of publications by a
watch dealer, a picture dealer, a medical advertiser, a novelty man and
an agents’ supply house. There will be quite a striking difference in
the ratio of results in each instance. A paper that pays one may not
pay the other. We have seen this demonstrated so many times that we
know whereof we speak.




Advertising Axioms.


“Virtue increases under a weight or burden” and results increase with a
comprehensive expenditure of money in good advertising mediums.

“Better late than never.” The golden opportunity is still open to him
who would enrich himself by judicious advertising. None other way will
pay.

“Mind moves matter.” Therefore exercise your mind to advertise so as
to stir the gray matter of the brains of the people and affect their
pocket-books.

Good goods will sell to good people constantly. Poor goods only once.
Don’t let people say, “after having praised their wine they sell us
vinegar.”

“There is no lock but a golden key will open it,” except that of the
people’s pocket-book. First class ads will do this with golden results.
When people think they want a thing, they do want it and they get it.

To be prominent anywhere one must have marked characteristics. So it
is with an advertisement in the crowded columns of newspapers and
magazines; in order to produce the best results it must be clear,
definite, conspicuous and fresh. _Is yours of this character?_




Free.


There’s the catch word of all humanity. Fifty years ago it was the most
potent word in the language, and all the advertising experts who have
developed since have not succeeded in devising one to succeed it.

Look over the papers which are read by the simple country folk, and
note how that word stands out all over them. The article advertised
goes in agate type below it. The particulars about what stamps or coins
must be sent to secure the “free” article, go in minion. The ad. may
occupy but an inch, and half of the inch may consist of the one word
“Free,” but the advertising evidently pays if continuance signifies
profit.

One sometimes wonders where the crop of gold brick victims constantly
comes from, where the green goods men continually find patrons,
and why confidence men grow more numerous as their wiles become
better advertised. There is a greater crop of “Free” victims growing
somewhere. It is hard to believe that anyone answers a “Free”
ad. twice, but this class of advertising grows and prospers. This is a
large country, and the boys who are growing up must all learn by
experience what their fathers learned likewise. No youth seems content
to be taught in any other way. It looks as if there was no danger of
any lack of advertising to teach them.--_Exchange._




The Old Story.


A man generally knows his own business well enough to make money out of
it. When he attempts another business he finds that some other fellow
has learned that business better than he has, evidently. Few men ever
learn enough about more than one business to make both or all of them
pay.




Profitable Catalogues.


Mr. John Lynn, of 48 Bond St., New York is a successful dealer in
novelties; his catalogue is very attractive.

Another successful dealer is Chas. E. Marshall, Lockport, N. Y. His
catalogue is a winner.

Montgomery Ward & Co., Chicago, do the largest mail order business in
the world. Their catalogue is quite a large volume in itself.




Gets One on Depew.


This is one of the stories about Chauncey M. Depew and a railroad pass
that is being told nowadays in local railroad circles.

The president of the Waupaca and Nishna Railroad company went to see
the mild-mannered president of the Vanderbilt system.

“What can I do for you?” Mr. Depew asked, letting the smile he uses on
such occasions have full swing at the visitor.

“I dropped in to see you, Mr. Depew, to ask for an exchange of
courtesies. I am the president of the Waupaca and Nishna Railroad
company. I would like to have a pass over your road and will extend the
same courtesy to yourself over my road.”

Depew looked thoughtful for a minute. Then he said:

“Where is your road?”

“Why, it’s out in Wisconsin.”

“Is it rated in Poor’s manual?”

“Oh, yes, indeed; we paid a nice dividend last year.”

“Strange. I never heard of your road. How long is it?”

“We are operating sixty-seven miles this year.”

“What, sixty-seven miles, and you call that an exchange of courtesy,
and the Vanderbilt system has its thousands of miles?”

Depew assumed his most cavalier air as he launched that question at the
head of the president of the Waupaca and Nishna and then he waited for
a reply.

“Well, Mr. Depew,” said the western railroad president as he arose
to go, “your road may be a little longer than mine, but it ain’t any
wider.”




His Joke Worked Badly.


A young man who seemed to be boiling over to do something smart was a
passenger on a Michigan avenue car the other day. After racking his
massive brain for a while he took out a silver dollar and laid it on
the seat and took a seat opposite. The car soon stopped at a crossing
to let on an old woman with a basket. She saw the empty seat and the
dollar, and it didn’t take her over thirty seconds to drop herself into
the place and the dollar into her pocket.

“Excuse me, ma’am,” said the joker, “but I’ve lost a dollar. I think I
left it on that seat.”

“I don’t,” she bluntly replied.

“But I’m sure of it. Did you pick up a dollar?”

“None of your business, sir.”

“But all of us saw you pick it up, ma’am, and I can prove it was mine.”

“Look a’ here, young chap,” she said, as she put down her basket, “if
it’s a row you want you’ll find me ready. I allow no one to walk on me.”

“But, ma’am, I left----”

“Come on, then,” she said, as she stood up and doubled up her fists. “I
am a peaceful woman, and I want to get along the easiest way, but if I
must I will.”

Everybody began to clap and laugh, and the smart Aleck took a drop off
the platform without asking what it was all about.




Mike’s Dilemma.


Mike is an Irishman just fresh from the Emerald isle, who recently came
to Hackensack, N. J., and was employed by two gentlemen, each keeping
a horse in the same stable, to look after their equines. One day
Mr. Jones told Mike to hitch up his horse and bring it around to his
residence.

Mike did as he was bidden, but when Mr. Jones saw the turnout he said:
“Why, Mike, that is not my horse, that is Mr. Smith’s animal.”

“Begorra,” promptly replied Mike, “so it is. I knowed that wasn’t your
horse, sir, but I couldn’t quite make up my mind which horse belonged
to the other gintleman.”




A Rank Failure.


“I don’t believe whippings do children any good,” said Mrs. Wiggins.
“Why, I whipped Johnny at the photographer’s three times because he
wouldn’t look pleasant and he still looked as cross and disagreeable as
ever.”




At Reduced Speed.


Uncle Hays--’Member the Hawkins boys who ran away to jine a theatre
company?

Aunt Marthy--Why, yes! What about ’em?

Uncle Hays (quietly)--They’ve walked back.




Two Feminine Views of Adam.


First Nineteenth Century Girl--I never did have any opinion of Adam.
A man who could excuse himself by saying, “The woman tempted me,” had
none of the instincts of a gentleman.

Second Ditto--But what could you expect of the first man? You know it
takes three generations to make a gentleman.




Posted on the Ring.


“Strange,” remarked Mrs. Brown, “I have rung at Mrs. Smith’s door three
times this week, and I didn’t succeed in arousing anyone. I suppose the
family is out of town!”

“Possibly,” replied Mrs. Jones; “but Mrs. Smith was telling me just now
that she could tell your ring among a thousand.”

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Transcriber’s Notes:

Punctuation has been made consistent.

The following changes were made:

p. 4: illegible word assumed to be are (they are attractively)

p. 8: illegible word assumed to be on (eyes on such)