Music Trade Review

Issue: 1896 Vol. 22 N. 16

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW.
Africa, where he at one time resided. By
the way, Cecil Rhodes is looking for all
the recruits he can possibly get hold of just
at this time.
CHAS. E. BOURNE, of Wm. Bourne & Son,
THE value of exports of musical instru-
ments shipped from the port of New York
for the week ending April 29th—the latest
date for which figures have been compiled
—amounts to $21,658, Germany being the
largest purchaser, with Great Britain a
gjod second.
GEO. W. HERBERT, 10 East Seventeenth
street, has been laid up with La Grippe for
some weeks, but is at his desk again after
a pretty severe attack.
DANIEL F. TREACY left on Monday for a
Western trip.
weeks.
He will be gone for several
of Boston, was a visitor to our city last
Saturday.
He reports business as quiet
down East, but is hopeful for better times
in the near future.
IT is announced that David McKee will
sever his connection with the Mason &
Hamlin Co., of Boston, after June 1st, and
contemplates establishing himself in the
retail business in that city. He has not
definitely decided what instruments to
handle.
THE Braumuller Co. are sending out to
their dealers some handsome new signs in
blue and gold.
C. F. HANSON & SONS, agent for the Soh-
mer pianos in Boston, are handling wheels
as a side line. They carry the "Flying
Yankee," made by the Eastern Cycle Co.,
of Amesbury.
THE McPhail Piano Co., Boston, have is-
sued a really effective pamphlet on "How
to Buy for Cash."
THE factory premises at present occupied
THE opening of F. A. North & Co.'s by Haines Brothers will be sold under
piano store, 1404 Eleventh avenue, Altoona, foreclosure on May 18th, by order of the
Pa., last week, was a brilliant musical Manhattan Life Insurance Co.
event. The room was elaborately deco-
THE warerooms occupied by the Muncie
rated, and an orchestra furnished delight-
Music Co., Muncie, Ind., are being re-
ful music. There was a large attendance,
modeled and enlarged, owing to increase
and the opening was a pronounced success
of business.
in every respect.
The A. B. Chase Co.
C
ALVIN WHITNEY, president of the
A. B. Chase Co., Norwalk, O., ar-
rived in town from the West on Wednesday
bubbling over with enthusiasm for his per-
sonal friend, Wm. McKinley, whose policy
Mr. Whitney upholds.
"As far as our business is concerned,"
said Mr. Whitney, "we could do more, but
considering the times, we are receiving a
fair share of support. There is one thing
that must not be overlooked, and that is
business cannot improve permanently until
the receipts of our Government exceed the
disbursements. This will occur only when
the vacillating policy of the present Admin-
istration is replaced by the strong, firm and
vigorous policy of which Mr. McKinley
stands as exponent and partly originator.
Tnerefore, while we all hope for better
times, no real improvement can take place
until after the 4th of March."
Mr. Whitney left for Boston on Wednes-
day night, and expects to reach Norwalk
about the middle of next week.
Flechter's Sentence Delayed.
V
ICTOR S. FLECHTER, lately con-
victed on the charge, of receiving
the stolen Bott violin, was to be sentenced
by Recorder Goff Wednesday, but at the
request of counsel, the Recorder again
F. I. HARVEY, of C. C. Harvey & Co.,
postponed sentence.
The Tribune says
THE Board of Trade of Portsmouth, O.,
representatives of the Steck piano in Bos- Edward Lauterbach had a conference with
are selling building lots in order to raise
ton, is visiting the metropolis.
the Recorder, and State Senator Cantor
money to aid the Golden Rod Piano Co. in
establishing their plant in that city.
THE current issue of the Dominant, Phila- had a conference with District Attorney
Fellows, and it was believed that efforts
E. R. PERKINS, of the ^Eolian forces, who delphia, contains a well-written and appro-
were
being made by prominent Hebrews of
recently underwent an operation for appen- priately illustrated article on brass band in-
the
city
to keep Flechter out of prison.
dicitis, is, we are pleased to say, on the struments from the pen of A. A. Clappe",
Preparations
for an appeal in his case are
high road to recovery, and will soon be at business manager of the Harry Coleman
being
made.
estate.
his old post again.
W. F. BOOTHE, of the Sebastian Sommer
Piano Co., has his war paint on, and is on
the path for the scalps of some of his critics.
THE Davenport & Treacy Co., of Stam-
ford, Conn., held their annual meeting at
Taylor's Hotel, Jersey City, N. J., last
week. The old officers and directors were
re-elected, and the report for the year was
considered satisfactory.
HOCKETT BROS.-PUNTENNEV
Co., Colum-
bus, O., have made arrangements to open
a new store at Toledo.
O. A. KIMBALL, of the Emerson Piano
Co., Boston, hopes to leave ere long for
Chicago for the purpose of superintending
the reconstruction and opening of their
new warerooms in that city, 215-17 Wabash
avenue.
CHAS.
KEIDEL,
of Wm.
Knabe & Co.,
Baltimore, accompanied by his wife and
daughter, left for Europe by the "Spree,"
of the North German-Lloyd Line, last
Tuesday.
H. E. SMITH, who carried on business at
23 East Fourteenth street under the name
of Smith & Co., has absconded, after de-
frauding friends and creditors out of a
large sum of money. He is accompanied
by his wife. It is supposed he has gone to
WM. KNABE & Co., Baltimore, Md., made
Optimistic H. J. Ray more.
a large shipment this week of grands and
uprights to their agents, E. Heuer & Co.,
J. RAYMORE, of the Shaw Piano
Mexico City, Mex. The Knabe pianos are
Co., was a visitor to our sanctum
t
making a steady advance in popularity in last Thursday. He looked so cheerful and
our neighboring Republic.
happy that we were forced to remark:
"You look as if times were good and
THE annual meeting of the Mason &
Risch Piano Co. was held at the company's business booming, Mr. Raymore?"
"Well, yes; that's about the size of it.
head office in Toronto, Ont., Monday of
last week. The retiring Board of Directors, We are doing well, exceedingly well."
"Then you cannot be classed among the
Messrs. T. G. Mason, V. M. Risch, A. J.
Mason and H. H. Godfrey, were unanimous- pessimists, who seem to be as thick as flies
ly re-elected. After the annual meeting these days?"
"Not a bit of it, sir. We are seeking
adjourned the directors held a special meet-
ing, at which Messrs. Thomas Mason and trade, and we are getting it, that's about
V. M. Risch were elected president and the whole thing in a nutshell."
Mr. Raymore will remain in town over
vice-president respectively.
Sunday.
J. O. BRZEZINSKI, Waterbury, Conn., has
purchased the stock and fixtures of the late
To Restrain Guernsey Brothers.
J. M. Kellogg, music dealer.
H
G. H. COOK will open a music store in the
Plate Building, Centre Main street, Hack-
ettstown, N. J.
THE Messrs. Sundberg will erect a fac-
tory for making mandolins and banios at
Hackensack, N. J.
F. D. IRISH, late with the Briggs Piano
Co., is now connected with the book pub-
lishing house of Lee & Shepard.
T
HE John Church Co., of Cleveland, O.,
have secured a preliminary injunc-
tion against the firm of Guernsey Bros.,
Scranton, Pa., to restrain the latter from
collecting money due on pianos which the
plaintiffs had sent to Guernsey Bros, as
their agents.
It is alleged in the bill of equity that
Guernsey Bros, have not made a proper ac-
counting of the moneys collected on the
pianos.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW.
From a Traveler's Note Book.
A VISIT TO THE STARR FACTORY CONTINUED EXTENSION OK MANUFACTURING FACILITIES—
LAST YEAR THE BANNER YEAR FRANK A. LEE A STRONG PERSONALITY WHOSE
INFLUENCE PERMEATES EVERY PART OF AN ENORMOUS ESTABLISHMENT
THE HOLTZMAN FACTORY A WELL ORGANIZED CONCERN — THE
BICYCLE CRAZE—ITS EFFECT UPON THE MUSIC BUSINESS-
OTHER TRADES AS WELL DEALERS WHO HAVE
.
SOLD WHEELS.
rjr-
HE Starr factory at Richmond
H
L —factories would be better, as
\
in this case a plurality exists,
for if the gentlemen compos-
ing the Starr Co. continue to
erect new buildings with the
same degree of regularity which has charac-
terized their actions during the past two
years, or since the tire, they will soon have
covered the entire valley below the city of
Richmond with their buildings.
If they are ever visited by fire again, one
thing is certain—it will be difficult indeed
for the devouring element to sweep the en-
tire Starr plant, detached as are the build-
ings, off the face of the earth.
The day of my visit Ben Stair was super-
intending the erection of a large brick ad-
dition to their present facilities. This new
building will be something like 75x100 feet,
rhree stories high. The Starr plant of to-
day is perhaps the most eloquent argument
that one can bring in substantiating the
statement that the Starr pianos continue to
popularize themselves in all parts of the
country.
There are few manufacturers building
extensive additions in these times, and the
Starr may be reckoned among that few.
Last year there were more pianos turned
out from the Starr plant than any previous
year during the history of the concern.
1896 will undoubtedly mark a still greater
increase.
Of course, a large number of pianos is
consumed in the various branches through
the South controlled by the Jesse French
Co., but aside from this output quantities
of them are absorbed by dealers all over
the United States.
The matter of producing a cheaper grade
of pianos has been definitely settled by the
Starr Co., but just by what name this pro-
duct will be characterized is not as yet
stated.
*
There are few men in the music trade, or
in any trade for that matter, who have ap-
proached nearer the solution of manufactur-
ing and distributing enormous products
than has Frank A. Lee, of the John Church
Co.
It seems to me that one of Mr. Lee's
strongest characteristics is that he divests
all business transactions of superfluities of
every kind, and of all sentimentality.
Somehow in talking with him I am always
impressed with the idea that he gets perhaps
about as near the solution of complex busi-
ness intricacies as any man whom it has
been my pleasure to meet.
Notwithstanding the gigantic business
which Mr. Lee successfully conducts, there
is about him that candid air of American
frankness and sincerity which at once im-
presses me with the fact that I am face to face
with a thinker, a man who always looks be-
low the surface, a man who has a clear and
practical solution and analyzation of the in-
tricate business environments which are
closely allied with the conduct of great and
varied business enterprises.
One should understand that the matter of
conducting a gigantic piano business, both
in the manufacturing and retail depart-
ments, it> only one of Mr. Lee's many enter-
prises. Take the enormous music publish-
ing business which the John Church Co.
conduct, and see what a tremendous force
must necessarily be behind that enterprise
to give it the impetus which it has in all
parts of the country. One man, John
Philip Sousa, received last year from the
John ChurchCo. an amount which raninto the
tens of thousands for his compositions alone.
Then, if we consider the business carried
on by the Imperial Music Co., whi.h means
the manufacturing and selling of an endless
line of instruments which come under the
general head of "small goods," and you
will perhaps best- understand the many
business ideas which are constantly evolved
from Mr. Lee's teeming brain.
Notwithstanding the active supervision
which he maintains over this entire busi-
ness, he finds time to go minutely into the
practical department of building instru-
ments. I have seen and examined some
inventions in machinery which are largely
the result of Mr. Lee"s own inventive
power, which are at once interesting and
wonderful in their productive results.
* *
Probably there is no better systematized
piano stool and scarf business in the United
States than that conducted by Henry Holtz-
raan & Sons, at Columbus, O. I knew the
Holtzmans, father and sons, years ago in
Pittsburg, and visited them shortly after
their move to Columbus.
At the time of my last visit I was more
than ever impressed with the wisdom mani-
fested in their change of location. At Col-
umbus they are located in a magnificent
distributing center. The railroad commu-
nications East, West, North and South are
excellent. Their supplies in raw material
can be procured at a minimum of cost, and
in these times of close competition every-
thing must be considered in manufacturing.
The senior Holtzman remains at home,
attending to the supervision of the factory
and general oversight of the business, while
his two sons and one additional traveler
cover all points in the United States.
They have made a specialty of the stool
business, and some of their late patterns
which I saw are decidedly unique and tasty
in effect.
Wherever I travel the complaints are
many which I hear regarding the business
conditions. I find many dealers attributing
the dull business to the fact that the bicycle
craze which has swept and is now sweeping
over America, has drawn largely from the
music trade—that people who have had in
mind the purchase of a piano have delayed
such purchase indefinitely, having appropri-
ated their present available funds toward
the purchase of a wheel.
There is no
doubt but there is a great deal in this, be-
cause no one who looks into the matter can
fail to admit that the bicycle business has
not only cut into the piano trade, but into
other trades as well.
In the first place we know positively that
at a majority of the bicycle factories they
are not only extremely busy, but are run-
ning overtime, and have a multitude of ad-
vance orders. The bicycle manufacturers
are independent almost as to trade. In fact,
they have all that they can do. Now, with
such a condition existing with manufactur-
ers who are turning out wheels by the
million, it must mean a certain shrinkage
in other trades, considering the amount in-
volved in the purchase of a single wheel.
The encroach of the bicycle business into
other lines may be seen in the following:
A friend of mine in the wholesale
clothing business remarked to me the other
day that dealers were bitterly complaining
of trade, that the people were spending
their money for wheels instead of clothes,
/that they were having a big run only on
one line of suits—bicycle suits. He said
that in many parts of the country it was
a common thing for business men and their
attaches to come down to business dressed
in a bicycle suit, and when Sunday came in-
stead of attiring themselves in their "Sun-
day best" they would don the bicycle suit
and go off for a day's outing.
Multiply the individual cases with the
tens of thousands and we will readily see a
tremendous shrinkage in the clothing busi-
ness.
Again, a friend of mine in the jewelry
business repeats that chestnutty story of
the encroach of the bicycle craze on his line,
saying people buy bicycles instead of
watches and jewelry. So I may go on al-
most ad infin itu 111.
Well, if the bicycle people are getting all
of the business and all the money, they are
distributing quite some, and it would seem
to me that it must course out in other chan-
nels, as money has only a temporary stay
in business institutions.
Again, the bicycle craze will mean the
building of better roads throughout the en-
tire country, and, of course, the employ-
ment of labor in this enterprise. It is true
that the bicycle manufacturers can be
counted among those who are singularly
fortunate in these times of general depres-
sion, yet in a few years they will have per-
haps met their Waterloo.
In the meanwhile it cannot be overlooked
that while people are spending a vast
amount of money in the purchase of wheels,
yet the fact that such conditions exist

Download Page 6: PDF File | Image

Download Page 7 PDF File | Image

Future scanning projects are planned by the International Arcade Museum Library (IAML).

Pro Tip: You can flip pages on the issue easily by using the left and right arrow keys on your keyboard.