Music Trade Review

Issue: 1896 Vol. 23 N. 3

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW.
some of the lesser failures have been con-
siderably magnified.
We have, we affirm, nothing worthy of
consideration until we reach the Hallet &
Davis and allied interests.
This failure
was primarily a direct result of the repudi-
ation doctrines promulgated at Chicago,
which set the Eastern financial circles
aglow, reflected upon the West, and the
banks there becoming alarmed, made a
demand upon the Hallet & Davis Chicago
corporation for a call loan which was
understood would not be called for until
November.
With the collapse of the Western house
the Boston house came also, notwithstand-
ing the fact that it possessed good assets
many times its liabilities.
Piano assets—there is a matter which
cannot be too well emphasized. We claim
that the values of pianos are maintained in
a degree which is not approximated by
other manufactures.
Buy a carriage, take a run down the ave-
nue—and that becomes second-hand and
its value goes down with a slump.
Buy silverware—its design becomes
passed
Jewelry—becomes antiquated.
Clothing—worn out.
How is it with pianos? There are in-
deed few records where there has been a
heavy drop in piano values.
Pianos
bearing the name of reputable manu-
facturers constitute at all times valuable as-
sets, approximating nearer permanency
than almost any other line of manufacture.
Let us compare values in the music trade
with those in the dry goods trade.
We have an illustration before us now.
Nearly opposite the offices of THE REVIEW
is located the firm of J. N. Collins & Co.,
dry goods merchants. The firm is an old
one, having been on Fourteenth street for
nearly twenty years. They have recently
failed. Their schedules show liabilities of
$144,566; nominal assets, $112,766; actual
assets, $50,884. The assets consist of mer-
chandise, fixtures and cash, $3,177. The
difference between the actual and nominal
assets is due to large shrinkage in the value
of goods on hand, a large part of which are
at present unsalable.
We claim that such an amazing per cent,
of decrease from nominal to actual assets
has never been witnessed in the music
trade, with the collapse of a reputable,
honest manufacturer, and the Collins firm
was considered reliable.
In the music trade, with an invested cap-
ital exceeding fifty millions, there has been
no occurrences which should tend to shake
the faith of those well posted in ourmusico-
commercial affairs.
It is only those who are in ignorance of
the real basic strength of our industry who
state and believe otherwise. All the music
industry needs, in common with other
settled trades, is an intelligent analysis of
its peculiar environments, and a policy o,f
fairness and discrimination extended in its
dealings with the money institutions of
our land.
#
#
In our "Specialty Talks" we have heard
from nearly all branches of the trade. Our
list up to date includes talks with the mem-
bers of the music trade upon the following:
Manufacturing; branch houses; retail
salesman; music publishing; wool and
felts; retail trade; and this week Mr. R. S.
Howard, the widely-know r n traveler of J.
& C. Fischer, answers some questions pro-
pounded from the traveler's vantage
ground.
#
#
Sixteen to one—that is, for one dollar in-
vested in THE REVIEW advertising columns
you get sixteen dollars'worth of advertising
value in return. That is sixteen to one, is
it not?
By the way, the present is the regular
size of the weekly issue of THE REVIEW.
Aside from its advertising pages it con-
tains nearly thirteen pages of live diversi-
fied trade news. Is there any music trade
paper in this country giving its constitu-
ency such service ?
#
#
It is well to think that even in these hot
days when one longs to meander around the
seashore or in the mountains, away from the
madding talk of politics, some pianos and
organs are being made and sold.
Factories are not working full time, nor
are the warerooms besieged by customers,
it is true, but what year have we had busy
factories or crowded warerooms in July or
August?
Memory fails us for a reply.
Then why not look on the bright side of
the situation? The darkest hour is always
before the dawn, and the present quietness
in trade will undoubtedly be followed by
an era of activity and commercial security.
More confidence and a greater faith in
the future are immediately necessary to
counteract the undercurrent of pessimism
which is depressing everyone and every-
thing.
No one will attempt to deny that there
is ample ground for unrest and dissatisfac-
tion, but the conditions are magnified by
this universal feeling of laissez faire among
manufacturers.
The wisdom of this course is dubious.
The situation this week is not discour-
aging. Dun's and Bradstreet's, in their
weekly, review of trade, report business
conditions as having clearly improved,
though business has not. It is the torpid
season, and better conditions have little
effect as yet. The signing of a compact to
regulate foreign exchange and the excel-
lent prospect of large crops of cotton and
corn have resulted in a very confident feel-
ing in the business world.
#
#
Last Tuesday Hardman, Peck & Co. paid
off the fourth instalment of $40,000 on the
extension granted them November, 1893,
on a full payment basis. This is, perhaps, a
private affair, but at the present time it is
not improper to state that this firm have
set an example in sound financiering
and careful conduct of business which
should commend itself to everyone in the
trade. Notwithstanding the depression of
the past few years payment after payment
has been met. We need hardly say it
has been uphill work to make business
progress, but Hardman, Peck & Co. have
made progress by hard work and good en-
gineering. The final payment will be made
the early part of next year.
FRANK X. SLINN, a piano tuner, living in
Paterson, N. J., committed suicide by tak-
ing carbolic acid at the Hotel Rockland,
Suffern, N. Y., last Wednesday night.
JAMES L. Ross, of the music firm of East-
man & Ross, Newburg, N. Y., died of ty-
phoid fever, Aug. 5, at St. Luke's Hospital.
His mother, Mrs. William Ross, died of the
same disease fifteen minutes later at her
home on South street. His sister died from
the same cause six weeks ago.
MR. DUNNING, of the Dunning-Medine
Co., New Orleans, La., is the inventor and
patentee of a new air brake, which is des-
tined to make quite a furore in railroad cir-
cles. It was successfully tested last Thurs-
day on the Louisville and Nashville road.
MCARTHUR & SONS, Knoxville, Tenn.,
are moving into larger quarters.
HENRY BEHR, president of the Waldorf
Piano Co., Newark, N. J., expects to have
the Waldorf piano on the market by. the
middle of September. He says that the new
instruments will be a revelation and sur-
prise to the trade. The factory is located on
Orange street, and has a frontage of 40
feet.
WM. H. SCHMOLLER & Co., of Omaha,
Neb., who purchased Adolf Meyers' entire
stock of pianos, organs, etc., at sheriff's sale,
is advertising same at a "great sacrifice"
in the Omaha papers. Steinway, Knabe,
Vose & Sons, Emerson and other pianos
are named. The character of the sale can
be understood from the fact that he adver-
tises "New upright pianos from $125 up-
ward."
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW.
from that seductive cereal; that the price
of corn has fallen in consequence, and that
the fall in the price of corn is the cause of
the free-silver movement.
There has been nothing more brilliant
than this since the deacon proved that the
moon is made of green cheese by showing
clearly that we could not know that it is
made of anything else.
*
T thejjfirstjglance at the illustration
below one might easily imagine that
it was a scene in "Shore Acres," and that
the central figure was James A. Herne. It
is not, however, it was taken by Charles
Henry Ormsby Houghton while out doing
the seashore on his bicycle with his recently
patented camera attachment.
A
Here~is*the~gentle way in which a West-
ern editor "does up" a rival: "An empty
cab drove up to the door of 'The Blazer'
shanty, yesterday, and the editor of that
scorbutic organ of infamy stepped out."
We hasten to state that the "Western edi-
tor" referred to has no connection whatso-
ever with the music trade press; although
the kindly (?) feeling at present existing
among our confreres in the West would in-
cline one to think so.
It should be the first and most
important business of every
dealer to know personally every
man to whom he grants credit,
and the closest scrutiny of coun-
ty records should be another
self-imposed and religiously
obeyed duty, remarks the "Im-
plement Age.'' Frequent trips
through the territory in which
a dealer's customers have their
home, and where they win or
lose by the efforts they put
forth, will always yield good
returns. The dealer who knows
from careful investigation the
actual condition of the people
on whose patronage his busi-
ness depends nearly always suc-
ceeds.
* *
*
The; gentleman who occupies the leading
place in the picture is a well-known figure in
the music trade. He is noted for his Ches-
terfieldian grace—for having in his ward-
robe more trousers than the late mayor of
Philadelphia, who is said to have had a new
pair for every day in the year—for the ease
and fluency with which he discusses trade
matters—for his influence, which is felt
throughout the trade, for the fact that he
resides one-half the year in Boston. Well,
I may as well say, for after the descrip-
tion I have given who else could it be but
Karl Fink!
Yes, it is Karl, and " Omie" snapped
him just as he is saying "All aboard!"
The bicycle is the curse of the age.
That is what some piano men say who
claim it has played the very mischief with
the trade. Upon its innocent head—or
frame-—is visited all the crimes of the age.
Only last Tuesday the president of a lead-
ing national bank in this city gave it as his
judgment that the bicycle is the cause of
the present political situation. He says
the wheel has taken the place of the
horse; that the horse had an appetite for
corn, while the wheel is a total abstainer
the pleasant things that make life worth
living. The relation from the country was
there.
"There's no use in talkin'," he said, "ye
done fine."
"Thank you."
"An' I must say thet the man thet made
the pianny deserves praise, too. Ye
couldn't pick up an insterment anywhere
'tall, thet 'ud stand the pace you put it
through."
"Perhaps not."
"I'll never fergit the way ye got yer fin-
gers all twisted up an' then untangled
agin. It's a sight ter tell the neighbors
about, thet is."
"I—I am glad you enjoyed it."
"Wall—I admired it more'n I enj'yed it.
There's jes' one thing you orter do."
"What's that?"
"Yer oughter come up to Higginsville
some time when yer ain't got very much to
do, an' git Mirandy Slocum to teach ye
'The Monastery Bells' an' the 'Fisher's
Hornpipe.' They take practice, but you
could git 'em purty soon, an' then ye'd
have a couple o' pieces thet was worth layin'
yerself out on."
* *
*
Dr. Carl Barus has recently shown how
the velocity of the wind can be noted by
noting the musical pitch of the sound of
stretched wire. The principal elements on
which the calculation is based are the
diameter of the wire and the temperature
of the air. The length of the wire is im-
material, so long as it is not changed.
Every variation in the wind's velocity is
faithfully represented b} 7 the rising or fall-
ing of the pitch of the note sung by the
wire.
*
I met Chas. H. Parsons, president of the
Needham Piano and Organ Co., a few days
ago. His bronzed face, clear eyes, and
elastic step indicate that his brief excursion
across the "big pond" was of material
benefit from a health standpoint. He was
an interested visitor to the Music Trade
Exhibition which was held in the Agricul-
tural Hall, where some specially constructed
Needham styles were on exhibition. As
usual Mr. Parsons closed some important
deals as well as enjoyed himself.
Patti is said to choose her ser-
vants for Craig-y-nos with an eye to" their
vocal powers rather than to their domestic
attainments. The castle is always full of
company, and as operatic performances in
the theatre of the castle are of constant oc-
currence, Mme. Patti must recruit her troupe
from the servants' hall. Patti is said to be
such an admirable manager that the double
avocations of her servants never clash.
She pays them very large wages, and treats
* * *
them as companions. The little opera
"I've heard of nerve," said a piano
house costs her about $50,000 a year.
dealer, "but the worst case I ever had in
my business was that of a man who bought
a piano on installments, and, though he has
It is unfair, more, it is despicable for a never paid a dollar, threatens to sue me be-
trade paper to "play" on the personal likes cause I refuse to send a tuner for the
and dislikes of individuals just to gratify fourth time within a year."
its own base purposes. This setting man
"Oh; that's nothing," said another
against man is not only unchristian, but dealer. " I have a man on our books who
brutal and undignified.
has had a piano two years and has renewed
* *
every note in payment, and who called this
The pianist had finished dusting the morning to know how much we'd allow
piano keys with his abundant hair, and his him for his old piano on a new one, to be
fingers hung with languid grace like paid for on the same terms as before."—
branches that had not yet recovered from " Music."
* * *
the onslaught of a fierce storm. He was
Judging from the interesting communi-
receiving the applause which his endeavors cations received at the home office from
as a classical interpreter merited. A Mr. Hugo Sohmer that gentleman is having
throng pressed around him and told him a most enjoyable time.

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