Music Trade Review

Issue: 1897 Vol. 24 N. 15

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
12
year after year their trade steadily lessen-
ing without taking energetic measures to
counteract those influences are not the men
to hold a strong position in the fierce light
of modern competition.
Another point that cannot be overlooked,
and that is that the cheap piano has ad-
vanced musically and architecturally until
to-day there are good and valid reasons
why it should be an important factor in
the distribution of musical wares. Under-
stand by cheap piaaos I do not mean boxes
with strings and of the kind of wood of
such curing that a friend of mine face-
tiously remarked that the cases were so
green that the boy in cleaning up the ware-
rooms used to sweep up a peck of acorns
or a quart of black walnuts every morning
lying near the instruments of those respec-
tive woods—but I do mean the commercial
piano.
It is destined in the natural course of
things to advance in price.
*
*
*
*
If a man expects to create a demand for
his goods, he must either meet modern
competition, in a trade sense of value, by
building a piano as good if not a little
better than his neighbor, but he must also
if he desires to find for it a ready market,
must make it known through the agency of
printer's ink, thereby creating if not a
demand at least a knowledge of the exist-
ence"of such an instrument as he attaches
a name to.
The old way of simply claiming that an
instrument eclipses its competitor is hardly
strong enough. Claims unsupported by
evidence amount to but little. Claims
must be founded on stronger ground than
mere assertion. There are to-day three
values in pianos—commercial, sentimental
and artistic.
*
*
*
*
It is too bad that we cannot have every-
thing to suit us in this little old world of
ours, but for every addition to the gifts
which the gods bestow on man, they are
careful to make a compensating withdraw-
al, they do not leave men in their debt.
The saying is as true to-day as it was in
the days of ancient Rome, and while busi-
ness in one way runs on much srrfoother
lines than years ago, yet there are many
things withdrawn which tended to make
business of the past a pleasure, and at the
same time combined magnificent profits in
its results. To-day the paths of the busi-
ness men do not abound entirely in pleas-
ant environments, there are many perplex-
ing and exacting demands made upon the
modern trade getter.
Painter & Ewing.
Among the young piano concerns who
are making their mark in the trade may be
mentioned the firm of Painter & Ewing,
Philadelphia. They are building a piano
which is bound to be appreciated on its
merits. Styles C and D especially are
neatly designed and well finished, and are
instruments that a dealer can make money
with.
Alfred Dolge's Lecture.
HOW TO AVOID A CONFLICT BETWEEN CAPITAL AND LABOR
LABOR SENATE.
J|The people of Little Falls are fortunate
in their possession of an organization which
has for its object their mental improve-
ment along lines which make tor wider in-
telligence and better citizenship, by plac-
ing within reach of all alike, and without
cost to them, very valuable educational op-
portunities. It is the University Club,
governed by a board of trustees, of which
W. D. Garlock is chairman and A. Gideon,
secretary. The fifth of a series of semi-
monthly lectures^ ending with a banquet
was delivered at Temperance hall, Tuesday
evening of this week, April 6, by Alfred.
Dolge, of Dolgeville, upon "How to Avoid
a Conflict Between Capital and Labor."
The audience was a large one, and it fol-
lowed the speaker throughout with close
attention and deep interest. Mr. Dolge
said:
The subject your club has invited me to discuss
this evening is a vital and far-reaching one, whose
ultimate solution affects the foundation and per-
manence of modern society. It is a momentous
social question, which can De properly considered
only on the broad lines of public weliare without
reference to any particular case. Almost every
conflict between capital and labor originates in the
demand of laborers for a betterment of their con-
dition. From the time of Spartacus laborers have
had to fight for every installment of advance they
have obtained.
Capital is conservative and tends to resist pro-
gress ; it does not fully realize that its own pros-
perity and safety depends upon the prosperity of
the great mass of consumers.
The world's history shows that civilization pro-
gresses step by step, in the ratio as the condition
of the laboring people is improved. Greece and
Rome started their grand careers as republics by
acknowledging the principle of personal liberty in
distinction to the barbarian autocracy of other
nations of that period. As a result, we have the
unexcelled Grecian art and the grand Roman
"jurisprudence." But slavery, the refusal to
recognize the social importance of laborers, de-
stroyed the culture of Greece and the power of
Rome.
In modern history England has ascended to the
high position of "Ruler of the Waves,' and has
become a dominant power on all bourses and ex-
changes of the world, because in advance of any
other nation, she had her Magna Charta, and was
first in developing the factory system, which
forced capital to offer better conditions to wage-
earners than the tilling of the soil would permit.
Unfortunately for England, and for the world's
progress, civilization and culture, the men of
science, the scholars of that period, who tried to
analyze and systematize the phenomena of indus-
trial development, formulated the postulate that
"profits rise as wages fall." This doctrine of the
Manchester school of laissez faire economists so
generally accepted as gospel, is a part of the sev-
enteenth century theory, that the reward of labor
is entirely governed by supply and demand.
Though very superficial, this explanation had a
plausibility that gave it ready popular acceptance.
It is on a par with the argument of Populists and
Silverites, that whenever money is difficult to ob-
tain, all we have to do is to set the govern-
ment's presses agoing, and print notes or coin
silver, and everybody's pocket will be filled. It is
this disinclination on the part of the people to do
some independent critical thinking, which gave
Mr. Bryan over 6,000,000 votes last fall, and
which permits the fallacies of the Manchester
school still to be taught in American colleges.
But America is destined to continue the march of
progress, inaugurated by Greece, Rome and Eng-
land.
In the Declaration of Independence, we estab-
lish the same rights and privileges for wage-earn-
ers as for employers. Since the signing of this
modern Magna Charta, the capitalist, a creation
of the factory system, has appeared and become
an important and exceedingly useful factor in our
body politic. Self-interest, an inherent element in
human nature, misled even the American capital-
ist into believing the English doctrine that "Pro-
fits Rise as Wages Fall," and 1 venture to say that
a majority of our manufacturers to this day believe
HAVE THEM UNITE IN A
that doctrine. One of the results of this was the
voting down of the protective policy by our wage-
earners in 1892, to the great regret alike of capital-
ists and wage-earners, neither of whom will aesire
a repetition of the misery and anxiety of the past
tour years. Capital mustlearn to understand that
wage-earners ot to-day are of greater importance
to the community as consumers than as producers.
When England introduced the factory system,
she sold the bulk of her products to foreign con-
sumers who had to pay for them in gold or its equiv-
alent, and English manufacturers therefore, for
the time being, really gained more in proportion
as they paid lower wages. Hence, they advocated
free trade to get raw material cheap and forced the
repeal of the corn law, so that they might be able
to feed laborers more cheaply.
We had a repetition of this argument during the
last three presidential elections, when the leaders
of our free trade party raised the cry of cheapness
and insisted that the wage-earners could accept
lower wages because they would be able to live
more cheaply.
But progress is irresistible. The entire world
moves forward, some parts more rapidly than
others, but the movement is universal. Steam and
electricity have destroyed the dreams of those
theorists who believed that the world could be
divided in parcels, whereof one would be the work-
shop and commercial emporium, and all the rest
constrained to raise food and raw material for that
workshop.
The spinning jenny and the loom, the planing
machine and automatic lathe are moving onward
and capture one part of the globe after the other,
and we find capitalists and wage-earners in the
modern sense almost wherever we go. Capital is
avaricious; labor is discontented. To avoid a con-
flict between capital and labor, therefore, it is
necessary that capital should be just as fair in its
dealings with labor as it expects labor to be to
capital whenever a conflict threatens.
The individual manufacturer and employer is,
of course, powerless. The complexity of the indus-
trial and commercial structure of the present day
excludes any individual attempt to reform or ad-
vance; everything moves in groups in modern
society, and the more we advance, the more com-
plex society becomes, the less can we get along
with the old-time so-called " Democratic Sim-
plicity," and the more absurd is the phrase that
" T h a t government governs best which governs
least." Never in the history of the world has
statesmanship had so many problems to solve as
at the present time ; never before was it necessary
for the true statesman to be well versed in science
and practical observation of the development of
social movements.
We live in the era of organization and combina-
tion, commonly known as trusts;—the greatest
achievement of modern times, made possible
through the application of steam and electricity to
transportation and communication. Although the
combination and organization of capital is attacked
and annoyed at present, it cannot be prevented
because this movement is strictly on the lines of
natural evolution and development, and instead of
attempting to obstruct this movement which has
proved so beneficial to society at large, our law
makers will eventually be forced to assist in its de-
velopment.
Capital, being in command of the best brains,
has found it necessary to combine and organize.
Labor should follow on the same lines, obtain
the best brains for its cause, and organize in all
branches of business. The next step should be the
general recognition of the rights of organized cap-
ital as well as of organized labor.
That once accomplished, it seems both capital
and labor might, for the adjustment of their differ-
ences, profitably copy the machinery of our govern-
ment, as George Gunton has suggested, namely,
that the organizations of capital and the organiza-
tions of labor be jointly and equally represented
in an association as a labor senate. To this body
should be submitted all propositions for important
changes in wages or other conditions, before any
definite action be taken by any individual, labor
union or employer, the decision of the senate to be
final. This would have several advantages over
any previous methods ; it would always insure that
the subject was discussed by neutral parties before
any bad blood was aroused. Much of the difficulty
in labor disputes arises from the ill-feeling due to
some personal indiscretion by one side or the other.
For instance, an employer will sometimes, in an
unguarded moment, make a rash statement of
what he will or will not do. Having said it, he
feels that his personal pride is affected to back
down.
Laborers, on the other hand, not infrequently
say and do very unreasonable things in similarly
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
unguarded moments, and so a breach is created that
prevents further rational discussion, and a conflict
Degins. This labor senate, in which both em-
ployers and laborers are represented, would
obviate all such difficulties, because it would be
the rule of the organization that no formal demand
should be made by laborers upon their employers
until the proposition had been considered by the
joint body, and on the other hand, no important
change should be inaugurated by employers with-
out similarly submitting the matter to the same
body. In this case, if through the indiscretion of
a hot-headed walking delegate, or personal feeling
in a particular union, an unreasonable demand was
made in a particular factory or shop, it would
readily be disapproved by the Senate, because the
laborers in the other concerns represented in the
organization would have no interest in countenanc-
ing irrational, hot-headed action of the laborers in
any particular concern.
One of the difficulties with which trade unions
have to deal is the insubordination within their
ranks. In that case, if an unreasonable strike oc-
curred contrary to the decision of the Senate or
united body, they would receive neither moral or
material aid from any other organization. This of
itself would insure its defeat, and in nine cases out
of ten prevent a strike. On the other hand, if any
employer proposed unreasonable changes in wages
or other conditions, the proposition would fail to be
sustained by the Senate, because the laborers would
be present to point out its unreasonableness, and
other employers would have no interest in sustain-
ing the irrational conduct and so provoke a strike
in which the employers were obviously in the
wrong. If a single employer insisted upon his ir-
rational conduct, besides encountering the united
opposition of all the laborers, he would lose the co-
operation and moral support of the other employ-
ers, and of course have public sentiment and the
press definitely against him, which would be suffi-
cient to bring quick defeat to almost any such un-
dertaking, and in fact would probably, in more
than 90 per cent, of cases, prevent the rupture.
Another great advantage of this industrial Sen-
ate would be the better understanding between
laborers and employers. Their frequent meetings
and discussions would be a source of industrial
education for both. Employers would have an
opportunity of learning the laborer's point of view
on many questions which they do not now under-
stand, and laborers on the other hand would be-
come much better informed of the real workings
and point of view of the employers, which is now
woefully misunderstood. Moreover, laborers
would be forced to select their most intelligent
men in order that they might have their case most
creditably presented. An intelligent understand-
ing by each, of the interests and conditions of the
other, would, of itself, do much to prevent a large
number of the misunderstandings that arise. I
have just learned that this idea has already been
adopted in the brick laying trade in New York
City. The laborers' and employers' unions have a
third party in which both are represented, and all
questions of important changes about which a dis-
pute may arise, are submitted to the joint body
before any action is taken either by the employers
or employees. Since this arrangement was
adopted, there has not been a single strike in the
brick laying trade. Several instances, however,
have occurred in which a strike would have been
inevitable under other conditions. Such a method
is rational, educational and economic. It asks no
one to give up his freedom or dignity, but is an
appeal to reason, manhood and integrity for the
adjustment of all industrial differences.
If such a system can be inaugurated, I believe
the worst phase of the conflict between capital
and labor would be eliminated.
I may mention here that a National Labor In-
surance System, which guarantees the wage-earner
a competency when his economic efficiency has com e
to an end, and which would also protect his family
from want in case of his death, would also tend
largely to avoid a conflict, because it would make
those contented who, for lack of ability or other
reasons, cannot rise above the ranks of the ordi-
nary wage earner.
Experience has shown that all attempts to avoid
or adjust conflicts between capital and labor by
exercising paternalism or philanthropic schemes
have ended in failure, as they deserved.
Paternalism and philanthropy destroy manli-
ness, self-reliance, and independence, those three
sterling qualities so prominent in the American
character, instilled by the founders of our republic,
developed by our liberal laws and institutions, and
supported by the justified everlasting demand for
bettering their condition by American wage-
Staib Piano Action Co.
HAVE BUILT UP A GREAT BUSINESS
MANUFACTURING PLANT.
A FINE
The recent-day annals of the music
trade do not exhibit a better illustration of
well merited and rapid success in business
than the record and present position of the
Staib Piano Action Co. Properly-directed
skill and energy have been successfully
«3
year's business has shown a remarkable,
healthy growth of substantial custom among
the most desirable piano manufacturers.
Reasons for the excellent showing above
given are not lacking. Pride is taken in
all branches of the work. All modern
facilities are made available. Experiments
to better the stock and products are always
in progress. Even now a new upright
action nearly if not actually equivalent to
that of a grand is being developed, and will
soon be ready for inspection. Altogether
the showing of the Staib Co. is highly
creditable to themselves and the trade
alike.
VIEW OF PART OF THE STAIB WORKSHOPS.
united to secure satisfactory results. This
is all the more creditable when it is borne
in mind that competition in action-making
has always been and now is keen, capable
and of large influence.
The firm began business in 1890. To-
day the whole lower part of the large build-
ing at 134th street and Brook avenue is fully
occupied in the manufacture of their ac-
tions. There is a basement or mill floor
for moulding purposes, 100x50 feet, with
10 men constantly at work. The part of
the factory shown in the cut is known as
the machine floor, of the same length and
width, used for the boring and small saw
machines. Forty men are busily engaged
here on full time. Immediately above it is
the finishing room, where 50 men are kept
fully employed in setting up actions and
gluing. Then, outside of the building
proper, is a large dry room, with capacity
for kiln-drying 15,000 feet of lumber.
The stock of material of all kinds on
hand is sufficiently large to make and com-
plete, from a to z, at least 2,000 actions.
The average output is 600 actions per
month. The firm's customers are in every
section of the country. Each succeeding
Praise for the Weber Concert
Grand.
Quite an important event in the history
of Willimantic, Conn., was the opening on
Friday last of the new High School build-
ing with appropriate ceremonies, in the
presence of the town's most distinguished
citizens and their neighbors. The eve-
ning's speech-making, etc., was varied by
an excellent musical program. A sym-
phony quartette sang several selections.
The new Weber concert grand in the
Assembly Hall was used, by courtesy of
Mr. Wheelock, of the Weber-Wheelock
Co., who was present at the celebration.
Signor Clementino de Macchi played, in
his usually admirable style, several num-
bers which met with unusual tokens of
warm appreciation from a critical audi-
ence. It must have been gratifying to
Messrs. Wheelock and de Macchi to hear, on
all sides, after the concert, the unqualified
praise of auditors bestowed on the tone
and power of the concert grand used on
this occasion.
The recent statement of the Smith &
Nixon assignee shows receipts amounting
to $97,011.04; disbursements, $54,194.92,
balance on hand, $42,817.12.
Highest Grade Pianofortes
(WREST-PIN AND STRINGER SYSTEMS.)
LISZT, CHURCH, CHAPEL and PARLOR
ORGANS.

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