Music Trade Review

Issue: 1897 Vol. 24 N. 17

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
VOL XXIV.
No. 17.
Published Every Saturday, at 3 East Fourteenth Street. New York, April 24,1897.
In The West.
THE NEW MASON & HAM1.1N HALL JOHN CHURCH CO. EXTENSIO
LYON & HEALY REPORT PROGRESS—PRESIDENT STEGER GE
CHASE BROS. PROSECUTE—CARRENO's SUCCESS HA
ORCAN CO.'s CHEERY REPORT.
Chicago, April 21, 1897.
The formal opening of the new Mason &
Hatnlin Hall, 250 Wabash avenue, took
place last Monday evening. There was a
large attendance of our local musical peo-
ple, and the program, which was partici-
pated in by Mary Wood Chase, the pian-
iste, and Geo. E. Holmes, the baritone,
was a delightfully entertaining one. The
J. A. Norris Co. have set the ball rolling
in good form. The hall will not only be
an attraction for musicians, but will inter-
est them in a line of instruments which is
certainly worthy of appreciation.
The John Church Co. made arrange-
ments this week, whereby the premises
Nos. 204-6, now occupied by Brentano's,
will be added to their present establish-
ment on May 1. The entire building will
be remodeled, and a full line of small
goods and sheet music will be carried. In
the meantime, a splendid opportunity will
be afforded for making a splendid display
of Everett pianos.
A. G. Cone, treasurer of the W. W. Kim-
ball Co., who has been sojourning for some
time on the Pacific Slope, is back in town
much improved in health—in fact he looks
like a new man. While away, Mr. Cone
managed not to overlook business abso-
lutely, for he made quite some important
connections in the far West which will pan
out big for the Kimball house in due course.
At Lyon & Healy's a better condition of
trade in the piano department is reported
this week. Their small goods trade is ex-
cellent, both domestic and foreign. Some
good-sized shipments were recently made
to England, Germany and Russia.
John V. Steger and his associates who
administer the affairs of the town of Ste-
ger have been winning compliments from
the press, owing to the energy and ability
they are displaying in improving that
thriving town.
Gen. Julius J. Estey, of the Estey Organ
Co., has been sojourning in town all the
week and many rumors are afloat regard-
ing Estey developments here. Rumor has
it all fixed up that a direct Estey branch
will be established, but I preft^ to post-
pone predictions until positive news is to
hand.
Mrs.
Eddy, wife of Clarence Eddy,
the famous organist, is a new stockholder
in the Clayton F. Summy Co. Mrs. Eddy
is an accomplished musician and a tactful
business woman.
R. O. Burgess, of the Wegman Piano Co.,
was in town this week and secured a good
order from John A. Bryant for pianos.
The "Wegman" is selling well here, and
Mr. Bryant speaks of it in the most compli-
mentary terms.
John Larkin, alias Daly, and A. M. Kim-
mel are locked up at the Harrison street
station. Larkin lives in Quincy street,
and it is charged that he went to Chase
Bros, and rented a valuable piano. Later
he and Kimmel, who is an expressman, re-
moved it. Kimmel refused to say where
he had hauled the piano, and he also was
arrested.
Mme. Carreno, who played at the Thomas
Orchestral Concert last week, made another
tremendous "hit." Every time she has ap-
peared here she has not only displayed her
wonderful talents to greater advantage but
demonstrated what a wonderfully satisfy-
ing and perfect instrument is the new scale
Knabe grand.
Mr. Louis P. Dederick, of the Manufac-
turers' Piano Co., and S. W. Chickering, are
East.
The Hamilton Organ Co. are much en-
couraged with the condition of business.
It is not only better than the same period a
year ago, but it has been steadily increas-
ing in volume month after month. For ex-
ample, the month of March was one of the
best in twelve while so far April has made
a still better showing.
J. M. Hawxhurst, the Bradbury repre-
sentative, made a visit recently to Kansas
City.
The Review learned on Tuesday from
Mr. Roth, of Roth & Engelhardt, that the
demand for the firm's products is large at
present, with every prospect of a continu-
ance.
S3.00 PER YEAR.
SINGLE COPIES, 10 CKKTS
Taxing Stocks in Stores.
STATE BOARD OF ASSESSORS HAVE COMMENCED
APPLYING THEIR SCHEME IN BUFFALO
AND ROCHESTER.
The assessor of Rochester, N. Y., has
decided to include in the tax levy for the
coming year a tax on the stock in the stores
of merchants in that city. This procedure
is urged by the State Board of Assessors,
who are desirous of increasing the tax on
personal property, and have endeavored to
have their plan carried out in all cities of
the State. The plan is in operation in
Buffalo this year, and the merchants whose
stock has been levied upon, among whom,
by the way, are some of the leading music
houses in that city, are protesting vigor-
ously against the new ruling.
The modus operandi is to visit a firm's
store and ask the value of the stock in hand.
After this is learned, the assessor asks the
amount of indebtedness and the value of
the estate taxed. This is deducted from
the value of the stock given, and the re-
mainder assessed at the regular rate of
taxation for the ward in which the firm is
located.
There is only one way to avoid paying
what they have been assessed, and that is
to swear they do not own the amount of
goods they are assessed for. The tax on
personal property will net a large amount
of money, but it will cause a mighty big
uproar.
Bush & Gerts Not Yet in New
York.
There is no truth in the statement made
in the current number of a trade contem-
porary to the effect that the Bush & Gerts
Piano Co., of Chicago, have rented the
rooms or building at 23 East Fourteenth
street for use as wholesale and retail head-
quarters. When inquiries were made at
the office of the Demorest Estate on Thurs-
day, the facts as given in another paper
were positively denied. It was said that
some negotiations are pending, but cer-
tainly nothing had up to that time been
decided one way or the other.
A Kansas Swap.
Two cows, two pigs, eighteen hens, a
greyhound pup and a bull were recently
given to a dealer by an Abilene (Kansas)
farmer for a cabinet organ.
This "knocks out" some of the deals
made around Fourteenth street.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
LYMAN
Editor and Proprietor.
PUBLISHED
EVERY
SATURDAY
3 East 14th St.. New York
SUBSCRIPTION (Including postage) United States and
Canada, $3.00 per year; Foreign Countries, $4.00.
ADVERTISEMENTS, $2.00 per inch, single column, per
Insertion. On quarterly or yearly contracts s. special dis-
count is allowed.
REMITTANCES, in other than currency form, should
b« made payable to Edward Lyman BilL
Entered at the New York Past Office as Second- Class Matter.
NEW YORK, APRIL 24, 1897.
TELEPHONE NUMBER 1745. - EIGHTEENTH STREET.
THE KEYNOTE.
The first week of each month, The Review
will contain a supplement embodying the liter-
ary and musical features which have heretofore
appeared in The Keynote. This amalgamation
will be effected without in any way trespassing
on our regular news service. The Review will
continue to remain, as before, essentially a trade
paper.
THE TRADE DIRECTORY.
The Trade Directory, which is a feature of
The Review each month, is complete. In it ap-
pears the names and addresses of all firms en-
gaged in the manufacture of musical instruments
and the allied trades. The Review is sent to
the United States Consulates throughout the
world, and is on file in the reading rooms of the
principal hotels in America.
MOVING AHEAD.
E have always claimed that the perma-
nency of an institution, whether com-
mercial or journalistic, depended solely
upon whether or no there was a demand for
its product. In journalism it is not a ques-
tion of what one competitor may have to say
about another, for, obviously, opinions of
this kind are usually influenced by personal
motives, jealous or otherwise.
We claim, and that emphatically, that
when a paper ceases to give value to its
advertisers—when it fails to be a power—
when its influence is felt no longer—itslife
then depends entirely upon the financial
resources behind it. If none, the paper
ceases. So all this talk about too many
papers, about small values, and all that
sort of thing is inconsequential and amounts
to nothing.
Some papers are dropping behind and
are steadily losing advertising patronage,
because they fail to give correct values—
they fail utterly as purveyors of news and
publicity.
Notwithstanding the times have been
depressed during the past three or four
years, The Review has gone steadily ahead,
and to-day is more firmly entrenched than
ever behind the breastworks of patronage
and trade support.
W
This position has not been attained
easily; it has been won by years of hard
labor and persistent work, and by rigid
adherence to those principles which, from
our standpoint, we believe to be absolutely
correct. We claim back of every successful
enterprise there must be character; with-
out it there can be no permanent success.
Hardly a week passes but that we are in
receipt of many letters not alone endorsing
the position of The Review, its extensive
circulation, its excellent advantages as an
advertising medium, but strong congratu-
latory words upon the assured progress
which the journal is making.
Last week while the editor of The Re-
view was in Boston, Mr. Francis H. Owen,
president of the McPhail Piano Co., who
had recently returned from a trip through
the Northwest extending as far as the Pa-
cific slope, said, "When I started out on my
trip I began to study the trade paper ques-
tion carefully, and the relative position of
each paper in the trade. I returned satis-
fied in my own mind as to their relative
value. I will say this for you. That you
are right in it. I have found your paper
in almost every locality, and was surprised
to see its standing and reliability among
the dealers. I cannot say it for all papers,
but your paper certainly has a national rep-
utation to feel proud of, and I for one am
satisfied as an advertiser."
There is something strongly convincing
and at the same time satisfying as well to a
publisher to receive such an unsolicited en-
dorsement from such a critical source as an
advertiser.
Here is another one under date of March
16. Mr. F. Edwards, ^"treasurer of the
Hutchins Manufacturing Co., Springfield,
Mass., writes:
"I want to express an appreciation of
your paper as an advertising medium. We
have received requests for catalogues from
nearly every State in the Union. One day
last week brought one from Oregon, South
Dakota and one from Texas, including sev-
eral nearby ones."
To show the strength of The Review in
this matter, we may add that the Hutchins
Manufacturing Co. have advertised solely
in The Review.
Here is another one under date of April
2. The Zobo Manufacturing Co. write:
"We have appreciated the many benefits
we have received through our advertise-
ment in your journal and consider the
enormous amount of business we have got-
ten through you."
We have never been prone to indulge in
vain-glorious boasts regarding our circu-
lation, but in every part of the Union, The
Review has a good support and its utter-
ances count. It has behind it nearly two
decades of continued permanency. Its per-
sonal representative has traversed every part
of the North American continent, and we
say this without fear of contradiction, that
The Review is the only paper whose editor
has covered the length and breadth of this
country time and time again. We have done
this, not in the interests of a few men who
have been called upon to pay traveling
expenses, but entirely upon our own re-
sources with trie fixed idea of extending
the influence of the paper. We have not
attempted a tour of the country which ter-
minated at St. Louis, and we have never
made a promise but what we have lived up
to; we never have asked a favor of anyone
in this trade excepting a fair patronage,
for which we believe we have given ample
returns. We have always upheld the dig-
nity of the trade, and have been influen-
tial in many ways in making suggestions
which have resulted in the betterment of
trade conditions.
We are marching mighty close to the
band in these latter days of the century.
Mean to approach closer, too.
+
[•
The indiscriminate guaranteeing of cheap
pianos is one of the many evils which has
come to the surface in the retail trade
within a recent period—at least since the
Cleveland regime of cheapness obtained in
this fair land of ours.
Guarantee—guarantee — without limit,
without qualification—without restriction
—everything, anything is guaranteed. As
there is invariably no distinction made be-
tween good reliable products and the cheap
instruments, sales can be made with
greater ease. What boots if the goods fail
to give satisfaction or are returned? The
manufacturer can be squeezed—the extra
profit is secure anyway. That seems to be
the plan of operation.
Somehow dealers can always be found
who are trying to cut under the lowest
notch. They are prouder of being "always
the cheapest " than of being "always re-
liable." This modern method of doing
business is not only questionable from an
ethical standpoint, but is opposed to the
best business interests of those who prac-
tice it. The day the dealer commenced
guaranteeing cheap rattle boxes he bid
good bye to present or prospective trade
in high grade, legitimate pianos. Thisisa
fact he usually overlooks.
Truly many evils have been born of the
hard times, and the sooner business men
return to common-sense methods the better.
There is danger ahead and a halt should
be called before it becomes too late. A repu-
tation is not for the day, but for all time.

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