Music Trade Review

Issue: 1897 Vol. 24 N. 5

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
vantage to be derived from intercourse and
exchange of opinions. Road men are essen-
tial, but in order to understand conditions
thoroughly, it is as absolutely necessary that
the manufacturer should take the road as it is
for up-to-date dealers to visit the factories and
become better acquainted with the products
which they handle.
" To keep in touch with the trade " is a
trite and timely sentence which dealers and
manufacturers should paste in their hats.
*
*
*
Hardman, Peck & Co. will make the last
payment of their indebtedness, as agreed up-
on in October, 1893, on Thursday of next
week, February 4th.
This will make a sum total of $400,000, with
an interest additional of $50,000, which will
have been paid off in three of the most de-
pressing years in our commercial history. It
it is well-known fact that at the time the agree-
ment was made many of the creditors were
willing to accept fifty cents on the dollar and
did not think it possible that Mr. Peck would
be able to carry out his obligations in this
matter. He has succeeded, and much credit
is due him and his associates for having done
so in the specified time.
*
*
*
There seems to be an unpardonable igno-
rance of music trade affairs among the writ-
ers for the daily papers. It is very rare to
come across an article which is accurate or
which shows any knowledge of musical in-
struments unless written by an expert, and yet
some writers and editors do not hesitate to
criticise and even satirize what they know
little about.
I noticed a case in point in last Sunday's
" Times," in which the advertising methods
of a firm and their instruments—the merits of
which are conceded abroad and through the
length and breadth of this country—were
criticised in a manner that showed the writer's
entire ignorance of the construction or pos-
sibilities of the instrument. It is evident that
the trade papers have a " mission," and that is
to educate our benighted brethren of the
newspaper press.
*
*
*
I regret that a previous engagement pre-
vented my acceptance of an invitation to
be present at the fourteenth anniversay and
reception tendered to the Hon. C. G. Conn
by his employees, which occurred last evening,
Tanuary 29th, at the Bucklen Opera House,
Elkhart, Ind.
All who attended must have had a delight-
ful time, judging from the very excellent mu-
sical programme sent me. Among the solo-
ists at the concert I noticed the names of
Jules Levy, Mme. Costa-Levy, K. A. Lefebre,
Hobart A. Davis, Henry Geiss, James F.
Boyer.
*
*
*
Mr. Hartpence, manager of the local branch
of the Emerson Piano Co., has almost recov-
ered from his recent illness. The early part of
the week he left for Flanders, N. J., where he
will spend a couple of weeks resting.
*
*
*
The touch of the Northwestern weather
which New Yorkers experienced this week
played havoc with business. Of course there
have been some complaints about retail piano
trade.
Verdict for Strich & Zeidler.
We doff our hats to President Steger, of
Steger, 111. Long may he reign.
In a conversation with Mr. Robt. Proddow
yesterday, he stated that there was no foun-
dation for the statement made that Mr. J. B.
Simpson had purchased the interests of Mr.
E. N. Camp in the firm of Camp & Co., of this
city.
J. R. Holcomb & Co., 12 Rockwell Street,
Cleveland, O., are reported to have made an
assignment the early part of the week. Liabil-
ities are unknown. "*
E. W. Furbush is visiting the trade in New
York State this week.
Frank J. Sohmer is out on his initial trip in
the interest of Sohmer & Co.^He will run as
far West as St. Louis.
J. K. M. Gill, representing the Schaeffer
Piano Co., is on his way East and will prob-
ably Sunday in New York.
The Mason & Hamlin Co. received this
week a large order for organs at their Boston
factory from their representative in Leyden,
Holland.
C. A. Hyde, of Norris & Hyde, Boston,
was married to Mrs. Arabella Brewster, of
Providence, R. I., in Cleveland, O., on Sun-
day, January 17th. It is seldom that a wed-
ding takes place on Sunday in Cleveland, but
Mr. Hyde's father was married in that city on
Sunday, and he desired to " follow in his foot-
steps " on the same day. Mr. Hyde's family
resides in Cleveland. We extend congratula-
tions.
The Temple Music Store on Main Street,
Richmond, Ind., has passed into the posses-
sion of a new firm, to be known as Tracy &
Porterfield. Both members of the firm re-
cently resigned from the Starr Piano Co. to
go in business for themselves. Mr. Tracy
was a voicer with the concern for twenty
years, and Mr. Porterfield was head tuner for
fourteen years. The new firm will handle a
full line of pianos, organs, and general musi-
cal goods.
Fire damaged the music store of Samuel
Britton, Mahanoy City, Pa., to the extent of
$600, Sunday night last. Loss is covered by
insurance.
" We have no reason to complain of trade,"
said Mr. Nahum Stetson, of Steinway & Sons,
to The Review yesterday. " Our January
business has been far in excess of the same
month a year ago. Of course the sales have
been in the high-priced pianos. The condi-
tions are, I think, favorable for continued and
steady improvement in trade."
H. F. Ramsdell, dealer in musical instru-
ments, Eastport, Me., has opened piano rooms
in the Corthell Building on Water Street.
The rooms are handsomely furnished, one be-
ing used by the Glee Club for their assemblies.
I. N. Rice, of the Schaeffer Piano Co., Chi-
cago, has been spending some days in town.
He will visit Boston before leaving for home.
Strich & Zeidler, of this city, have come out
triumphant in the suit for slander which they
brought against Albert Steinert, of the Prov-
idence branch of the M. Steinert & Sons Co.
The case was heard before the Supreme
Court in Providence, R. I., the early days of
the week. Mr. Widenmann's evidence was so
conclusive as to the use of the slanderous
statements made decrying the Strich & Zeid-
ler pianos and questioning the financial status
of the house, that the jury very properly had
no recourse but to render a verdict in favor
of the plaintiffs.
An attempt was made in the cross-examina-
tion of Mr. Widenmann to justify some of the
statements made by Mr. Steinert that " the
Strich & Zeidler piano is a low grade, cheap
piano, of the poorest workmanship, made by
an unknown firm." It proved to be a fizzle.
Paul M. Zeidler gave expert testimony and
proved to the satisfaction of the judge and
jury that the Strich & Zeidler is a high grade
instrument with nothing but the best entering
into its manufacture. He was backed in this
matter by the testimony of representatives of
the houses that furnish supplies.
Although damages were placed at a large
sum, yet Strich & Zeidler were not looking
for money; they were simply fighting against
a gross breach of trade ethics. The verdict of
five dollars damages which the jury returned
justifies the action taken by Strich & Zeidler.
It further demonstrates that efforts to aug-
ment business by discrediting the standing of
a rival piano and its makers is reprehensible
in trade and has no standing in law.
" f Newby & Evans Incorporated.
On Saturday last the Ncwby & Evans Piano
Co.,of New York, was incorporated at Albany
to manufacture and sell pianos. The capital
stock is $50,000. The incorporators and di-
rectors are John Evans, of Brooklyn, A. J.
Newby, of New York, and P. S. Hortz, of
Philadelphia. The merging of Newby &
Evans into the Newby & Evans Piano Co.
will effect no radical change in the business;
merely a broadening out and a desire to se-
cure the protection of the incorporation laws
of this State.
The organization of the Newby & Evans
Co. was effected Wednesday last, when John
Evans was elected President, Philip S. Hortz,
Vice-President and Treasurer, and Alfred J.
Newby, Secretary. The latter is also super-
intendent of the factory.
Prescott Piano Co.
At the annual meeting of the Prescott Piano
Co., held January 25th, the following were
elected directors for the ensuing year: Willis
D. Thompson, J. E. Fernald, Geo. D. B. Pres-
cott, William M. Mason, C. C. Danforth,
Frank P. Andrews, Dana G. Prescott. The
board organized by the choice of the follow-
ing: President, W. D. Thompson; Treasurer
and General Manager, George D. B. Prescott;
Secretary, Dana G. Prescott; Clerk, Frank P.
Andrews; Executive Committee, W. D.
Thompson, J. E. Fernald, George D. B. Pres-
cott.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
From a Traveler's Note-Book.
BUSINESS PROSPECTS TRADE SHOULD NOT 1!K FORCED HARD WORK WILL BRING REWARD
BEST MARKET IN THE WORLD SOMETIMES NEGLECTED THE LARGE VERSUS THE
SMALL DEALER SOME CONCLUSIONS MONTHS OF TRAyEL—
TRADE CONDITIONS IN ALBANY AND ONEONTA.
HE prospects for trade are indeed
brightening- all along the line.
During the past ten days I have
seen indisputable proofs that
the storm clouds which have
hovered over the trade horizon
for so many months are fast
being 1 dissipated. It is encouraging from ev-
ery standpoint to note these brightening con-
ditions. However, it is well to move along in
a conservative way. There should be little
attempt to force trade. Good, honest work,
intelligent and persistent work, plenty of it,
will bring commensurate reward, but the mat-
ter of over-booming should be carefully avoid-
ed, now that we are presumably about to
enter upon a few years of seemingly prosper-
ous times.
*
*
*
It was some years ago, after one of my
transcontinental trips, that I called attention
to the fact that some manufacturers pay un-
due attention to far-away trade which does
not bring them the returns which the same
energy and money expended would if placed
in channels nearer home.
There are some manufacturers who will
send their travelling man throughout the far
Western States, working for trade, when they
are leaving undeveloped the best market in
the world—that is, the market of New York,
Pennsylvania, and the New England States.
That territory worked carefully and persist-
ently would bring larger and better returns
than to cover the vast, undeveloped, and thin-
ly settled States of the great West. What need
to traverse Idaho, Montana, the Dakotas,
Kansas, Nebraska, Utah, and others, when
the best market is at our own doors? New
York, with her teeming millions, Pennsyl-
vania with her varied industries, afford a field
for the piano trade which is not found in the
far West.
*
*
*
Again, some manufacturers seem to think
if they can place the agency of their instru-
ments with some of the great houses that it
will pay them, that the prestige of a great
name will assist them to make trade else-
where.
But will it? That is the question. Often-
times these large agents desire enormous con-
cessions of territory, price, and terms which
afford little profit to the manufacturer. The
same territory divided up among a number
of smaller agents, each one of whom pays a
personal attention to his business, and has a
personal following, would amount to many
times the volume of business conducted by
larger dealers.
*
*
*
I do not mean to have the inference drawn
that I am unduly prejudiced toward larger
dealers. I am not, but there are hundreds,
yes thousands, of smaller dealers, some may
term them " country dealers," who sell a vast
number of pianos a year, and, as a rule, are
THE
intensely loyal to the instruments which they
sell. They do not carry an endless variety
of different makes, therefore they are in a bet-
ter condition to give personal attention to
this and that manufacturer. While it is too
often the case with some of our larger dealers
that have secured the agency for a certain
piano, and perhaps the first shipment of in-
struments will remain for months and months
unsold in their warerooms. Sometimes they
secure an agency simply to keep it out of
the hands of their competitors; in the mean-
while they do not carry out the work for the
different instruments which they represent in
a manner that is satisfactory to the manu-
facturer. There are usually one or two makes
which have a decided preference, and the oth-
ers are allowed to go without proper work in
their behalf.
I do not mean this in a broad or sweeping
sense, yet I have seen and noted these facts
in my constant travels among the trade.
Then again, there is the old and oft-quoted
saying about having too many eggs depos-
ited in one basket. It frequently pays better
to have several receptacles in which to de-
posit them, then, if an accident occurs, the
breakage is less demoralizing.
*
*
*
I have before me some months of travel,
covering the principal points in America as
far north as St. Paul and Minneapolis, and as
far south as New Orleans. I shall be inter-
ested to note changes which have taken place
in the trade, and the present conditions as I
find them along my lines of travel, as com-
pared with my last year's trip.
*
*
*
The cold wave seems epidemic, and, as I
scan the weather bulletins, I note that the in-
telligence conveyed there is not of such a
character as to cause a man of nomadic life
to replace heavy clothing by that of lighter
texture. At Albany trade may be character-
ized as fair. Boardman & Gray continue
along in the even tenor of their way. The
brothers Gray take pride in building good
pianos, in the manufacture of which every-
thing which savors of the cheap is carefully
avoided. The " B. & G." pianos have not
only stood the test of time, but the strongest
criticism as well. Some of their styles in oak,
Circassian walnut, and birch are particularly
striking. While in the Boardman & Gray
warerooms, I met George H. Zincke. Mr.
Zincke is a salesman and a traveller of nation-
al repute who is now doing efficient work for
the Boardman & Gray piano.
Mr. McKinney, who controls the destiny of
the Marshall & Wendell piano, takes rather
an optimistic view of the business situation,
and believes that we are now entering upon
a few years, at least, of prosperous times. The
Marshall & Wendell Co. will shortly issue a
new catalogue.
Alfred Shindler, who is the general travel-
ler for the company, will leave in about a
week on an extended trip West and South, re-
turning about May ist. Young Shindler is
a tireless worker, thoroughly systematic, pre-
cise in his business affairs, and, I may add, is
constantly forging to the front in a commend-
able way.
The retail trade is looking up materially.
Albany has not a plethora of music stores.
Aside from the two manufacturers, there are
the Cluetts, Thomas, Tietz, Curtis, who was
formerly at Schenectady, and the Capital City
Music Store. Surely not too many stores for
a city of a hundred thousand, with a well pop-
ulated territory adjoining. At Cluetts' there
may be found the Steinway, Chickering, and
Weber pianos, and for a long time the firm
have had the agency for these three great
makes. In December their sales of Steinway
grands were surprisingly large. While I was
visiting the warerooms another sale was ef-
fected. Notwithstanding the zero weather,
the Steinway grands are in demand. The
^Lolian occupies a prominent place in the
Cluett warerooms. Frank VV. Thomas, too,
has a line of the old standbys—Knabe, Steck;
Sohmer, Emerson—form a solid phalanx, and
Thomas has them. " An excellent December
trade," said Mr. Allen of Thomases. " The
best in the history of the house."
The Capital City Music Co., of which C. H.
Van Wie is the proprietor, are doing an ex-
cellent trade in Mehlins. " Our best musi-
cians like the Mehlin," said Mr. Van Wie.
" It seems to meet all requirements and sat-
isfies amply the most exacting demands made
upon it." The Capital City Music Co. have
recently secured the agency for the Kroeger
piano.
*
*
*
At Oneonta I enjoyed a pleasant sojourn
with Messrs. Baird and Shelland, of McCam-
mon fame.
I want to say right here that the new scale
McCammon pianos are coming through fine-
ly. They are musical instruments of un-
doubted merit, and their excellence must ma-
terially augment the fame of McCammon—•
a name which is old in the annals of the mu-
sic trade. The star of McCammon blazes the
way to musical progress.
A howling snow-storm at Binghamton, the
home of Jones, who pays the freight, and I
did not find Barrett Bros. in.
Apropos of the cold wave. I was tarrying
at a small station at one of the innumerable
junctions which distress the traveller in cen-
tral New York. The door opened, and in
came an individual whose appearance sa-
vored of the antique. His whiskers were
frost-bound, and, after extracting a few icicles
from his hair, he said, in clarion tones, which
made the little building echo and re-echo:
" By cripes, this weather makes a feller hump
like a burnt boot." The expression struck me
as singularly odd, but I thought no more about
it and returned to my paper, when I had the
cold remains of the Seeley dinner served up
to me. My attention was diverted from the
nauseating menu by a peculiar odor which
savored not of ottar of roses. Glancing to-
ward the agriculturist who, in his careless
abandon had extended his pedal extremities
toward the red-hot stove, I saw that, un-
known to him, his boot was burning. I then

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