Music Trade Review

Issue: 1897 Vol. 25 N. 5

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
Til
VOL. XXV.
N o . 5.
Published Every Saturday, at 3 East Fourteenth Street. New York, July 31,1897.
From the City by the Lake.
[Special to The Review.]
P. A. Starck, retail manager of Story &
Clark, said: "We have had more orders
for pianos and organs in the farming dis-
tricts during the last three months than we
had during the previous three years. The
farmers are paying cash, and our country
agents are sending in most encouraging
reports. During the hard times every-
thing was sold on time. Now there is a
brisk trade, not only in the country but in
the city, the demand for pianos in Chicago
being very much improved. Our country
agents are calculating on doing a big busi-
ness in the fall among the farmers owing
to the good crops. The demand for organs
among the farmers at the present time is
good harbinger of what will come."
C. H. MacDonald's connection with the
new Estey branch, although not unexpect-
ed to those on "the inside," has created
some talk.
Lyon & Healy had quite an invoice of
goods on board "LaTouraine," which failed
to arrive in port before the Tariff bill was
signed.
Louis Dederick is calling on the trade in
Missouri and Nebraska in the interest of the
Manufacturers' Co.
F. S. Cable, of the C. C. O. C, is in the
East, visiting his mother and sister.
The members of the music trade whose
business houses are located on Wabash
avenue are taking a lively interest in the
association formed for the purpose of im-
proving that thoroughfare.
George Grass has been touring the West
with considerable success in behalf of the
Steck wares. The latest production of the
house, style H, photographs of which Mr.
Grass has shown agents, has been much
admired.
Will L. Bush returned recently from a
highly satisfactory business tour. He re-
ports improving times, good orders and an
encouraging outlook all along the line.
Bush & Gerts are at work on a number of
new styles for the fall trade.
Lyon, Potter & Co. have made large
sales of Steinway pianos during the past
week.
J. K. M. Gill, who recently underwent an
operation in a local hospital, is fully recov-
ered and is again on the road.
Chicago, July 28, 1897.
The Times-Herald published a number
of interviews last Sunday, going to show
that the farmers are becoming more liberal
in their purchases now that things are
going their way. Referring to the music
trade it says: Organs are the last things
farmers buy, and they usually must have
money ahead before they decide to get a
little music in the house. During the last
three months, however, the pianoand organ
business among the farmers of the West
has picked up wonderfully, and manu-
facturers believe there will be a fall trade
which will equal the banner year of 1892.
In that year the organ business was at
its height. Cash was paid for every pur-
chase, and the farmers indulged in all the
luxuries the good times allowed them to
get. That the good times are coming
again is evidenced in the demand for
pianos and organs. The farmers are not
asking for long time. They are paying
cash with the orders. The trade is so brisk
that one Chicago firm is increasing its plant
at a cost of $107,000.
E. S. Con way, of the W. W. Kim ball Co.,
said: "Our business has been getting better
every month since the istof January. Our
trade is especially good among the farmers.
Many of our most active dealers are finding
their greatest increase in the agricultural
districts. In Nebraska we have done more
business during the last six months than
we were able to do in the previous twenty-
four. The trade in Kansas has greatly in-
creased. Mr. Seals, our agent from Bir-
mingham, Ala., was in to-day, and he said
that he would have to put several wagons
on the road, as his best trade was in the
agricultural districts.
"We have been turning out thirty pianos
and thirty organs a day, but notwithstand-
ing this we have found it necessary to in-
crease our plant at a cost of $107,000. At
present the orders have come in so thick
and fast that we are between 500 and 600
orders behind on organs. The cash receipts
are far in excess of our requirements, and
the increase in the business seems to be
universal. For the last three years cus-
tomers have been giving paper and asking
for long time. They are now asking for
the best cash discounts. Our business be-
Among the callers this week at the Wiss-
ing one of luxuries, we calculate from our ner warerooms, New York city, was
experience that the present impetus in George D. Meares, a well-known citizen of
trade will help us immensely. I do not
expect any boom, but I am thoroughly Raleigh, N. C. Mr. Meares is lessee and
convinced that the general commercial and manager of the Metropolitan Opera House
agricultural interests have struck the up in that city, also a music publisher and
grade."
dealer.
$3.00 PER YEAR.
SINGLE COPIES, 10 CENTS
Accused of Many Larcenies.
PROMINENT HOUSES IN THE MUSIC TRADE THE
VICTIMS.
Charles Gabler, Jr., twenty-three years
old, 318 West Forty-fourth street this city,
has been held in $1,000 bail on the charge
of swindling a number of musical firms.
Among the complainants were William
Pond & Co., the Meloharp Co., Alfred
Dolge & Son, and the American Auto-
harp Co. Gabler is an accomplished musi-
cian. He carried with him references,
purported to be signed by some rather
well-known New York men. According to
the complaint he bought on memorandum
some $2,700 worth of musical instruments,
which were found pawned at less than one-
fifth their value. On June 6 he called upon
Pond & Co., and on the strength of a letter
of recommendation signed with the name of
Alfred Dolge & Son, got five inlaid banjos,
valued at $125, which were found pawned
the next day. Complaints came to the
police about Gabler. While searching for
him Detective Sweet heard complaints
from little girls that their gold rings had
been stolen from them by a man whose
appearance was like that of the musician.
Gabler had sixty-eight pawn tickets in his
possession when arrested, and they not only
represented musical instruments, but also
gold rings. Besides all these suspicions,
the police think their prisoner robbed the
house of a Mrs. Brown, Forty-fourth street
and Eighth avenue, and the director of the
Volks Garden orchestra.
Looschen & Meinberg.
THE LATEST ADDITION TO THE LIST OF LOCAL
MANUFACTURERS.
Alfred Meinberg .recently connected with
the firm of Weber-Wheelock & Co., and
formerly with William Knabe & Co., has
formed a partnership with George Loo-
schen, a brother of J. J. Looschen, the pi-
ano case manufacturer, and formerly con-
nected with a manufacturing department
of the Weber factory, under the title "Loo-
schen & Meinberg."
The object of the firm will be the manu-
facture of first-class pianos, with factory,
warerooms and offices at the premises re-
cently occupied by Gildemeester & Kroeg-
er, 356-360 Second avenue. Active business
will begin in September, when Mr. Mein-
berg will start on the road in the interest of
the firm.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
the highest value, as surely as children cry
for Castoria. Now, to apply the same rule
to the piano trade.
Can any intelligent, sane, reasonable hu-
man being, living A.L>. 1897, tell why man-
ufacturers of piano actions should not ad-
R LVMAN
Editor and Proprietor.
vertise and should not stamp their name
or trade-mark, if they so desire, upon
PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY
every set of actions that is made under
3 East 14th St., New York
their supervision?
SUBSCRIPTION (including postage) United States and
If a satisfactory explanation can be given
Canada., $3.00 per year; Foreign Countries, $4.00.
why a firm should not create, through
ADVERTISEMENTS, $2.00 per inch, single column, per
insertion. On quarterly or yearly contracts a special dia-
•oont i« allowed.
legitimate channels, a demand for and an
REMITTANCES, in other than currency form, should
interest in their wares, whether piano ac-
to made payable to Edward Lyman BilL
tions or threshing machines, we should be
8nt*r*d mt tha N**> Y»rk Post Offict as Second- Oass Mmttm.
mightily pleased to hear it. Of course,
NEW YORK, JULY 31, 1897.
there are a limited number of manufactur-
TELEPHONE NUMBER 1743. — EIGHTEENTH STREET.
ers who supply every part of the instru-
THE KEYNOTE.
ment ; again, there are others who carefully
The first week of each month, The Review
eschew all mention of the action-maker's
will contain a supplement embodying the liter-
name
when referring to their instruments,
ary and musical features which have heretofore
appeared in The Keynote. This amalgamation
and still others who will state that their
will be effected without in any way trespassing
actions
are made under patents of their
on our regular news service. The Review will
own—are in the strictest sense their own
continue to remain, as before, essentially a trade
paper.
actions. All this is perfectly proper from
an ethical standpoint, but let us take a
THE TRADE DIRECTORY.
view from the action-maker's position. If,
The Trade Directory, which is a feature of
The Review each month, is complete. In it ap-
by taking a proper advantage of every op-
pear the names and addresses of all firms en-
portunity, and by following every channel
gaged in the manufacture of musical instruments
and the allied trades. The Review is sent to
We could continue with an endless list of of publicity that he can force open, he can
the United States Consulates throughout the
obtain for his wares a fixed and unassail-
world, and is on file in the reading rooms of the names but no one can or will attempt to
able
position, then is he not acting for the
principal hotels in America.
deny that every man who is at the head of
an industrial institution is wisely using all preservation and advancement of his own
avenues that are accessible to augment the interests?
THE VALUE OF A NAME.
Action making is his specialty and the
N every industry may be found men who fame of his wares and render them more
higher standard he can create for his
have concentrated the energy of a life- and more a fixed necessity.
particular
brand, the better off he is com-
The close of the century while iconoclastic
time upon the production of certain
wares. They have witnessed with honest in many ways has not destroyed those mercially and the stronger the demand for
pride the evolution of their business from things which have helped to increase the his actions continues.
If he can go beyond the manufacturer
inconsequential nothingness to majestic value of special articles of trade.
and
popularize the actions with the dealers,
proportions. It is but natural that men
Even in that most modern of all industries
who have contributed the energy which —the bicycle business—we find the value the musicians and the public, then he is
springs from enthusiasm to the expansion of a name or trade-mark, as associated with making his position more and more secure.
of a commercial enterprise should con- certain special articles which enter into the Every one in business is striving to
template their work with the satisfaction make-up of a wheel, strongly emphasized. create a demand for his product and should
which comes to them as a rightful heritage. Not only do the compilers of the different action manufacturers be different than the
Take away that desire to create—to evolute wheels keep their names strongly to the rest i
—to be a recognized factor in the marts front, but they are also shrewd enough to
Are they cast in different clay?
of trade, and you at once level all to the advertise the names of the makers of the
Is there no desire on their part to in-
socialistic plane.
different parts of the wheel who have crease the value of their wares?
Are they to be deprived of the right of
Look at the military cadet, he hopes to gained prominence for the excellence and
forge ahead to a commanding position. He reliability of their work. We see enumer- stamping a trade mark if they so desire
wishes to be a power in his chosen pro- ated in the specifications such items as so- upon their actions?
Let us interrogate here. Was it not the
fession. The young naval officer fresh and-so's tires, saddles, etc.
Courier
Trade Extra which advised "no
from Annapolis may be an embryo Farra-
This may be interpreted as meaning that
gut if the occasion ever arises in our na- the makers of the advertised parts not only names on piano actions?" The same paper
tion's history when such a man is needed. perform excellent work, but they have lib- which by the way has been assailing
Every professional reader of Blackstone erally advertised it, so that the purchas- Wessell, Nickel & Gross of late and pre-
can not be a Choate or an Evarts but he ing public has learned to look upon such senting weekly a partial list of the cus-
hopes for distinction in his profession.
a name as meaning standard of merit. tomers of that firm.
No higher compliment could be paid a
Every man who follows industrial pur- Wise men they were, too, because an idea
suits is actuated by that same desire to once formed is difficult to uproot, and we firm than for those who use its products to
naturally ask for certain brands that we advertise them and while we have no de-
achieve distinction.
It is ambition—sometimes a dangerous have grown to look upon as representing sire to criticise Wessell, Nickel & Gross in
possession—that spurs us all on to further
accomplishments.
In the music trade ever) 7 artisan who
leaves the employ of a firm and begins on
his own account cannot reasonably expect
to become a Steinway or a Chickering in
national esteem, but way down in the
hidden recesses of his heart is safely stored
the hope that some day he may achieve
prominence for himself and his wares.
If it were not so in all probability he
would never have embarked in business on
his own account. In the field of journalism
it is the same—the individuality of the
man becomes a part of the paper. The
combined strength of men is condensed in
the name of the paper. Some are fortu-
nate enough to have the span of life
extended so that they can look back with
composure upon the obstacles which they
have overcome and experience an intense
satisfaction which comes from the occu-
pancy of a vantage ground. William
Steinway, at one time a workman at the
bench, lived long enough to see his name
an acknowledged power in all the art and
commercial circles in the world. It was
pride, ambition—that spurred him on to
higher accomplishments.
I

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