Music Trade Review

Issue: 1898 Vol. 26 N. 5

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
EDWARD LYMAN BILL-
Editor and Proprietor
PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY
3 East 14th St., New York
SUBSCRIPTION (including postage). United States,
Mexico and Canada, f^-oo per year; all other countries,
$300.
AOVERTISEn r NTS, $2.00 per inch, single column, per
insertion. On quarterly or yearly contracts a special dis-
count is allowed. Advertising Pages $50.00, opposite read-
ing matter $75.00.
REMITTANCES, in other than currency form, should
be made payable to Edward Lyman Bill.
Entered at Vie New York Post Office as Second Class Matter.
NEW YORK, JANUARY^ 29,11898.
TELEPHONE NUMBER, 1745--E1GHTEENTH STREET.
THE KEYNOTE.
The first week of each month, The Review wil)
contain a supplement embodying the literary
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.
FROM OUR VANTAGE GROUND.
T H E present tendency of manufacturers
towards combination is one of the striking
evidences of the unsatisfactory condition of
the manufacturing business in its present
state. Reorganizations will occur, adjust-
ments will take place, but we shall not hear
in the future that cry of over production.
We have not reached that point, nor will we
in this day and generation.
The present position which music occupies
in the educational institutions of our land
demonstrates that the future American will
be necessarily musical. His environments are
becoming more and more musical. If we go
back to that period of our own youth, and
compare the musical accessories of those
times with the present, we will see that a
marvelous change has taken place—a change
which means an almost phenomenal develop-
ment of musical America—Seidl and others
to the contrary notwithstanding.
When the century began a few cities in the
United States had their operatic representa-
tions, but they were representations of trifling
operatic operas of England and English sing-
ers, and had generally to be paid for before
they could be heard. The boys of the Char-
ity School sang in the choir of Trinity Church.
Music was there in New York, but not much.
It was during those early days that pleasure
parties drove out to Harlem to dance to the
fiddle of a negro slave.
What New York enjoys now need not be
enlarged on. Her instrumental forces vie in
number and skill with those of the capitals of
Europe. Her opera belongs to the noblest
institutions of its kind in the world, and is
not supported by subvention from royal ex-
chequers wrung in the shape of taxes from
the people, but one-half by those who go to
enjoy its pleasures and one-half by the gifts of
a body of public-spirited citizens. In very
truth the goddess of music has come down
from the austere heights where once she
could only be approached by the elect among
her devotees.
Limiting the piano production of such a
country.
Nonsense.
Effusiveness which shows ignorance of the
conditions underlying America's industrial
strata and the musical possibilities of^. her
people.
f-{AlNES BROS, have taken the proper
course by bringing suit against the Courier,
announcement of which is made in another
part of this paper.
This action on their part will demonstrate
to the trade the honesty of their intent in se-
curing the signatures displayed in the author-
ized announcement, and will justify the cor-
rectness of their position in not permitting
such an act of baseness on the part of a pub-
lication to pass without using all the legal
means which the laws of this country afford
to place the stamp of condemnation upon it.
They do not propose to have their name
used in a manner which reflects discredit
upon their actions, and which, without doubt,
is avast injury to their business as well, with-
out calling to their aid legal means. Their
course has been both dignified and generous.
After the publication of the advertisement
which was calculated to throw discredit upon
their actions, they at once wired every con-
cern whose name was displayed in the adver-
tisement and followed it up by letter immedi-
ately stating that the matter was used without
their knowledge or sanction.
After this, through their attorneys, a letter
was sent to the Courier Annex, requiring that
paper to print in its editorial columns a state-
ment to the effect that the advertisement was
not caused to be inserted by any one con-
nected with the Haines Bros, corporation.
Few concerns would have given an oppor-
tunity for explanation and retraction. But
the position of the Annex was peculiar in
this, as an explanation on its part would have
placed it in a questionable light before the
trade, and would virtually have amounted to
an open acknowledgment of the attitude of the
Courier in inserting an unauthorized adver-
tisement which was calculated to have a det-
rimental .effect upon the future of Haines
Bros.
Haines Bros, were not to be trifled with in
this matter, nor did they resort to that sort
of bluff which is so well known to the Annex
editor.
Haines Bros, claim that the advertisement
was not only a breach of faith on the part of
the Courier, but was a misrepresentation of
the purposes for which the manufacturers'
affidavits were given, and that the publication
of the advertisement and the unauthorized use
of the names of the manufacturers was a di-
rect injury to their business.
In reviewing this matter it should be re-
membered that last Monday the Courier An-
nex containing the two page advertisement
was used in open court by Haines & Co.'s at-
torney to support his allegation that the suit
of Haines Bros, had its origin in an advertis-
ing scheme. The Courier Annex was filed
with the court as part of the defendant's
papers on that motion.
It looks as if there was a deeper scheme
involved in this advertisement than appears
on the surface. All of the plans concocted in
the publication of this dishonest advertise-
ment will be fully brought out by the attor-
neys of Haines Bros.
Haines Bros, in bringing this suit deserve
the hearty commendation of the trade. They
are the first manufacturers to bring a damage
suit against Marc Blumenberg. While others
have fumed, threatened, chafed and smarted
under the Courier lash, Haines Bros, have
acted.
Morris Steinert was the first member of
this trade to bring Blumenberg to his knees,
and now Haines Bros, prove that they do not
propose to be unjustly assailed without sum-
moning the law to their aid.
It is rumored that a number of men whom
Mr. Blumenberg has maligned in the past will
be subpoenaed to appear at the trial. His
character will be clearly shown up in the
Court room.
It is also rumored now
that Haines Bros, have taken a determined
stand to protect their rights and for trade
honor, that also others who have been the ob-
ject of Courier abuse in days past will im-
mediately form a line of attack on the breast
works of the enemy.
P\OWN South the cotton growers have en-
• tered into an arrangement to the effect that
only a limited number of acres shall be
planted with cotton.
A correspondent suggests to us the ad-
visability of the piano manufacturers of
America operating on the same lines, agree-
ing to limit the number of pianos manu-
factured annually to a specified number.
This man does not understand that the
tiny, tinkling instrument of a century ago to
which George Washington, like his great ad-
mirer, Frederick the Great, played an accom-
paniment on the flute in his sentimental
moods, has developed into an instrument that
asserts itself in an orchestra of one hundred
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
instrumentalists, is not so easily to be limited
in its production.
That the piano manufacturer of to-day has
not exactly a flower strewn path to traverse we
will all admit. Competition, fierce competi-
tion has denuded the business of many of its
pleasing features of years ago, and has re-
duced it more and more down to the plane of
commercialism.
However, it is not the attitude of the trade
itself which has placed it there. It is the in-
fluence of the age upon this trade which has
wrought the changes. It is in truth a com-
mercial age, and this country is not like the
far Orient, sleeping under indolent rule and
ground down in the depths of ignorance. It
is a giant in industry and in aggressiveness,
and every sub-division of industry has felt to
a large degree the onward spur of commercial-
ism.
In the days when George Washington used
to lead the reel in old Virginia we were strict-
ly an agricultural country. We have now be-
come one of the greatest manufacturing
countries on earth, and an investigation of
the records in the Patent Bureau at Washing-
ton will disclose the fact that the inventive
ability of this country exceeds all of Europe
combined, and we are still in the furnace, as
it were, as a nation.
There are many elements yet to be welded
together before America stands with its per-
fectly tempered blade to carve the industrial
world. It has always been so in the history
of all nations, the greatest of which have been
first fused, then welded, then hardened to
their final strength.
The Romans, the English, the Germans,
followed that great rule in their path of pro-
gress towards civilization.
We are only
standing upon the threshold—upon the open-
ing doors of a coming age. And who shall
now speak fully of the destiny of this great
Continent?
Talking about limiting the product of a
trade. It is the expression of an idle dream-
er, of a pessimist. There is no limit to-day
nor any in sight to the productive powers of
this trade when properly marshaled and offi-
cered. Success and greater development
are sure to come, but they will not
come out of idle waiting, nor by the regret-
ful criticisms expressed on conditions which
are not entirely to our individual liking. Out
of this all must come a civilization higher
and broader than all that has gone before.
" THERE is no possibility of concerted ac-
tion on the part of the trade or any part
of it on vital questions."—Courier Annex.
This sentence appears among others of
equal strength in the columns of our, once
upon a time, contemporary.
The Courier Annex should not be too san :
guine over this fact, because there may be
concerted action on the part of the trade on
several matters which are now pending. But
then Mr. Blumenberg's spells are vague and
symbolical. He fills the circumambient air with
a whirling phantasmagoria of words. His
adjectives drip with the molten streams of
latent fire, and his irregular verbs gleam along
the horizon like comets. Indeed, his voice
is very large. Recently he let loose the lava
of his invective and, strange to say, the trade
is still here, and his little play with the
Haines Bros, matter has not proven to
be a colossal success, but as an ejaculatory
projector of shimmering generalities, he has
demonstrated the fact that he is a Kohinoor
of the first magnitude.
AT the banquet held at the Waldorf-Astoria
last Thursday night by the National Associ-
ation of Manufacturers, the East and West
touched glasses over the return of prosperity.
President McKinley left Washington at his
busiest season to be present at this banquet.
His address was replete with sound logic and
wise counsel to the manufacturers. He said:
"The country is now emerging from trying
conditions. It is only just beginning to re-
cover from the depression in certain lines of
business long continued and altogether un-
paralleled. Progress therefore will naturally
be slow, but let us not be impatient, rather
let us exercise a just patience, and one which
will in time bring its own reward. . ."
The Manufacturers' Association, which had
its inception in Cincinnati in '95, embraces
now a thousand members, representing every
important industry in the country. The
work of the Association pertains to the home
interests of manufacturers and the develop-
ment of American trade with foreign coun-
tries.
Among the objects which pertain to home
interests are the conservation of the home
market, the creation of a Federal Depart-
ment of Commerce and Industry, the im-
provement of the patent laws, the unification
of railroad freight classification, the enact-
ment of a uniform bankrupcy law and the im-
provement of internal waterways.
The chief features of the foreign policy of
the association are described as the ad-
vocacy of the investigation of foreign mar-
kets, the establishment abroad of warehouses
for samples, the improvement of the Consular
service, the restoration of the American mer-
chant marine and the restoration of the
treaties of reciprocity.
It will be seen that the objects of the Asso-
ation are broad, comprehensive and patriotic.
Among the delegates from Cincinnati to
attend the Convention this week were Frank
A. Lee and Geo. W. Armstrong, Jr. These
gentlemen have taken a warm interest in the
organization which had its inception in their
home city, and have labored assiduously to
promote its interests in every way. Their
interests have not been personal or selfish
ones, but through a general desire to promote
the welfare of America on the logical basis
that national prosperity is a patriotic motive
which interests us all.
Geo. P. Bent is also a member of the asso-
ciation and was present at the banquet.
In the East among its staunch supporters
in the music trade is Alfred Dolge. Mr.
Dolge readily grasped the great scope of the
organization, and anything which promotes
national welfare always interests him.
Rudolf Dolge, who has charge of the
manufacturers' warehouse in Caracas, Venez-
uela, was cabled by the president of the As-
sociation, and he immediately took a steamer
for New York and read a paper before the
Convention last Thursday, stating the advan-
tages won by the manufacturers' exhibit in
Venezuela, and the possibility of future ad-
vancement in our trade relations with that
country.
pORCIBLY stated, the more advertising you
do, the more power which you do has.
But that is not all. Cumulative advertis-
ing means more; it is retroactive. The more
advertising which you do, the more power
what you have done has.
The first insertion in a medium usually
makes a little impression. The second in-
sertion helps to deepen the impression of the
first. The third goes still deeper and so on
ad infinitum.
If constant rubbing wears away the stone,
then persistent and intelligent advertising
wears away the masonry of business obstruc-
tion and makes the entrance clear for the
business vehicle.
The day has really gone by for circulars, as
the average citizen pays little attention to
circulars which may be sent to him. Of
course in some cases a neat brochure is effec-
tive, yet there are few people who spare the
time to peruse every circular which reaches
them.
They are not won by attractive head-lines
and an illusory opening, neither do they
wade through a dreary wildnerness of hyper-
bole that is usually encountered in these
gratuitous sheets. It pays better to advertise
in legitimate mediums which reach the par-
ticular class of people desired than almost in
any other way. It does not pay to press the
advertising button and then let go becaus^,
the rest is not done. It is the steady ringing
which brings about the desired results.

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