Music Trade Review

Issue: 1898 Vol. 27 N. 3

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
V O L . XXVII.
No. 3 .
Published Every Saturday at 3 East Fourteenth Street. New York, July 16,1898.
WAR AND BUSINESS.
MORE OPINIONS OF MEMBERS OF THE TRADE REGARDING THE BUSINESS SITUATION THE REVIEW
WILL CONTINUE TO PRESENT THE TRADE VIEWS UPON THIS MOST IMPORTANT MATTER,
AS SEEN THROUGH MANY GLASSES BUSINESS MEN IN ALL SECTIONS CON-
TRIBUTE TO THE DISCUSSION MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS ARE
INTERVIEWED—SOME VERY ENCOURAGING REPORTS THE
OPINIONS SHOULD FORM A FOUNDATION UPON WHICH
TO BUILD THE STRUCTURE FOR FALL TRADE.
Chas. ft. Stieff, Baltimore, Hd.:— " T h e
indications of an unusually prosperous
fall are not only supported by a consensus
of opinion coming from those who have
carefully studied existing conditions, but
are based upon indisputable and logical
grounds.
"Vast sums of money have recently
been expended, and we must receive our
just quota.
"The nation has adapted itself to the
conditions of war, the ill effects of which
were generally felt immediately after its
declaration. Our spirits are high, because
our victories have been glorious, and
peace promises to be realized in the early
future.
" We are extremely busy preparing for
the fall, and our factory is taxed to meet
the conditions we anticipate.
"We are optimistic on future trade."
harvested and marketed at an average
fair price, we think trade this fall will
be the best we have had since '92. Am
expecting a very large music trade during
the balance of this year and indications
are such that all kinds of business in this
part of the country will be exceedingly
good and it seems to the writer that we
can expect these good times for at least
three years to come, if not for all time.
"Our banks are in better condition,
having more ready cash to-day than ever
before, and I can see nothing ahead that
can prevent us from having at least a
good solid trade for the rest of the year,
and in my mind, there is no question but
that the present war has helped to do this
to a great extent."
Raphael Fassett, Manager Conover
Music Co., St. Paul, Minn.:—"Business
with us has been slowly improving, each
Wulschner & Son, Indianapolis, Ind :— succeeding month showing a healthy
"We are making all preparations for a growth over the preceding one, until June,
large fall trade. Our factory force we are when a comparison with same month 1897
increasing and are endeavoring, during the shows our profits on sales to have been
present quiet state of affairs in the whole- twenty-five per cent, greater this year.
sale business, to catch up and, if possible, This certainly does not look as if the war
scare was perceptibly affecting our busi-
get a little ahead.
"We may find a continuance of the war ness, still the men complain of some cases
longer than we all expect, though it is our that they cannot close until the final sur-
opinion, regardless of the war excitement render comes and the troops are mustered
(unless something startling happens which out of service, and once more at home.
reverses our present good fortune) that the We hear much of the great wheat harvest,
incoming season will be a bright one for and undoubtedly it is bound to help the
entire country. Certainly business should
the entire music trade."
Stone's flusic House, Fargo, N. D.:— be better in St. Paul than it has been for
" A t the commencement of the present ten years, this fall. Having had the en-
war, it interfered very much with the tire management of this branch only since
majority of business throughout the State, January 1st last, my six months' work is
everybody being in an unsettled condi- very encouraging."
tion. However, it has called a good many
H. W. Hall, Manager, Bailey's Music-
of the idle men to employment leaving Rooms, Burlington, V t . : — " I do not think
work for those remaining home.
that to-day, the war with Spain is interfer-
"We have already seen quite an ad- ing with our business to any perceptible
vancement in business, and if our present extent. I came to this conclusion after a
outlook for the coming fall crop (which is careful comparison of our April, May and
very fine) meets our expectations and is June business, with last year.
$ 2 .oo PER YEAR.
SINGLE COPIES, 10 CENTS
" The first part of April business went
hard. Everybody talked 'war' and felt
the situation very grave. However, it was
but a short time before there was an im-
provement ; to some extent a better feeling
prevailed, and while it takes a little more
push, a little earlier start in the morning,
a little closer attention to details, we seem
to be doing about our iisual amount of
business.
" T h e fact is, the farmers are feeling
more sanguine. The crop outlook was
never better, and prices good. This has a
great deal to do with our business. The
piano dealer begins to realize that he can-
not sit in his comfortable office and
theoretically build up a big and profitable
trade. Customers must be manufactured
as well as the goods. They must be
looked up and converted, and it is only the
hard, incessant worker who does this.
" I t is all well enough to work out a suc-
cessful business on paper, but it requires
the application to make it a success.
'' The motto of every piano dealer should
be: 'War or no war, business must suc-
ceed,' and they will soon find the 'war ex-
cuse ' to be a secondary consideration.
Less theorizing as to the future, and more
energetic and systematic work at the pres-
ent time, will keep up and build up any
business."
C. F. Grobmann, flilwaukee, Wis.:—"As
to your query, ' How will the fall trade
be?' first, we will say:
"There are no 'remnants' or seasonable
pieces in the piano business. Years ago
pianos were sold every day in the year.
"We do not look for any better trade
this fall or next spring, and all the other
falls and springs to follow, so long as we
are afflicted with national and internal dis-
turbances!
" So long as the war continues, so long
may we expect poor business. When the
war is over we have still the greatest of
all evils to contend with, namely:
«• "The union labor agitators, those peo-
ple who neither seed nor harvest, and yet
they make their money out of the wage
earners and keep the cotintry in a contin-
ual turmoil from coast to coast. If every
wage earner would do his own thinking
and dictating, and Uncle Sam would exert
his power to call down and quell these
walking delegate agitators, those free
(Continued on page 8)
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
-—3—vEDWARD LYMAN BILL-*—*
Editor and Proprietor
PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY
~
3 East 14th St., New York
specialism, events have so shaped them-
we fling the infamous insult, this atrocious
selves that there became a necessity for
lie back into the Courier teeth for future
factories in which special parts of instru-
mastication.
ments could be manufactured at a saving
from a trade publication, shows either ma-
of
licious intent or lamentable ignorance of
time, labor and annoyance to piano
manufacturers themselves.
SUBSCRIPTION (including postage), United .States,
Mexico and Canada. $i<.oo per year; all other countries,
$3.00.
ADVERTISEnriNTS, $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 the New York Post Office as Second Class Matter.
NEW YORK, JULY 16, 1898.
TELEPHONE NUMBER, 1745-EIQHTEENTH S1REET.
THE KEYNOTE.
The first week of each month, The Review will
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.
the underlying laws which are operative
This does not alone apply to the piano
trade, but to every branch of industry.
an
action
manufacturer
in every industry.
The man who offers a finished piano for
It is not hypocritical or contradictory to
say that
Such a statement, coming
sale, completed in his own factory, is as
can
much a legitimate manufacturer, as if he
produce actions more cheaply when he is
grew the elephant whose tusks produced
manufacturing three hundred sets a week
the keys.
than one can in making ten sets during
the same period.
Apply the same law to the publication
of papers.
There are a number of papers
In the first place the action manufac-
that we can name in every city of impor-
turer invests capital in labor-saving ma-
tance in the land where the typesetting,
chinery, and his energies are being de-
press-work, binding and editing of which,
voted to one special branch of industry,
is all done at different points and still
hence it is the aim of his life to produce
those papers are not stencil or illegitimate
the best goods that he can at a minimum
publications.
Every man in business contracts for his
cost.
Not only the purchasing trade receives
work
as his means and ideas permit.
a large benefit accruing from his industry
Does a reader in criticising a paper com-
and application, but the purchasing public
plain to the typesetter for an occasional
as well.
error or misprint?
The same applies to case making
Does he censure the
PIANO LEGITIMACY.
—to the manufacture of sounding-boards,
man who runs the press, for an inferior
T H E dying throes of the Courier-Annex
and everything else used in the construc-
grade of press work?
tion of musical instruments.
blame the paper mill for a qiiality of paper?
. are indeed ludicrous to behold. There
is now and then evidence of a little life in
There are examples in this trade, as in
the Annex body as seen by a spiteful kick
all others,
at some particular non-supporter.
reached such an enormous output weekly
A rather peculiar issue, raised in this
where
manufacturers
have
that from their vantage ground they can
Does he praise or
No, it is all concentrated at one point,
whether praise or censure, it rightly falls
upon the publisher's shoulders.
Does a purchaser of a piano blame the
attenuated sheet which is obviously made
well afford
to cover an attack on Henry F. Miller, is
parts of the instrument.
Their output is
the action manufacturer for a slight here
that no piano makers are really manufac-
of sufficient magnitude to justify a large
or there, the varnish maker for poor var-
turers until they themselves make all parts
investment in special machinery, and by
nish?
of the instrument, such as actions, cases,
maintaining a large output they are en-
No, it is always the maker, the man
abled to keep a sufficient corps of trained
under whose roof all its parts are grouped.
men at work in the special departments of
They are placed there by his own instruc-
plates, etc.
Why not go a step further and add to
it, until they raise the elephants in Africa,
have iron mines in Alabama, mahogany
forests in South America and all that ?
No matter where a man may purchase
to manufacture the special
their business.
tions, by his own directions, and he is the
We are neither arguing for nor against
the manufacture of all parts of the piano
by manufacturers.
case manufacturer for some imperfection,
That is purely a per-
responsible party.
At least such is the case in this land of
commerce—this home of piano makers.
parts of anything, the whole is greater
sonal matter and only interests the manu-
With the
than any of its parts, and it is for that
facturer himself, whether he can produce
blumenbergs
whole
that
manufacturer
cease from troubling and
stands
cheaper or better work within his own
the weary piano makers are at rest, we are
sponsor whose name appears on the fall
lines—made under his own supervision—
not acquainted.
board
No matter
or whether he proposes to place his work
be acquired later—maybe.
whether the keys are made in Kamtschatka,
with outside specialists, and have his work
or the ivory taken from some pre-historic
prepared according to his own specifica-
tusks
tions and suggestions.
of
the
other land, where the marc-
the instrument.
found
within
the
Arctic circle,
certainly as long as they are
A knowledge of that will
EXHIBITING INVOICES.
T H E R E are still a few men in the world
grouped
We repeat, it is unnecessary to enter into
together in one factory and one man stands
an argument anent the benefits accrviing in
sponsor for the perfected instrument then
either case.
he is as much a manufacturer as if every
must be decided by the individual.
They are purely personal and
If the
—some inside of the barbed
wire
fence surrounding the music trade—who
make a point of exhibiting invoices of
pianos to customers.
These invoices were
part were made under his own factory
manufacturer can contract for a thousand
gained, in many instances,
roofs.
sets, or any number for that matter, of
period while they held the agency of the
actions per year with a reputable maker at
pianos named in the invoice.
It is a question of material—of scale—of
finish;
a question
of
labor, of
correct
a lower rate and obtain eminently satis-
during
the
They do this with the direct idea of not
supervision, of attention to details in every
factory results, we presume that it is his
only injuring the sale, but of killing the
department that assists to create a perfect
own affair whether he wishes to do this,
reputation of their competitor.
piano.
It is the unfinished product which
is really the cheap piano of to-day.
As
the age has gravitated
towards
Invoices
or whether he wishes to embark in action
should never be exhibited, and any dealer
making on his own account.
But as far as
who shows an invoice of a piano of any
the legitimacy of a finished product goes,
make to a customer with the direct idea of

Download Page 3: PDF File | Image

Download Page 4 PDF File | Image

Future scanning projects are planned by the International Arcade Museum Library (IAML).

Pro Tip: You can flip pages on the issue easily by using the left and right arrow keys on your keyboard.