Music Trade Review

Issue: 1899 Vol. 28 N. 15

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
most sincerely for your kind reception in
the name of the navy. I believe that the
navy is entitled to the warm-hearted greet-
ing and praise and confidence of the Ameri-
can people. (Applause.) It is enough to say
perhaps that the navy in the year 1898
maintained the high prestige won by the
American navy in former years. And the
success of the navy (if you will allow me
to say it) is very largely due, I believe, to
the professional spirit, standard and char-
acter of the men who make it up. Not in
any spirit of modesty, but from a desire to
state the simple truth, I say that no credit
is due to the head of that department; all
credit in connection with that branch of
the Government is due to the men and
officers—to the personnel of the navy.
(Applause.) I do not believe that a finer
spirit exists anywhere in any body of men.
It is not merely a martial spirit; it is not
merely a naval spirit; it is not merely the
spirit which seeks to win victory. It is
the high professional spirit which marks
character, purpose, elevation of the mind
—high ideas. I refer to this because I
think the achievements of our navy show
the advantage of a high professional spirit
—because I think they emphasize the im-
portance of such associations as that in
which you are now organized—an associa-
tion which, as Mr. Conway and other
gentlemen have said, has been instituted
for the purpose of cultivating in your de-
partment of business and among the mem-
bers of your association, a high professional
spirit—a spirit rising above the mere com-
mercial question, important as that is—a
spirit higher than the mere industrial ques-
tion, important as that is—a spirit of ac-
complishment, of achievement, of doing
the work which you have to do in the best
possible way and with the best possible
results.
And how delightful it is that your work
is connected with the most exquisite of
the 'fine arts—the exquisite art of music,
the beauty of--which is in its very efferves-
cence—the subtle vanishing of the tone,
the sound, the melody, the harmony,
which, even as it vanishes, becomes per-
manent in the memory and in the dream.
The other arts suffer somewhat from the
fact that they deal with elements which
remain before the eye; but music, even as
it fades, becomes immortal. (Loud ap-
plause).
And then, too, I do not forget that this
great industry in which you are engaged
is one of the great benefactions of the time
—not merely in carrying into humble
homes this means of melody and harmony
—this means of rest and recreation after
the day's toil—this means of the cultiva-
tion of the mind and spirit and soul of the
boy or the girl—this exquisite art which
refines and delights, which makes home
beautiful, but which also furnishes em-
ployment for the artisan—the means of
making the home which, in its turn, shall
receive this product of your art.
We are passing to-day as we have been
for the last year through stormy times—
times which try the national soul, the na-
tional loyalty, the spirit of the citizen—the
stability, the strength, the force, the per-
manence of American institutions. Repre-
senting, as I do in my humble way, the
National Government, may I not appeal
to you to remember that you are gathered
here not only for the advancement of this
beautiful art to which you are devoted, not
only in behalf of the noble craft which you
follow—not only as manufacturers but
also, deeper than that, as American citi-
zens ? (Applause.) When you selected
the National Capital as your place of meet-
ing at this time, there was, I doubt not,
something of patriotic purpose in connec-
tion with the selection. You feltth at you
were coming here as citizens, as represen-
tatives of this great nation, as men who
employ labor, as men who are influential
in yoiir homes and vicinities, as men who
desire to do something for the maintenance
of this American Government.
As I have just now remarked, we have
been passing through trial and difficulty.
There are many phases in the public con-
dition to-day which are painful. It is sad
to any lover of his country, to any lover of
peace, to any man who has the right in-
stinct with regard to the great cause of
been the hard toil; there has been the
movement of the plane, the chisel, the saw.
But at last, after all these things have
passed, there has come this perfect instru-
ment resulting in the most exquisite pro-
ductions of the art of music. May it not
be that after this year of hardship and toil
and battle—after all the blood that is shed,
after all the dear lives that are lost, after
all the wounds that must be bound up,
there shall be perhaps in the years to come,
in the far islands of the sea, a new,
a brighter, a better civilization, where the
sword shall no longer reign, where the gun
shall no longer blaze, where the battle shall
no longer rage, but where the church and
the school shall hold sway, where homes
shall be happy, where labor shall be re-
warded, and where, when daily toil is
done, sweet music shall close the day with
the fall of the evening shadow. (Secre-
tary Long resumed his seat amid enthusi-
astic cheering).
PRESIDENT
F. H. OWEN HcPhall Piano Co
humanity—it is sad to feel that the hand
of war is still abroad, that the glove is still
folded, that the sword sweeps the air,
that the red cannon blazes, that human
life is held cheap, that blood and slaughter
occur. Let us hope, however, that out of
all this, some higher and better fruition
will come, not only for our own country
but for the world; and if there be sacrifice,
if there be suffering, if there be things we
regret, that they are merely the agencies
which are leading towards a higher and a
nobler development and civilization for the
whole world. (Applause.)
May we not derive some lesson of consol-
ation from your craft ? As we listen to
MILLER:—And
now,
gentle-
men, we have another Massachusetts' man
with us to-night. We are glad to have him
honor us with his presence, and would be
glad to have him speak to us on any subject
he might choose. Rut when he comes to
us ready and willing to talk to us on the
subject in which every member of the as-
sociation is more deeply interested perhaps
than in the thousand other subjects that
might be spoken of, when we have before
us a man who has through his speeches
and writings given to us the thoughts
which have enabled us to study the advan-
tages in connection with the handling of
labor—we are indeed fortunate; and it is
with the greatest pleasure that I introduce
to you now Hon. Carroll D. Wright.
HON. CARROLL D. WRIGHT'S SPEECH.
MR. WRIGHT:—Mr. Speaker and Gentle-
men: I would gladly have struck my
colors to the American Navy; and certainly,
in asking me to follow the gentleman who
last addressed you, you have set me a task
as difficult as that of the Spanish Admiral
when he undertook to leave the waters of
Santiago. (Applause). To follow Governor
Long means, in the inception of the work,
defeat: and to undertake to follow him re-
quires the moral courage that would carry
a man up to the guns of his ships. But he
and I are old friends; we know how to
handle each other; we know how to get on
without clashing; for we have worked to-
gether many a year.
What Governor Long has said stimulated
this thought, almost as a text of what I
shall say to you—that the soul of industry,
of social progress, of educational results,
of deep religious life, depends upon the
success of industry; and the success of in-
dustry and its great prosperity to-day,
depend upon sentiment. You have print-
ed in connection with your menu these
words: " T o steer steadily towards an
ideal standard, is the only means of ad-
vancing in life, as in music." It is this
that makes industry to day what it is. Fifty
years ago, there was what is known as the
iron law of wages, explained, but not for-
mulated, by the great Ricardo. It meant
simply this—that a man should be paid
that wage which would enable him to keep
a working human machine in proper con-
dition—a sufficient amount to supply food,
C. H. PARSONS—Needham Co.
raiment and shelter. That was the iron
these musical sounds, as we hear the touch law of wages in industry until our period
of the piano, the enjoyment is so exquisite. —a period when invention dominates all
I do not forget, however, that in the con- industry, and human ingenuity finds its
struction of that exquisite instrument, the greatest play in supplying the wants which
savage axe felled the tree; there was the are demanded by the highest sentiment.
grind and screech of the saw; there has If industry to-day depended upon the iron
been the dust of the factory; there has law of wages, this meeting, Mr. President,
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
JO
would not have been held, and you gentle-
men, would not be in business to-day.
You are doing something which may be
called the supplying of the spiritual wants
of men. I do not use the word ''spiritual"
in any pietistic sense but as meaning the
highest side of human character and human
elements.
It is always a pleasure to meet face to
face the men engaged in any branch of in-
dustry whether they are the proprietors,
the great projectors of industry, or the
men who are working with their skill and
hands; for they are the men that meet the
spiritual want of the age. And this is
above the line of the iron law of wages.
The demand of labor to-day is not for that.
The demand of labor everywhere is not for
mere subsistence. Once the conflict was
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
Tissot, know the inspiration which has
guided his mind and his hand. And thus
the highest aesthetic side of human elements
is supplied.
And you, gentlemen, are in this very busi-
ness. Your prosperity is due to the fact
that men have grown to make this demand
for something higher, something beyond
their mere physical wants. As I have
said, if industry were directed simply to
supplying those wants your great trade
could not exist. You are the exemplifica-
tion, the personification, the manifestation
of this very spiritual side of human nature.
(Applause.) You may call it what you
please; you may apply to it philosophical
terms, ethical terms, religious terms—I do
not care what; the fact remains that the
great want of the age is the wise supply
which such industries as this can give.
Capital finds in the furnishing of this sup-
ply something more than the commercial
spirit. As has been said here to-night,—
and there was never a truer word than that
uttered by the gentleman from Chicago
and emphasized by Governor Long—senti-
ment has its value as well as mere commer-
cial profit. Take out of this town if you
please the Congressional Library and the
Corcoran Art Gallery; take out of Boston
the Public Library and the Art Museum;
take out of any of our great cities the
results of this spirit; and you have depre-
ciated the commercial values of those com-
munities. (Applause.)
Yet you have
taken out something that cannot be sup-
plied by mere physical industry.
The material side of life is essential;
but industry has supplied that; and it has
done something more; otherwise it would
simply be the cheap illustration of hard,
sordid work. Such organizations as yours
come forward and lift industry above that
plane, exhibiting the spirit expressed in
the sentiment I have quoted from your
CALVIN WHITNEY—A. B. Chase Co.
menu—the constant striving after the ideal.
for existence—which man should . live. And I may say that this sums up the whole
Then came the conflict for subsistence, and philosophical basis of the labor problem.
that was under the iron law that I have How shall this struggle for the ideal—
stated. To day the demand is a higher which you may resolve into another expres-
one; it is a demand for those things which sion, the struggle for a higher standard of
shall supply this spiritual nature of the living—be secured? You are helping to
human race. So industry for its prosperi- secure it by helping to make men and
ty to-day depends upon the wisdom of that women everywhere cleaner in their lives,
supply. This demand is ten or fifteen per better in their hearts and truer in their
cent, above the subsistence line; and the homes. (Applause.) It is this that makes
me an optimist in considering industry,
margin is constantly increasing.
And here you find a demand which because underlying it all, at the very bot-
must be met. Education comes in. We tom of it, there is what you may call the
are training our people to want more than soul of the work. That which gives the
subsistence, more than food, raiment and highest occupation to the human mind and
shelter. We have taught our men and hand is the best; and it is only when peo-
our women in our schools that there is a ple are engaged in the higher qualities of
higher side. . President Eliot has well labor that they are the truest citizens and
expressed it when he said that the whole the besl. members of the community. It
result of education is to fit a man for social is through such influences that we reach
serviceableness. And social serviceable- the true end of education—"social service-
ness cannot be attained without afield for ableness"—when a man recognizes that he
our higher nature. So if you look about secures more from the community than he
over the industries of the country, you will can possibly render to it. It is what the
find that more than half of them are man draws from his associations that stim-
prosecuted to supply this very want. ulates him and gives him the modern idea
Music—all the arts—education—literature of what Drutnmond has called "other-self-
—these are the things which the common ishness "—the selfishness that looks after
man to day wants; and human ingenuity is the welfare of your neighbor as well as
to supply them. Millet paints his great your own. (Applause.) We call it phil-
pi:ture the Angel us, and appeals to the o s o p h i c a l altruism, but Drummond's
very highest aesthetic sentiments. Former- designation is the better one after all,—
ly, only the few could look upon his work; "other-selfishness."
but to-day the whole mass of humanity can,
Now if we can find in the elements that
through invention and human ingenuity, belong to industry the things that stimulate
look upon the Angelus and enjoy its spirit- to this higher ethical character of men, is
ual meaning by means of the many artistic there not something which can give us all
reproductions. Now we have Tissot, who hope for the future, never minding the
is giving us the new idea of life—the struggles that may come? It is the conflict
Christ. But only the few can look upon always that brings the purification. It is
the originals as they come from his hand. the storm that clears the sky. And the
The many, however, can purchase the troubles that accompany all these industrial
ten-cent magazine and know the genius of developments are only the accompaniments
of intelligence and not of an increasing
ignorance. These accompaniments mean
that the men who are engaged in the con-
flicts are simply struggling for this higher
side of industrial life—that side which shall
feed their souls, which shall feed the spirit-
ual nature, which after all comes through
an exalted industry. (Applause.)
I think, if I occupied a pulpit, I should
always preach about the spiritual side of
industry, because I find in its study more
that belongs to the development of human
character than I find in studying philosophy
itself. Somebody has said, as you will re-
member, that when philosophy settles a
point there is no more philosophy; and
hence philosophers do not care to reach any
conclusive point. But industry, on the
other hand, is constantly reaching points
and conclusions—constantly developing to
the minds of men that in it are to be found
the great resources of ethics.
In the late war with Spain this very
element found its embodiment. A nation
not given to the use of inventions can never
overcome a nation that is given to the use
of inventions. (Applause.) A non-machine-
using country can never prevail over a
machine-using country. Hence the Amer-
ican people—the Anglo-Saxon everywhere
—will in time prevail over the nations that
seek to attack them. It may take time;
but the skill of our American mechanics
has had as much to do with the victories of
the navy of the United States as any other
one element (applause); because the use of
inventions involves intelligence. We used
to speak, during the Civil War, of men
with brains behind the guns. You must
shoot with brains as well as do other things
with brains. You remember the artist
who, when someone asked him how he
mixed his colors, said that he mixed them
with brains. It is so with industry. And
when I consider the men who are conduct-
ing great industrial enterprises to-day, I
ROBT. PRODDOW—Estey Piano Co.
look upon them as the saviors of the Amer-
ican Republic, (applause) as the men who
are bringing to bear that magnificent ex-
ecutive quality which enables them to
marshal great forces and conduct great
enterprises; and when you have that class
of men being developed everywhere in our
land and among Anglo-Saxon peoples—
allied to the intelligence and the skill of

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