Music Trade Review

Issue: 1899 Vol. 29 N. 11

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
made on a basis of payments which would
require a year and a half to two years to
get back the actual cash cost of making the
sale, considering fairly the outlay in freight,
cartage, salaries, advertising and other
TWENTY-FIRST YEAR.
legitimate expenses which should properly
•EDWARD LYMAN BILL-
be charged against the instrument, this,
Editor and Proprietor
entirely outside of the purchase price of
the piano.
PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY
3 East 14th St., New York
We are confident that when cash is as
plentiful as at the present time dealers will
SUBSCRIPTION (including postage), United States,
Mexico and Canada, fajoo per year; all other countries,
$300.
materially advance their interests if they
ADVERTISEnENTS, $2.00 per inch, single column, per
insertion. On quarterly or yearly contracts a special dis-
work harder for cash. That portion of the
count is allowed. Advertising Pages $50.00, opposite read-
ing matter $75.00.
public who ordinarily visit piano stores can
REMITTANCES, in other than currency form, should
toe made payable to Edward Lyman Bill.
raise money for the purchase of pianos as
Entered at the New York Pott Office as Second Class Matter.
easily as they can pay cash to other busi-
NEW YORK, SEPTEMBER 9, 1899.^ ness establishments from which they make
TELEPHONE NUMBER, 1745—EIGHTEENTH STREET.
purchases.
THE KEYNOTE.
There is a belief existing among the people
The first week of each month, The Review will
contain a supplement embodying the literary
that pianos can be purchased for little or
and musical features which have heretofore
nothing down and the same per month,
appeared in The Keynote. This amalgamation
will be effected without in any way trespassing
or, to indulge in the vernacular of the
on our regular news service. The Review will
continue to remain, as before, essentially a
day, for any old thing. This idea would
trade paper.
not have gained ground had it not been
encouraged by piano dealers themselves,
CAMPAIGN FOR CASH.
r \ N E Western dealer writes to The Re- and it is quite time to start the wheels
going in the opposite direction. In other
view :
'' I have read with lively interest the words, to contribute somewhat to the change
editorials advocating stronger work along of public opinion in regard to the purchas-
cash lines, and I want to say that I believe ing of pianos. It can be done by main-
that you are doing the trade a service in taining a firm stand on cash lines. It is
this work. I myself have already profited good, straight, cold cash that counts' with
by it, and believe that the whole trade will manufacturers. It possesses an eloquence
be better if they work harder for cash that wins everywhere. Cash is all right.
Get some. You can't do too much busi-
than is the ordinary custom."
We are of the opinion that our corres- ness along cash lines.
pondent is correct in the main. The truth
WAREROOM PROGRESSIVENESS.
is we have fallen into the installment rut,
and it only requires a little exertion to ex-
A TOUR of inspection of the music
tricate ourselves completely from it.
stores of America will disclose the
fact
that
the most attractive warerooms are
Now, we do not wish our utterances to be
construed as meaning that we condemn in- the places where the business is being
stallment sales. They are all right, but done. People naturally gravitate to at-
we do say that this trade would be in a tractive establishments, and dark, gloomy
better condition to-day if cash sales were warerooms wrapped in funeral habiliments
talked with a little more energy, and install- have a chilliness about them which possess
ment sales were talked on a basis of larger no drawing power for the average piano
monthly payments, than is the usual cus- purchaser. Too many piano merchants
tom to-day.
begrudge business its legitimate expendi-
. From observation we are inclined to the tures, constantly refraining from expenses
belief that there is an element in this trade which are absolutely needed, expenses for
largely wrapped up in the installment sales fixtures, improvements in the store and
to such an extent that they consider wall adornments.
they are doing a profitable business when
This is especially the case with stores
oftentimes they are not. They get pianos long established, whose proprietors are apt
out, no matter on what terms, but get to feel that what has served for so many
them out, and are satisfied to receive in years is adequate for the present day.
payment a lot of paper which may be
Now the successful close of the century
greatly depreciated as time rolls on.
merchant treats his business liberally, and
Then again the cash cost of selling oftentimes denies himself that he may ex-
pianos has not been fully understood by pend money on his store. He also realizes
many dealers. They have been figuring the full value of advertising, and his name
on a false basis as to the real cost of selling appears regularly in conjunction with the
pianos. We have seen, personally, sales wares which he handles in the columns
of the local papers. He appears in the
business community in which he lives as a
live business character, hence when people
are desirous of purchasing musical instru-
ments they gravitate naturally to his store.
While it pays to have an active corps
of outside salesmen working intelligently
along lines which result in bringing cus-
tomers to the warerooms, it pays also to
have attractive establishments which warm
the heart of the intending purchaser after
he has entered. People form ideas quickly
nowadays, and they are apt to believe that
the man who conducts business in an un-
attractive place, whose warerooms have no
drawing power, and whose stock is usually
dust-covered, is also not up-to-date in his
business dealings, and they prefer the
bright, cheery establishment upon which
lingers no dust of indifference.
It pays to brighten things up a bit.
IRON AND INDUSTRY.
T H E iron trade is always regarded as a
most trustworthy measure of busi-
ness conditions; therefore general atten-
tion should be given to the remarkable de-
mand for iron at the present moment.
According to the "Iron Age," the first
authority in its line, the excitement in the
iron market is growing and is spreading.
A very large tonnage of pig iron is being
placed for 1900 delivery at advancing
prices, a number of orders having been
placed for delivery as far ahead as the
second half of 1900. Our contemporary
also states that evidence is accumulat-
ing that a very large tonnage of unfilled
orders will be carried over until next year,
not alone in steel rails, but also in structu-
ral material, plates and other forms of
finished iron and steel.
These indications are of vast importance
to the piano industry for they point to the
steady employment of a great amount of
labor during the winter, a period which in
many industries, is usually a slack one.
There seems to be no reasonable doubt
that business in all lines will continue to
be unusually active.
We learn that there is no probability
that the scarcity of iron will affect the
piano plate men, at least not for a period
of some months, yet that jio one can
predict with any degree of certainty. The
fear, however, of immediate suffering
owing to the dearth of iron may be com-
pletely removed.
CONCERNING PRICES.
P\EALERS continue to visit the markets
and are placing liberal orders for
future delivery. Many of them manifest
an eagerness to secure their wares before
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
the advance of prices becomes general, be-
cause as sensible men they realize that the
question of price is " up " to them. They
know that the pace started by the old and
distinguished house of Chickering must be
followed by others. In fact, to-day a num-
ber of others have already swung into
line.
No business institution can long evade a
vital question, and there can be no sound
reason why the prices of all pianos
will not be materially advanced within a
brief time. How can we expect it to be
otherwise when materials are steadily ap-
preciating, and there seems to be no limit to
the advance in sight? There is no stability
to prices. The schedules which are out are
all subject to immediate change, and the
change only shows a still higher advance.
The same condition of affairs prevails in
the labor world, and dealers know that
piano manufacturers are only following
correct business lines when they advance
prices on the finished product in conformity
with the advance made in material and
labor.
GAS FROM GENEVA.
A WAVE of trouble rolled across the
peaceful breast of the Annex editor
sojourning amid the Alpine beauties—a
great cloud of heavy gloom which obscured
the beautiful Swiss scenery—when the
stencil brochure, issued by the Piano Man-
ufacturers' Association, reached him. It
may be believed that the inky darkness
was only lightened after a while by the
lurid flashes of rage which illumined
the entire mountain side and caused the
sturdy burghers to ring in a fire alarm.
These lurid flashes became so frequent
that huge blocks of ice on the Matterhorn
miles away, melted, and with the aid of a
powerful glass could be seen to grow visi-
bly smaller, while tremendous crashes fol-
lowed.
To get right down to serious facts, all
the frothy ebullitions of temper, all the
lurid pronunciamentoes of the man who
once exercised considerable influence in this
trade amount to naught.
His measure
has been carefully taken, and a line of
bombastic and egotistic " I's " and " I's "
stretching from New York across the At-
lantic to the Paris Exposition could not
change the attitude of the men who have
once for all completely thrown off the in-
fluence of this individual who has been
completely dethroned.
No doubt the full realization of his
present position comes slowly and painfully
to him. His sluggish brain has not as yet
reached the position of a clear analysis of
his present environment. We believe that
at the present time he is not aware of the
fact that the ruling forces of this industry
realize, and have for some time, that there
is a material difference between the agita-
tion of the stencil question for private gain
and its impartial analysis for trade good.
They have concluded that the stencil
problem shall no longer be used as a club
by a base intriguer, but that its discussion
shall be on broad and impartial lines.
Small wonder when we consider how times
have changed that there should be exhibi-
tions of bad temper from Geneva.
Yes, there will be warm times, and we
welcome them. Let it be a fight to the
death. The principal opponent to the
honest elimination of the stencil seems to
have lost his head as well as his temper at
the beginning. He will realize later that
his personality, together with his rapidly
declining paper, cuts but little figure in
the industry, not enough even to mention
—at least so thought the compilers of the
stencil brochure—for a minute search
through the volume will not disclose men-
tion of his existence.
Such a slight brings infinite pain to a
vulgar and absurdly egotistic individual.
REVIEWLETS.
STRAW which will indicate that the
trade wind is blowing Chickering-
ward may be found in the fact of the
many seekers for Chickering territory,
formerly controlled by the Jesse French
Co. Leading dealers throughout that sec-
tion know the value which is attached to
the Chickering agency, and the activity
evidenced on their part to secure it shows
that they realize fully what prestige and
worth are embodied in the name of Chicker-
ing when placed upon a pianoforte.
A
. H. RUSSELL, president of the
American Bankers' Association, at the
fifth annual convention of the Association,
held in Cleveland, O., on Tuesday last, and
which was attended by fifteen hundred
bankers, made the following significant
statement in the course of his address:
"The business of the country is being
done on a cash basis. The annual and
semi-annual settling days of the older
States are not upon the calendar. The
jobber finds his profits within the discount
of the manufacturers, and the country
merchant has learned the lesson, buys
more carefully and pays cash, and so we
see business paper surely disappearing."
of a lifetime, and anyone who is not al-
ready a subscriber to The Review should
lose no time in perusing the offer made
in this issue. Not only dealers, but some
of the leading manufacturers of the trade
have forwarded their checks to The Re-
view office to secure the most interesting
souvenir of the times.
\17"HILE the approaching National Ex-
port Exposition in Philadelphia will
be artistic in its presentation and relieved
by many new attractions beside the con-
ventional amusements incidental to exposi-
tions, it has a definite plan and purpose
which distinguishes it above every exposi-
tion held in America, and will eclipse
everything of its kind ever presented by
any nation. It will appeal directly to the
self-interest of every manufacturer in the
United States and to every merchant in
foreign lands. David Harum observes
that the heart of man is much nearer the
trousers' pocket than the coat pocket, and,
that being so, there will be more heartfelt
interest in the great exhibit of exports,
and the bringing together from remote
corners of the earth of buyers and sellers,
than in any public undertaking the world
has ever seen.
'"THOSE opposed to the National Bank-
ruptcy law because they think that
under its provisions debtors of all kinds
can get discharges from former obligations
whether they deserve them or not, should
note the refusal of Referee Brown, of this
city, to grant a petition to the members of
a firm which failed in 1896 without apply-
ing the entire amount of their assets to
the payment of their liabilities.
This is the second in stance of a petition in
bankruptcy having been refused under the
new law, and there is not the slightest
reasQn to doubt that such refusals will be
frequent as time goes on and the courts
are called upon to deal with new cases.
It stands to reason that in the case of
failures which occurred several years ago
considerable difficulty is experienced in
tracing out the record of the petitioners,
and only in the most flagrant cases can the
petition be refused. These conditions will
entirely pass away when all the old cases
have been finally settled.
A DVICES from Albany say that the forth -
coming quarterly bulletin of the New
York State Labor Bureau will make the best
'T'HE premium offer made last week by showing from the standpoint of the em-
The Review has received such a hearty ployment of labor ever issued by the De-
greeting at the hands of the trade that it partment. The percentage of unemployed
now appears only a short time will have labor in the State of New York is less than
elapsed ere the present stock of premiums 1 per cent., and in many trades no unem-
will have become exhausted. It is the chance ployed are reported.

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