Music Trade Review

Issue: 1899 Vol. 29 N. 14

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
Admiral Dewey. He has been honored in papers, for there has been a radical advance
countless thousands of ways, and has had in the prices of paper, as every publisher
everything on earth named after him, from knows that it costs him more to-day to
shoe strings up to pianos. His face has produce a paper than it did three months
decorated patent medicine and other ads.
ago, if we take the present market price for
No matter where we look, or where we all which enters into the composition of a
turn in the pages of the daily papers or in publication.
the advertising columns of the great maga-
Dealers in turn will have to ask more for
zines, the familiar face of Dewey confronts their instruments, for they may as well
us. And, candidly, we sometimes think make up their minds once for all that they
that we are overdoing this Dewey business will be compelled to pay more than merely
a trifle. Surfeit is always the cause of a five dollar note, for it cannot stop there.
violent indigestion. However, be that as There must be a substantial increase all
it may, the people have concluded to wel- along the line.
come Dewey in close-of-the-century style.
All metals, woods and veneers have ad-
Marching thousands will pass through a vanced. One item alone which seems a
reproduction of the famous arch of Titus, trivial one, yet when we come to analyze
and to reach it they will pass through a it, it is an important item in a year's busi-
canyon of human faces walled by the ness. It is the lumber which enters into
American colors in fanciful display.
the piano box for shipment. Piano boxes
No such reception has ever been ac- to-day cost from seventy to ninety cents
corded to a modern hero as Dewey, the more per box than a year ago, based upon
plain American sailor, will receive after his the cost of the common lumber of which
arrival, which will be announced by the they are constructed.
booming cannon in nearly every state in
the Union. Countless thousands of peo-
Owing to the Dewey festivities The
Review appears this week on Thursday
ple will flock to New York to witness the
instead of its usual publication day—
Dewey celebration, which will be perhaps
Saturday.
one of the most memorable in the annals
of America. All of the railroads have an-
IF A PIANO TRUST?
nounced reduced fares from distant points,
and without doubt, New York will be I F a piano trust ever became an estab-
lished fact, there would be capital enlist-
crowded—filled to the brim and running
ed immediately in a competitive enterprise,
over.
To people who enjoy the music, the for there is always enough idle capital in
marching, the toasting and the excitement, this country to insure competition. Then
it will be a glorious feast, for the painters, again, if it were inherently weak by reck-
sculptors and decorators have all united in less over-capitalization it would have to
producing that which will lend charm to succumb in a hurry. The Standard Oil, by
the occasion. The arch at Twenty-third securing special privileges from railroads,
street is a magnificent testimonial to their and other almost dishonest railway discrim-
skill and patriotism. The whole scheme inations, has succeeded in a way which no
by day will be a glorious symphony, and other trust has.
The sugar trust tried to follow the ex-
the nights will be tinged with carmine.
ample
of the Standard Oil, but has signally
New York will give herself up to a sea-
son of festivities which have probably failed. One batch of rival plants after
never been equalled since the days when another has been bought in at high prices,
Hendrik Hudson held his first pow-wow only to be followed by the erection of still
other refineries which remain to compete
with the early citizens of Manhattan.
Well, all honor to Dewey and his gallant on a cash basis, or like their predecessors,
fighters. They have added new lustre to be secured at the expense of a further in-
flation of the trust capital. Production
American fame.
and distribution on a large scale is the un-
deniable tendency of the times, but what a
GROWING PRICES.
'"P HE RE are a number of manufacturers corporation, or combination, or trust, as
who have thus far refrained from we commonly term it, may do for common
raising prices for their instruments until benefit and what it does do are oftentimes
they determine, as they state, whether the at variance.
have always endeavored to develop, as far
as it lay within our power, an increased
distribution of The Review. To this end
we have offered premiums from time to
time, including the technical work, "The
Piano," which has obtained a widespread
distribution; also a number of excellent
literary works, which we have handled
successfully. The latest offer, however,
as one decidedly opportune at this time," is
the Dewey watch, full particulars of which
are given on page 17.
Perhaps no premium has been more
popular than this, and those who have
sent in their new subscriptions have ex-
pressed themselves in terms of delight and
praise concerning the premium which we
offer. We do not know where, for a simi-
lar amount invested, as much pleasure and
profit can be derived as from the invest-
ment referred to.
We may say of The Review, without be-
ing liable to the charge of egotism, that it
is a publication upon which the members
of the trade have learned to look with con-
fidence, as to the reliability and truthful-
ness of its utterances. It can be made a
weekly companion during the year together
with a handsome premium for a modest
sum.
advanced prices have come to stay, or
whether they are due purely to a temporary
fluctuation of the market.
In our opinion they may as well conclude
that high prices have come to stay and
govern their prices accordingly, for the ad-
vance has reached almost everything, and is
still going up. It affects even the news-
Q T R I K E S have not ceased, and there
will be more to follow. One occurred
in New York this week at the Kroeger fac-
tory, and was settled quicker almost than
it takes time to record it.
A DEWEY OFFER.
A TRADE publication is necessarily
limited in circulation. Its areas of
distribution are circumscribed largely by
its own industrial environments. There
are, however, legitimate ways in which
circulation may be augmented, and we
PIANO ADVERTISING.
DIANO advertising is improving. An
examination of the papers throughout
the land in which the local trade advertise
will disclose this. There is more attention
and care given to the display and arrange-
ment of the matter.
Piano merchants are beginning to real-
ize that advertising is a serious investment
to begin with, and should be looked in-
to as carefully as the buying of goods
for the warerooms. The merchant will
not buy ordinary articles without knowing
something about them, and in buying ad-
vertising space it should be used in an ef-
fective manner. Display work should be
plain, terse, directly to the point and at-
tractive in its setting beyond anything
else. Nine men out of ten refuse to read
any display ad that does not in some way
attract and catch the eye, either with a cut,
with the price, or with a decided setting.
The great trouble lies in overcrowding
advertising, in making the effort to cover
everything instead of one good thing a't a
time. Simplicity and price carry all be-
fore them in advertising.
Dewey has arrived! If you want a sou-
venir of the event, read page 17.

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
To Share with Employees.
STEGER &CO. AND THE SINGER PIANO CO. WILL
GIVE THEIR WORKMEN A PERCENTAGE ON
EARNINGS PLAN IS INTENDED TO
PROMOTE DILIGENCE
WHAT
MR. STEGER SAYS.
John V. Steger has ever been of the pro-
gressive school. He has long labored,
not so much for himself as for those around
him. This is demonstrated afresh by the
agreement which was effected the closing
days of last week between Steger & Co. as
well as the Singer Piano Co., the institu-
tions of which he is head, and the em-
ployees of these concerns whereby the
latter are to receive 3 per cent, on their
earnings. The employees were told some
time ago that their employers were ready
to make such an agreement, and in conse-
quence of this a meeting was called for at
Steger, 111.
J. V. Steger went to Steger to attend
the meeting and there explained to all the
workmen in the employ of the company
the system which he proposed, with their
indorsement, to adopt. The only thing
asked by the company of the workmen was
that they are to use care and diligence and
at all times work for the benefit of their
employer.
No cost was levied upon the employes
whereby they could become beneficiaries
of the scheme and it was adopted without
a dissenting voice.
The scheme goes into effect Oct. 1 and
continues indefinitely. Payments are to
be made once each year in the neighbor-
hood of Feb. 20, and any employee who
leaves the concern before the payments
are made can, by giving the company two
weeks' notice of his intention to leave,
secure all the interest money due him on
his earnings up to the time of his going.
The company reserves the right, how-
ever, to hold this money until the regular
payments are made at the end of the year.
"We decided to adopt this interest sys-
tem," said J. V. Steger, "purely upon our
own suggestion. There has been no dis-
sension among our workmen, and we have
proposed this system in order that the em-
ployees may be drawn nearer to us. It will
be a saving to us and a saving to them. I
told all who were in attendance at the
meeting that it was my opinion that the
company could save $20,000 per year by
the workmen exercising proper care in the
handling of materials, and I told them fur-
ther that it was my desire that they have
the money.
• 'We shall watch the working of the new
system with much interest and if at the
beginning of another year we find that a
greater percentage can be paid to the em-
ployees upon their earnings we will give
them the benefit of it. We are anxious to
help the people of our town and by this
method we can help more of them than by
any other. The workmen enthusiastically
adopted the scheme and gave me a vote of
thanks."
There is no doubt in the mind of Mr.
Steger that the new method will prove a
good one and that it will tend to bring
about harmony in the shops, thus eliminat-
ing the fear of strikes.
"The Scale is 7^3 octaves, overstrung,
3 strings to unison, copper spun bass
The latest Strich & Zeidler candidate for strings, ornamented full iron plate, malle-
trade favor is the charmingly designed able iron nickel-plated pressure bar. The
piano pictured herewith. It is purely Colon- action is double repeating, powerful, res-
ial in casing, 4 feet 6 inches high, and ad- ponsive and light in touch, mounted on
mirably proportioned architecturally — a metal nickel-plated brackets. There are
feature, by the way, of all Strich & Zeidler three pedals, viz.: loud, soft and practice
products. A cut, no matter how excellent, pedal; the latter with full felt muffler.
The full dimensions are: Height 4 feet
will not convey an idea of the strikingly
chaste and artistic lines of this instrument 8 inches; width, 5 feet 4 inches; depth,
—it must be seen—examined—and then en- 2 feet, 4 inches; gross weight, boxed, 950
pounds; c u b i c feet,
boxed, go."
A Strich & Zeidler " Gem."
Hill Demolished.
thusiasm will be pardonable in any piano
man capable of appreciating piano values
at their true worth. And the value is not
alone in the design, but in the tone, con-
struction and all essentials that go to make
an artistic piano; it is certain to prove a
winner or we greatly mistake. We would
advise dealers to give this instrument some
attention this fall.
The Strich & Zeidler new style Colonial
is made in figured mahogany, burl walnut
and quartered oak. Other fancy woods to
order.
In response to an enquiry by The Review
anent a technical description of the in-
strument a member of the firm said:
' 'The case is made of the choicest selected,
thoroughly seasoned hardwood, all parts
crossed and double veneered on both sides;
moulding, projections, etc., made of the
corresponding natural woods. The back-
frame is of hardwood, constructed on the
latest and most scientific principles, var-
nished and finished in natural color.
"The architectural design is on the pure
Colonial style, yet not too severe, but cor-
rect in every detail. The entire upper
frame forming the music-desk, is made
with one panel, decorated by two beautiful
hand carved wreaths. The lower frame
has two panels. Beaded molding is iised
in ornamenting the case top, key-bed pil-
asters and lower brackets, adding greatly
to the artistic appearance of the case.
"Our New Improved Patented Sliding
Fall-Board, used by us exclusively, and
acknowledged by trade and public to be the
simplest and finest fall-board in existence,
is used. The continuous hinges on top are
nickel-plated as also are the handle and
escutcheon at lock on fall-board. The best
ivory and ebony are used in the keys.
A tornado of the Kan-
sas variety struck the
village of Little Falls,
N.J., Sun day afternoon.
It demolished George
Jackson's felt mill, up-
rooted trees and caused
havoc in that section.
The tornado made its
a p p e a r a n c e about 3
o'clock and continued
for ten minutes.
It preceded the first
big shower. The brick
chimney, fifty feet high,
of the felt mill was
directly in the path of
the storm and was rip-
ped from its foundation. The entire roof
was torn off, and then the walls collapsed.
The storehouse adjoining was also demol-
ished, and thousands of dollars' worth of
machinery, manufactured goods and goods
in process of manufacture were destroyed
by rain and wind. Portions of the mill build-
ing were carried a distance of half a mile.
A New Wage Schedule Oct. 1st.
The proposed meeting between manu-
facturers of pianos and organs and the rep-
resentatives of the piano and organ work-
ers' union of Chicago, scheduled for Tues-
day of last week, was a failure, as none of
the manufacturers put in an appearance.
The union's representatives decided to put
into force a new schedule of wages Oct.
1 st. The members of the union are quite
indignant over the snubbing given them
by the manufacturers.
Clough & Warren Co.
The Clough & Warren Co., of Detroit,
Mich., are as busy as they can possibly be.
The resources of their well equipped fac-
tory at Adrian, Mich., are being tested to
the utmost to fill orders. Every effort has
been made, and almost successfully, to
catch up with orders delayed through the
fire which destroyed their old plant the
early part of the year. The Clough &
Warren pianos and organs of to-day are
instruments that appeal to cultivated taste.
They are made under the careful super-
vision of Mr. Warren, and have behind
them an unsullied reputation which amounts
to a great deal when it bears the name—
Clough & Warren. Dealers anxious to
have in stock a paying as well as a selling
line of instruments will do well to look up
the Clough & Warren.

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