Music Trade Review

Issue: 1899 Vol. 29 N. 3

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
TWENTY-FIRST YEAR
•EDWARD LYMAN
Editor and Proprietor
"
PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY
3 East 14th St., New York
SUBSCRIPTION (including postage), United States,
Mexico and Canada, $2.00 per year; all other countries,
$3°o.
ADVERTISEnENTS, $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 Clast Matter.
NEW YORK, JULY 15, 1899.
TELEPHONE NUMBER,
t745~EIQHTEENTH STREET.
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.
there is going to be a great scarcity of iron,
amounting almost to a famine. The vis-
ible supply amounts to practically nothing,
and much inconvenience will be experi-
enced in all branches of trade by reason of
the extraordinary pressure for iron and
steel. Work is being delayed on bridges
and buildings because essential parts are
not being delivered in time.
It also extends into small wares, manu-
facturers using malleable castings being
obliged to wait unreasonably long for the
delivering of pieces needed to finish work
which they have in hand.
We have taken occasion to make investi-
gations during the past week in the hard-
ware trade, and we find that annoyances of
this character are being seriously felt, and
we would say that those who are still skep-
tical about an iron famine need only to in-
terview a few manufacturers and consum-
ers to unearth convincing evidence.
Now, iron may be properly said to be the
barometer of trade, and when there is an
unprecedented activity in the iron world,
as iron enters into almost everything, it
means that activity finds a responsive echo
in every industry. It looks now as if there
will be transacted the coming fall the
biggest volume of trade that has ever been
recorded in the industrial annals of
America.
Now, if a piano manufacturer is delayed
in receiving his hardware much annoyance
and delay will resxilt therefrom, and in
order that the machinery move noiselessly
and without the annoying creakings there
must be harmony all along the line. Deal-
ers must place their orders early, in order
that there may be no delay.
Too nrnch emphasis cannot be placed
upon the shortage of iron, and we may say
that some foundries in the West have been
obliged to shut down for several days,
awaiting receipts of needed raw material.
There are, of course, those who are ex-
tremely careful, and have not placed large
advance orders on account of the steadily
advancing prices. They have been buying
•from hand to mouth, expecting continually
to be able to do better for themselves a
little later. Some of these people are now
paying premiums for immediate delivery.
It is the wise man who places his orders
early.
facturers have not exhibited astonishing
interest in the big Fair. As far as we are
able to ascertain there are less than a half
dozen firms in this country who propose
to exhibit in Paris. Most of our manu-
facturers view the great Expositions with
less favor since the Chicago Fair. The
value of medals and diplomas in the eyes
of American manufacturers has somewhat
depreciated.
To our minds the results of a gain from
international expositions do not warrant
the vast outlay necessary to make an ex-
hibit with satisfactory official recognition.
Still the recognition which any American
firms may receive at Paris will have larger
value inasmuch as the number who re-
ceive official recognition will be exceed-
ingly limited.
OUT-TRUSTS THE TRUSTS.
A CONCERN known as the Mercantile
Organization Co. was incorporated in
the State which is the mother of all trusts,
New Jersey, last week for the purpose of
establishing a retail general store in every
town of fifteen thousand inhabitants or
more in the country.
This scheme rather out-trusts the orig-
inal trust itself. It is said, by the way,
there are a number of men of money be-
hind it. Details of the plan have not as
yet been given out, but it is said that prog-
ress is being made and the scheme is not
entirely visionary.
ORDER EARLY.
A NUMBER of dealers who have visited
the offices of The Review during the
past week have emphatically declared
themselves as being influenced by the
utterances of The Review, urging that
orders be placed early in order that there
might be no disappointment later on when
the rush season is plainly with us.
They have affirmed that it was the cau-
tionary signals hung out by The Review
that induced them to visit the markets so
ADVERTISING INVESTMENT.
early in the season.
We are certainly gratified at the recep-
'"THE advertiser who thinks that his name
tion accorded our utterances, and in our
and specialties are so well known that
opinion the advice regarding the placing
he can afford to withdraw his advertising
of orders should be carefully considered by
for a while commits a colossal business
every dealer in the. United States who
error. The buying public, like the pro-
hopes to have a fresh stock, in order to
gressive dealer, is prone to forget. It is,
catch the first favoring trade breezes of
moreover, more difficult and much more
the early fall.
expensive to regain a lost customer than
to prevent his straying away from the
Manufacturers have been, as we all know,
business
hold.
bitterly disappointed during the past few
years in their trade anticipations, and they
Some of the greatest advertisers in the
are exceedingly loath to continue to accu-
world, notably one soap and a sarsaparilla
mulate stock without advance orders.
concern, decided they had expended
such vast sums in advertising that they
Now, pianos cannot be ground out with
could afford to curtail their huge expendi-
the same despatch that hats and clothing
tures in this direction for a year or two.
are sent from the various factories. Time
This they did, and it is no secret in the
is needed in order to produce satisfactory
advertising world that in order to regain
instruments. Then again, from all indi-
their lost position they had to spend more
cations, there is going to be a difficulty in
THE EXPOSITION AT PARIS.
securing stock.
cousins across the water do not than double the money for advertising the
To particularize: No one who is familiar
manifest great interest in the Paris third year of their curtailment that they
with the metal markets is unacquainted Exposition. Up to this date only two were expending during the former years.
with conditions which threaten a metal English piano manufacturers have secured
The time to stop advertising is when
famine. There is really no reasonable space for exhibition purposes, one of these one stops business. Advertising is the
stock of pig iron visible and it means with being the famous house of Broadwood.
motive power to business and many peo-
the growing demands for that metal that
We may also add that American manu- ple view it entirely in the wrong light.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
Some men in this trade speak, of it as an
expense and some even as a loss.
This is not regarding it in its proper
light. Advertising is nothing more or
less than an investment, and thousands of
firms manage it so that it brings them
royal returns.
to put in a small amount of overtime on
that day. This sort of thing is conspicu-
ous by its absence in the wholesale dry
goods houses in this country, in fact one
well-known retail house now announces
that it will close all day Saturday during
the summer.
SHORTER HOURS.
f_TOW the closing hours have changed in
New York during the past few years.
In 1888, and for three years thereafter The
Review regularly circulated for the signa-
tures of the members of the local trade a
document which was an agreement to close
piano warerooms during the months of July
and August at one o'clock on Saturday. It
has now become almost universal to close at
twelve, and there is hardly a piano ware-
room in our city which is not closed, and
the curtains drawn promptly at noon.
Then, too, during the summer week days
nearly all the warerooms close at five
o'clock.
This is as it should be. There is no
trade lost, and the recreation which is af-
forded by the early closing hours gives to
both proprietor and attache, renewed vigor
for the working hours.
Without doubt the shortening of the
business hours in this country is of incal-
culable benefit to the people in that it re-
laxes the business attention and affords an
opportunity for indulging in athletic
sports and outdoor exercises, thereby mak-
ing the race stronger physically and men-
tally as well, for the mental part is always
in too close harmony with the physical not
to be immediately affected by deterioration
in the former.
The Americans are generally regarded
in Europe as a nation of hustlers and are
supposed to devote all of their energies in the
pursuit of the elusive dollar, and devote
little or no time to recreation.
As a matter of fact if we look into the
the question closely we will find that the
hours of labor in Europe in most lines of
business are very much longer and the
work more arduous than is the case in
this country. Contrast for example, the
condition of the junior employees of the
wholesale drygoods houses of New York,
Boston and Philadelphia with those of
London. Attention to the conditions pre-
vailing in the wholesale houses of England
has just been called by a strike.
It appears that these men are compelled
to work every night from two to six hours
overtime without extra pay, 9.30 appearing
to be most often the hour at which their
work is completed, while nominally these
London houses close for half holiday on
Saturday, they actually compel their men
SAVE MONEY.
pvEALERS who visit New York from
the South and Southwest and east
of the Mississippi, can secure, through the
Merchants' Association of New York, sub-
stantial reduction in railroad fares. This
organization has done much to stimulate
New York trade, and it intends to spare
no effort or expense to make this summer
and fall trade the largest ever experienced
in New York. It has arranged, or is
now negotiating with the Southern Pacific
Railway Co. and the Mallory line of steam-
ers from Galveston, and other railways
which cover nearly all of that section of
the country which lies east of the Missis-
sippi.
Merchants can easily avail themselves of
these concessions. A full explanation is
given in another part of The Review un-
der the caption of " T o Visiting Dealers."
THE ANTIQUE.
T H E R E is in the furniture world to-day
a strong demand for the antique, and
there is a probability that this may cause
somewhat of a revolution in piano case
architecture. The demands for antique
furniture have become so strong that
Europe is becoming scoured for the choicest
and most beautiful examples of antique
furniture to satisfy the demands of Amer-
icans. The call has been so large that
our factories have been turning out imita-
tions of carved furniture of the periods of
Louis XIV, XV and XVI. The business
of reproduction of antiques to-day is an
important one in the furniture world, and
these imitations are so cleverly constructed
as to defy an expert.
The growing demand for the antique
must be felt more largely in the piano world.
RECEIVERSHIPS.
Y\7HAT a difference in receivers! There
was Colonel Treacy who accepted
the receivership of the Braumuller busi-
ness and went to work with intelligence
and vim in the interests of the creditors
and distributed among them nearly thirty-
six cents on the dollar of the corporation's
indebtedness. It was rated as a bad fail-
ure, and much of the stock had to be made
up and a market found for it.
In contrast: the Haines failure which oc-
curred more than a year ago and John A.
Jarvis was appointed receiver. There was
an auction sale on the 24th of August of the
entire factory assets. In other words, the
whole thing was cleaned out for $11,594.-
15. This Mr. Jarvis received in a lump
sum, and he has not as yet distributed one
farthing of the proceeds of that sale among
the creditors. It is true that there were
some dealers'accounts unsettled, but at one
stroke Mr. Jarvis relieved himself of all
worry incident to completing and selling
stock, and it would seem as if a portion at
least of the money received could have
been pro-rated among the creditors.
There is a difference in receivers, you
know. Some of the Haines Bros, creditors
are naturally much interested in the dis-
tribution of the proceeds of that corpora-
tion. They have been figuring just what
percentage will be eaten up in expenses.
At the time of the failure it was estimated
by a number who went carefully over the
assets of the corporation that Haines Bros,
could pay fifty cents on the dollar.
T H E editor of The Review finds it a
physical impossibility to reply person-
ally to all of the kindly messages sent upon
The Review gaining its twentieth birth-
day. It is certainly gratifying to know
that our work is so widely appreciated, and
it furnishes renewed inspiration to cut a
few more notches in the stick before the
chapter is closed.
T H E dealers of this country are now be-
ginning to realize that in the near
future they must pay more for their in-
struments; as intelligent, sound reasoning
men they know that the enormous rise in
materials of almost every kind means a
marked advance in the cost of the finished
instrument to the manufacturer. Then, too,
there is the labor item to be considered,
which is an important one.
present indications the twenty-
first year of The Review will be a
banner one. If the special advertising
demands upon the paper continue, we will
shortly be called upon to increase the size.
We are now producing from thirty-six to
forty-eight pages weekly—a fact in itself
which shows more eloquently than words
the important position of this newspaper
institution.
\ 1 7 H E N we consider that there is nearly
$100,000,000 more money in circula-
tion in this country to-day than there was
a year ago, it is not surprising that the
piano business has materially improved.
Yet despite this enormous increase in cap-
ital there is not enough money in the coun-
try to supply the demand made on account
of new enterprises under development.

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