Music Trade Review

Issue: 1899 Vol. 29 N. 4

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC 'TRADE REVIEW
TWENTY-FIRST YEAR.
• EDWARD LYMAN BILL-
Editor and Proprietor
PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY
~~~ 3 East 14th St., New York
SUBSCRIPTION (including postage), United States,
Mexico and Canada, $a.oo per year; all other countries,
$300.
ADVERTlSEriENTS, $2.00 per inch, single column, per
insertion. On quarterly or yearly contracts a special dis-
count is allowea. 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 (he iVew York Post Office as Second Clast Matter.
NEW YORK, JULY 22, 1899.
TELEPHONE NUMBER,
1745-EIGHTEENTH 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 pur regular news service. The Review will
continue to remain, as before, essentially a
trade paper.
PLACE ORDERS.
CVIDENCE continues to multiply which
points toward early fall trade of huge
dimensions. Traveling men are already
burnishing up their arms and putting a
keen edge on their knives for the conquest.
It would seem as if America were drifting
on to industrial supremacy in a way which
will be most satisfying to all who are inter-
ested in this country's welfare. The mu-
sic trade industry must share with others
the great prosperity which is now upon us.
It is recognized by all that not for years
has there been such activity in the piano
factories during the summer months as at
present, and still, notwithstanding the life
which is apparent in the factories, there
has been as yet no appreciable accumula-
tion of stock.
There is no mistaking the fact that some
dealers must be short of stock and will
suffer delay in their orders if they wait
until the last moment to place them. It
will be utterly impossible for all to be sup-
plied if orders are delayed until a late date.
Dealers have been educated in recent
years to the belief that they could get in-
struments just when they desired upon a
day's call. This condition of affairs no
longer exists, and it is of the utmost im-
portance that men realize this to the fullest
extent. Manufacturers too are destined to
have more or less trouble in the filling
of orders. There is a metal famine ex-
isting iii this country to-day, and this
dearth in the metal world is destined to
cause costly delays and exceeding an-
noyance before the end of the busy
season.
It would seem to us, after consultation
with men who are prominent in the hard-
ware and metal worlds, that such a con-
dition will be almost unavoidable. The
only way that manufacturers can reduce
the possibility of costly delays is to order
well in advance and accumulate a sufficient
amount of hardware of all kinds to tide
them over a temporary delay which seems
bound to occur later.
The Review has been careful to urge
dealers and manufacturers to place their
orders early. We do not believe in wait-
ing until it is suggested that we do this, but
we believe that one of the duties of a trade
paper is to keep its readers fairly well in-
formed upon trade conditions.
Probably there is no institution in this
industry that is in closer touch with the
manufacturing, wholesale and retail trade
in America than The Review. We also
keep closely informed of conditions in
every other line of industry. Our infor-
mation is gleaned from experts, and we
take some pride in the fact that the past
utterances of this paper upon important
matters which affect trade welfare have
invariably proved correct.
vent shrinkage of the wealth or property
holdings of the men who now own stocks
of goods and store buildings. It is argued
that if competing manufacturers, banks,
railroads, newspapers, insurance compa-
nies, etc., find it advisable to unite their
properties and pool issues retail store-
keepers may find it advantageous to do the
same. They also present the idea that
before long large combinations of capital
will undertake in small cities, medium -
sized towns and villages what the depart-
ment stores have already done in Chicago,
New York and elsewhere.
As already suggested, the end of the
movement, if it shall be started in a prac-
tical way, seems to be the making of
storekeeping a public function done by the
municipality, the State or the nation.
This is a somewhat startling scheme, and
it may be interesting to see what the folks
who go to Mackinac Island will have to
say on the subject. Of course the idea is
not altogether new having been exploited
somewhat exhaustively in Bellamy's "Look-
ing Backward."
A movement along these socialistic lines
would tend to confirm the views of one of
our leading thinkers who said, in talking
RETAILERS TO TAKE ACTION.
of the centralization of wealth in great
SIGNIFICANT illustration of the trusts and the crushing out of the healthy
present trend of thought in the mer- middle class of the nation, all tending to
cantile world, is furnished by the move- the creation of two classes the very rich
ment now on foot to hold a meeting of the and the very poor, that it would end either
leading retail dealers of the country at in State socialism or revolution.
Mackinac Island, Mich., on July 26, 27 and
The entire scheme of the merchants in-
28, for the purpose of discussing various terested in this movement seems at the
questions connected with merchandizing, present time visionary, but as it emanates
among which are the advantage of co- from men of character and undoubted abil-
operative or united wholesale buying, the ef- ity, many of them leaders in their respec-
fect of co-operative distribution, whether co- tive lines of effort, it is therefore entitled
operative stores can render better service to consideration.
with less expense than privately owned,
Those interested in the movement cer-
competitively conducted stores, and store- tainly cannot be charged with being be-
keeping as a public function. The latter hind the times, and the meeting at Mack-
question is formulated as follows by inac Island will result in some very inter-
those interested: " T h e ethical and eco- esting debates.
nomic possibilities of public ownership
and operation as contrasted with some of
CALL A MEETING.
the wasteful practices and immoral conse- Y\TB.Y would it not be an excellent plan
quences of private and corporate owner-
to call a meeting of the Haines Bros,
ship of retail stores."
creditors, inviting the receiver to be pres-
The plan of those who have called the ent and ask that he state before the meet-
meeting seems to be to obtain ideas as to ing just precisely the present condition of
how merchants must act to "offset the affairs?
trade-centralizing power of the trusts, the
He could easily secure an order from
department stores and the mail-order busi- the Court, permitting him to pro-rata a
ness." It is stated that some of the re- certain portion of the moneys received
tailers who have promised to attend the nearly a year ago from the sale of the
meeting are of the opinion that in many Haines Bros, effects.
towns storekeepers will find it expedient to
There is a considerable amount of money
form combinations, afterward changing the involved in this failure and The Review
ownership from corporation to co-operative would be glad to hear from some of those
ownership under conditions which will pre- interested in the matter.
A
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
THE COLLAPSE OF TRUSTS.
TT would seem as if the trust octopus was
receiving some pretty severe blows
these July days. There has been a failure
of the chair trust, the glove trust and two
or three other of lesser importance, and
now it appears that a lack of financial sup-
port came near producing the entire collapse
of the much talked of bicycle trust.
The trust—that is, The American Bi-
cycle Co.—which was recently incorporated
under the laws of the State of New Jersey
with a capital of $80,000,000, was seriously
hampered, to say the least, by complications
which prevented the perfection of the
organization. A crisis was reached with
the inability of the under-writers to furnish
the funds requisite for carrying on the
amalgamated interests as one.
Several meetings were held in this city
during the week and the result was that a
new combination was made with half the
capitalization of the original trust. It is
understood that more than one half of the
manufacturers in the country are outside
of the new deal, and the success of the
combination as it now stands is looked upon
as extremely doubtful. It is stated that a
small percentage of cash will now be paid
the owners of the plants who are included
in the re-organization scheme.
A talk with some of the manufacturers
who have remained out of the combination
leads one to the belief that they look upon
the scheme as full of possibilities for failure.
The partial collapse of this gigantic trust
is of particular interest to piano manufac-
turers, as the conditions which exist in the
bicycle industry conform more closely to
those which now prevail in the piano
trade perhaps than almost any other in-
dustry that we can name.
There are more than two hundred con-
cerns employed in the manufacture of
bicycles. Then, too, there are many parts
made in other factories which correspond
closely with what we term the supply fac-
tories of the piano industry.
It has been claimed by those who have
looked over the field carefully that it would
be almost an impossibility to form a suc-
cessful bicycle trust or combination, owing
to the fact that capital always could be
secured to carry on competitive manufac-
turing. The promoters of the bicycle
trust succeeded in obtaining options on
115 plants. These options expired prior
to July 1st, and an extension of another
month was granted under the plea
that a further examination of the
plants was necessary. It was during the
interim that the American Bicycle Co. was
incorporated. Having nominally purchas-
ed about 43 plants, the promoters attempt-
ed to float the securities of the corporation.
This they were unable to do, and it is
stated that the manufacturers themselves
will have to furnish capital to start the en-
terprise, if it is ever really floated. They
are now seeking to discover some means to
successfully bolster up the scheme, but
it seems the promoters will have to pump
a powerful lot of wind into the finan-
cial tire before it will support the or-
ganization. Then if they ever do succeed
in starting the wheel there are plenty of
tacks in the path in the way of sound com-
petition which is liable to make some
mighty big punctures.
It is the old story of attempting to float
a vast financial scheme on wind chiefly,
and relying entirely for the launching up-
on the willingness of the people to sub-
scribe for stock through the various
brokers.
Take up almost any leading metropolitan
paper and we will find an alluring an-
nouncement of some new corporation,
known in the vernacular as a trust, which
desires to sell stock. The directorate of
these concerns invariably is made up of men
who rank high in the financial world.
These are supposed to give the color of
legitimacy as well as solidity to the scheme,
but the people are beginning to find out,
after all, that the responsibilities of these
stool pigeon directors amount to little or
nothing, and are becoming decidedly chary
of investing in the over-inflated stock
which is being offered.
How much better the piano trade is to-
day to have followed the advice of The
Review, and preserved its independence.
If a trust had been formed in this indus-
try what assurance have we that it would
be any more successful than many of the
others which have been launched largely
upon promoters' inflated talk. If a man
can get cold cash for his business and dis-
pose of it at a fair price, why it is all well
and good to retire from active life, but
how many men in this industry are there
who would be satisfied even with those
conditions? The fact is the piano industry
never was as healthy since its inception as
it is this day, and the prospects never were
as bright. If our views count for any-
thing, formed by personal observations by
thousands of miles of travel during the
past few months, we say that this industry
will enjoy the biggest fall business in trade
history and men are wise who retain
their individual independence and have
immediate control of their business insti-
tutions.
And how much better for this industry,
and for the whole country for that matter
to encourage individual independence
rather than to merge interests into one
colossal combination.
PESSIMISTS TO THE REAR.
T H E wail of the pessimist is no longer
heard in the land. The fact that the
United States by reason of its great excess
of exports is draining the moneyed centers
of Europe is something to set all thinking.
It is known positively that the $12,000,000
recently shipped abroad by our local insti-
tutions in defiance of the laws of the
foreign exchange, was money actually bor-
rowed from Wall street by Berlin bankers
to meet the money stringency there.
America to-day cuts a mighty important
figure before the world. The Spanish-
American war has given America greater
prominence in the eyes of Europeans than
all of the events that have transpired in
the last quarter of a century.
A fact showing the business of this coun-
try has grown during the twelve months is
the enormous figures in bank clearings.
For the six months ending June 30th the
clearings in seventy-six cities aggregate
$48,073,459,121, a gain of forty-six per
cent, over 1898, ninety-four per cent, over
1897 and 117 per cent, over 1894.
When such figures are presented it means
that the pessimist together with the anti-
expansionist must go. This country is
not to be halted in its onward career by
pessimistic howls.
A S The Review has frequently stated
there is a tremendous business abroad
to be secured for American pianos, just as
well as for American engines, or anything
else which we create. We have suggested
time and time again that pianos be built
specially for foreign markets. Still the
wise realize to-day that the home trade
pays the best and is the best, and until we
have that pretty fairly supplied our manu-
facturers will prefer to work on this conti-
nent rather than across the seas.
T H A T our foreign trade relations would
be considerably improved if Ameri-
can exporters paid more attention to the
manners and customs of the different peo-
ple the world over is a fact that admits of
but little discussion. Some testimony put
forth by the Philadelphia Commercial Mu-
seum shows that a carelessnesss in pack-
ing, shipping and divers other shortcom-
ings has tended to prevent foreigners from
buying our goods. If Americans desire to
obtain a still larger share of the trade of
the old world than they now have they
must pay considerable attention to the
whims and caprices of their customers.

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