Music Trade Review

Issue: 1900 Vol. 31 N. 17

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
TWENTY-SECOND YEAR.
RMDV
EDWARD LYMAN BILL,
EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR.
J.
B. S P I L L A N E , MANAGING EDITOR.
EMILIE FRANCES BAUER,
Executive Staff
:
THOS. CAMPBELL-COPELAND
WALDO E. LADD
GEO. W. QUERIPEL
A. J. NICKLIN
PnDlishefl Every Saturflay at 3 East 14m Street, New York
SUBSCRIPTION (including postage). United States, Mexico
and Canada, $2.00 per year ; all other countries, $4.00.
ADVERTISEMENTS, $2.00 per inch, single column, per
insertion. On quarterly or yearly contracts a special discount
is allowed. Advertising Pages $50.00, opposite reading matter
$7S°°.
.
REMITTANCES, in other than currency form, should be
made payable to Edward Lyman Bill.
Entered at the Netu York Post Office as Second Class Matter.
NEW YORK, OCT. 27, 1900.
TELEPHONE NUMBER, 1745--EIGHTEENTH STREET.
On the first Saturday of each month The
Review contains in its "Artists Department"
all the current musical news. This is effected
without in any way trespassing on the size or
service of the trade section of the paper. It has
a special circulation, and therefore augments
materially the value of The Review to adver-
tisers.
foolishly surrendered to the dictation of
selfish and arrogant leaders of the Dold
type.
The Piano Maker's Union as a national
organization never will receive recognition
at the hands of manufacturers unless it
shows itself more worthy than it has in the
past.
Instead of having a cigar maker at its
head like Chas. Dold, it should have a
skilled piano maker, a man versed in every
department of the business, one, who by
his own qualifications should have won the
respect of at least the owners of the factory
wherein his work has been carried on.
Such a man, skilled in all departments
of the business, would exact from every
other member a certain qualification which
would raise the standard of the organiza-
tion. Then, if the men would turn about
and grade the work, we will say into about
four classes, establishing a standard of
wages for each class, they will have made
a stride in the right direction and one
which would win for the organization at
least the respect of the piano manufactur-
ers, because at the outset they would have
established the principle that a certain
standard of excellence, a certain knowl-
edge of work, is necessary even to enter in
the fourth class of workmen.
Then, by having gradations there is also
an incentive for the man who receives the
lowest wages to reach the point where he
may receive greater returns, and this he
can only do by perfecting himself along
certain mechanical lines, thus raising an
educational as well as intellectual standard.
The serious objection to the Union as it
now stands is that it assumes all men are
equal, which they are not, never were and
never will be. For as long as there is an
inequality of brains there must exist in-
equality regarding the possible accom-
plishments of individuals.
Unions to-day have a tendency to hold
back the ambitiously energetic workman
and reduce him by their organization rules
to the standard of the drone, and by hav-
ing the applicants for membership in
the union pass no examination, they are
really raising ignorant workmen to be
the equal of skilled workmen.
This position cannot be maintained ex-
cept at the sacrifice of union success, and
the intelligent men of the unions will see
this and break away from the shackles
which bind them to the unworthy
and to the leaders who are too often inter-
ested in fomenting labor troubles in order
that they may draw their weekly stipend
from the organization.
INVITING DISASTER.
/ ^ H A S . DOLD is indulging in his usual
flamboyant utterances in Cincinnati.
He is making all sorts of claims, and
says that the national organization of piano
workers will uphold the Cincinnati strikers
to the end. He alleges that there are ten
thousand men in the international organi-
zation each one of whom will contribute
fifty cents a week to support the members
who are now on strike and that they will
continue the fight until the sun goes down
on their lives.
We have all heard of Dold's mouthings
before.
Mr. Dold and many other men of his
class overlook the most important point in
organization work. They wish their unions
recognized but seek to dictate terms of set-
tlement to manufacturers. In the latter
their position is un-American and will not
be countenanced by independent manu-
facturers.
One thing, however, which must impress
the average piano workman who is bolster-
ing up tile union cause, is what little for-
ward movement the International Piano-
makers' Union has accomplished in the way
of promotion of the interests of the men.
There is no question but that organiza-
tion can be effective if manipulated prop-
erly and confined to the legitimate func-
tions of organization work.
Take the history of the Piano Maker's
Union and thus far it has scored only-
lamentable failures and instead of advanc-
ing the cause of the workmen it has been
instrumental in causing them vast losses
and entailing upon them and their famil-
There is a union existing among elec-
ies much suffering all because they have tricians, and we understand they have cer-
tain grades dependent entirely upon the
educational qualifications of individual
members. No man can reach the ele-
mentary stage even until he has passed a
suitable examination.
When the workmen of the piano indus-
try exhibit a desire to advance on educa-
tional lines, maintaining a certain individ-
ual standard for admission to the craft,
they will then have made a move in the
direction which will dignify their union
in the eyes of all manufacturers.
When they operate along lines where
ignorance and knowledge are placed upon
the same plane, then they are working on
principles which can only end in disaster
for them. The blatant, abusive utterances
of such men as Dold only have the effect
of creating a feeling of antagonism on the
part of manufacturers, and the men by fol-
lowing such teachings are pursuing lines
which must lead to inevitable disaster.
/~\NE of the oldest piano travelers in the
industry remarked, while in The Re-
view offices this week, that never in his ex-
perience has he seen business maintain
such a satisfactory condition during a
presidential year. In fact, he expressed
surprise at the size of the orders he had
recently taken.
No one can deny the truth of the state-
ment that politics has had but slight effect
upon business. There is activity every-
where, and the result of the election is al-
ready being discounted by business men.
For the next six weeks the power of the
mercantile brain should have its profit-
earning reward without resort to clap-trap
or specially cheapening methods in the dis-
position of the retail product. Leave those
things, the big drum, the loud horn and
the red fire to the dull season. The live
piano merchant will find that it will re,-
quire effort on his part only along dignified
lines to bring trade into his doors during
the next eight weeks.
MR, DEALER!
TTAVE you bought the right pianos?
Is your entire stock good as a profit
earner?
Don't wait too long to find these things
out.
You are busy, perhaps, but are you mak-
ing money? Are you not selling pianos
too cheaply? Are you educating people
on the upward or downward grade regard-
ing piano prices?
Are you exploiting in large type a hun-
dred dollar piano at retail?
Is your business gravitating largely to
the small installment plan? Are you fill-
ing your books with a lot of accounts that
will not improve in value as time rolls on?
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
Are you working the cash principle in
just the way that you should?
Are you emphasizing the large cash pay-
ments, or are you rushing that end of your
business which tends towards the elusive
installment piano dollar?
Have you improved the class of your
trade in the same way that you have "jol-
lied" the piano traveler regarding the im-
provement of his wares.
Have you boiled matters down in a busi-
ness way and gotten rid of all business that
doesn't pay? Are j^ou cumbering up your
books with a lot of cheap installment paper
given by dead-beats, slow-pay-may-be-
good-some-day customers?
Are you loading your books and your
mind with transactions that don't pay?
You can better afford to shut them off
now anyway, when business is good, than
at any other time.
It is better far to do less business and
have that profitable, than it is to do a big
business and fool yourself by a magnifi-
cent showing of assets purely on paper.
A rational, conscientious, care-taking
business man watches all of these things,
and why should he not?
Work for cash.
More piano money.
D ETAIL piano advertising has improved
materially within the past few years.
There is more taste used in the selection
of types used and in the display and ar-
rangement of advertising than ever before.
Then again, in many cities we notice the
smart and snappy style has obtained
to a considerable degree.
Piano merchants are beginning to learn
the value of symmetrically arranged "ads."
Good advertising has never been ap-
proached in a greater degree than at the
present time, and the exploitation of pianos
in the retail field is to-day carried along
attractive, well-balanced lines.
THE ONLY BUSINESS MENACE.
"THE business prospects of the country
were never more brilliant than at the
present time, and for but one contingency
there would not be a cloud on the commer-
cial sky as big as a man's hand. There is
one possibility fraught with great danger;
let us hope that possibility does not be-
come a probability.
We refer to the possibility of Bryan's
election.
In weeks of travel we have not met one
democratic business man who would can-
didly admit that he hopes for Bryan's vic-
tory.
There is not one man that we can
name who would have the slightest fear
regarding the future of his business were
he assured beyond the peradventure of a
The ONLY music TRADE paper which
received any award at the Paris Exposi-
tion of 1900 was The flusic Trade Review
which was given the GRAND PRIX, the
HIGHEST official recognition obtainable
for any exhibit in any division of art, me-
chanics or industry.
mahogany, but in the meanwhile mahog-
any is climbing up.
FLOTSAM AND JETSAM.
T H E itinerant tuner is getting to be a
decided nuisance. If tuners of this
country would perfect an organization
and demand from every member a certain
doubt that the present administration is necessary qualification before a certificate
to remain in control of governmental func- of membership should be issued to him, in
tions.
a little while they would then be able to
The great danger to business interests drive the irresponsible, fraudulent tuner
is not wholly the fear of the debased silver from the field.
dollar. That to our minds is only an inci-
A number of reports have reached us re-
dent. The real menace is the man him- cently from dealers whose territory has
self and what he stands for. For Bryan been infested by a source of irresponsible
not only stands for silver but for popul- tuners. No one should permit an unknown
ism, Tillmanism, Altgeldism and all other tuner to touch a piano. Tuners who have
isms. By his utterances he is endeavoring the indorsement of their local music trades-
to array the so-called masses against the men, and no others should be employed.
so-called classes.
A ND so the Annex is making another
Labor against capital. No man, save
flop accompanied by the usual amount
Bryan, who has ever run for the highest
of
stage
thunder. It is now the ''vaude-
office in the gift of the American people
has attempted to introduce and encourage ville extra," and we rather incline to the
belief that the members of this industry
a class distinction in this country.
will hardly care to have their wares ex-
TT is extremely probable within the near ploited in a publication where vaudeville
future we shall be able to announce a affairs take precedence over those of the
new move made by a gentleman who re- industry. The staid members of the trade
cently disposed of his holdings in a large will care very little whether Bessie Bone-
hill has a couple of daughters in the chorus
Western music trade corporation.
at Weber & Fields', whether Dick and Kit-
VENEERS GOING UR
ty Kumminshave resigned from the Indian
CANCY veneers are advancing in price. Maidens Company, or whether Jennie
There are a number of reasons given Joyce has resumed her stage work at the
for this condition, and one of the repre- earnest solicitation of Teddy Marks.
sentatives of a large veneer house recently
'"THERE is no question but an attractive
stated to The Review that the new method
business establishment pays in more
of decorating walls in veneers instead of
ways than one. People are naturally
tapestry had much to do with this.
drawn toward up-to-date establishments
Of all the different varieties of wood
which have an appearance of prosperity.
both native and foreign, such as mahog-
The man who looks prosperous and self-
any, birch, rosewood, Hungarian ash, ma-
reliant has some of the attributes of suc-
hogany has been the most popular, and is
cess. People like to rub elbows with pros-
used more than all the others combined.
perity, provided prosperity is not arro-
Six or seven years ago, all the mahog-
gant. And so a prosperous appearance is
any used in this country came from South
productive of piano prosperity.
America, Mexico, Cuba or Porto Rico.
The wood gradually became too popular TJOW would piano manufacturers enjoy
paying taxes in every state to which
for the supply, and new fields had to be
they
ship
pianos?
found. The veneer men found that ma-
That according to Mr. Bryan is the way
hogany was growing more and more scarce,
and at last Africa was selected as the most to get at trusts—make every corporation
likely source for the best mahogany and pay a license to the secretary of state when-
now a large portion of our mahogany comes ever it transacts business outside the state
from there. Mahogany is becoming more where the corporation was formed. Every
and more popular for offices and legal incorporated piano concern according to
chambers, and it has come to be used Bryan should pay tribute to every state
largely in private dwellings. Veneer peo- where it conducts business.
ple, however, are looking for a substitute IT is now definitely settled that the allied
for this popular wood in Porto Rico and
music trades of this city will be repre-
the Philippines. It is believed by many sented in the Business Men's parade, which
that our new colonial possessions will fur- occurs a week from to-day. Indications
nish a variety of woods with just as fine a are that our industry will make a very
figure, capable of just as high a polish as creditable showing.

Download Page 4: PDF File | Image

Download Page 5 PDF File | Image

Future scanning projects are planned by the International Arcade Museum Library (IAML).

Pro Tip: You can flip pages on the issue easily by using the left and right arrow keys on your keyboard.