Music Trade Review

Issue: 1900 Vol. 31 N. 26

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
TWENTY-SECOND YEAR.
ture far as human eye can see, that
these same satisfying conditions are rea-
sonably assured for some time to come.
There can be no great upheaval which
will overthrow public confidence to an ex-
tent which will threaten the destruction
EDWARD LYMAN BILL,
even temporarily of the splendid business
EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR.
J . B. S P I L L A N E , MANAGING EDITOR.
edifice which we have reared in this
EMILIE FRANCES BAUER,
country.
THOS. CAMPBELL-COPELAND
There can be no great disturbing ques-
WALDO E. LADD
Executive Staff :
GEO.
W. QUERIPEL
tions agitated during the next few years
A. J. NICKLIN
such as tariff and finance which strike at
PnDlisheii Every Saturday at 3 last 14th Street, New YorK the very heart of business. They are set-
SUBSCRIPTION (including postage), United States, Mexico
and Canada, $2.00 per year ; all other countries, $4.00.
tled, and for a number of years the busi-
ADVERTISEMENTS, $2.00 per inch, single column, per
insertion. On quarterly or yearly contracts a special discount
ness interests of this country will be com-
is allowed. Advertising Pages $50.00, opposite reading matter
$75.00.
REMITTANCES, in other than currency form, should be
paratively free from the depressing effects
made payable to Edwai d Lyman Bill.
of great national issues along political
Entered at the New York Post Office as Second Class Matter.
lines. It is true we have some knotty
NEW YORK, DEC. 29, 1900.
problems on hand for solution, but the
TELEPHONE NUMBER, 1745--EIQHTEENTH STREET.
abiding faith which we have in the party
On the first Saturday of each month The
Review contains in its "Artists Department"
in power to bring about a condition of
all the current musical news. This is effected
without in any way trespassing on the size or
reasonableness and peace is of that charac-
service of the trade section of the paper. It has
a special circulation, and therefore augments
ter that immediately lends encouragement
materially the value of The Review to adver-
to the early settlement of the existing
tisers.
problems.
THE PAGE CLOSED.
We have had in this country four tariff
/GREETINGS to all! May the first year
eras, and the question has been the main
of the new century be rich in good
one in our politics with few exceptional
things for Review readers everywhere.
years when the money problem took prece-
A S far as The Review is concerned, its dence. With both of those happily out of
business year closes with this issue, the way as disturbing elements, the ques-
and 1900 becomes at once retrospective. tion of running this great big business in-
In an industrial sense it takes high rank, stitution which we call the United States
for notwithstanding the fact that we had Government becomes vastly simplified.
to face a red-hot presidential campaign,
T"HUS as we view the situation the pros-
business did not show the depression which
pect for the opening years of the new
usually comes from contact with national
century are roseate with rich promises for
politics. It is true that many expected a
the people of this energetic young nation
tremendous boom in all kinds of enter-
of ours.
prises immediately after the lingering
We are too practical a people to devote
echoes of the campaign thunder had died
much time to retrospective thought. It is
away, but take the year as a whole, it
the ceaseless onward grind of energy that
has been a most prosperous one. The
compels no halt of any great period, there-
horn of plenty has been tipped gen-
fore with the American piano manufac-
erously for piano manufacturers and
turer the only breathing spell will be the
merchants, as well as all others in this
short time required for stock taking and
great big expanding country of ours.
talking over a little the opening campaign
Many men have been prosperous in the
for the new year. There will be no pause.
affairs of this world, and the overflow of
bounty has found its way into the laps of We are too matter-of-fact to indulge in any
the poor as well as the rich; and so on the long periods of business contemplation.
last Christmas of the century joy and It is up and on, spurred by new ambition,
plenty entered many homes and many and fired by new ideas which are almost
faces seamed with the tracery of life's daily applied to business enterprise.
cares have been made to smile and hearts T H E year has been remarkable in many
ways. Of failures of consequence in
which have been steeped with disappoint-
the
industry
there have been practically
ment have been made glad.
none. Of course business smash-ups are
indelibly
associated with trade, but it is
the music trade interests of this coun-
try it may truthfully be said that they with gratification that we turn to the
never were in such a firmly entrenched posi- leaf of trade history now closed and point
tion as to-day—buttressed around as they to the few figures made upon the page of
are with the generous earnings of the past 1900 of trade failures.
three years of plenty, and it would seem
Then, too, we cannot recall a year where-
as we take a prospective dip into the fu- in trade has been conducted on what we
may term more cleanly lines than during"
1900.
It is true we have had sporadic
cases wherein the reprehensible practices
of yore have been indulged in to a certain
extent, but taking the retail department as
a whole it may be truthfully said to have
advanced several notches along lines of
business honor and decency.
It is hopelessly impossible to change the
natures of some men who will resort to
methods of deceit which the honorable
most heartily condemn. The music trade
has not been exempt from such creatures
who have found therein a fertile field for
plying their nefarious vocations. They are,
however, becoming lessened as time rolls
on. Boston has taken a splendid position
towards the elimination of this class of
merchants and trade morality is steadily
advancing. There is too a strongly pro-
nounced effort on the part of a certain
element of the trade to take a decided stand
against unbusinesslike and deceitful meth-
ods.
|Vj ATURALLY the means adopted to sell
pianos must change with the chang-
ing times, and there is to-day a strongly
emphasized desire on the part of piano
merchants to be frank with their patrons.
This may be evidenced in the class of
piano advertising which appears in the col-
umns of the daily papers throughout the
land.
Most of the men are beginning to real-
ize that there has been abundant room for
reform in trade methods, and they have
gotten out the knife and have removed cer-
tain excrescences which heretofore have
been prominent upon the trade body.
T T is true the large profits of years agone
no longer abide with us. Competition
has changed materially, and the whole bus-
iness world has gone through an economic
change, and some of the old piano men
of the middle century days would not
recognize the scene of to-day if they
should chance to revisit us.
""THERE are many merchants who have
emphasized strongly during the past
year the large cash payments rather than
the small installment feature of the busi-
ness, and as far as The Review man at the
masthead views the situation, it is just
this class of dealers who have the fattest
bank account during this holiday season,
and whose trade is most eagerly sought by
manufacturers.
Matters relating to the business world
travel on electric wings, and a dealer's
methods are known to all in a compara-
tively brief space of time. The ones who
are exploiting the dollar payments are
the ones whom piano manufacturers as a
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
whole view with a feeling akin to sus-
picion, for such methods are not business-
like and are not necessary in a competitive
sense. A dealer who follows a local
competitor in this plan, might as well,
applying the same kind of logic, jump
off the dock and commit suicide just be-
cause some other man did.
Competition is regarded by some as the
desire of one man to undersell the other
on the theory that the more damage he
could do to the other would better himself.
To our minds that is a ridiculous view to
take of competition. Competition is the
logical result of the cheapening of goods
brought about by certain economic causes,
principal among which may be reckoned
improved machinery and new inventions.
The cause of competition is to be found in
the lessening of the cost of production,
and not in the desire of one man to cut
another.
This we apply purely to the manufactur-
ing field, and if the dealers are bound to
cut at each other and slash each other's
throats, why, that is their affair. Low prices
in the piano world, brought about by the de-
creased cost of manufacture, have enabled
the piano merchant to mark his goods
down to a surprisingly low point over
those of years agone. Still it should not
follow that the decreased cost of manufac-
turing should mean the open door through
which he has to enter to the ruination of
his own retail trade. Competition should
not be synonymous with business debase-
ment. A man who offers his goods lower
does it because they cost him less, or, ac-
cording to the reasoning of the department
store man, that he can afford to because
larger sales secure him a profit in the ag-
gregate.
There is only one way to view competi-
tion, and that is by meeting it. Talking
about it does not remove the seat of the
trouble. It should be met, and met on the
proper basis, but there are kinds of com-
petition in the piano trade which we may
designate by that inelegant, yet expressive
word, rotten. That word is fittingly ap-
propriate to some of the methods adopted
by piano men, which should not be fol-
lowed by others or looked upon as a kind
of competition. That should be properly
classed as business suicide, and there is no
reason why, if one man wishes to draw a
knife across his own throat, another should
do likewise.
The new century will improve matters
along these lines.
T H E trust discussion has simmered into
nothingness as far as the piano in-
dustry is concerned, and there seems to be
at the present time no good reason why the
subject will be revived during the new
year Tremendously depressed conditions
would be instrumental in creating new
discussions along trust lines, thus bringing
about new possibilities.
T ABOR troubles have been of a sporadic
character during the industry this
year. There have been several local dis-
turbances yet they have not seriously crip-
pled the output as a whole. Some manu-
facturers, notably in Cincinnati, lost a large
portion of their fall business through labor
troubles.
T R A D E journalism too has shown steady
advance during the past year. ,On
the whole, trade journalism to-day has be-
come generally recognized as an education-
al force which cannot be easily passed by
in the cultivation of special interest in
special wares.
For The Review 1900 ranks as the ban-
ner year.
We have worked steadily to advance
what we have believed to be the best inter-
ests of the industry, and to uphold its dig-
nity. We have been inclined by peaceful
means to force a recognition of the fact
that trade journalism stands well to the
front of the liberal professions. The rec-
ord of this institution is well known, and
its increased business proves that rightly
conducted journalism is being recognized
to an extent that it never was in years past.
T H E end of the year closes the con-
troversy regarding whether 1900
begins the twentieth or ends the nine-
teenth century. No one can doubt that we
round the line of demarcation next week.
The nineteenth century in point of
advance and progressiveness eclipses all
others of which we have record. It is to be
regretted that its closing years should have
been marked by war, but, after all, the
wars of the past three or four years have
been comparatively bloodless when compar-
ed with those of earlier days.
What marvelous progress has been made
in art, science and industry during the
century whose requiem is now sung. The
whole world has been brought into close
contact, inventions almost human in their
accomplishment have been perfected, and
it would seem almost impossible for the
twentieth century to rank as iconoclastic
in many ways as has its predecessor which
has been practically a space annihilator.
It seems beyond human accomplishment
to win such marvelous advance as has
been made during the past half century,
still we have no doubt that the new one
will render a good account of itself, for
the age is evolutionistic and forward not
backward runs the tide of progress.
In the piano industry tremendous ad-
vance has been made and America within
a comparatively brief period of time has
become the greatest piano and organ pro-
ducing country on earth, and not only the
largest in aggregate output, but greatest
in point of individual output, for there
are no firms in Europe which even ap-
proach the great manufacturing concerns
of America.
In point of factory system and equip-
ment we are far ahead of Europe, and al-
ready American competition has created
such havoc in Europe that it has been pro-
posed to exclude visitors from certain piano
factories for fear they are spies represent-
ing American concerns who would glean
factory information which could be used
advantageously in this country.
What tommy rot! There are some things
in which we may still lean toward Europe
for information, but not in piano making,
and surely not in factory system, for the
American equipment is immeasurably
ahead of the antiquated forms now in
vogue in so many European factories.
TVJOW and then the ghost of the stencil is
paraded in view of some manufactur-
ers with the hope that it will strike terror
to their hearts. Stencil agitation for the
past year has created but a ripple on the
piano surface, and as a means of coercing
men into bestowing patronage upon a jour-
nalistic enterprise has long since passed
into its decadence.
T H E R E are still some weekly publica-
tions which will insist upon produc-
ing Christmas numbers and various other
"specials." As a whole, however, this
system of working advertisers has become
practically obsolete, not only in this indus-
try but in all others, for a careful perusal
of the list of leading American trade jour-
nals will show that a small percentage in-
deed has endeavored to bring forth a
special holiday number.
The management of this institution for
years has been opposed to specials of
any nature whatsoever. We believe that
the individuality of the advertiser is lost
when surrounded by a hundred more who
exploit their wares in the same issue. It is
better far to occupy a strong position in a
regular issue than to be lost among many
in a large edition.
A "Special for" each advertiser is our
slogan rather than a special for all at one
time.
—with its struggles, with its tri
umphs, with its joys, with its sor-
rows, with its successes, with its failures.
The year and the century now passes into
history. Vale, nineteenth century! Hail
and farewell! Let us turn to the spotless
page of 1901,

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