Music Trade Review

Issue: 1901 Vol. 33 N. 4

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
TWENTY-SECOND YEAR.
REVIEW
EDWARD LYMAN BILL,
EDITOR AMD PROPRIETOR.
J . B. S P I L L A N E , MANAGING EDITOR.
THOS. CAMPBELL-COPELAND
WALDO E. LADD
GEO. W. QUERIPEL
A. J. NICKLIN
Executive Staff:
Every Satnrflay at 3 East 14th Street, New Yoit
SUBSCRIPTION (including postage). United States, Mexico
and Canada, $2.00 per year; another countries, $4.00.
ADVERTISEriENTS, $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,
$75.00.
REfilTTANCES, in other than currency form, should be
made payable to Edward Lyman Bill.
Entered at the New York Post Office as Second Class Matter
NEW YORK. JULY 27, 1901.
TELEPHONE NUMBER, 1745-EIQHTEENTH STREET.
THE
On the first Saturday of each
ARTISTS 1
month The Review contains in its
DEPARTMENT " Artists'Department" all the cur-
rent musical news. This is effected
without in any way trespassing on the size or ser-
vice of the trade section of the paper. It has a
special circulation, and therefore augments mater-
ially the value of The Review to advertisers.
DIRECTORY OF
u^nr.rTinr..
The directory of piano manu-
facturing firms and corporations
MANUFACTURERS
f
d
Q n p a g e
J g w i n b e Qf
value as a reference for dealers and others.
DIRECTORY OF
A directory of all advertisers
in
ADVERTISERS
The Review will be found on
Page 5.
EDITORIAL
DOES SUMMER ADVERTISING PAY?
A subject w h i c h
"THE average piano
should interest every
piano merchant—The
retail summer adver-
tising of prominent
houses—The plan fol-
lowed in various lo-
calities.
merchant does not
believe in making large
advertising expenditures
during the summer
months. His energies are also slackened,
and, consequently, summer stagnation reigns
in most of the piano warerooms throughout
the country.
There are many exceptions, of course, to
the general rule, and houses in New Eng-
land, for illustration, like Steinert's, maintain
a constant exploitation of their wares in the
columns of the papers throughout the entire
New England States. Recently they have
been making a special feature in their ad-
vertisement of the fact that they control "thir-
ty branches in New England."
The Steinerts are business people and,
if advertising in the summer did not pay,
they would surely discontinue it. That
Steinerts find that summer advertising pays,
there is no doubt; should not their example
stimulate others?
In the West, too, there are a number of
concerns which evidently believe in summer
advertising, for they keep everlastingly at it.
Presumably they obtain good results or they
would not continue large expenditures ad-
vertiseward.
New York is not noted for the activity
of its warerooms in piano quarters during
the summer months, There are some of our
local piano men, however, who continue to which we have received, touching upon this
give publicity to their instruments in the pub- subject of trade interest, there have been but
lic print even during the. summer, when few expressions of opinions questioning the
most of us are seeking places "swept by benefit to the trade of having one price
It would seem, that
ocean breezes." John Wanamaker is one universally adopted.
O'f the believers in mid-summer piano adver- with an almost universal belief in favor of
tising. He has recently devoted much space having one price that it should be brought
in our great dailies to the exploitation of his about without any great exertion on the part
piano department. "He advertises "stirring of piano men.
concessions in price on pianos that have been
It is interesting to note the views of deal-
used some time." His list of special bar- ers upon this important trade topic, tending,
gains is extensive—likewise alluring.
as they all do, towards a common end.
In San Francisco we find that some of the Many are unreservedly in favor of the one-
leading houses of that city show no material price system, and state unhesitatingly that
slackening in their business efforts during they believe it would be a very great bene-
the summer months. They believe that all fit it it were possible to establish it generally ;
seasons are good in the piano.line in the others claim that they have practised it with
metropolis of the (Pacific Slope.
success for more than a decade, and that
In New Orleans, the announcements of while they have missed some sales which
the local piano men occupy but small space they could have made by other methods,
in the papers of that city during the summer. they are confident that those losses are more
Everything there is at a standstill, and the than balanced by the fact that it is generally
piano merchants of that city do not seek to known that they hold exclusively to one
transact much business during the heated price, and that while some dealers have a
reputation for juggling prices, their institu-
term.
In the Northwestern cities there is com- tion is known to be absolutely reliable in the
paratively little publicity given to piano news way of prices and that a child can buy of
them as cheaply as an expert.
during the summer months.
As a rule, in every community, the most
There are some who consider that theo-i
progn ssive people are good advertisers— retically the one price is the proper thing, but
in season and out—and while it cannot be practically it is impossible to carry it out
said that all advertising is successful, yet owing to existent conditions.
it is a fact that most business men who have
There is one thing which must be evident
achieved pronounced success have been lib- to all and that is, that The Review has been
eral users of printers' ink. It is an encour- enabled to draw out the only national dis-
agement to business men of enterprise as cussion pianowards ever inaugurated upon
well as determination, that there is no trade the one-price system. Almost everyone ad-
so settled that a vigorous competitor cannot mits that if it were possible to establish an
take it away by advertising when the estab- absolute rigidity of price, it would be the
lished concerns neglect the best methods of best possible occurrence that could happen
to the retail department of the industry.
publicity.
Then,
if they believe this honestly and sin-
Summer advertising pays, of course—as
long as the shutters are not closed it pays to cerely, why do they not take some personal
let the public know what specialties a mer- interest in organization work, either local
or national, which is obviously tending to-
chant carries that will interest.
INTEREST IN ONE-PRICE SYSTEM. wards creating a better understanding
T"" 1 HE first topic in our among piano men than has hitherto existed?
Opinions from many
prize contest as
It was not very many years ago, as one
dealers upon the ben-
efit of the one-price
dealer
remarked to The Review, when it
to whether the depart-
system — All believe
that trade conditions
ment stores would be- would have been quite the thing for a cus-
warrant the move.
come permanent and tomer to have offered a.clothing merchant
greater piano distributing factors, created half the price he asked for a suit of clothes
to have secured it; in other words, there was
widespread comment, and essays upon this
but little security that could be placed in the
topic were received from many parts of the
original retail price upon garments. Now
country.
all that has changed. Most clothing stores
The second subject, however, far sur- are run upon absolutely one price. To be
passed the first in point of interest. From sure many bargains are offered in the self-
all over America hundreds of opinions have same institutions, but the bargain offers are
reached us, bearing upon the possible bene- extended to all customers alike, and if the
fits which would be derived from the one piano dealer has anything which he is par-
price system, if it were universally adopted ticularly desirous of getting rid of, then let
him cut the price, but have the reduction
in the retailing of pianos.
hold good to one and all upon the advertised
It is worth while to state in this connec-
date.
tion, that put of the vast correspondence
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
There are plenty of ways, if the aver-
age piano merchant adopt them, which will
result in a building up of public confidence
and esteem in his establishment, and the one-
price system will cause the cheap piano to
be sold at its proper price and thus the line of
demarcation between the cheap and the bet-
ter grades will become more distinct.
Confidence after all is the mainstay of all
business, and the communications which we
have been receiving from piano merchants,
upon the subject of fixity of price, show
plainly that they themselves do not believe
the general public possess the confidence
which it is desirable to hold, in the prices
asked at the average piano stores. They
frankly admit that one of the great deterring
influences in popularizing the piano business
with the public, has been its well-known elas-
ticity of prices which has prevailed to an
alarming extent for a long term of years.
The subject is growing exceedingly inter-
esting, and the special contributions to the
Prize Contest which we have been present-
ing should be read by every dealer, also the
opinions of many dealers presented weekly
in The Review serve to make the subject full
of live and continued interest.
THE PROMOTER'S PREDICAMENT.
The chilling effect
'"THE suggestion of
of the forfeit propo-
The Review that
sition upon the pro-
moter — [ H i s p l a n s
a cash forfeit be de-
completely routed—
The break in his pro-
demanded when a piano
gram—A hopeless tan-
gle.
plant option was de-
sired, in the event of its not being taken up,
has had a decidedly chilling effect upon
the work of the special trust envoy among
the piano manufacturers. Every manufac-
turer should insist upon this when a prop-
osition is made to him and an option re-
quested upon his plant. It is the quickest
and surest way to make the promoter show
his hand and, at the same time, his strength
and his financial backing.
In other words, his bluff is immediately
revealed. His alleged gigantic support
dwindles into an incoherent mass of mean-
ingless phrases calculated to confuse, but
which amount to nothing more than an eva-
sion of the subject.
That trade interest in the proposed piano
trust scheme is diminishing is evident to all.
Some weeks ago, when interest was at
the high water mark, the promoter was
over-jubilant, but, like other men with schem-
ing proclivities, he has witnessed the defeat
of his finely drawn plans which have been
completely shattered.
It required considerable time for him to
recuperate from the severe shock which he
encountered when the New Yorker who pro-
posed to underwrite the original plan turned
it down with an unmistakably heavy thud.
He has been endeavoring to get his forces
together after their rout, but, at the present
time, has not succeeded in making a formid-
able showing.
It is said that he grew black in the face
when he perused the suggestion of The
Review, that all manufacturers demand the
putting up of a cash forfeit in some bank
when an option on their business was de-
sired.
Take it all in all, June and July have not
been especially enjoyable months for the
promoter, who has witnessed the evolving
of his schemes into an almost hopeless tan-
gle.
He is beginning to think that he knows
really as much about forming a piano
trust as a brewery mule knows about trigo-
nometry.
In fact, his present condition of mental
doubt and financial hope reminds us of the
far-famed omithorhynchus which dies with-
out finding out whether it was born a duck
or a musk rat.
CONDITION OF TRADE*
TTHE decapitation of
Trade has kept up
notwithstanding
business is antici-
strikes and lack of
rain—Hope that labor
pated in the piano line
troubles may be ad-
during the summer
justed—No stock ac-
cumulation.
months; but the head
of the piano industry has not rolled into the
basket of business stagnancy as yet, although
we have passed mid-summer.
It is amazing how the demand for pianos
has continued with such frequency upon the
manufacturers' resources, and there has been
but little accumulation of stock for the fall
trade, which is sure to come in on the early
tide and remain with us for a long time.
Notwithstanding the rather discouraging
crop report which we get from the central
West, and the alarming possibilities of the
strike now under way, business still "keeps
up," to use the colloquial term.
It is to be hoped that some sort of an
adjustment will be made between the in-
terests involved in the Steel Trust, where
the leaders desire to suspend the labor of
hundreds of thousands of workmen, not
because wages are too low—not because
operatives are unfairly treated—but simply
because some of the plants that have come
under the control of the Steel Trust are still,
as they have always been, operated by non-
union labor, which employers decline to co-
erce into the union.
A general strike in the most important
manufacturing industry in this great coun-
try for such a cause as this appears pre-
posterous, and unprejudiced sentiment will
naturally range itself on the side of capital,
no matter how great the, sympathy with labor
in the abstract.
If the strike should assume the propor-
tions which those who are responsible for
it desire, the loss inflicted on the country
will be enormous.
The retail piano dealer will be one of the
first sufferers in the districts immediately
affected by the strike; he will not only lose
many "prospects," but it will be manifestly
impossible for his constituency to get in
sight of installment payments, provided a
general strike occurs.
The baleful influences will spread in ever-
widening circles. There surely ought to be
some method of preventing this suicidal and
fratricidal course—some method of control-
ling these unsafe guides who are them-
selves ignorant of the road.
Why should manufacturers and dealers
be constantly at the mercy of irresponsible
labor leaders?
The evil is not beyond remedy—by leg-
islation which shall embody justice to all.
A DESIRABLE~COMBINATION.
DEFERRING to a
Character and dol-
lars—Where the love
notorious
music
of money carries some
—Notable examples of
trade editor, whose al-
men who have not
leged retirement has
viewed life from the
dollar standpoint.
been the subject of con-
siderable jollying in trade circles, a member
of the trade remarked the other day: "Well,
no matter what methods he adopted, no mat-
ter how many people he has roasted, he has
succeeded. And that is what we are all in
the race for—to win success no matter what
the cost." Then and there we expressed
ourselves in strong terms of disagreement
with the expression quoted above.
It is
true, the world is too prone to judge success
in life from the money standpoint, but, as
a matter of fact, the desire to make money
is not the dominating thought in human
makeup. There are plenty of men who fig-
ure that character is much preferable to win
in the battle of life than mere dollars. It
is also true there are men, like the alleged
ex-music trade editor, without intellectual or
sentimental aspirations, who are moved en-
tirely by egotism and the desire to win dol-
lars, irrespective of the methods employed.
The alleged ex-music trade editor desires suc-
cess because success flatters his insufferable
vanity, and the roasting which he has done
is simply an incident in his career to win
money to satisfy personal vanity. It is pre-
cisely the same method employed by the
highwayman who holds up his fellow men
simply because he desires money and it is
the easiest way for him to achieve success.
Truly great men have had higher dreams
in life than simply money getting. Glad-
stone was Prime Minister five times and
could have made a very large fortune with
perfect ease, but he died poor. Jefferson im-
poverished himself serving his country.
There are plenty of men in public life to-day
who do not make money their god. There

Download Page 6: PDF File | Image

Download Page 7 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.