Music Trade Review

Issue: 1903 Vol. 37 N. 4

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
EDWARD LYMAN
BILL,
EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR.
J . B. S P I L L A N E
MANAGING EDITOR.
EXECUTIVE STAFF :
THOS. CAMPBELL-COPELAND
ORO. TV KELLER
W. MURDOCH LIND
A. EDMUND HANSON.
EMILIE FRANCES BAUER
GEO. W. QUERIPEL
A. J. NICKL1N
Published Every Saturday at I Madison Avenue, New
.SUBSCRIPTION (Including postage), United States, Mexico and Canada, f 2.00 per
year; all other countries, $4.00.
ADVERTISEMENTS, f 2.00 per Inch, single column, per Insertion. On quarterly or
yearly contracts ft special discount Is allowed. Advertising Pages f 50.00 ; opposite
reading matter, $75.00.
KEMITTANCES, In other than currency form, should be made payable to Edward
Ly man Bill.
Entered at the New York Post Office as Second Class Matter.
NEW YORK, JULY 25, 1903-
TELEPHONE NU/1BER, I74S-E1QMTEENTH STREET.
On the first Saturday of each month The Review contains In Its
THE
"Artists' Department" all the current musical newt. This Is
ARTISTS
n r D i B T i i . . . effected without In any way trespassing on the size or service
DEPARTMENT of the trade section of the paper. It has a special circulation, and
therefore augments materially the value of The Review to advertisers.
DIRECTORY
The directory of piano manufacturing firms and corpora-
PIANO
tlons found on page 31 will be of great value as a reference for
n r
MANUFACTURERS ^ - s and others.
EDITORIAL
\ I 7E learn that at the next session of the New York Legislature
it is proposed to introduce a bill which will do away com-
pletely with the doubtful origin of pianos offered at retail. It is
proposed in this bill that every instrument shall bear either upon
its name-board, or upon its plate, the name of the individual or cor-
poration manufacturing the instrument. This will be a State law
applied to all pianos offered for sale within the State. Pianos of
an indefinite, or stencil origin can then be immediately traced to the
source from which they originate.
To illustrate: A piano which is stencilled "Steinweg" must
bear, according to the proposed law, in a conspicuous place the
name of the maker, either below the large stencil on the fall board
or in some place in the plate, which can be easily seen by raising the
top lid of the piano.
It is proposed that the first offense shall be punishable by a fine
not exceeding $500, and the second offense shall merit both fine and
imprisonment.
-
|
ERTAINLY a law of this kind will completely annihilate
illegitimate stencilling, and every manufacturer who puts out
a piano bearing other than his firm or corporate name should think
enough of the instrument to have some mark by which it may be
traceable directly to him. Such a law will afford protection to the
retail purchasers and no piano can be offered for sale when such a
law is upon our statute books unless it shall bear in some prominent
place the name of the maker.
There are firms which are manufacturing several brands of
pianos, and who make no concealment of that fact. They are in
every sense legitimate products ar|:1 are openly advertised as made
by the concerns, But there are instruments which are vended
REVIEW
under names which closely approximate some of the leading instru-
ments, and which are sold frequently to ignorant people with the
impression that the purchasers are securing the genuine product.
' A GAIN, the vanity and weakness of other purchasers is cleverly
played upon by a certain class, who insist that no one will
know when they see the name on the instrument but that the pos-
sessor has a genuine product of one of the old and famous makers,
for instance the "Steinweg" might mean a Steinway, or "Picker-
ing" the famous dickering, and "Webber" the well known piano
bearing the name Weber.
Men who have created a certain following for their instru-
ments on account of their artistic worth are entitled to all the pro-
tection which the law can afford. Purchasers also should be safe-
guarded in piano purchases in every possible way. Why is it not
a good point to have all pianos traceable to a definite source?
HE solid business interests of the country will not be affected
to an alarming extent by the juggling which is going on in
Wall street. The prosperity of America rests upon a substantial
foundation which is not likely to be easily disturbed. The course
of the grain markets and the condition of the growing crops con-
tinue to be centers of absorbing interest, and it is well to note that
nothing has evolved unfavorably in crop prospects.
In fact the weather conditions have improved, and the most re-
liable trade authorities, hundreds of whom have written to The Re-
view, have reported the best weather of the season for harvesting
and for crop growth.
Indeed harvesting in certain sections of the West is said to
never have been done under more favorable conditions.
Taken altogether the outlook for business is certainly encour-
aging, and dealers will do well to see that their stocks are in good
condition to keep the best favoring trade breezes of the early fall.
course we hear the cry of the pessimist abroad in the land that
business will go to smash, and if we should listen to these
pessimistic wails and agree with this way of thinking we would all
be in the slough of despond.
A good definition has been given by some one of the pessimist
that he is a man who, of two evils, always chooses both. We
have been hearing from him during the past two or three years,
to the effect that we would soon have another panic, and that the
times are out of joint, and it is possible that same of the pessimists
are very much disappointed and very sorry that their predictions
have not come true.
How much better it is to be an optimist with a proper degree
of conservatism as a balance wheel.
That there have been some clouds upon the business horizon
during the past year or so, which have affected some portion of the
body politic we will all admit, yet they all have been, or all are be-
ing dissipated one by one and they will continue to be, no matter
if the question be tariff, finance, labor troubles or what not.
The great common sense of our people in this wonderful land of
ours must and will in the end prevail.
IN looking back and making observations and comparisons of the
* conditions and methods of handling the piano business to-day
and twenty years ago one notes marvelous transformations. Con-
ditions have changed so rapidly that it has kept one busy to keep
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
MUSIC TRADE
pace and follow the line of march directed by piano evolution. No
REVIEW
' I ""HE piano corporation which has adopted this plan recently
drastic and positive
stated that they were not getting results from their men
changes and there are still other changes which will be made for the
which they were formerly. This would seem to give credence to the
other line of business has undergone such
The business has broadened to far be-
belief that the fact of being a stockholder is likely to make the work-
yond possibilities predicted by the leaders in the industry of two
men a bit uncomfortable in the shop. He is hypercritical of the policy
score years ago.
Who then dreamed of a single factory turning
of the management, gives more time to watching others not stock-
out more than fifteen thousand pianos in a single year, to say noth-
holders, than to earning the wage upon which he continues depen-
ing of pipe and reed organs and piano players?
dent and resents in feeling if not in words the sharp reminder of
betterment of the business.
NE dealer in writing to this paper states in line with a sugges-
the foreman that he is neglecting his duty, or discharging it badly.
But the chief and insuperable difficulty is that he cannot suc-
tion made by The Review some months ago, that he holds
They dine together
cessfully disassociate himself from fellowship with the labor which
Saturday night, and they discuss ways and means by which it is
has no ownership in the works, and which is perpetually scheming
possible to accomplish certain business betterments.
and planning to advance the interests of labor at the expense of the
a regular weekly gathering of his salesmen.
The dealer
writes us that he is convinced that these gatherings are of vast ben-
interests of capital.
What the future may develop is of course a matter of specula-
efit to the business.
Good salesmanship can be materially augmented by intelligent
tion, but the present tendency is not in the direction of such an
study of the business, and salesmanship should be lifted to the dig-
alliance between employers and employee and would make it in any
nity of a profession, therefore it requires constant study.
In these days of keeia competition great value can be gained
from regular meetings of salesmen who may discuss the means of
conspicuous degree, mutually advantageous for labor to be more
largely identified than it is now in the ownership of industrial plants.
H p H E grandest tribute to a great and blameless life was evi-
*
individual advancement.
ALESMANSHIP is the quality in a man.
It is true this may
denced in the anxiety with which the civilized world hung
for days upon every bulletin from the Vatican.
Catholic, Protes-
be partly inherent and partly acquired; but it is a quality, the
tant, Agnostic, followers of each and every belief, viewed with
possession of which enables the man to successfully create interest
more than a personal interest all the varying phases of the ven-
in a prospective customer.
erable Pope's illness. This deep concern was not alone due to His
Now the ability to sell goods in a
straightforward manner with satisfactory results to all requires abil-
Holiness' high office, but to his respect compelling attributes as a
ity of no mean order.
man.
Salesmanship is the science of putting into
The universal grief evidenced over his death is a proof of
work honesty of speech, loyalty to employer, the hustle of modern
the admiration and reverence which a noble life can excite even in
civilization, and at all times being a gentleman.
the most worldly heart.
There is always constant advancement for the salesman who
Perhaps the last man identified
with the music trades of
demonstrates the possession of ability and faithfulness in the per-
America who had an audience with the Pope in the Vatican was
formance of his duties.
Take the case of E. VV. Furbush, whose
Chas. H. Wagener, vice-president of the Melville-Clark Piano Co.,
promotion to the vice-presidency of the Vose concern was reported
who related in The Review office how deeply impressed the Pope
in The Review last week.
Mr. Furbush has been for many years identified with this con-
cern as wholesale representative, or in the vernacular of the trade,
traveling salesman, for that would be his title divested of all super-
fluities.
It would be hard indeed to locate a man who has been
more faithful in the performance of his duties than has Mr. Fur-
bush, and his enthusiasm and earnestness in the support of the Vose
cause has resulted in his promotion to a position of great honor in
that distinguished corporation.
It is a position worthily won and one which his legion of friends
in all parts of America know that he will fill with honor.
was with American ingenuity, which had evolved mechanism capa-
ble of producing such remarkable music.
Upon parting, after
listening to the Apollo player, the venerable Pontiff handed Mr.
Wagener a gold medal, and giving his benediction told him to re-
member their meeting.
No doubt the memory of that meeting
will be cherished in Mr. Wagener's memory as one of the most
notable events of his life.
T R E N U O U S efforts are required to keep the business ball roll-
S
ing in anything approaching satisfactory shape during the
heated term.
Piano dealers on the seacoast near the great summer
resorts always have a splendid rental business during the summer
P ) ECENTLY a well known New York piano concern announced
^
that it had admitted a number of wage earners as stockhold-
ers in the corporation. It is still a question whether the schemes for
admitting wage earners to the stockholding privileges in industrial
corporations are as successful as those who devised them hoped they
would be. The plan of the U. S. Steel Corporation is too well known
to need comment. In other corporations results have been such as to
warrant reports which were interesting reading, and from which
the superficial student of the great problem of identifying the in-
terests of labor and capital, might very well get the impression that
the solution of every difficulty would be found in making labor a
partner with capital in the ownership of plants.
months.
It, however, requires nothing short of heroic efforts to
keep business going the right way during the season usually given
over to recuperation and rest.
A good many dealers rather lean to the idea of making strong
reductions in certain lines of pianos in order to get them out during
the summer. Forceful advertising, too, will win even when busi-
ness is usually dull.
Publishers who are issuing editions de luxe invariably offer
some special inducement to their summer customers; even in New
York in the summer months the book business is forced to a pretty
good volume by certain special inducements. Good retailing calls
for a decisive clearing of stock and the stock must be kept moving.
In order to do it retailers should not stop at reasonable expense

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