Music Trade Review

Issue: 1905 Vol. 40 N. 14

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADB
8
REVIEW
he were disposed to be generous and render unto Caesar the things
that are Caesar's, he would credit a certain portion of this betterment
to the helpful influence of organization work.
T
Editor and Proprietor.
EDWARD LYMAN SILL.
J. B. S r i L L A N C . Managing Hdlt*r.
EXECVTIVE AND REPORTORIAL STAFF:
GEO.
B. KELLER,
W.
Wu.
B. WHITS,
W. L. WILLIAMS,
BOSTON OFFICE:
EiNEST L. WAITT, 265 Washington St.
PHILADELPHIA OPPICB:
R. W . KAUFFMAN.
N. TYLER,
A. J. NICKXIN,
EMILIB FRANCIS BAUER,
GEO. W. QUERIPEL.
CHICAGO OFFICE:
E. P. VAN HABLINGEN, 86 La Salle St.
MINNEAPOLIS AND ST. PAUL:
E. C. TOKREY.
5T. LOU 15 OFFICE :
CRAS. N. V A N BUBEN.
SAN FRANCISCO OFFICE: ALFRED METZCER, 426-427 Front St.
Published Every Saturday at 1 Madison Avenue. New York.
Entered at the New York Post Office as Second Class Matter.
SVBSCRIPTION (including postage), United States. Mexico and Canada, $8.00 per
year; all other countries, $4.00.
ADVERTISEMENTS. $9.00 per inch, single column, per insertion. On quarterly or
yearly contract* a special discount is allowed. Advertising Pages, $60.00; opposite
reading matter, $76.00.
REMITTANCES, in other than currency form, should be made payable to Edward
Lyman Bill.
THE ARTISTS'
DEPARTMENT
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 aujr
ments materially the value of The Review to advertisers.
DIRECTORY i / PIANO ^ e directory of piano manufacturing firms and corporations
* * . * . . . - . ^~..._ - _ »
found on another page will be of great value, as a reference for
MANVFACTURERS
dealers and others.
LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE-NVMBER 1745 GRAMERCY.
NEW
YORK, APRIL 8. 19O.5.
M
ARCH was undoubtedly an improvement upon February, but it
must be freely admitted that on the whole business up to April
1st was disappointing in many ways, both as to character and volume
of trade. There are, however, in our reports since the first of the
month, less complaints in the Western than in the Eastern part of
the country. The South is not finding everything up to the expecta-
tion it entertained some months ago, although our correspondents
write that retail prospects as well as actual trade was much better
than three weeks ago. However, the conditions could be much more
satisfactory. In the Northwest reports from smaller towns indicate
a slowing up of trade as the farmers are engaged in getting spring
crops in readiness and are not thinking about pianos.
Y
ET with the coming of spring weather the retail merchants are
finding their business opening up satisfactorily, and those
who are wise are maturing and putting into execution plans for the
aggressive-exploitation of their instruments. The time to move is
now, and the advance of the season should naturally quicken the ef-
forts of piano merchants. April and May should be banner months,
The general conditions are excellent, and with the proper emphasis
placed upon business there can be no good reasons advanced why
commensurate results should not be forthcoming. There are now
excellent opportunities for business, for owing to the almost impass-
able condition of the roads, and extreme cold weather which was in
evidence the first three months of the year, trade suffered keenly. It
is now the time to make good the business deficit.
MILWAUKEE dealer writes to The Review : "You have always
maintained the strongest advocacy of a dealers' national as-
sociation, in fact, I believe, were the first to openly advocate it, and
I would like to ask you if you consider conditions in the retail trade
any better to-day than they were before the dealers' association came
into being? Has it been of practical benefit to the piano men, the
merchants, as you term them ?"
If our subscriber were familiar with the general conditions which
prevail in the retail trade in all sections of the country, he would
not ask whether there had been an improvement in methods during
the past few years, for he would know that there had been. And if
A
H E R E is to-day manifest more of a spirit of camaraderie than
ever existed before, and this fraternal iniluence is assisting in
many ways toward trade betterment. It is helping upward and on-
ward to better and more healthy conditions.
To begin with, local abuses have been abandoned in a large
degree. Years ago the scalping knives were in evidence and the
tomahawks were worn openly. To-day the weapons are carefully
concealed, and there is a manifest desire to be more friendly and
fairer in carrying on competitive battles. There may be just as keen
competition, in fact we think that it is keener to-day, because men
are better educated from the standpoint of argument than ever be-
fore. But on the whole business is conducted along cleaner lines
and consequently less abusive methods are in vogue.
T
H E R E is less offensive advertising to-day than formerly, and
the fact that there is a national association which condemns
disreputable methods has a deterring influence presumably upon
those who would be inclined to overstep the strict lines of trade
decency.
*
It was only a short time ago that a man in California issued a
fraudulent document purporting to be a graded list sanctioned by
the Dealers' National Association. At the executive meeting of the
Dealers' Association, the author of this document was strongly con-
demned, and while the officers did not go as far as some believed
that they should have gone, yet they went on record as emphatically
protesting against this libel on the Association.
This, of course, received publicity in the trade papers, and
probably there is no inclination to repeat this offense.
O
F course, there are men who are insincere in their expressions
who are associated with the dealers' organization and the
same may be said with equal truth of all associations. There are
others who are indifferent, and others as well who are members
simply because they desire to show their good will, and as a result
the labor of carrying the real work of the organization and increas-
ing its membership has fallen upon the shoulders of the few.
There is no question but that the association has accomplished
good work, and it can win much more it it has the hearty and sym-
pathetic co-operation of a large number of men who have remained
aloof from participation in its counsels.
I
TS objects are worth)- of the hearty support of all members of the
trade. At the convention, which is to be held in June at I'ut-in-
Bay, there will be a number of topics discussed. The officers have
decided that the better way will be to have short talks rather than
carefully prepared papers upon assigned topics. President Miller
has requested that members forward to him suggestions for such sub-
jects as they deem proper for discussion.
One of the most vital matters which affects the trade of to-day
and will affect the piano business far more in the future is the han-
dling of special brand pianos, and if the Dealers' Association would
take this subject and deal with it exhaustively from every standpoint,
so that the dealers themselves who are following out the plan of ex-
ploiting special brands will fully understand that they are helping to
reduce piano selling to the level of furniture merchandising, they
would perform a vast good for the entire industry.
T would be an interesting convention subject. Suppose at the roll
call the question were asked, hew many sell special brand pianos.
What proportion would respond in the affirmative?
Discussion
would perhaps reveal the situation -in its true light, and would show
how the special brand business has crept steadily in so that to-day
the pianos exploited under other names than the makers cut a sur-
prising figure in the general output. If the piano business is to be
maintained in an elevating position as compared with other lines of
trade, it must be through the support of the men who are retailing
pianos, and the special brand business is doing more than any other
one influence to drag down from its pedestal the noblest of musical in-
struments.
I
HE special brand business is perfectly legitimate; no one can
decry it, from a legal standpoint. And while considering it
it is well to leave abuse out of the question as well, and simply treat
it from an argumentative standpoint. The trend that trade has taken
T
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE
in the past few years towards the special brand line means that if the
business is permitted to go on unchecked that serious and almost ir-
reparable injury will be done manufacturers as well as dealers. Some
of the dealers who have the agency for high grade and reputable
pianos are simply using them as pullers in. They trade upon the
reputation of the great names. It gives them position in their respec-
tive towns, and dignifies their business, but all their sales emphasis
is placed upon their own special brand instruments, which in most
cases bear their own names, and are sold as the just as good. They
are bolstered up and foisted upon the public simply by the associa-
tion of the dealer with some of the great names in piano history.
What is the remedv ? How shall this move be checked ?
T
H E best way to effectually check this growth is to have manufac-
turers themselves fix the prices at which their various instru-
ments shall be offered at retail. When this course is adopted, and it is
thoroughly understood through the mediums of great circulation that
manufacturers place certain values upon their instruments, no one
will pay more than the asking price.
The retail prices on Steinway pianos are published broadcast, and
when the prices are fixed by the manufacturers no dealer can place
a fictitious valuation upon them in order to bring his own special
brand up, so that he can take a wide gap between his special and the
regular make. If a Steinway vertegrand is advertised by the manu-
facturers at $500, the dealer cannot say it is worth $650, and put his
own in the $500 class. The best way is the establishment of prices
bv the manufacturers. Boot and shoe men, cigar men, hat manu-
facturers, all have regular prices on certain products, and why should
not piano manufacturers, particularly those whose products have been
unfairly treated bv dealers?
T
HERE is but one way out of the difficulty; and that the adoption
of the right price at retail, Crave questions confront the
piano industry—questions that require exceeding care and judgment
in handling. Associations which hope to accomplish good must be
conducted on broad lines and supported by the best ideas of all mem-
bers working in harmony for the betterment of conditions. The mere
existence of an organization which may be at once called into active
support or condemnation of any particular move is excellent, but
there can be no strong forward movement unless it is supported in
a irenuinclv enthusiastic manner.
I
F pays to get out good trade literature, and to have it attractive in
every way. The great success of the catalogue houses results
largelv from the fact that their catalogues are skilfully compiled, giv-
ing complete, sometimes glowing, perhaps exaggerated descriptions
of the devices to which they relate. A great deal of business is se-
cured in this way. Similar information given bv piano men relative
to their respective claim?; would result in awakening interest in their
particular ware, simply to advertise that a piano is good and has splen-
did qualities is not enough. Some reasons should be advanced why
that particular piano is better than those offered by competitors.
P
IANO advertising in order to be interesting and successful must
be dealt with in an exhaustive manner. Specific claims should be
made and supported in a good argumentative and entertaining form.
Most of the piano advertising in the magazines is dull and uninter-
esting because it is prepared by advertising men who have no knowl-
edge of piano construction or of the science of acoustics.
They
simply treat the subject from the standpoint of sewing machines,
washboards or corsets. The pianos advertised are all good, but that
statement is not enough for so expensive and so artistic a product as
a piano. Reasons should be offered.
HE Aeolian Co., admittedly the largest trade advertisers, for
years put forth the most interesting style of advertising, pur-
sued in this or any other industry. They created a new standpoint
for music trade advertising, and they caused people to think; they
aroused interest in homes where indifference formerly reigned.
That was the kind of advertising which struck the solar plexus of the
public in a manner that was Corbettesque.
And results, why bless you, they have been getting them, their
dealers have all been beneficiaries under the system. Correct adver-
tising has been really one of the strongest inground principles in the
root of Aeolian success. It was not merely indifferent, spasmodic
advertising, but carefully thought out, skilfully planned, unremitting
advertising of the right kind.
T
REVIEW
9
T a recent meeting of the Buffalo Credit Men's Organization the
parcels post bill was warmly denounced. The members con-
sidered it advantageous to the catalogue houses, but a great detriment
to the wholesale and retail interests of the country. They figure
that it would tend to crystallize and concentrate the business interests
of the country in the hands of a few, which would result in a gigantic
monopoly and the killing off of merchants throughout the country
who pay taxes for the support of trade municipality, and are entitled
to the retail business in their locality. They figure that this class
legislation is in the interests of a very few and a detriment of the
manv.
A
N O T H E R thing, a parcels post would burden the mails with
packages to the delay and detriment of first-class matter. There
is no doubt but that it would be one of the most serious blows to the
small goods dealer that has ever befallen them and still there has been
no concerted move in this trade to take the slightest action to prevent
the passage of this bill, which, if it goes into effect, deals a severe blow
to the small goods man in every section. When Uncle Sam will take
a package from Maine to California at the same rate as from New
York to Brooklyn as he does a letter, making the short distances pay
for the long, the fat routes for the poor ones, and charging upon
the general taxation, why then he is going to make indeed short work
of the country retailer.
The Review again sounds a note of warning in this matter and
urges the dealers not to remain indifferent to this very important
question.
A
T
HE ideas become ingrained because these industries have existed
for years, that no condition could bring about their removal to
tolerant labor conditions, should furnish an object lesson to those
who seek to hamper the manufacturer by unjust restrictions.
It is not alone labor organizations, too, that are having a tend-
ency in all cities to cause industries to move, but unfair control of
municipal affairs as well. Cities whose affairs are in the hands of
wise, honest and discerning men, are usually generous in their treat-
ment of their local industries. Over-taxation of the manufacturing
property is a poor policy, so is overcharging for water furnished by
the municipal w r ater supply, yet a tendency to do both exists in many
places, especially in older cities where industries arc regarded as un-
questionably permanent fixtures.
T
H E ideas become ingrained because these industries have existed
for years, that no condition could bring about their removal to
other cities, that because they have prospered in the past, nothing
could prevent their continuing to increase in importance. l>oth pre-
mises are wrongfully taken. The manufacturer has to compute his
course very carefully in these days of sharp and close competition ;
he cannot afford to pay a greater percentage of taxes than his compet-
itor in another city. The manufacturer must get business at a
profit, or he will require less labor in his works, and he will have to
pay less wages. In either case his city is the loser.
It is always
better for owners of property in a community to pay larger taxes that
the manufacturers may pay less. His property should be assessed
for taxes at a minimum figure, not for his own benefit any more than
for the benefit of all those people whose property values and whose
business depends upon the general prosperity of the community. We
have in mind some localities which have important music trade indus-
tries which the tax assessor has viewed with hungry eyes.
T
HE death of J\ J. Healy removes one of the most remarkable
men that this industry has ever produced. Eroni early boy-
hood to the close of his life, he was ever a worker, ever striving to
win higher points. His close application to business shortened his
days, but in the winning of his laurels his nature was never hard-
ened. His warm generous heart pulsed with nothing but kind-
ness toward his fellowmen. The magnificent business enterprise
which he reared will stand as an imperishable monument to his busi-
ness accumen, while mourning friends everywhere will recall his
manly attributes.
H E N we first visited Cuba some years ago, we stated that it
would be a half dozen years after the American occupation
before the Island would form a market of any magnitude for our
musical instruments.
[ust now the prosperity of Cuba is causing many manufacturers
to make investigations regarding the sales chances in that country.
While the market is slowly improving it will be some years yet be-
fore there will be a large purchasing power among the people for
pianos.
W

Download Page 8: PDF File | Image

Download Page 9 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.