Music Trade Review

Issue: 1905 Vol. 41 N. 18

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
6
THE: MUSIC TRADE: REIVIEIW
RMLW
LDWARD LTMAN
Editor a n d Proprietor
tarflnrf Editor.
J. B. 1P1LLANE,
EXECVTIVE AND REPORTORIAL STAFF:
Quo. B. KBLLBB,
W I I . B. WHITB,
W. N. TYLHR,
L. J. CHAMBERLIN.
F. II. THOMPSON.
A. J. NICKLIN,
EMILIE FRANCES BAUER,
QBO. W. QOBRIPEL,
BOSTON OPP1CE:
CHICAGO OFFICE
ERNEST L. WAITT, 173 Tremont St.
E. P. VAN HARLINGEN, 1362 Monadnock Block.
PHILADELPHIA OFFICE:
R. W. KAUFFMAN.
TELEPHONES : Harrison 1521 ; Automatic 2004.
MINNEAPOLIS AND ST. PAUL:
5T. LOUIS OFFICE:
E. C. TORREY.
CHAS. N. VAN BUREN.
SAN FRANCISCO OFPICB: ALFRED METZGER, 425-427 Front. St.
CINCINNATI, O.: NINA PUGH-SMITH.
Published Every Saturday at 1 Madison Avenue, New York.
Entered at the New York Post Office as Second Class Matter.
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, $75.00.
REMITTANCES, in other than currency form, should be made payable to Edward
Lyman BilL
_
On the first Saturday of each month The Review contains in its
THE ARTISTS' "Artists' Department all the current musical news. This is effected
without In any way trespassing on the size or service of the trade
DEPARTMENT Beet Ion of the paper. It has a special circulation, and therefore
augments materially the value of The Review to advertisers.
n n i T T n o v * , , . „ . The directory of piano manufacturing firms and corporations
uiULtiUKT of riANU f o u n ( j o n another page will be of great value, as a reference
MANVFACTUR.ER.S
f or dealers and others.
LONG DISTANCE TELEPBONE-NVMBER 1745 GRAMERCY.
NEW YORK, NOVEMBER 4, 19O5.
R
EPORTS from the piano field for the past week are indeed
satisfactory. They indicate a large and general demand for
instruments. The orders which are coming in to the various fac-
tories necessitate the continued activity of the manufacturing forces
throughout the country.
Lately, too, there have been quite a large number of rush orders,
which indicates that a good many of the piano merchants realize
that a possible shortage of instruments will confront them within the
near future. We know of one large concern having a number of
branches, the proprietor of which- was very conservative regarding
the placing of early orders. Recently he visited New York and
desired three hundred pianos inside of thirty days. He wished
these delivered to his various stores. This is one indication which
shows which way the trade wind is blowing. The Review sounded
the note of warning early in the season that the piano retailers
should place their orders early so that the manufacturers would not
be compelled to carry all of the trade burden. Pianos cannot be
created over night, and appearances now indicate that some of the
retailers will be decidedly short of stock for holiday trade.
B
USINESS will be more active as the season advances, and
cold weather will have a decided stimulating effect upon all
kinds of trade. The markets in every line have a firm tone in
consequence of the strength of the raw materials in all staples,
and a good many manufacturers in various lines are unwilling to
contract ahead at existing prices. The pressure of orders on
manufacturers is such as to prevent them from making shipments
with promptness, and the excellent prospect for business makes
them more firm than usual in maintaining their prices.
In view of the advances which have taken place in a good many
lines, piano manufacturers should not remain aloof from accom-
modating themselves to conditions which manufacturers in every
other line have done.
W
HILE chatting with a well-known manufacturer recently,
he said: "I fear that the exposures in connection with the
insurance investigation which has been going on in New York will
have a tendency to injure the retail piano business."
We can hardly agree with our friend, for whose opinion we
invariably entertain the highest esteem. On the contrary we be-
lieve that the insurance exposures will have a tendency to benefit
the retail sales department, and we will present our reasons for
entertaining this belief.
Of course there are hundreds of men all over the country who
have been acting as agents for the insurance companies whose
business must necessarily be severely injured if not entirely anni-
hilated. They will be forced to seek other vocations, and pre-
sumably their revenues will be decreased in such a manner that
they will not become purchasers of pianos; but let us look at the
other side.
T
HERE are hundreds of thousands of men who will not take out
insurance policies, influenced by the recent exposures of internal
rottenness. They will figure that to continue to deny themselves
and their families luxuries which go a long ways toward making
life pleasant by saving money for insurance sharks to dispense in
a criminal manner is wrong, that they had better use the same
money in smaller investments, and incidentally to purchase acces-
sories which bring joy to the home circle.
There are hundreds of thousands of men who have cut off many
of the luxuries of life in order to save money to meet the recurring
insurance obligations. And it is now apparent that fewer policies
will be written within the next few years. A decrease will be
certain until the insurance business itself is placed upon a healthy
and sound basis. Therefore the new men who would have easily
been won over by the arguments of the insurance agents will now
refuse to take out policies in the larger companies at the cost of
personal sacrifice and stringent economy. Therefore they will be
more apt to purchase pianos and other high-grade home fittings.
A piano, particularly if it is a good one, is a sound investment,
and creates pleasure in every home where it finds a resting place;
therefore if the piano merchants over the country take advantage
of the present condition as they should, they could easily profit by
the exhibition of rottenness in the insurance companies of the
East, which has been demonstrated by the investigation in this city.
T
HINK of the thousands of men who have saved, cutting here
and there and denying themselves, to create a sacred fund for
their
dear
ones, and these men now witness the profligate and dis-
T may be well to state that excellent prices are being obtained
honest
disposition
of their hard-earned savings by the men who have
at retail which shows the dealers can get more for their in-
controlled
the
destinies
of the great insurance organizations.
struments if sufficient backbone is exhibited when mentioning prices. •
The
handling
of
large
impersonal funds surely kills all of the
The same, too, might be said of the manufacturing end.
moral
sensibilities
of
these
men, if they ever possessed any at the
We know a number of manufacturers who have not hesitated to
start.
say to their agents that they would be compelled to ask more
Piano merchants too may find splendid use for some of the per-
for the pianos. They marked up their pianos reasonably on ac-
suasive
eloquence of the local insurance agents. As a rule they
count of increased cost which every man of intelligence knows has
are
good
talkers, and are impressive men, who would make good
been added to piano making within a recent period.
piano
salesmen,
and some of them will be looking for positions.
Dealers are not prone to view this matter in an unreasonable
So,
taken
on
the
whole, this great expose should benefit the retail
light when approached fairly. They know that labor and materials
piano
business
rather
than act as a detriment.
have increased the wholesale cost of pianos, and they expect to pay
more. There is really no need for long drawn out arguments in
HERE is an interesting communication from Philip Werlein,
a matter of this kind. It is straight business, and the plainer and
president of the Piano Dealers' National Association, appear-
more emphatic a trade truth is presented the more force it has. ing in another portion of this paper. Mr. Werlein sends on an
There is nothing gained by evading the trade" conditions which
able document in which he takes exception to some of the state-
confront us. They have changed materially over those of years
ments made in The Review concerning the proposed piano exhibit
ago, and every business must adjust itself to the present state of
to be made in Washington, during convention time.
affairs.
Mr. Werlein affirms that he does not find that a condition op-
I
T
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE
posing the exposition exists. It is presumed that his sources of
information may not be as complete or as direct as those at the
disposal of a trade publication which has on its weekly payroll
more than fifty news gatherers, and which through its extensive
organization is in touch at all times with every section of the
country.
R. WERLEIN admits that the move should be carefully con-
sidered before entering enthusiastically upon it. He fur-
ther supports the argument which has been made by The Review
that it is possible to create a great music trade exposition which
might be held in Madison Square annually and believes the pro-
posed exhibit in Washington might be an initial move in this di-
rection. He figures that the expense incident to preparing and
making an exhibit would be more than balanced by the advantage
which would accrue to the manufacturer making the show of his
instruments. He reasons that the sale of special exhibition pianos
too would cause a boom from one end of the United States to the
other.
There are many other points made in Mr. Werlein's communica-
tion which should be carefully read, and it was the intention of
The Review in starting this movement to create a fair discussion,
and it is gratifying to know that the publicity thus far given it
has been instrumental in bringing about healthy and helpful argu-
ments. •
M
I
T is fitting too that matters of this kind which effect the entire
industry should be carefully sifted in the columns of repre-
sentative trade publications. We then would be more apt to sepa-
rate the wheat from the chaff and get down to the situation as it
actually is, brushing asicle superfluities, or impossible theories con-
nected with it.
We should be glad indeed to hear from other members of the
trade, whether connected with the two organizations or aot. We
have in separate issues presented the views of the chief executives
of the manufacturers and dealers associations. We have also
received many communications from others who have requested
that their names be not used in connection with the matter. There
is no necessity, however, to evade the question; it is either good,
or it is not. If it is good, if the end justifies the expenditures, let
us all stand together and make it the greatest success of any event
in music-trade history. If it is demonstrated that the possible
benefits fall far short of a monetary success then it certainly would
be wise to discontinue the project.
Thus far our own sources of information do not indicate a
desire on the part of the manufacturers to hold a large trade exhibit.
The exhibits promise to be rather sporadic than centralized, but
there is plenty of time to argue the matter from every viewpoint.
T
HE directory of piano manufacturing firms and corporations
which has appeared weekly in The Review for some years
past has been found on many occasions to have been of great ad-
vantage to piano merchants everywhere. For proof of this we
have received many letters from piano men stating how useful the
directory is to them.
Otto Geitner, of New Brunswick, N. ]., writes: "This summer
a stranger came into my store saying, T am from Missouri, business
brought me East. I will go back in a few weeks. I received this
morning a letter from my daughter in which she says she intends
to buy a certain piano, but I think it is only a stencil piano. Do
you know that name?' I did not. We looked in The Review
manufacturers' list and found that name mentioned among the
New Yorkers. The man has been satisfied and said: T will write
home to-day and advise my daughter to buy the piano.' "
A number of similar communications frequently reach this office
showing that The Review list is useful in protecting the best
interests of the trade.
T
RADE papers in every department of industry are found to
be more and more useful, and it is gratifying to know that
The Review, is better understood to-day than ever and that its
influence is a strong power for trade good.
A. B. Smith, the well known dealer of Akron, O., says, in en-
closing a subscription to The Review: "We like the true attitude
of your paper, of attending to your business as editor, aiming to
do that which is best for the manufacturer and dealer both, without
dictating to either one, considering the interests of one equal to
_
REVIEW
that of the other." A trade paper should be helpful to all divisions
of trade which it represents, and the aim of The Review has been
to not only accurately present the news of the day, but to truth-
fully portray trade conditions so that the paper shall stand as a
force for general good in the industry.
D
OES the pessimist win success? The twentieth century thought
has too firmly established the belief that we receive what
we are looking for to permit the pessimist to build successfully,
and when you hear a man condemning every part of the piano
business he is pretty sure to be a pessimist, and he hasn't sized up
the business situation correctly. He has not fully realized the im-
portance of this industry, and the possibilities which it contains
for progressive, optimistic men.
Success is never attained when a business is dropped through
lack of achievement, and another selected through accident. If the
greatest possible success has been attained in selling matches then
a man is ready to sell iron bridges successfully.
We see so many young men who simply drift instead of fight-
ing against conditions, and then they complain about ill luck and
the lack of possibilities which the piano trade possesses for them.
When you hear a man who is always complaining you can make
up your mind, rightly too, that he has not sized up conditions prop-
erly. There is something wrong in his own make up rather than
in trade conditions, and the man who produces from an unpromis-
ing line, is the man to entrust with important propositions, because
he has made the most out of conditions around him.
HP* HERE could be many legitimate reasons advanced why a man
-L might change his business for larger opportunities, better
fields, more promising outlooks. A few conditions could turn one
into a new channel, but if a man hasn't achieved some success when
conditions were not wholly to his liking, it is pretty safe to wager
that he would not win with better surroundings, for the men who
have won the most distinguished success in their- line of trade did
not fall into it by sheer luck. Back of this so-called luck is plenty
of enterprise, will power, energy, vitalizing force.
W
E see some men in this trade who expect to find a little
sack of gold inside of every piano, and because the big
money does not materialize at once, they say there is a rope around
their neck holding them back from success. They say luck is against
them, and business is worthless. All of those things are lame and
apologetic explanations of a man's own inability, for before the
throne chair of success is occupied there is a long road to travel,
filled with thorns too. But Lord bless you, when a man can talk
nothing but pessimism, can see nothing but black inky clouds when
sunshine is all about him, it is pretty safe to assume that he couldn't
make a success in any line. He might possibly pick up a few nug-
gets in the gold field, if they were dug out and placed where he is
bound to stub his toes against them, but there is no future for any
such man in this business. It demands sharp, keen, progressive
business men, and many of the new men who are coming in are
bringing with them useful attributes, and the more good business
men that we can get in the industry the better it will be for it.
N
EARLY every one concedes that price-cutting is an evil that
must be avoided by himself and discontinued by his neigh-
bors, and yet price-cutting goes on in all localities.
Suppose that the maximum prices on leading pianos are estab-
lished by manufacturers, would the price-cutting evil be indulged in
to the same extent that it is to-day ?
Hardly. And there is no single move that could be made that
would lend price stability to pianos like the establishment of a maxi-
mum retail price by the manufacturers.
The worst part of this price-cutting is that when once started it
is hard to stop. It is like an avalanche which starts far up a moun-
tain side with a mere handful of stone and gravel plunging down
in its mad career sweeps away the houses in the valley. It seems a
small thing for the retailer to cut the price on merchandise in order
that he may win business. But, after all, when the price-cutting once
becomes dominant in a store there is no stability to the business. It
is any old price for any instrument, and the salesmen are continually
running back to the manager's or employer's desk asking if such and
such a price can be made on a particular instrument. .
No wonder some of them get nervous prostration under such
conditions. One price, the right price, insures the merchant at least
a modicum of pleasure in the conduct of his business.

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