Music Trade Review

Issue: 1905 Vol. 41 N. 6

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
MUSIC TRADE
33
REVIEW
SOME RARE WOODS.
FELT Jr •"
Piano Men are Finding it Harder Every Day to
Get Certain Hardwoods—Some of the Most
Popular as well as Expensive are Here Enum-
erated.
— Purposes.
Piano and Organ Materials
Repairing Outfits .
TOOLS
11O-112 East 13th St.
NEW YORK
WESSELL, NICKEL & GROSS
MANUFACTURERS OF"
PIANO
ACTIONS
HIGHEST GRADE
ONE GRADE ONLY
OrFICE—457 WEST FORTY-FIFTH STREET
rACTORIES—WEST FORTY-FIFTH STREET, Tenth Avtnut and West F.rty-Slxth Street
C. F. GOEPEL & CO.,
137 East 13th Street,
v
Can Be Easily Attached
to any Piano, Old or New
New York
Sole Agents for
GROSS'
Patent Pedal Attachment
Old and well-seasoned oak is hard to get and
harder to work.
There is no great quantity of old oak furni-
ture in the market, and old pieces that would
supply large enough lumber for important work
are seldom found. New kiln dried oak is uncer-
tain, being liable to warp and crack.
Paneled articles can be made of such material
with some safety, but large, solid articles are
likely to give a bad account of themselves at the
end of a winter in a steam-heated house.
Rosewood also the best cabinetmakers distrust.
This wood has a peculiar oily quality that makes
it unsafe when glued. For this reason rosewood
is used chiefly as a veneer. Thin sheets lose
much of their oil and take glue satisfactorily.
Native walnut is no longer a favorite with
the cabinetmakers. This wood was in effect ex-
hausted a quarter of a century ago or more, and
it is now as expensive as mahogany, and by no
means so beautiful.
Chestnut is a good deal prized, not for furni-
ture, but for wainscoting and for doors. It is
sometimes put up in the rough with good effect,
and sometimes oiled and polished, when it is re-
markably beautiful, considering the cost.
Gulf cypress is used with great effect in like
fashion, and when filled and oiled it makes one
of the most beautiful woods for inexpensive in-
terior decoration.
Cherry was the old substitute for mahogany,
and is still a favorite wood with the furniture
makers. It is, however, not easily obtained in a
properly seasoned condition, for proper season-
ing makes it expensive.
The fact is that with cherry, as with oak and
mahogany the seasoning is an important element
of cost. The cabinetmaker who must sink his
capital for two or three years in wood that is un-
dergoing the process of seasoning finds it hard
to compete with those who use kiln dried ma-
terial.
Mahognay is the favorite wood with the best
cabinetmakers. There is a vast amount of sea-
soned mahogany to be had from ruinous old arti-
cles made in the last century when the rage for
mahogany was well developed; and while the
new mahogany is less beautiful than the old, pur-
chasers of furniture seem to have learned that it
is worth while to have the new wood well sea-
soned.
BONNEAU'S MAHOGANY DISPLAY.
Devised to Keep Mice Out of Pianos
Being* Used by Leading Manufacturers
JULIUS BRECKWOLDT
Manufacturer of Sounding Board*, Bars, GuStar and Mandolin Tops and
Sounding Board Lumbar.
MULLS AND OFPlCBt DOLQBVILLM. N. V.
). J. Bonneau Co.. of Seventh street and East
River, are opening up the consignment of African
mahogany logs recently received, and find that
as a whole they are noteworthy for their size and
quality, as well as for the fine figuring shown.
They will have a large quantify of this veneer on
exhibition thio coming week.
KURTZ & SEEBERG'S NEW FACTORY.
(Special to The Review.)
HOLD-FAST IVORY CLAMPS
FOR ATTACHING IVORY OR CELLULOID. (Patented)
Both clamps m&Ke a neat and secure joint and
leave a clean, flat surface.
Rockford, 111.. August 7, 1905.
Workmen are roofing the new Kurtz & Seeberg
piano action factory on Eighteenth avenue and
Eleventh street, and it will be ready for occu-
pancy on September 1 or thereabouts, unless
there are unforseen delays in the construction.
As soon as the rooms are in condition for use
the piano action company will remove to the new
building, and it will be one of the large factories
of the Southeast End.
HULL HAS SOME SPECIAL LINES.
No. 88B. For Fronts.
No. 88D. For Tops.
Ask lor Circular No. 1658.
HAMMACHER, SCHLEMMER & CO.
PIANO
MATERIALS
AND
TOOLS
NEW YORK, SINCE 1848
NEW HOME, 4th Ave. and 13th St.
(Block South of Union Square.)
' M. A. Hull, of 437 East Tenth street, has some
new samples of mahogany showing very pro-
nounced and rare figures. One of these logs will
me isure fourteen feet in length and twenty
inches wide. Mr. Hull says the case makers are
buying only for immediate needs, but say that
with the movement of stock on hand and in
course of construction, they will buy heavily.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
34
TlrlE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
PO0O0O0CX)O0CZX)CX3O0O0O0O0O0O0O0O0O0O0CX3O0O0O0O0O^^
In tKe Musical Merchandise Domain
SMALL GOODS MEN OPTIMISTIC.
Liberal Inquiries from Jobbers and Dealers
Predicate Liberal Buying This Fall—Cata-
logue Prices the Subject of Discussion—
What the Chief of a Leading House Has to
Say on This Interesting Question—Condi-
tions in Various Sections of the Country
Analyzed.
Notwithstanding the mid-summer condition of
the small goods trade the prevalent feeling is
one of great expectancy regarding business for the
remainder of the year. Some symptoms of what
will undoubtedly materialize in the way of what
every one, without exception, speaks of as a tre-
mendous fall trade, are already in evidence. In-
quiries from jobbers and dealers predicate liberal
buying, and manufacturers, importers and stock
houses are preparing their lines with unusual
care and on a broad basis. To be sure, the au-
tumn is the leading season of the year, and tak-
ing general conditions into consideration the
small goods people feel assured that not only will
a large amount of musical merchandise be pur-
chased by the distributers at satisfactory prices,
but that dealers will move their stocks rapidly
and profitably.
A matter that is occasioning much discussion
is that of catalogue prices. That is to say,
whether the catalogues issued by the importing
and wholesale interests should quote open or close
prices. It is held by those conversant with the
subject, which means practically the entire trade,
that the time has come when other methods than
those established, possibly when John Jacob As-
tor brought over a small lot of flutes at the close
of the Revolutionary War, should be revised and
brought up to date. In explanation and advocacy
of adopting a more satisfactory plan for dealers
relative to catalogue information, the chief of an
aggressive house discoursed at length and most
instructively to The Review, of which the salient
points are set forth in the appended summary of
his remarks:
"It has been a question in my mind for sev-
eral years whether the manner of quoting prices
in catalogues should not be changed radically.
At the present time nearly every Tom, Dick and
Harry, whether professional musicians or quon-
dam teachers, know that the recognized trade dis-
count is 60 per cent., and if a dealer, for instance,
should happen not to have an article called for
in stock, but shows the customer a catalogue and
informs him it will be obtained, there is the long
price and the party immediately figures the sixty
off and leaves little if any margin for the seller.
Now, then, what I would propose, and which
leading dealers throughout the country are ad-
vocating, is either to quote the actual cost of
goods for the private information of the trade
only, or increase the discount, say, to 90 per cent.
This arrangement will give the dealer a chance to
figure his profit safely. Every house now issuing
a catalogue quotes prices that have been in vogue
30 or 40 years; perhaps longer. In fact, it is
surmised old man Noah must have originated the
scheme. This answered very well when the mar-
gin on all lines was large, but goods, especially
staples, are now sold pretty close, from the pro-
ducer down, consequently the average dealer is
placed at a disadvantage. As a matter of straight
truth, the trade is being imposed on by musicians
and so-called professionals, who are altogether
too wise. It is high time some way to circum-
vent these wise ones should be taken. A cata-
logue for the dealer only, it seems to me, is the
proper thing. Besides, were firms issuing cata-
logues to alter their methods more in confor-
mance with an up-to-date system, it would be bet-
ter for all in interest.
"Also, I may add," continued the gentleman,
"there is a marked tendency to carry larger
stocks, more representative, in fact. This is es-
pecially notable with dealers in the far West,
say, from Kansas City to the Coast, and east of a
line drawn from Buffalo south. In the Middle
Western States the stocks of small goods suffer
greatly by comparison with the sections named;
and it is in this central territory where the Chi-
cago mail order houses get in their fine work to
the loss of the dealer. Every town is proud of
the mercantile and social importance of its music
store, and its owner is regarded as above the av-
erage merchant in his status to the community,
and the better stocked his establishment the
greater pride is evinced. Later on I may prob-
ably take this subject up again, if your very
obliging editor will surrender sufficient space in
his invaluable, always reliable, invariably clean
and high-toned journal, for The Review is all
this, and more, too, in the estimation of the trade
at large."
GROWTH OF LOCAL JOBBERS.
An
Interesting
Subject Discussed—A
Competition.
their interests and in many cases become a con-
venient medium for the distribution of their
goods. Business with them is transacted in some
respects on a more comfortable and satisfactory
basis than with the great houses, especially in
view of the fact that prices are not quite so close
and the pressure for lower quotations and more
favorable terms less insistent. There is, too, the
recognition of the great principle that there is an
important advantage in having a multitude of
trade connections instead of being limited to com-
paratively few houses.
"This favor of the manufacturer, importer and
wholesaler is, by the way, an important feature
of the situation and gives the local jobber an
important advantage in his efforts to extend his
trade in competition with the great resources and
admirable methods of the houses which are known
as distributers of small goods throughout the
length and breadth of the land. It looks indeed,
all things considered, as if the small local dis-
tributers would do more than hold their own."
TONK & CO.'S FALL LIST.
New
"A month or so back The Review referred to
the growing importance of the small or local job-
ber," remarked an importer of musical merchan-
dise this week, "and it interested me greatly.
These local jobbers are naturally receiving a good
deal of attention from all classes in the trade.
The dealer knows scarcely how to regard them,
as they sometimes encounter them as competitors,
while at the same time a similar growth in busi-
ness is probably the hope and aim of most of
them. Inasmuch as these local distributers grow
at the expense in good measure of the larger job-
bers, they can hardly expect to be regarded with
favor by the great distributers, especially as the
development of the dealer into the local jobber
ie sure to involve an interruption to a great ex-
tent of his relations wi.th the larger jobbers from
whom he has for years been purchasing a part, at
least, of his merchandise.
"How the large jobber is to carry on his busi-
ness so as to hold his customers as they develop
is one of the problems for which a solution has
not yet been found. The manufacturer and im-
porting wholesaler, however, notes the growth of
these small jobbing houses with unmixed satis-
faction. They do not in any way conflict with
Tonk & Co. have just issued their fall sheet,
descriptive of the large line of piano stools,
chairs and benches, which they have on exhibi-
tion at their factory at 452-45(5 Tenth avenue,
New York City. These embrace a wid t variety of
styles, from the plain caned seat stool to the or-
nate revolving seat chair of solid oak or ma-
hogany. Among the benches illustrated is one in
Gothic design for piano players. AirioiiK the nov-
elties in chairs is one of twisted wire, Japanese
bronze finish. William Tonk said that their sea-
son was opening somewhat earlier than usual,
and orders for fall delivery were now being re-
ceived.
RETRIBUTION.
The musical instrument seller had succeeded
at last in working off a cheap fiddle on a cus-
tomer at four times its value.
"Where shall I send it?" he inquired.
"To 914
street. My flat is on the third
floor."
The fiddle dealer's face fell. He had only
moved with his family the day before.to the flat
on the second floor of No. 914
— street, on a
three years' agreement.
THE STANDARD OF THE WORLD
THE
ORIGINAL S. S. STEWART BANJO
and the B A U E R . Mandolins and Guitars
MANUFACTURED BT
Pacific Co&st Agents, SHERMAN, CLAY 6 CO., San Francisco, Cal.
THE BAUER CO
1410-12 N. 6TH ST., PHILADELPHIA, PA.
THE
Awarded
t h e C . G.
Conn Band, Or-
chestra and Solo
Instruments, Is
Canadian Headquarters, NORDHEIMER PIANO b MUSIC CO.. Toronto, Ontario.
GRAND PRIZE
The Holidays Are
Almost Here, which
£CTE O
suggests that a gift to
y o u r f r i e n d of a
"GRAND PRIZE" In-
strument would make a
p r e s e n t t h a t would
charm and delight :: ::
merely a new acknowl-
edgment of what was
I o n s •£<> c o n c e d e d ,
namely, that the
" W o n d e r s " are un-
paralleled In any excel-
lence or quality that goes
to make up a P e r f e c t
and I d e a l Instrument.
Address c .
J
i
. ii. ..•..js^r
G. CONN CO., Elkhart,
Send for large ILLUS-
TRATED
CATA-
L O G U E telling all
about them :: :: :: ::
Indiana
P. S.—The Wonder Instruments are sent on trial and FULLY GUARANTEED

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