Music Trade Review

Issue: 1906 Vol. 42 N. 15

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
TH
MUSIC TRADE
REVEW
EDWARD LYMAN BILL, - Editor and Proprietor
J. B. SPILLANE, Managing Editor
Executive and Reportorlal Staff:
GHO. B. KBLLEB.
L. E. BOWKKS.
W. N. TYLER.
WM. B. WHITE.
F. II. THOMPSON.
BMILIB FRANCES BAUER.
L. J. CHAMBERLIN.
A. J. NICKLIN.
BOSTON OFFICE:
CHICAGO OFFICE:
E. P. VAN HARLINGKN, 195-197 Wabasb Ave.
TELEPHONES : Central 414 ; Automatic 8G43.
PHILADELPHIA OFFICE: MINNEAPOLIS and ST. PAUL: ST. LOUIS OFFICE
ERNEST L. WAITT, 173 Tremont St.
It. W. KAUFFMAN.
E. C. TORREY.
CHAS. N. VAN BUREN.
SAN FRANCISCO OFFICE: ALFRED METZGER, 425-427 Front S t
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
yearlj 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
Lyuiau Bill.
Directory ol Piano
Manufacturers
The directory of piano manufacturing firms and corporations
found on another page will be of great value, as a referenci
for dealers and others.
REVIEW
ferent expositions, but never centering the whole trade under one
roof. It will, without doubt, be featured so that it will attract
widespread attention. Coming, as it will, shortly after the middle
of September, a great many dealers will, presumably, find it con-
venient to be in New York about that time.
r
~P v HE decision which has recently been rendered, whereby an
X
injunction was granted Henry F. Miller & Sons by the
Superior Court of Massachusetts, restraining the Miller Piano Co.,
Inc., from doing business under that name, or selling or handling
pianos with the name of Miller upon them, unless built by that
concern, is of more than passing interest to the trade.
It seems that, according to the statement made in last week's
Review, the president of the Miller Piano Co. admitted that he
knew nothing about the manufacture of pianos, and that he had
never received any compensation as president of the company, add-
ing that he was at present janitor in a Boston building, and was
formerly a professional boxer.
Henry F. Miller & Sons contend that the name of Miller on
pianos used by the defendant company was for the purpose of
misleading the public as well as Henry F. Miller customers to be-
lieve that the instruments were manufactured by the original Miller
concern.
It seems from the decision rendered that the court was in
perfect harmony with the claims made by Henry F. Miller, to whom
the thanks of the trade are due for immediately and emphatically
suppressing work of this kind.
Exposition Honors Won by The Review
Grand l'rix
Pnris Exposition, 1900 Silver Medal.Charleston Expoistlon, 1902
Diploma. Pan-American Exposition, 1901 Gold Medal. .St. Louis Exposition, 1904
Qold J/ecfcU.Lewis-Clark Exposition, 1905
LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE-NUMBER 1745 GRAMERCY
NEW
YORK.
APRIL
14,
1906
EDITORIAL
T
HE latest development of the exposition plan will be interest-
ing to members of the music trade in all sections of America.
It is now definitely settled that there is planned a great music trade
exposition to be held in Madison Square Garden, New York, from
September 17 to 24. This will be under the management and per-
sonal supervision of Captain J. A. H. Dressel, of the Madison
Square Garden Co.
Captain Dressel is a veteran in the exposition line, as for four-
teen years he has managed exhibits at the Garden, and has never
yet scored a failure. The Sportsman's Show, which has been built
up under his management, just recently closed the most successful
exhibit since the establishment of this annual attraction at the
Garden.
T
HERE is really nothing more contemptible in commercial life
than for one concern to trade upon the reputation of an-
other. A good name is priceless, and a name which has been used
in pianodom for many years, and has won a high position, consti-
tutes at once a valuable business asset, which is frequently looked
upon with longing and jealous eyes by those who are desirous
of profiting by the hard work of others.
This recent Boston decision is in line with all of the recent
rulings by courts concerning the use of names and trademarks
which are calculated to deceive retail purchasers as to the origin
of the merchandise offered. Anyone who attempts to deceive the
public by trading upon the name and reputation of another is de-
serving of the strongest kind of condemnation.
All piano manufacturers are naturally interested in matters of
this kind, for if manufacturers whose names are used with the
apparent intent of deceiving have no recourse, why, then others
are encouraged to copy names indiscriminately, and as a result in
a few years we would have the trade filled with a lot of rank
imitations of some of the great names foisted by men who would
attempt to make dollars upon its good name and honest dealings
of other concerns.
A
SUBSCRIBER, writing from Phoenix, Ariz., says: "I have
been a reader of your valuable paper ever since it was first
started, and have noted your commenting on different methods of
APTAIN DRESSEL, while discussing his plan with The
conducting the piano business. Am sending you copies of adver-
Review, remarked that he had looked over the ground thor-
tisements of two firms who are running special sales and knocking
oughly and was convinced that an exhibit could be made not only
each other in this city. I would like to get your views regarding
interesting to the members of the trade but to the public as well.
this style of knocking."
He proposes to have a number of original features which will
The papers inclosed contain advertisements which do not differ
attract the attention of the public, thus increasing the selling possi-
materially from others which have been used in various sections of
bilities of musical instruments. An eight-day show at the Garden
the country. There is one concern who advises in a big headline
under expert management is pretty nearly what The Review pre-
to "Keep your optics open and look around before you buy." Then
dicted some two years ago, when we stated that a great exposition
later on the advertisement contains the following:
under veteran control at Madison Square Garden, which would
"We don't advertise "big sales,"' "ruinous prices," "great
include all branches of the industry, and special attractive musical
slaughter" of pianos or other misleading expressions to catch
features, was the only manner in which the exposition could be
ignoramuses. We don't buy a lot of moth-eaten, shop-worn and
made a possible success.
out-of-date instruments from old defunct firms and gull the public
with "bargain" yarns. We don't advertise having the finest and
HE whole exposition scheme must be treated broadly, and it largest stock, though we pay in Phoenix three times more taxes
is the intention of the management of the proposed music
on musical instruments than the other dealers combined. We don't
trade exposition to have many novel features which will have a buy from California (thereby paying double freight), nor do we
drawing power. Some manufacturers with whom Captain Dressel
pay heavy store rent nor give TO per cent, commission to teachers
has taken up the matter have already expressed themselves in the to have their assistance in puffing up hot air on unsuspecting pur-
warmest terms as approving the plan. Certainly it will give great
chasers. But we assert that we handle a better class of instruments
prestige to the musical wares, and it will be novel because never
and receive them direct from the largest factories in Christendom
in the history of this country has there been an exclusive music
(having a combined capital of $30,000,000) and sell cheaper and
trade exhibit. There have been various sporadic exhibits at dif- on easier payments without recourse to the humbuggery of "grand
C
T
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
slaughter," "ruinous prices," "must be sold regardless of cost,"
etc., which some firms resort to in order to sell their thump boxes
and agony tanks."
The advertisement is unique in some respects. "Agony tanks"
is a new phrase in trade nomenclature, and, after all, this kind of
advertising has the effect to discredit the entire piano business in
the minds of readers of such advertisements as we quote above.
does not help to solve a perplexing trade problem, if a piano
is priced at $300 and the piano merchant can calmly lower that
price to $175, and then offer to sell the instrument at that price
at $10 down and $6 a month. It at once arouses suspicion in the
minds of people that the original pricing was a fake. Perhaps,
after all, our Arizona friend was right when he called them "agony
tanks."
NE would think that the concern putting forth such adver-
tising was decidedly sore at having their preserves poached
upon, and that they carried their soreness to the extent of losing
their temper and accusing the other fellow of selling "thump boxes
and agony tanks." Surely such knocking does not dignify the
trade, and we question whether local dealers who indulge in such
a form of publicity profit by it.
We rather incline to the belief that readers of such adver-
tisements would view the entire piano trade with suspicion, particu-
larly when the other concern whom our Arizona friend mentions
offers to sell "$300 new upright pianos at $175, and $450 pianos
at $318.50," and to sell these instruments on small payment down
and six dollars a month.
Surely if a $300 piano can be sold by a regular dealer for
$175, and have the time of payment extend over nearly two and
one-half years, it looks as if the piano business could afford pretty
liberal profits, and the customer might be induced to ask the man
who had made the cut from $300 to $175 on a new upright to
make another cut of $75. In other words, just such statements
as these help to create a belief in the minds of the public that
there are no fixed values in piano selling.
T
O
EE how much different the conditions exist in a neighboring
industry—one to which we referred last week in our remarks
upon the talking-machine trade. The largest concerns in the talk-
ing-machine industry have absolutely fixed rules as to the prices
at which their instruments may be offered by jobbers and dealers.
They go further; they even regulate the sale of shop-worn and
second-hand machines, for a special license must be issued to the
dealer offering second-hand instruments, so that he can sell them
at reduced prices. These conditions must be affixed to the bottom
of the machine, showing at the time of sale that these instruments
are known to be second hand, and are licensed to be sold at the
reduced prices.
The retail prices of every kind of machine are absolutely fixed,
and they cannot be deviated from, except, of course, at the dealer's
loss. As a result of the adoption of business principles the talking-
machine business, which was formerly looked upon as one of
ephemeral existence, is showing great solidity.
Now, every intelligent piano man knows that the "new upright
$300 piano" which is offered in the advertisement referred to above
for $175 was never worth $300; therefore it was misleading and
false to place such a value upon it. If the price had been fixed
by the manufacturer it would probably have been placed at about
$175, which would have approximated the real value of the instru-
ment to the retail purchaser. At that price a good margin of
profit would be afforded the piano merchant, and the public would
have been fully protected.
S
S it is, such advertising as we have instanced must prove to
the public that pianos are sold at abnormal profits—at least,
it encourages that belief. The abnormal profits may come in on
the "agony tanks" for which dishonest prices are asked, but they
do not appear in the sale of instruments of the higher grades.
We hear a great deal about trade ethics, and some men are
fond of stating how closely they should be observed by members
of the industry, and yet it has been said that some of those who
prate the loudest are apparently ignorant as to what is going on
in their own establishments. Ignorance in such cases makes it
easy to say that they are not responsible for representations made
by their salesmen.
Trade ethics are all right, particularly at convention time; they
are soothing, mouth-filling and have a certain air of seductiveness
which charms and captivates; and if one price is a good proposi-
tion— anc j most merchants believe that it is—it is best not merely
to talk it, but to enforce it. But one price counts for nothing
unless that be the correct price. It is not good business, and it
A
HIS cutting of prices is an element of weakness, and, we may
add, it is a lack of salesmanship to cut prices. It smacks
of old-fashioned methods when the country storekeeper said: "The
price is a dollar, but as you are a regular customer I will make
it eighty-nine cents."
One-price methods were inaugurated and became popular with
progressive people from their first introduction, and the salesman,
either wholesale or retail, who cuts prices gives his firm a black
mark and stamps himself with a lack of resourcefulness that is
the foundation of a salesman's success.
R
EPORTS from all sections of the United States and from
nearly all industries show that the American manufacturers
continue on that wave of prosperity which has been prevalent for
almost a decade, and which, we may add, was most pronounced
last year. This general welfare has more than local significance.
When considered in conjunction with the growing exports of
American goods, it reveals the new attitude of the American manu-
facturer to the foreign field.
Not many years ago it was the custom to look abroad for a
market when only dulness prevailed in the home demand. To-day
all this is changed. The importance of a universal market has been
realized, and the majority of the larger manufacturers and ex-
porters have well-equipped export departments, with traveling and
resident agents in all parts of the commercial world.
Last year was the first time in the history of the country the
annual exports of manufactured products exceeded five hundred
millions, and if the ratio of increase of the first seven months of
the current year is maintained, they will exceed six hundred
millions.
T
HESE reports tell most eloquently of this country's onward
march, and while the piano manufacturers have not, to a
great extent, shared in this growing foreign demand, the oppor-
tunities for large export trade lie before them. Some of our
leading concerns are making fair shipments to some European
countries, but, considered as a whole, it may be said that the
American piano cuts no appreciable figure in the markets of the
world outside of the countries which lie close to us.
With the talking machines and piano players it is entirely
different. The talking-machine manufacturers have sent an enor-
mous number of their products abroad, and American piano play-
ers are shipped in considerable numbers to various countries. The
foreign demand for pianos thus far has been treated in rather
an indifferent manner. We have not created instruments such as
are desired by most foreign countries. We make what we term
the American model, and this must be changed somewhat if we
are to develop a large foreign trade for pianos. We will have
to follow the old rule of supplying what the people need if we are
to cater to a foreign piano trade in a large way.
Then, again, one of the best of reasons may be found in the
fact that there is good American business to be had nearer home,
and it is business that is likely to be kept up, for from present
indications there will be no falling off in trade demand.
T
O those who have sent in orders for our new work upon piano
construction we desire to state that we have been delayed in
the publication of this book, so that it will be at least two weeks
before we shall be ready to supply copies. We shall then be able
to offer a technical book which will be the first of its kind ever
published in the English language, covering every practical de-
partment of piano building and scale draughting. It is a work
which should be in the hands of every student of piano building,
and it will be useful to every dealer as well.
The work represents nearly two years of continuous study
and research, and contains a series of illustrations which will be
of interest in following the development of the piano.

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