Music Trade Review

Issue: 1907 Vol. 45 N. 12

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
fflJJIC TIRADE
V O L . X L V . N o . 1 2 . Published Every Saturday by Edward Lyman Bill at 1 Madison A Y C , New York, September 21,1907
DEFENDS MANUFACTURERS.
Brownell
Declares Fund Was
Crush Labor.
Not
Raised to
The campaign of the National Association of
Manufacturers to furnish means of popular edu-
cation on the labor question, which has been
met in its beginning by vigorous attacks from
the American Federation of Labor, is explained
in detail by Atherton Brownell in an article
published in American Industries, issued recently,
The article is in part a counter-attack on the
representatives of labor who have designated the
campaign fund of the manufacturers "the war
fund for crushing labor."
The allegation is
made by Mr. Brownell that labor unions have
been successful in suppressing news the publica-
tion of which would be harmful to their cause,
and one instance, no names being used, is cited
where "one of the greatest newspapers in this
country is visited daily by one of the most repre-
hensible labor leaders, whose power it is to sup-
press any matter that does not please him." The
writer also declares that in many newspaper
offices the labor leader gets in his work by
threatening the editor with trouble.
The object of the fund of the manufacturers
is declared to be not to crush labor organizations,
but to educate the public in the matter of prob-
lems of labor and capital.
"To specify more particularly the use of the
fund," says the writer, "it may not come amiss
to specify the exact purpose for which the ex-
penditure of $500,000 a year was authorized. To
establish a federation of all the associations of
citizens, merchants, and employers of labor; to
maintain a great council of this federation.
"To support for the federation a literary bu-
reau and a speakers' bureau.
"To continue the educational work of the dif-
ferent separate organizations in a far larger and
more effective way.
"To aid members of Congress and the State
Legislatures against the attacks of organized
labor.
"To employ a corps of lawyers who shall ad-
vise local organizations on all local questions,
report the violations of all State and National
laws affecting industry and trade, and the State
and National Governments in the prosecution of
offenders.
"To create labor bureaus, operate a labor clear-
ing house, and help in the better distribution of
immigrants.
"To aid and promote the establishment of in-
dustrial schools."
The use of the manufacturers' fund along these
lines, the writer declares, will be pursuant to the
policy of the National Manufacturers' Association
of attacking tne evils of unionism, and not the
principle of organized labor.
half century of successful trading in musical
instruments. The house is still growing and even
at the present time is making extensive improve-
ments and enlargements.
SETTLING DOWN TO BUSINESS.
The Vacation Season Has Now Closed and
Traveling Men Are on the Road or Getting
Ready for Their Trips—'Mostly Everybody
With Whom The Review Has Spoken Is Con-,
fident of a Busy and Prosperous Fall.
The vacation season being at an end the manu-
facturers note a decided change for the better,
and they are gradually becoming more optimistic
relative to fall business. A week or so ago most
every man you met asked, "Well, what are the
prospects for fall," and in the next breath would
quote certain people who thought that trade was
going to be dull, etc., etc. To-day the majority
are confident that business will be good; in fact,
since orders are coming in freely they are
hustling every department of the factory to meet
the call. This not only applies to the piano in-
dustry but to small goods as well. Every im-
porting house and jobber have all the business
they can swing to, and the retailer is placing
orders earlier than usual so as not to be caught
short on the market when the holiday rush
sets in.
The piano supply manufacturers, including
hardware, actions, etc., etc., are rushed with or-
ders, and in several instances have been obliged
to run their plants overtime to keep up. with
advance and duplicate orders.
The local piano dealers are getting more in-
quiries than a week or so ago, and the hopes of
many have been revived. The business atmos-
phere is certainly clearer and things generally are
putting on a more sprightly air. In another
week trade will be in full swing and the fears of
yesterday will be forgotten.
TO TEACHMJVERTISING.
Y. M. C. A. Lecture Course to Teach Ethics of
"Crying Wares" in Public Prints.
To give those who wish to take up the writing
of advertisements as a career—a good basic
knowledge of the ethics of "crying their wares"
in the public prints—the' Twenty-third street
branch of the Y"oung Men's Christian Associa-
tion will open its third year's lecture course on
"The Theory and Practice of Advertising" on
Wednesday, October 9. With the exception of
Christmas and New Year's Day this will con-
tinue every Wednesday evening until April 1.
The opening lecture will treat of the subject
"Advertising as a Career for Young Men," with
Frank L. Blanchard, of the Hampton Advertising
Co. to supervise the course, in which will be
heard M. L. Gillam, advertising director of the
DROOP & SONS' 50TH ANNIVERSARY.
New York Herald, on "The Ad. Writer;" "Prin-
E. P. Droop & Sons Co., the piano dealers, of ciples of Display," by George P. Metzger, of the
Washington, D. C, announce that they will cele- Columbia Phonograph Co.; "Some Mistakes of
brate the fiftieth anniversary of the establish- Advertisers," by Joseph Eldridge Esray, associate
ment of the business on November 17, 1907, this editor of the Fourth Estate; "Retail Advertis-
being the exact date that nwks the end of a ing," by Samuel Brill, of Brill Brothers; "De?
SINGL E
$ 2 .OO°PER S VEAR C E N T S '
partment Store Advertising," by George H. Per-
ry, of the Siegel-Cooper Co.; "Selling Goods by
Mail," by Robert Wynn Palmer, editor of Print-
ers' Ink; "Value of Newspaper Advertising," by
Frank L. Blanchard; "Magazine Advertising,"
by Herbert S. Houston, of the World's Work, and
"The Personal Element in the Placing of Ad-
vertisements," by Robert Frothingham, of Every-
body's Magazine. Rates and contracts and re-
sults are also to be taken up and other phases
of the business will be dealt with.
CHAPMAN BUYS OUT MILLER.
Rochester Dealer Steadily Expanding—Has Re-
cently
Absorbed
Two
Establishments—
Handling a Big Line of Instruments.
E. J. Chapman has purchased the store and
entire stock of the late Giles B. Miller, Roches-
ter, N. Y., including piano players, small goods
and sheet music, and will continue the store at
63 State street as a branch. Mr. Chapman now
conducts three stores, including his headquar-
ters at 31 Clinton avenue, South, and the re-
cently acquired store of Martin Bros., at 69
State street, and with the recent additions han-
dles the following lines: Mason & Hamlin, Hard-
man, Behning, Sohmer, Fischer, Poole, Kurtz-
mann, Lester, Kroeger, Harrington, Baus, Cam-
bridge, Bailey, Erhardt, Briggs, Laffargue, Mar-
tin Bros., Shoninger, Hensel and Kohler & Camp-
bell. He also sells the Hardman Autotone, Cecil-
ian player and Autopiano.
FEEL NEW YORK^S COMPETITION.
Piano Dealers in Paterson and Other Towns
in New Jersey Complain of New Yorkers
Working Their Territory.
The piano dealers of Paterson, N. J., state
that the competition from New York is becoming
quite a factor in their city and that the battle
for business will be keener this fall than for
many years before. New York department stores
conducting piano auxiliaries are working all the
adjoining territory in a most careful and sys-
tematic way, with the result that piano dealers
in smaller towns are feeling this kind of com-
petition very keenly. Hence it behooves them
to be up and doing in order to hold their own.
CROWN PIANO FOR PROMINENT CLUB.
A special "Crown" piano is being built at the
Geo. P. Bent factory in Chicago, 111., for the
Palette and Chisel Club, one of the most notable
clubs of artists in Chicago. The case will be
of special mission design to match the furnish-
ings of the club, and will be a creation that will
reflect credit on Mr. Bent, and on its owners.
The Palette and Chisel Club has been In exist-
ence some twelve years, and represents the
younger school of painters and illustrators in
Chicago and vicinity.
Van Alstine & Moore have opened a new piano
store in Ricketts' building, Eureka, 111. Both,
are piano men of experience,
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. SPILLANE, Managing Editor
Executive and Reportorlal Staff:
GEO. B. KEIJLEB,
W. H. DYKES,
F. H. THOMPSON.
BMILIB FRANCOS BAUHR,
L. B. BOWERS, B. BBITTAIN WILSON, WM. B. WHITE, L. J. CHAMBERLIN, A. J. NICXLIN.
CHICAGO OFFICE:
E. P. VAN HARLINGEN, 195-197 Wabash Ave.
TELEPHONES : Central 414; Automatic 8643
„ MINNEAPOLIS and ST. PAUL t
ST. LOUIS:
BOSTON OFFICE:
ERNEST L. WAITT, 278A Tremont S t
PHILADELPHIA :
R. W. KAurFMAN.
ADOLF EDSTEN.
CHAS. N. VAN BURBN.
SAN FRANCISCO: S. H. GRAY, 2407 Sacramento S t
CINCINNATI. O.: NINA PUGH-SMITH.
BALTIMORE, MD.: A. ROBERT FRENCH.
LONDON, ENGLAND:
69 Basinghall St., E, C.
W. Lionel Sturdy, Manager.
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 and Mexico, $2.00 per year;
Canada, $3.50 ; 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, $60.00; opposite
reading matter, $75.00.
REMITTANCES, In other than currency form, should be made payable to Edward
Lyman Bill.
Directory of Plaao
The directory of piano manufacturing firms and corporations
_:
: ~
found on another page will be of great value, as a reference
M»nultelnrer»
f o r dealers and others.
Exposition Honors Won by The Review
Grand Prix
Paris Exposition, 1900
Silver Medal.Charleston Exposition 1902
Diploma.Pan-American Exposition, 1901
Gold Medal.. .St Louis Exposition, 1904
Gold Medal. .. .Lewis-Clark Exposition, 1905.
LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONES-NUMBERS 174S and 1761 GRAMERCY
Connecting all Departments.
Cable address: "Elblll New York."
NEW YORK, SEPTEMBER 21, 1907
EDITORIAL
"\ X 7HETHER justly or unjustly among the shortcomings at-
V V tributed to the average New Yorker is his inability to
readily grasp the fact that his city, great though it be, is by no
means the United States. We have had in this city for years a class
of men belonging to the idle rich who make annual pilgrimages to
Europe who are not in touch with the developments of the great
West and South. As a result of this narrowness" of view which
has reached active business channels there are a great many people
who come to the metropolis from other sections of the country who
have difficulty in understanding New York, and not unfrequently
this lack of understanding of the conditions which surround the
visitor acts to the detriment of the New Yorker.
The recent serious depression in Wall Street perhaps alarmed
New Yorkers to considerable extent and in a degree which was not
approached by any other section of the country. This condition of
alarm, when the rest of the country is so prosperous, is not neces-
sary, but perhaps we are too near the seething maelstrom of Wall
Street not to be infected with its poison.
The anomalous nature of the situation was recently portrayed
in an emphatic manner in a cartoon in the Evening Mail of this
city, in which the artist depicted "Uncle Sam" reclining in ease and
tranquility amid great sheaves of wheat, and holding between his
fingers that emblem of good luck, a four-leaf clover. The cartoon
was headed, and aptly so, "A Panic in Wall Street."
B
ECAUSE the price of certain stocks has declined some New
Yorkers have worked themselves up to the delusion that the
whole country is on the down grade, and because they are so un-
fortunate as to be unable to rid their minds of this error, they seek
relief by telling their forebodings to everyone around, including
out-of-town buyers. As a matter of fact, some piano men who
have been in these offices recently, came to this market enthusiastic
over the outlook in their particular section, but they have listened
to pessimistic tales poured forth here and have read the New York
papers, which are more or less charged with pessimism, an.d as a.
REVIEW
result have bought in smaller quantities than they had originally
planned, and will go home not as enthusiastic as they came, and
what is a mighty sight worse they will spread abroad in their re-
spective cities the fact that New Yorkers seem afraid of the business
outlook.
N
OW the best possible,advice that can be given to pessimistic
manufacturers, merchants and salesmen, is to become ac-
quainted with the actual conditions outside of their own immediate
environment. All those who do this will surely speedily emerge
from the gloom into which they have unwisely permitted themselves
to drift, and they will become as optimistic as they had been previ-
ously down-hearted. As a matter of fact if a man must discuss busi-
ness conditions with his customers, it is better to confine himself to
general conditions, and if he knows nothing more 'of them than he
has imbibed from the sensational reports from the Street he had
better remain quiet. It isn't the time for croakers. New Yorkers
should look over this vast country, study its boundless resources and
get busy. The great West and South will form splendid markets
for pianos during the next three months. There is unquestionably
a good brisk trade ahead of us and the way to win it is by the
adoption of optimistic methods and getting away from pessimism as
far as possible.
M
OST active brains work overtime. Most of a man's planning
and figuring and real head work must be done outside of
regular business hours. Thousands of men neglect the opportunity
of doing a little thinking, because they are employes and expect the
boss to do the planning. There's the rub. Such a man thinks he
is working for the boss instead of for himself. The biggest mis-
take an employe can make is to deceive himself with the idea that
he is simply working for someone else for so much a day. Every
employe, whether a one thousand or ten-thousand-dollar-a-year man
or a dollar-a-day man, is first of all working for himself, and when
he concludes that he is working for the boss and lets the boss do his
planning, he is giving himself a life sentence at hard, disagreeable
labor and small pay. It pays to take a personal pride in adding to
your skill. Be a part of the institution. If you have a boss give
him the benefit of all the planning you can; he needs it. And, be-
sides, it gives you practice in planning. Some day you may be at
the head of an institution yourself. What then ?
T
HE parcels post men are active and that leads us to ask what is
being done in this trade to counteract the influence of the
organization supporting the proposed parcels post legislation? If
this bill once becomes a law musical merchandise dealers all over
the land will feel its effect. It would seem that with the splendid
dealers' association, an organization representing hundreds of men
in every part of the country, considerable force could be brought to
bear against the passage of this bill. Possibly the officers of the
association have not acquainted themselves with just what effect this
bill would have upon the music trades of this country. Depend
upon it its effect would be far-reaching and harmful.
P
OSTMASTER-GENERAL MEYER'S recent declaration of
his intention to recommend to Congress the authorization of
an experimental parcels post has already begun to bear fruit, and
it is a foregone conclusion that the coming session of Congress will
witness the most spirited contest on this question that has ever
marked this paternalistic movement. That the parcels post pro-
moters are fairly well organized and provided with a considerable
fund is evidenced by the work they have done since General Meyer
made his original declaration at Nantasket Point, Mass., some few
weeks ago. The press reports of his speech on that occasion and
the interviews which he subsequently gave in New York have been
reproduced in facsimile by photolithography and are being widely
circulated, accompanied by copies of bills pending in the late two
congresses designed to carry out various features of the Postmaster-
General's, recently announced policy.
Thus far this parcels post literature has been circulated anony-
mously, but its form and appearance show conclusively that it ema-
nates from a common source, although the envelopes containing the
matter received here are variously postmarked to indicate that they
were mailed at New York, Boston and Washington. The fact that
none of this literature appears to emanate from Chicago is interest-
ing, but to those familiar with this movement indicates merely that

Download Page 3: PDF File | Image

Download Page 4 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.