Music Trade Review

Issue: 1907 Vol. 45 N. 19

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
REVIEW
V O L . X L V . No. 1 9 . Published Every Saturday by Edward Lyman BiU at 1 Madison Ave., New York, November 9,1907
among the business men of the city. W. P.
Chrisler, of New York, will come to fill the place
Business for the Past Month Ahead of a Similar
made vacant by the promotion of Mr. Alfring.
Period Last Year—A Growing Demand for
Serge L. Halman, who has been with the Aeolian
High Grade Instruments—Some Dealers Say
branch here for some time, will go to St. Louis
Money Stringency Has Been Incentive to
to accept a position with Mr. Benjamin. Mr.
Many People to Pay Their
Debts—Starr
Benjamin writes to Indianapolis that business in
Piano Co. Inaugurate Series of Winter Re-
St. Louis is opening up in good condition.
citals—Alfring Takes Charge of Aeolian Co.
Plans for the carnival of the Elks, to be given
Branch Succeeding G. P. Benjamin.
the week beginning Nov. 11, in the new factory
building of tne King Piano Co., at Bluffton, have
(Special to The Review. 1
been completed. Elks will come from Chicago
Indianapolis, Ind., Nov. 5, 1907.
and other large cities, and the carnival will be
Despite unfavorable conditions the piano busi- a big event. Arthur King, of the King Co., will
ness in Indianapolis during the month of October take an active part in the carnival. The King
went far ahead of the business during the corre- Co. hope to occupy their new buildings by the
sponding month of the preceding year, accord- first of the year.
ing to the statements of Indianapolis dealers.
Mrs. H. C. Jackson, of the King Co. here, has
"Our business for the last month was excel- just returned from Muncie, where she took part
lent," said H. C. Jackson, of the King Piano Co. in the annual fall festival in the interest of the
"Not only that but our business for November King Co. In the great parade which was given
has started off in excellent form and we have a Friday afternoon the King Co. was represented
number of good prospects."
by a highly decorated trap driven by Mrs. Jack-
"We have no room to complain of the October son.
business," said Mr. Fuller, of the firm of Fuller
George C. Pearson has in the display window
& Currens. "We have a number of good pros- of his store a large mounted bass which, when
pects for this month and feel that business con- caught, weighed more than six pounds. It was
ditions are good."
caught by Mr. Pearson in a lake in Kosciusko
"October was one of the best months in the County, Sept. 22, and was mounted at Chicago.
history of the Aeolian business in Indianapolis," Mr. Pearson is one of the old sportsmen of the
said W. H. Alfring, manager of the Aeolian Co. State.
"Trade is good and prospects are good."
Among the trade callers in Indianapolis during
"Our business for October was excellent," said the last month were the following: Mr. Long-
Frank Carlin, of Carlin & Lennox. "Collections more, of W. W. Kimball Co., and Frank Burns,
have been unusually good for the last few days. stool and scarf salesman of New York, at Fuller
It seems as though the money stringency is an & Currens; Mr. Fitzmaurice, of the Schaeffer
incentive for the people to pay their debts."
Piano Co., and William R. Gratz, of the Gratz
"The business of this company has been ex- Import Co., at Carlin & Lennox's; Major Rich,
cellent during the last month," said Mr. Seeord, of the McPhail Piano Co.. at Pearson's; W. P.
of the George C. Pearson store. "Our business on Collins, of the Autopiano Co., at Carlin & Len-
Steinways, Kurtzmanns and Hazeltons has been nox; E. Devereaux, of the Kurtzmann Co.; J.
excellent, and we believe that business will con- Frank Smith, of Krakauer Bros., and J. W. Kline,
tinue good. Our October business finished really at Pearson's.
better than we had expected. We have ordered
Milton Cash, who was in the piano business for
the factories which we represent to ship our . many years on Indiana avenue, is dead. He died
winter stock in as fast as possible. We are suddenly. He had been in poor health for some
highly pleased with the examples so far to hand." time.
The business of the Starr Piano Co., according
Ed Lennox, of Carlin & Lennox, has returned
to Mr. McCormack, the manager of the retail from his trip abroad.
department, was better this October than in any
previous October in the history of the business.
A TIME FOR COURAGE.
This is due partly perhaps to the scheme adopted
by the company of giving a free scholarship in Interesting Chat with Henry C. Lytton, One of
the Indianapolis Conservatory of Music with each
Chicago's Prominent
Merchants, on the
purchase of a Starr piano. So successful has
Financial Situation—The Time to Invest in
this plan been that the company now are con-
and Uphold American
Securities—Public
sidering the feasibility of continuing it for at
Later on Will Appreciate the Benefits of
least another month.
Roosevelt's Policy.
The Starr Piano Co. are to start a series of
Henry C. Lytton, one of Chicago's prominent
winter recitals, which will be given each week
on Tuesday evening, when musicians of ability merchants, in discussing New York's financial
will appear. The first recital will be given next disturbances with a correspondent of the Herald
Tuesday evening, and at that time Hester Louise in Paris this week, said:
"Any person with even a superficial knowledge
Houk, contralto soloist of the Central Christian
of the vast resources of the United States should
Church, will sing.
W. H. Alfring has been appointed manager be able to see that the present prices in many
of the Aeolian Co. here, succeeding G. P. Ben- cases are far below the proper values. I am not
jamin, who left a short time ago to become man- encouraging speculation, but investment. The
ager of the Aeolian branch at St. Louis. Mr. future extent of American commerce and agricul-
Alfring has been with the Indianapolis branch ture is not being grasped by the multitude—it
since last June and has made many friends is almost unlimited.
GLEANINGS FROMINDIANAPOLIS.
SINGLE COPIES, 10 CENTS.
$2.00 PER YEAR.
"Mr. Lawson was logical in his recent public
letter, in which he advised the buying of certain
stocks and warned would-be purchasers not to
pay any attention to subsequent falls of five or
ten points, counselling them to hold on in view
of the intrinsic values of which the soil is the
basis.
"I just came through by automobile from Gen-
eva and I observed France's beautiful lands, the
source of her individual and national wealth.
Those lands have been tilled for many centuries.
Now think of the area of the United States,
forty times as great and virgin in quality, on
which only little more than twice" France's popu-
lation makes its demand for sustenance.
"For those persons who have money I say
now is the time to invest in American secur-
ities. I have none to sell. I am only inter-
ested in America's welfare and in exposing what
1 believe to be the exact situation.
"I have seen property values in the West
grow by leaps and bounds, and I know, as does
everybody else, that the value of property is
measured by the interest it will yield on the
investment. Ground rents in Chicago, which,
for instance, were worth $20,000 a few years
ago, are now worth $50,000. This is not infla-
tion, it is sound, solid everyday business.
"As for the national banks, there is nothing
to be feared. Foolish persons have rushed to
banks for their money and now old stockings
and trunks are filled with the nation's cur-
rency. Naturally the banks are embarrassed,
particularly because of the fact that there is a
continuous heavy demand on them for money
with which to pay farmers high prices for grain
or live stock.
"Banks cannot do business without money any
more than I can do business with no merchan-
dise. Plainly stated, there is not enough money
to go around. In American finance it has been
shown that the country has been steadily growing
up to stock values, and in but very few in-
stances have quotations been too high.
"President Roosevelt is now being pounded
from pillar to post by part of the public, but
the entire public later on will appreciate the
benefits of his policy. I do not entirely approve
his methods. He has been rather brutal and
noisy in his attacks. He might have accom-
plished the same reforms in a quiet manner.
The net result, however, will be beneficial."
FISCHER GRANDS FOR Y. W. C. A.
Two handsome Fischer grands and one up-
right and two pianos of another make were re-
cently sold by the Lewis-Welsh Piano Co., of
Cleveland, O., to be placed in the new building
just completed for the Young Women's Christian
Association in that city.
H. L. Stoner, proprietor of Stoner's piano par-
lors, Chambersburg, Pa., will open an up-to-date
piano store at 111 South Main street on Novem-
ber 1, where he will handle a full line of Soh-
mer, Weber, Ludwig pianos, and Estey and Mil-
ler organs, Victor talking machines, sheet music,
etc. He has found his present store at 144
South Main street inadequate to meet the grow-
ing demands of his business, hence the change.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE
EDWARD LYMAN BILL - Editor and Proprietor
J. B. SPILLANE, Managing Editor
Executive and Reportorlal Stall:
0 » . B. KBLLEB,
W. H. DYKES,
P. H. THOMPSON.
J. HAYDEN CLARENDON.
I* HJ. Bo WEBS, B. BBITTAIN WILSON, WM. B. WHITE, L. J. CHAMBEELIN, A . J. NICKMN.
ROSTON OFFICE :
EtBNXST I*. WAITT, 278A Tremont S t
CHICAGO OFFICE:
B. P. VAN HARLINGEN. 195-197 Wabash Are.
TELEPHONES : Central 414; Automatic 8643.
MINNEAPOLIS and ST. PAUL t
ST. LOUIS:
PHILADELPHIA t
E. W. KAUFFMAN.
ADOLF EDSTBN.
SAN FRANCISCO:
CHAS. N. VAN BURBN.
S. IT. GRAY, 2407 Sacramento S t
CINCINNATI. O.i NINA PDGH-SMITH.
BALTIMORE. MD.: A. ROBERT FRENCH.
LONDON. ENGLAND:
69 Baslnghall S t , E. C.
W. Lionel Sturdy, Manager.
Published Every Saturday at 1 Madison Avenue, New York.
Entered at the New Y»rk Pest Office as Stctnd 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 BUI.
Directory ot M o o
The directory of piano manufacturing firms and corporations
__
«
found on another page will be of great value, as a reference
MsanUetnrcri
f o r de alers and others.
Exposition Honors Won by The Review
Grand Prim
Paris Exposition, 1900
Silver Medal. Charleston Exposition 1902
Diploma.Pan-American Exposition, 1901
Gold Medal.. .St Louis Exposition, 1904
Qold Medal
Lewis-Clark Exposition, 1905.
LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONES-NUMBERS 4677 and 4678 GRAMERCY
Connecting a l l Department*.
Cable address: "Elblll New York."
NEW YORK, NOVEMBER 9, 1907
EDITORIAL
B
USINESS conditions are constantly improving and banking
conditions so far as New York is concerned have become
fairly normal. Plenty of investors are now buying up interest
bearing stocks of various kinds and there is a belief existing in
financial circles that business will go ahead even at a pace consider-
ably accelerated over that which was in evidence just before the
financial flurry of last month. The country is all right. The se-
curities which cover American property cannot stay low. The
wealth they stand for is too enormous and the earning power too
great to make such a thing possible.
There is everywhere a manifest desire to bring money out
from hiding places which it sought during the short lived panic and
invest it. In order to do good the dollar must be kept at work
and the man with the dollar contributes so much to his own se-
curity and the country's strength when he lets his dollar work. It's
useless when hoarded.
C
OLLECTIONS have been somewhat slow during the past two
weeks. That was to be expected as the immediate outcome
of the financial crisis here in this city, but during the last week
there has been a decided improvement. Money is moving more
freely and bills of various kinds are being paid promptly. Of
course, many men will find the panic an easy excuse for not meet-
ing their obligations as they mature. It will be easy to blame the
flurry for a whole lot of things which would come along in the
ordinary course of business, and plenty of men will avail them-
selves of the opportunity, blaming the recent financial condition in
New York as one of the chief reasons why they cannot meet past
due accounts promptly.
T
HE wave of dementia financia which swept the country seemed
to arouse temporarily considerable fear. It is surprising how
business men who are usually cool headed get frightened so easily.
A number wired in cancellations of orders and seemed to lose their
heads on a number of matters, but since the quieting down of con-
REVIEW
ditions they have requested shipments of goods in accordance with
original orders. There is no good reason why business men should
be alarmed a.t the present outlook. This country has a stability
which has been thoroughly tested and it stood like a rock. Ten
years ago if the same conditions had prevailed it would have been
a long time before the country would have recovered from the shock,
but to-day the excitement was short-lived. The unshakable finan-
cial structure of the country was never displayed to better advantage
than during the busy week in New York last month.
The reserve financial strength of this country is simply over-
whelming. Nothing can stop it.
W
HEN the current of affairs runs along quietly and peace-
fully we give little thought to the influence of the press,
but let the state or nation face an industrial revolution—let there
be an upheaval of labor, or let some great disaster occur, then the
real power of the press becomes apparent. During the recent panic
here if the utterances of the Metropolitan dailies had been intem-
perate, runs could have been created on every savings bank in New
York, even to a point which would have threatened the peace and
safety of the city.
It is a matter of satisfaction to every journalist to know that
the great power wielded by the members of the craft is rarely ever
misused. Those who conduct the great papers of this country are
invariably men of high ideals. It is right that journalism should
occupy a high position among the professions of this country.
Music trade journalism would have won a much higher position in
the estimation of the members of this trade had it always been
honestly conducted. The blackmailer, however, has left an im-
print upon the music trade journalism that will take a whole genera-
tion to completely efface.
It is the abusive form of trade journalism which has helped
to discredit it. Journalism is- a business just like any other enterprise,
but the editor holds a position different from the ordinary business
man because his influence is far-reaching, he can make and unmake
reputations of others, and be it said as a whole that trade journal-
ism has been of assistance to the industry, and every fair-minded
man concedes its usefulness in promoting interest in special
products.
Newspaper men should be trustworthy, honest, and above all,
loyal. It is traditional that a good newspaper man can be trusted
with information which will be held sacred until such time as it is
released by informants. It is true, too, that the wastebasket gets
more sensational news than do the readers of a paper.
I
N Germany they exercise a curious form of censorship over
advertising and the following, from a foreign exchange, illus-
trates well the present condition in that country:
In connection with the censorship of advertisements in Ger-
many, we learn that a firm which spends a million a year in telling
the public of its medicine has been told by Germany that if it ad-
vertises any more in that country it must condense its announce-
ments down to a couple of inches. Recently these advertisers took
a quarter of a single column in a German newspaper. A few days
after the advertisement appeared the publisher wrote to the adver-
tisers stating that he had been summoned and fined for "bombastic"
advertising. No other advertiser occupied more than one or two
inches of space, and one of the subscribers to the newspaper in-
formed the local police that the quarter of a column—although it
set forth the value of the medicine in terms of the strictest modera-
tion—was offensive and irritating to the reader. The authorities
did not in any way question the efficacy of the medicine; the sole
objection was that an advertisement that occupied so large a space
was offensive to the readers. The Fatherland is extremely strict
in its supervision of advertising. A patent medicine vendor is not
permitted to announce the disease his wares are intended to cure.
Only the general effect it may have upon the system can be set
forth, and the reader must himself conclude for what particular
ailment it is intended.
BIG Southwestern concern states to The Review: "Business
is good in this part of the country. It is running ahead
of last year, although collections are somewhat slow. The very
favorable weather before harvest time insured good crops in
both corn and cotton, while in certain sections may be short if the
high prices continue, they will in a large measure overcome the ill
A

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.