Music Trade Review

Issue: 1881 Vol. 4 N. 2

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
38
THE MUSICAL CRITIC AND TRADE REVIEW.
MORE ABOUT D. F. BEATTY'S DISREPUTABLE METHODS.
QUINCE the publication of our article, in the laat issue of this paper,
O exposing the disreputable methods employed by D. F. Beatty, of
Washington, N. J., in his endeavors to force his goods upon the public, we
have received a number of contributions to the stock of information which
we possess concerning D. F. Beatty, and his manner of transacting business.
It is well known that this man Beatty makes a strong point of what he
maliciously and falsely calls the extortion practised by the agents of leading
piano and organ manufactures. It is a common thing for him to advertise
" Beware of agents," claiming that he never employs agents under any cir-
cumstances.
We give below a copy of one of his "special circulars," which he sends out
to parties through the country, whom he thinks may be able to influence sales
for him. If this circular does not give the lie to his boast that he does not
employ agents to practice extortion upon the public, then we must confess
that we have lost our ability to read the English language correctly. The
circular is as follows:
February 20th, 1881.
TRADE CHAT.
Mr. Wm. Heinekamp, Jr., of Baltimore, was married on Tuesday, Feb.
15th, to Miss Laura V. Riddlemoser, of the same city. The happy pair left
for the north on the afternoon train from Baltimore.
Mrs. A. Scherzer, of 523 Arch street, Philadelphia, who has been the
agent for the Sohmer piano since the death of her husband about a year ago,
feels much encouraged with her success with .the Sohmer piano in Phila-
delphia.
Blasuis, of Philadelphia, is not only holding his own but increasing his
business with the Steinway piano, in spite of the great influx of pianos of
other makers which Philadelphia has experienced during the past few years.
It is reported on excellent authority that over 300 Emerson pianos were
sold in Philadelphia during the past year.
$7.
SPECIAL OFFER.
$15.
There is much talk among the dealers in Philadelphia about the excel-
Bear Sir:—If you can make and forward me a list of the names of relia- lence of the organ which the Burdett Organ Co., of Erie, Penn., are now
ble persons of your acqaintance who may wish to procure an instru- putting on the market.
ment, either piano or organ, I will correspond with them, using my best
A. Hume, of Pittsburgh, Pa., has taken the agency of the Albrecht
endeavors to sell them, and for every piano I succeed in selling to persons piano Mr.
for his locality.
on your list, I will, immediately on completion of sale, forward you $15 in
cash; and for every organ $7 in cash; this commission will, 0/ course, be given Pomplitz, of Baltimore, will furnish the organ to be used by the new
on circular prices only. Please send me a list of reliable persons at once, oratorio society lately organized in Baltimore.
and oblige
DANIEL F. BEATTY,
The report published that Gen. Grant would soon resign his position as
Washington, N. J. President
of the World's Fair Commission, is denied by Col. Fred Grant,
and by Messrs. Algernon S. Sullivan and Thomas McElrath of the directors.
WHAT A NEW JERSEY PAPER THINKS OF THE D. F. BEATTY.
rr^HE Anbury Park Journal has the following in its issue of February 12th.
Trade generally in Philadelphia and Baltimore in musical instruments
_L It will be seen from this that the D. F. Beatty is properly appreciated is dull, and, of course, many theories are rife among manufacturers and
in the neighborhood of his house:
dealers to account for it. The late severe weather has its share of the blame,
the nearness of the late holiday season, during which people are supposed to
THAT MAN OF " CHEEK."
" Last week we published a decidedly " cheeky " letter from one Daniel have spent all they had to spend for at least two months, and the unsatis-
F. Beatty, of Washington, N. J. On Wednesday we received from him a factory financial condition of some parts of the South are all brought forward
as excuses. These, no doubt, all have their weight, but the Philadelphia
catalogue and the following postal:
and Baltimore men have had so much prosperity that they, think if trade
WASHINGTON, N. J., Feb. 7, 1881.
Dear Sir:—Paper with notice at hand, thanks. Come and see me and does not double in volume every year that business is bad.
you will find that I am a live man, come my boy, come.
One of our representatives was in the store of Albrecht & Co., in Phila-
Very Truly Yours,
delphia, a few days since, and asked the firm, in the course of conversation,
DANIEL F. BEATTY.
if they had heard from their advertisement which appeared lately in two
We said that we believed Beatty to be a humbug ; but after examining numbers of this paper. " Why," he said, taking a pile of letters out of a
his catalogue and reading therein what he says of himself, we take it back, pigeon-hole in his desk, " look at these ! I have been exhausting my whole
and say that in our opinion he is a fraud. We would not invest in his al- stock of catalogues in answering these letters that came to me as a result of
leged musical instruments, and advise our readers to pursue the same course." my advertisement in the MUSICAL CEITIC AND TBADE REVIEW. YOU charge
a good price for advertising in your paper, but we have always had the best
PROGRESS OF THE STRIKES.
results from it. The best articles always command the highest prices."
E employes of Behr Bros., piano case manufacturers, had a meeting
What is McCammon using in his upright piano actions which makes the
recently to discuss the situation. Wednesday, February 9th, the firm
of Behr Bros, announced a reduction in the pay for top cleaning from 75 to rats so fond of them? In a Philadelphia store the rats attack the McCam-
40 cents. The top makers then left work. Behr Bros, after waiting about mon upright and don't touch the others. This is a very interesting scien-
a week offered to pay the men $15 a week instead of paying by the piece. tific question, to which we should like a solution; we confess that we are
This proposition was put to vote at the meeting of the men and was unable to solve it, although we have devoted much rat-iocination to the
matter. We have had many theories upon the subject, but, as yet, have
accepted.
The strike at Albert Weber's factory, which was caused about a month been unable to rat-ify them.
ago by an attempt on the part of Mr. Weber to reduce wages ten per cent.,
Rumor has it that a piano manufacturer in Philadelphia has laid off half
is approaching its termination, having probably lasted as long as Mr. Weber his workmen on account of dull business.
intended it should, for we do not suppose that Mr. Weber seriously thought
The junior partner of the firm of Dutton & Son, of Philadelphia, spends
of fighting the trade union alone, and the proper time having arrived to com-
mence work again, Mr. Weber has notified a committee of his workmen that his winter this year in Florida.
he is willing to rescind his order for a ten per cent, reduction, and pay them
Bellak's men were very busy bringing McCammon pianos into the store
at former rates.
in Philadelphia on Monday last; these instruments were in excellent order
The only thing now standing in the way of a resumption of work on the and are giving great satisfaction.
part of the men, is the employment of non-union men or "scabs" by Mr.
What is the matter at J. P. Hale's piano factory; don't the new set of
Weber, and the workmen have had a meeting at which it was decided by vote
not to resume work until the non-union men were discharged. This point men work as well as the old ones, or what other negro is there on the fence
will probably be conceded by Mr. Weber for it would be foolish after swallow- that prevents Mr. Hale's agents from having their orders filled promptly?
Mr. Hale seems to be feeding his agents in homoeopathic doses; yet we read
ing the camel to strain at the gnat.
in one of the so-called "music and trade papers " that " J. P. Hale is making
100,000 more pianos for the trade." It would seem to be necessary to
ADVICE TO A BRASS BAND.
rewrite this announcement and leave off a few of the ciphers.
BRASS band was formed at Groton, to be called the Fort Griswold
A testimonial concert to Mr. F. T. Lilliendahl, organist of the German
band, and Oscar W. Hewett, known as the Pawtucket historian of the
Evangelical Church of Hoboken, N. J., was given on Tuesday evening, Feb.
Providence Journal, addressed to it the following advice:
Gentlemen: You have now entered upon the most serious undertaking 8th. The principal soloists were Mr. F. T. Lilliendahl, Mr. Geo. W. Mor-
of your lives. It is a solemn thing to put the brazen serpent to your lips. gan, and Miss Hegetschweiler. The organ used was one of Messrs. Jardine
It is no idle act to blast a brass viper or to set a pair of cymbals to butting. & Son's celebrated make.
True, there is no harm in gnawing upon a trombone, even after one has his
Lowell (Mass.) Mail says of a Henry F. Miller grand, used in that
cornet, but we repeat that it is a solemn thing to startle the world with sud- city The
recently, that " it was equal to every exaction." We are a little doubt-
den "brass music." Therefore, brethren, we would enjoin care and pains- ful about
this. Does the Mail mean exaction in regard to the price charged
taking. Be ye not puffed up, as are wind instruments of winding brass. for a Miller
piano ; or what ? Please explain.
Temptations bestrew your path. There is always a snare set for the drum-
mer, and no drummer knows when he may become base. To the cymbal
An unworthy knave ! A piano manufacturer engages a newspaper tout
player we would say, "Strike, but hear." Yours is a higher calling than to do his dirty work, and the tout pretends to be enthusiastic in his master's
that of the punster. He plays upon words. You play upon symbols. To services; yet, at the same time, he is divulging to his master's competitors
him who plays upon the brass boa constrictor with a grass-hopper leg the fact that the secret of a strike in his master's factory is due to a reduc-
attachment, you are peculiarly subject to temptation. The temptation is to tion of expenses, made necessary by a notification that a mortgage on the
keep the piston rod ever in motion. It strengthens with years. It becomes factory must be paid on a certain day or it would be foreclosed.
grim habit with practice, so that men operate it by muscular action, merely,
after they are dead. An admonitory word to the young man who has chosen
Jardine & Son are busy with two large organs, one for Cleveland and the
the yellow clarinet. Yellow clarinets tend to melancholy—sometimes other for Manayunk, they are also getting up an "orchestral organ" for
suicide. Either he who plays the yellow clarinet, or his nearest neighbor, Koster & Bial's Concert Hall. Ever since the fine one that was there for a
must commit suicide, otherwise the clarinet is not a yellow one, or it is out year was removed the regular audience have expressed their regrets, so the
of order. Yellow clarinets are not compatible with long life. A man with proprietors have given the order to Jardine & Son to build them a much
an iron constitution may possibly live to 50 years on the flute, but a yellow finer and larger instrument. Mr. F. W. Jardine being now in Paris, has
clarinet is as dangerous as the deadly and anaconda-like accordeon. To him purchased some of the new orchestral stops, in which the' French excel, and
that handles the stupendous and sententious tuba—we mean the brass this coupled with the experience Mr. Jardine has gained from his first organ
monster that gapeth and grinneth like a hippopotamus in the river brakes— for Koster & Bial, will enable him to make the new one a great success. It
think what a wakeful capacity this instrument has! The bellowings of will also form a grand ornament, towering up to the ceiling with its groups
famished thunder are in its brazen bowels, and its expansive mouth uttereth of artistically arranged and decorated pipes and trumpets. It will take
earthquakes. Whisper in her lightly, my boy, and the whole world will be four months to build this superb instrument, and the opening will be cele-
obliged to listen to you! Fair fame and success to the Fort Griswold band! brated by a grand concert.
A
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
Ferbuary 20th, 1881.
THE MUSICAL CRITIC AND TRADE REVIEW.
A Useful Book for Organists!
Fischer's Practical Organist.
A collection of Preludes, Interludes, Postludes, and. Modulations,
adapted to the wants of young organists. Embracing
selections from the works of Koerner, Rmk, Ober-
hofer, Piel, Topefer, aud other great masters.
•Compiled by JOSEPH FISCHER, Organist at the Church of the
Most Holy Redeemer, New York.
P R I C E ! , $1.50.
The " Practical Orgmiet," by J. Fischer. Organist, &c, &c, is a
most delightful and useful book. There is not a piece in it which
is not good and pleasing, and fitted for the Divine Service. It
makes a charming little Vade Mecum for au organist. It is t > be
hoped that the worthy compiler of it will prepare a still larger
work of the same kind.
39
NEW HAVEN
ORGAN
HEMAN ALLEN, A. M ,
Director of the Cathedral Choir, Chicago.
Published by J. FtSCHER & BRO.. Music Publishers, 226 Fast
4th Street, NEW YORK,
MANUFACTURERS OF
WM. SCHAEFFER,
MANUFACTURER OF
Upright and Square Pianofortes,
524
•CUILD.
m
O
J
T h e " A C M E " O R G A N STAR PARLOR ORGAN CO.
GUILD.
These Pianos have no Superiors.
I
Nearly Fifteen Thousand in use.
Good agents wanted, and protection in territory guaran-
teed. Lowest prices consistent with greatest excellence.,
Circulars and special terms on application.
MANTJFAOTTJHERB OF
High Grade Parlor and Chapel Ograns.
NEW CATALOGUE JUST OUT, NEW STYLES, Jardine&Son,
ESTABLISHED IN 1861.
(ESTABLISHED 1836)
GUILD,CHURCH & C O . r
•GUILD.
ESTABLISHED 1 8 5 9 .
W A S H I N G T O N , N. J . , IT. S. A.
H. W. ALLEGER, Washington, New Jersey.
ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE FREE
Manufacturers, Boston, Mass.
NEW HAVEtt, COM.
4=3<3L S t r e e t , 3ST-
& 526
p
ORGAN BUILDERS,
GUILD-*
Lowest Prices Consistent with
Greatest Excellence.
SABIN li'F'G CO,, M0NTPEL1ER, TC,
MANUFACTURERS OF
319 & 320 East 39th St.
Organ & Piano Springs.
"THE STRATTON"
Russian Gut Strings.
All Goods guaranteed to be of the best quality,
and prices low as the lowest. Send for
samples and prices.
Unexcelled for Durability and Tone. Be-
waro of imitators who, having more
confidence in our bus ness ability than
their own, copy our Name and Manner
of Packing in the hope to benefit by
our reputation. Every string bears our
Trade Mark, and is fully warranted by us.
For Sale by all Retail Dealers. No
Strings sold by us at retail.
G. SCHIRMER,
Importer &Publisher of Music
Circulating Music Library.
SOLE AGENT I N THE TJNITKD STATES FOB
Edition Peters, Augener & Co., Breitkopf &
Haertel.
No. 3 5 UNION SQUARE,
•Went Side, near 17th Street,
New Ifork.
TO BE READY] 1 8 8 1 [JAHOARY, 1881.
SKARLV 1O.OOO
"MATCHLESS"
BURDETT
JOHN F. STRATTON & CO,
Organs have teen made and shipped to all parts of the World.
Importers and Dealers in all kinds of Musical Merchandise,
CHAPLAIN McC ABE'S OPINION.—" Therecan be no mistake
No. S 3 M a i d e n L a n e , N . V . made in purchasing aBurdett Organ, A poor organ—like poor
art—is good for nothing. A rich, full-toned organ, like the Bur-
Wholesale Agents of T h e I H c T a m m a n y O r g a n e t t e .
dett, ' is a thing of beauty and joy forever." The Celeste stop
gives a wierd effect to the music which is
well nigh enchanting.
I would say to all our people : Be care r ul to avoid purchasing
poor organs that you will tire of in a week. I might mention
some that make me shudder every time I sit down before them.
Manufacturer of GRAND, SQUABE AND U P R I G H T
C. C. McCABE. D. D.,
Asst. Cor, Sec'y of Board of Church Extension of M. E. Church.
PIANO-FORTES.
Indorsed by prominent Artists ; have
BUBY, QUEBEC, CANADA, April, 14,1880.
been used at Concerts with Grand success by ALFRED H.
DEAR SIRS—I ought long ago to have written to say that the
PEASE and many others. "Warerooms and Factory, 916 M a i n organ I bought from you (as Church Warden) for St. Paul's Church
in this place far surpasses our expectations iu every respect. Its
Street, Buffalo, IV. Y .
beautiful appearance, sweetness and strength of tone; its numer
ous combinations, from which the kind of music required can be
so easily obtained, render it a great acquisition. I know no organ
in the neighborhood that can begin to compete with it, though
there are several that cost much more than I paid you.
Faithfully yours.
THE BTJBDETT ORGAN CO.
ROBERT COWLE8.
Organs
for
the
Parlor,
School,
Lodge, Church, etc., are
No. 1129 CHESTNUT STREET,
made by the
BUBDETT ORGrAN CO., Limited, ERIE, FENN'A.
Philadelphia, Penn.
JOHN M SCHULER.
JAMES BELLAK'S
Piano & Organ Warerooms,
OF GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND.
The only Reliable Directory Published.
PRICE, 3s. 6d., POST-FREE.
CONTENTS:
Musical Societies; Cathderal Establishments;
List of Singers and of Instrumentalists; General
Professional List, (with full particulars), also
General Trade List, etc., etc.
Published by
W. REEVES,
Depot (or Music, 185 Fleet Street, London.
CORNISH & COMPANY,
MANTJFACTUREBS OF
Beed Organs,
WASHINGTON, NEW JERSEY.
NONE B U T B E S T MATERIAL* U S E D .
None but the most skillful artisans employed. Agents wanted.
Special rates on application.
SEND FOR CIBCTJLAK.
The MUNROE ORGAN REED CO.,
Established January \st, 1S69.
FIFTEEN MILLION OF OUR REEDS NOW IN USE.
Having recently occupied our new factory, we •£ ould respect-
fully state to our former patrons and to the trade generally, that
our extensive facilities and improved methods warrant us in say-
ing that we are prepared to supply the demands of the trade in
the most perfect manner, both as regards Quality and Price.
BEED BOARDS of any desired plan made to order from carefully
selected stock. We also manufacture the best and cheapest
OCTAVE COUPLER in the market, and we constantly keep on
hand lull lines of ORGAN MATERIALS, including Stop-Knobs,
K.ey-Biards. (both celluloid and ivory), Felw. etc., etc.
Office and Factory: 25 UNION STEEST, Worcester, Mais.
GRAND CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC
OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK.
21 East 14th Street. 21
This RENOWNED MUSIC SCHOOL offers the accumulated advan-
tages of years of successful operation. Instruction in all branches
of Vocal and Instrumental Music, Harmony and Composition,
etc., by the most eminent Masters and Professors of the land, at
MODERATE BATES. For farther particulars, address,
E . E B E R H A R D , Director.
O
IWILL NOT SHOW
P O I A L N I S
H . I FINGER MARKS.
For all articles with a varnished or oiled surfaca.
CLEANj easy of Application, very PURABLE. Is USED,
WOI.D and RECOMMENDED by Leaders of the
PIANO, ORGAN, and FURNITURE TRAPES.
"~""^""™
SOLD AT WHOLESALE ONLY BY
VINTON BROS., Sole Agents for the United States,
89 East 18tli Street, New York.
3T- ITEFFEUT,
"Manufacturer of First-class
Store Stools, Music Racks and Stands. Manu-
facturer of Flannel and dealer in Embroidered
and Rubber Piano Covers. Prices reasonable.
Warerooms, 390 Canal St., N. Y.
CRANE & CHAPUIS,
MANUFACTURERS OF
PIANO FELTS,
13 UNIVERSITY PLACE, N. Y.
Q-rand, Square and Upright
PIANOS!
HIGHEST
HONORS
Over all American and many European rivals
at the
EXPOSITION, PARIS, 1878.
EVERY
WOEK
PIANO Is a
OIF 1 -A-.RT.
Perfect In Design.
Perfect in Workmanship,
Elegant in Appearance.
CHAS. M. STIEFF,
No. 9 North Liberty Street,
BALTIMORE, MD.
PELTON, POMEROY & CROSS,
Sole Agents for Chiekering & Sons,' Hazelton Brothers',
Krnst Gabler's, Decker & Sons,' C. Kurtzmann's, and
Pelton, Pomeroy & Cross' Pianos ; and VVilcox & White's,
Taylor & Farley's, Aeolian Organ Co's, and Pelton, Pome-
roy & Cross' Organs,
ISO & 152 State St., CHICAGO,

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