Music Trade Review

Issue: 1887 Vol. 10 N. 20

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
Music Trade Review.
The Only Music Trade Paper in America, and the Organ of the Music Trade of this Country,
1879.
VOL. X. No. 20.
$3.00 PER YEAR.
SINGLE COP1KS. 16 CENTS.
NEW YORK, MAY 20 TO JUNE 5, 1887.
Communications of interest to the music trade are so-
licited. All Western correspondence will receive prompt
attention by addressing Lock Box 492, Chicago, III.
PUBLISHED * TWICE • EACH + MONTH.
BILL & CARR,
CHICAGO CORRESPONDENCE.
EDITORS AND PBOPRIETOBB.
All CheckH, Drafts, Money Orders, Postal
FROM OUR SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT.
Notes and Mail matter should be
made to
Lock Box 492.
BILL & CARR,
May 15, 1887.
EPITOJUB k PBOPBIETOHS.
3 EAST Hth STREET, NEW YORK.
SUBSCRIPTION (including postage) United States and Canada,
$3.00 per year, in advance; Foreign Countries, $4.00.
ADTRRTIKEMKNTS, $2.'K) per inch, slnyle column, per insertion;
uul«8B inserted upon rates made bj special contract.
Entered at the New York Pott Office at Second Cltut Matter.
HAPPILY CELEBRATED.
A .TOYOXJ8 OCCASION AT THE RESIDENCE OF MB. B.
8HONINGER LAST EVENING—OVEK TWO HUNDRED
OF THE SHOP HANDS SURPRISE EX ALDERMAN
SHONTNGKK ON THE EVE OF HIS SAILING
FOB A TRIP IN THE OLD WORLD.
L
AST evening at nine o'clock strains of excellent
music were heard on Chapel street, near Olive,
and crowds of people repaired to the scene and
found the handsome residence of Mr. B. Shoninger
ablaze with light, and Landrigan's red-coated brass
band discoursing the music from a position on the
front lawn, while inside the yard also were gathered
about 200 of the men employed at the Shoninger
manufactory. After the band had played two selec
tlons very finely, superintendent Loorais of the manu-
factory came out and in behalf of the family invited
the shop hands and band inside to partake of a gen-
erous .supply of refreshments which had been provid-
ed for the joyous occasion. The affair was concocted
by the men in the employ of the Shoninger Piano and
Organ company as a surprise to ex-Alderman S. B.
Shoninger, eldest son of Mr. B. Shoninger and mem-
ber of the firm, who with his family sails in the Aller
today for an extended trip in Europe. After partak-
ing of the refreshments so abundantly provided and
after words of welcome from ex-Alderman Shon-
inger to whom the affair was a perfect surprise, more
music by the band followed and an illumination of
the garden and conservatories with red flre, after
whicli complimentary remarks were made by Mr.
Sawe, drum major of the Second regiment band, and
by Mr. Busse, foreman of the varnish department,
congratulatory to Mr. Shoninger and wishing him
and family bon voyage and a safe return. Ex Alder-
man Shoninger replied, expressing his sincere and
heartfelt thanks for the compliment given him, and
especially for its evidenceof thegood will and kindly
feelings existing between the firm and its employes,
a state of good feeling which it would ever be his
desire to cherish and promote. The remarks were
warmly applauded. Following, Mr. B. Shoninger was
loudly called for and in response said it afforded him
great and unmixed pleasure to see written upon the
faoes before him the evidences of good will and kind-
ly feeling. It was a joy to him that such relations
existed and it would ever be his aim as long as his
health and strength permitted to provide work for all
hands in season and out of season, prompt weekly
TRADERS' BUILDING, CHICAGO, |
payments as invariably hitherto, and to cultivate and
cement the bonds of friendship prevailing. Mr. Shon-
inger's remarks were warmly greeted and enthusically
responded to, supplemented by three rousing cheers
for the host and hostess. After more musicthe work-
men marched in procession, headed by the band to
the old Green and there dispersed, all much pleased
with the evening's performance. There has never
been a strike at the Shoninger manufactory where
over three hundred hands are employed, most of
whom, excepting those living out of town and the
young lady employes, were present last evening. A
large part of the employes have worked for the con-
cern for years, while not a few have worked there for
over twenty-five years. They are all old skilled work-
men and many were formerly among the best men
from noted New York piano factories, who find here
the wages are equal if not better, while the coat of
living is cheaper than in New York city. Also the
firm pays the best wages and seeks carefully to pro-
mote the well being and interests of their employes.
The happy occasion last evening is another pleasant
chapter in the history of the establishment and a
pleasing incident in these days of strikes and labor
troubles.—New Haven, Conn., Journal and Courier,
May 4lh.
[Where such feeling and good will exist as does be-
tween the workmen and employers of the B. Shon-
inger Organ and Piano Co., certainly only first class
work must be the result. The dealers who handle
these instruments show their good judgment and
business tact, and by handling these goods make
their trade profitable.]
KIND WORDS.
SPARTA, WIS., May 8, 1887.
EDITORS MUSIC TRADE REVIEW :
GENTLEMEN : Please send me your paper commenc-
ing May 1st, 87, for year. It Is very serviceable to me
in my business.
Very truly yours,
C. A. TELYBA.
f
Trade in the retail line is good. The wholesale is
more than good and the manufacturers, W. H. Bush
& Co., C. A. Smith, Story & Clark, Kimball & Co.,
and Newman Bro.'s are more than busy, with orders
way ahead.
Mr. Gildermeester has returned from a trip to Mil-
waukee, St. Paul and Minneapolis and has gone to
Cincinnati.
Anton H. Rintelman has taken the agency for the
Behning piano for the State of Illinois.
Mr. Mortimer Rae, salesman for Sohmer piano,
has gone over to the Chickering agency.
Conover Bros, are about establishing a music house
it Leaven worth, Kan.
Mr. Thomas Floyd Jones, manager of Haines Bros,
warerooms here, has returned from a trip to New
York.
Mr. Curtis Kimball, for several years cashier for
the W. W. Kimball Co., has given up his position and
gone on the road, to try his skill in the selling of in-
struments for the Kimball Co. He is a young ma 1 '
liked and respected by all that know him.
The Evening Journal reports that the Kimball Co.
are to build a piano factory to cost $100,000.
Mr. J. G. Loomis, the well known piano and organ
dealer of La Crosse, Wis., has moved into his new
store. It is fitted up in fine style.
W. M. Madden, National Music Co.,Chicago, gave
a chattel mortgage for $700. They publish cheap
sheet music.
W. J. Minderhout, of the firm of Minderhout &
Nichols, was in town last week and left a good order
with the Western Cottage Organ Co.
Estey & Camp are doing a fine retail business with
the famous Decker Bros, pianos. The Estey & Camp
warerooms are the finest fitted up of any in this city,
and Mr. Daniels, the gentlemanly salesman of the con-
cern, makes every customer feel happy that passes
through his hands.
The Shoninger Co. are having a remarkable suc-
cess with the retail trade in this city and vicinity.
Their fine upright pianos are in great demand and are
meeting with the approval of the trade and public,
and the increasing demand for them is an acknowl
edgement of their merits.
Mr. Wright, the popular manager of the Wheelock
Co. piano warerooms, reports the sale of these favor-
ite instruments have been very satisfactory. Mr.
Wheelock is expected here in a few days.
I. M. Eppstein, Le Mars, la., has given another
chattle mortage for $300.
The following dealers have been in :
Mr. H. H. Dennison, Elgin, 111.; Mr. Max Myers,
Omaha, Neb.; Mr. W. Sharp, Sedalia, Mo. ; Mr. J.
Summers, Joliet, 111.; Mr. C. B. Prescott, Decatur.
111.; Mr. J. Moxter, St Louis, Mo.; Mr. D. S. Brown,
Peoria, 111.; Mr. T. J. Peterson, New Holstein, Wis.;
Mr. S. D. Roberson 1 , Fort Wayne, Ind.; Mr. W. J.
Minderhout, Montgomery, Ala.
Yours,
OWEN.
306
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW.
THE H&LLEr & DAVIS CO. CONSTANTLY
GAINING NEW LAURELS.
many connoisseurs in the audience. Mr. Hyllested's
programme included a Bach prelude and fugue and a
bouree by the same great master. Chopin's Third
Ballade, nocturne, op. 48, the 'Fantasia,' op. 47, and
the 'Valse Brillante' in A flat; Liszt's 'La Ricordan-
za' and 'Polonaise'in E, and his own 'Variations
Serieuses.' The audience was most enthusiastic, and
was especially demonstrative at the conclusion of
Mr. Hyllested's phenomenally brilliant performance
of his own composition and the Liszt 'Polonaise.'"—
Chicago Evening Journal, Saturday April 9, 1887.
HEEE is probably no firm of piano manufactur-
ers in the country that is making more rapid
advancement than the Hallet & Davis Co. of
Boston. The dealers everywhere speak in the high-
est terms of the excellence of these instruments and
the readiness with which they are sold. Many of the
conservatories throughout the country use the Hal-
let & Davis grands exclusively, and the unsolicited
testimonials from some of our greatest artists are as
JOHN R. HENRICKS' NEW TEMPLE OF
strong as words can make them. We cannot give space
MUSIC.
to all of these testimonials, as it would require pub-
lishing an issue altogether too large to go through
ISING gracefully above its surroundings on
the mails. However, there are one or two recent let-
Wood street, "The Temple of Music"—No.
ters that have come to our notice that deserve recog-
4115—attests, within and without, to the taste
nition. The first, which we give below, is from Dr.
and
foresight
of Mr. John R. Henricks. This gentle-
E. Tourjee, Director of the New England Conserva
tory of Music, which is the largest in the country. It
is as follows:
T
R
NEW ENGLAND CONSERVATORY OF MUSTC.
FRANKLIN SQUARE,
THE
E. TOUBJEE, Director.
BOSTON, January 15, 1887.
HALLET & DAVIS CO. :
GENTLEMEN : Please send us fifty (50) more of your
upright pianos at your earliest convenience.
Having thoroughly tested your recent improve-
ments whereby the pressure is removed from the sound-
ing-board, the volume and purity of tone increased
and evenness in all the registers secured—let me
congratulate you upon the superior grade of your
instruments and add my testimony of its merits to
that of the many eminent artists who give it their
unqualified endorsement.
Yours truly,
E . TOTJRJBB,
Director.
Below we have a letter from the eminent voice
teacher, Big. Bioardo Banfl.
MANUFACTURERS OF
HIGHEST GRADE
PIANOS
-AJSTID
CLHVELAND, O., April y, 1887.
MR. B. S. BARRETT:
DEAR SIB : The Hallet & Davis grand and upright
pianos (new scale) have, on several occasions of late,
been brought to my notice, and especially at a recent
public concert where I was engaged as pianist and
PARLOR AND CHAPEL
used one of the HALLET & DAVIS LADIES' GRAND
PIANOS. I was so well pleased—I might say delight-
ed, with the instrument that I determined in my
mind to purchase that particular piano, which I did
a few days later, and am greatly pleased with my
choice.
The beauty of tone—pure, free, and sympathetic—
remarkable for sustaining (singing) quality, make
them eminently the desirable piano for voice culture and
accompaniment.
I must congratulate the Hallet & Davis Company,
and you, Mr. Barrett, as representative of, in many
Important respects, the finest piano in the market.
I am yours, dear sir,
Very respectfully,
R. BANPI.
Pupil of the Royal Conservatory, Milan, Italy.
Again we have the opinion of the Chicago Evening
Journal, at the successful debut of August Hyllested
before a Chicago audience.
"The Chicago debut of Mr. August Hylleste'd took
place on Thursday evening in the hall of Methodist
Church Block. There was a large and critical audi-
ence present. Mr. Hyllested's performance was such
as to entitle him to a position among the first of the
piano virtuosi who have visited this city. It is not
too much to say that his qualifications place him
upon a level with Von Bulow and Joseffy. His
power as a Beethoven player was illustrated in his
scholarly and intelligent reading of the massive "So-
nata Appassionata,' and in the adagio from the 'Sona-
ta Pathetique,' in which the lovely melody was de
veloped with a delightful singing quality of tone,
which is rarely achieved even by the most skillful of
pianists. His beauty of cantabile playing is a dis-
tinguished characteristic. A portion of this effect is
attributable to the beauty of tone in the Hallet &
Davis grand piano, which was the instrument furnish-
ed the artist. It is only just to accord a word of
praise to the superb qualities of this instrument,
whose beautiful, sympathetic tone quality and ready
response to the players's touch were obvious to the
Best of Workmanship and Quality of
Goods Guaranteed.
Correspondence Solicited.
ADDRESS,
A.+B.+CHASE+COMPANY,
19 Whittlesey Ave.,
NORWALK, OHIO.
admiration for its capital lighting, by day and night,
its depth (one hundred feet), and its height (fifteen
feet). The equally spacious floor above, reached by
a handsome stairway, is occupied by organs, and the
third floor is arranging with a special view for use as
music teachers' apartments, the intervening walls
being deadened to prevent all transmission of sound.
In this well appointed temple there stands a col-
lection of instruments fully in keeping with theirsur-
roundings, and that represents the best efforts of the
piano and organ builder.—Pittsburg, East End BuU
letin.
A SCHOOL OF FLOUNDERS.
T
HE piano trade went fishing Saturday, May 7th,
that Is, those composing the School of Flound-
ers did. The School of Flounders is an organi-
zation recently formed for the advancement of the
trade in the art of catching fish and other things in-
cidental thereto.
The School of Flounders is officered as follows :
Geo. W. Herbert, President; J. Burns Brown, Treas-
urer; Charles Parmlee, Secretary; A. Dumahult,
Steward; W. A. Kimberly, Bait-cutter. The object
of this organization is ostensibly to catch fish, and the
first raid on piscatorial waters was made on the date
above and at City Island. All were present, includ-
ing the officers above named and Mr. R. S. Howard
who, believing that the post of honor is the private
station, does not hold an office. Previous to the de-
parture an election was held with the above result.
The election passed off quietly and with little can-
vassing for offices save that of bait-cutter. Owing to
the earnest and indefatigable work of Mr. W. A. Kim-
berly the prize would undoubtedly have fallen to his
friend, Mr. A. Dumahuit, when at the last moment
that gentleman withdrew his name and in a neat
speech magnanimously turned his support over to his
friend Kimberly, and the latter to his surprise was
unanimously elected. Mr. Kimberly acknowledged
the compliment paid him with tears in his eyes, and
promised (?) to discharge the duties of his office to
the best of his ability.
The gang—we mean the "School"—left on the 7
o'clock A. M. train with a large quantity of fishing
tackle, sandwiches, Gold Seal, Blue Grass, Rye and
other products of the vegetable kingdom.
The day was a most inauspicious one for fishing,
being cold and wet, so much so that Mr. Dumahuit's
three carat diamond appeared larger and more brill-
iant in its ruby setting. The party arrived safely at
the fishing grounds and Steward Brown having done
his duty, and Bait-cutter Kimberly having hired a
boy to do his, the party proceeded to clean out Long
Island Sound of its superfluity of fish. The first fish
that was caught was a flounder and Mr. J. Burns
Brown was the lucky man. Congratulations follow-
ed and Mr. Brown opened the lunch basket; the next
fish fell to Mr. Dumahuit, whereupon Mr. D. invited
the club to take something; the next fish came to
the president, who generously "set 'em up." Mr.
Kimberly caught a big flounder and invited the boys
to drink, and so on, with ea)h fish caught came a
smile. About one hundred fish were caught with the
following results : when the party landed Mr. Parm-
lee, who had made the discovery that a flounder has
4 eyes, fell overboard when landing, or ratherstepped
overboard, for Mr. Parmlee explained afterward,
while he was drying his clothes, that he always got
out of a boat that way. Mr. Brown and Mr. Herbert
afterward, while on their way home, turned their
carriage over on its side. Mr. Brown explained this
by saying that as everybody rode in a carriage the
other way he wanted to be original and ride in it on
its side. He thinks the other way is the best now.
man has happily named his handsome place of busi-
ness, for it is a Temple excellently fitted for the pur-
pose for which It was erected, and for the advance-
ment of the Divine Art of Music. Each one of its
MORE ABOUT THE RICHEY PIANO COYER.
three spacious stories bears a burden of melody, em-
bodied in the best musical instruments—pianos and
LITTLETON, N. H., April 18, 1887.
organs—that the well known practical experience of
Mr. Henrieks could prompt him to assemble. His
MRS. SARAH E. RIOHEY :
ripe judgment, perfected through many years of
Chicago, 111.:
active participation in the business which he now
The
piano
covers
we have received from you are
conducts alone, enables him to place before the pub-
lic just such instruments as can be absolutely relied entirely satisfactory and they have only to be seen
to be appreciated.
upon in every respect. Of the "Temple of Music"it
Yours very respectfully,
self it need only be said that it is the business heart
C. A. GLOVER & Co.,
of the city, and that from ground floor to crest of
No. 29 Main St.,
roof it is a building specially adapted to the use to
Littleton, N. H.
which it is devoted. The main salesroom challenges

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