Music Trade Review

Issue: 1893 Vol. 18 N. 10

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
t
VOL.
XVIII. No. 10.
published Every Saturday.
*
f/eu; Yor^ September 30, 1893.
that he was prompted by other than a desire to
see full justice meted out to all. In this em-
broglio THE
c HICAGO.
THE LATEST NEWS
CONCERNING
THE AWARDS,
CHICAGO,
September 27th, 1893.
EDITOR MUSIC TRADE REVIEW :
As many of your readers have doubtless learned
ere this, by telegraph, Judge Grosscup of the
United States Circuit Court dissolved the Chase
Bros. & Co. injunction on Monday, and John
Boyd Thatcher proceeded at once to give out the
list of awards, fearing other restraining orders.
The list I send you ignores quite a half dozen
piano firms and little less than a dozen other
exhibitions in Section I. It is rumored to-day
that some of these firms will appeal.
From the list no one not on the inside can
tell how the lucky ones will be graded, and few
venture a guess as to who will be in the first
class, but my guess of last week will probably
not be far away, save and except that it is confi-
dently asserted that the Kimball Company
pianos, to the surprise of many and disgust of
not a few, have been placed in the first grade.
Chase Bros. & Co. are given a place, but in
what grade no one seems to know.
As I predicted in my last, more than one
newspaper man suffered in the hearing and out-
come of the dissolution of the injunction. Of
course our good friend Marc came in for
a fair share of the "roasts " that were given.
Gen. St. Clair, World's Fair Commissioner,
of Counsel for the Fair, denounced him in
scathing terms, characterizing him as a well-
known blackmailer. If Marc has any spunk
in his make up he will challenge the
doughty West Virginian. Our friend Dr. L. B.
Folks, editor of Presto, has made affidavit that
Jurymen Hlavac and Schiedmayer had promised
him an award for any friend he might designate
in return for his defense of them against
Blumenberg's attacks, and that they with Car-
penter had said to Farwell, of the Dominion
Piano and Organ Company, that he need lose
no sleep over the possibility of an award. To
the surprise of the Doctor's friends the owner
of Presto discharged him, claiming that his
paper had been used by the Doctor to further
projects for his own gain. Few, if any, believe
MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
is
the
only music trade paper that has taken any active
part in the discussion that has not made enemies
and come out the worse for the battle. It has
given the news, expressed the opinion of its
correspondents freely, but dispassionately, and
yet has prejudiced no one case nor sought
to influence anything or anybody to the injury of
any firm. Now that the field of carnage can be
surveyed calmly, I can safely aver that I have
not intentunally misrepresented anything, and
certainly have not set down aught in malice. On
the contrary, I have made friends and support-
ers for THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW.
Trade is awfully dull, and lots of business
men from the houses down town have been
viewing the F"air, having little else to do. This
is likely to be the worst September known in
the trade for years.
It is likely that our friends, the Chase Bros.,
will pick their flints and try again, this time in
the shape of an appeal to the Commission, in
which event, it is said, they will have several
more firms as coadjutors. Yours, etc.,
HARRY MANNING.
AWARDS FOR MUSI-
CAL INSTRUMENTS,
W. W. Kimball Co., pianos and reed organs.
Conover Piano Company, pianos.
James Bvetts, Jr.
Adam Schaaf.
C. A. Gerold.
A. Reed & Sons, Bush & Gerts Company,
pianos.
George P. Bent, pianos and reed organs.
Chicago Cottage Organ Company, reed
organs.
Newman Brothers' Company, reed organs.
Story & Clark Organ Company, reed organs.
John W. Banks, guitars.
Joseph Bohmann, stringed instruments.
S. Brainard's Sons' Company, sheet music,
books, etc.
Lyon & Healy, Peloubet organ.
James Evetts, Jr., tuning attachments.
Lyon & Healy, ten awards on musical instru-
ments and accessories.
Ledden & Hermon Manufacturing Company,
music leaf turner.
Tonk Manufacturing Company, piano acces-
sories.
The following additional American firms re-
ceived medals :
NEW YORK.
Dolge, Alfred & Son, New York, pianoforte
materials.
Friedrich, John & Brother, New York, violins,
violas, etc.
Gemunder, August & Sons, New York, vio-
lins, etc.
54.00 PER YEAR.
SINGLE COPIES, 10 CENTS.
i Hartman Brothers & Reinhard, New York,
musical instruments.
f Boardman & Gray, Albany, N. Y., pianos.
E fcSchubert Piano Company, New York City,
pianos.

Kranich & Bach, New York, pianos.
Wessell.^Nickel & Gross, New York, pianos.
Bacon Francis, New York, pianos.
Hardman, Peck & Co., New York, pianos.
Behr Brothers & Co., New York, pianos.
Waterloo Organ Co., Waterloo, N. Y., pianos.
Estey Piano Company, New York, pianos.
Automatic Piano Company New York, pianos
and automatic attachment.
Strauch Brothers, New York, piano actions.
Wegman & Co., Auburn, N. Y., pianos.
C. F. Zimmerman Company, Dolgeville,
autoharps.
vSohmer & Co., New York, pianos.
Rogers, Joseph, Jr., Highview, N. Y., banjo
and drum heads.
Mannello, Angelo, New York, mandolins and
mandolas.
MISCELLANEOUS.
. Mason & Hamlin Organ and Piano Company,
Boston, Mass., pianos and organs.
Mason & Risch Vocalion Company, Worces-
ter, Mass., vocalion organs.
Pepper, J. W., Philadelphia, Pa;, band instru-
ments.
Pilcher, Henry, Sons, Louisville, Ky., pipe
organs.
Conn, C. G., Elkhart, Ind., band and orches-
tral instruments.
Fuller, Levi K., Brattleboro, Vt., tuning
forks.
Menealy Bell Company, chiming reels.
Vandusen & Tift Company, chiming bells
and pipe organ.
Chase Brothers Piano Company, Muskegon,
Mich.
Bush & Gerts Piano Company, Chicago, 111.
Everett Piano Company, Boston, Mass.
Starr, James M. & Co., Richmond, Ind.,
pianos.
Steinert, M., New Haven, Conn., loan exhibit
of pianos, representing the development of the
pianoforte.
Stewart, S. S., Philadelphia, Pa., banjos.
Stieff, Charles M., Baltimore, Md., pianos.
Hallet & Davis, piano manufacturers, Boston,
pianos.
Vose & Sons, Boston, pianos.
Shaw Piano Company, Erie, Pa., pianos.
Kroling, F. W. & Sons, San Francisco, Cal.,
banjos and banjorinas.
Krell, Albert, Cincinnati, Ohio, violins and
'cellos.
Carpenter, E. P. Company, Brattleboro,
reed organs.
Chase, A. B. Company, Norwalk, Ohio,
pianos.
Chickering & Sons, Boston, pianos.
(Continued on page j.)
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW.
Monday evening a meeting of the
Music Trade Salesmen's Association will
be held. A full attendance of the committee is
expected, and a plan of organization will then
be perfected.
<*|ZHE reports from Chicago are not calculated
5T» to enthuse Blumenberg ; on the contrary,
as he reads and notes the descent of the mercury
it must even slightly effect his nerves, or nerve.
f
3 EAST 14th STREET, NEW YORK.
SUBSCRIPTION (including postage) United States and
Canada, $4.00 per year, in advance; Foreign Countries,
$500.
ADVERTISEMENTS, $2.00 per inch, single column, per
insertion; unless inserted upon rates made by special
contract.
Entered at the New York Post Office as Second Class Matter.
AYS the Washington Evening News ; '' Mr.
Freeborn G. Smith, of Brooklyn, N. Y.,
manufacturer of the Bradbury piano, is in the city
looking after his different business interests,
and is stopping with Mr. W. P. Van Wickle, of
No. 1757 Q Street, Northwest.
GT» the highest award for musical instruments
should in no way be prejudicial to the masterly
and creditable exhibits made by all the other
firms who have . contributed in such a graceful
manner to make the World's Fair a success.
The people who have attended the Fair take off
their hats to Section I in its entirety.
a Commissioner stands up in open
Court and denounces the editor of a
musical paper '' as known all over the country as
a blackmailer," it must indeed be a pleasant
subject for the accused to dwell on. It is stated
that Marc is looking for a large sized knot hole
in which to ensconce himself. A member of
the trade states that it would be quite a proper
thing for him to do, to close the opening
after he has hidden himself.
SOHMER.
f
HE OFFICIAL REPORT OF THE JUDGES OF
AWARDS IN THE MUSICAL SECTION OF THE
WORLDS FAIR HAS NOT YET BEEN HANDED
IN.
THE INJUNCTION PLACED UPON THEM WAS
REMOVED LAST MONDAY.
ACCORDING TO ALL
is from the Bridgeport Standard of
recent date; '' The Keller Brothers &
Blight Company received an order to-day from
the Hotel Waldorf, in New York, for one of their
style H San Domingo mahogany pianos. The
company can feel highly complimented upon
their piano being chosen by this great metro-
politan hotel.'' This certainly is a great com-
pliment for the Keller Brothers & Blight
Company.
REPORTS SOHMER & CO. HAVE SECURED THE
FIRST PRIZE.
ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORTS HAVE
ALL CREDITED SOHMER & CO. WITH SECURING
THE FIRST POSITION.
air has been surcharged with vaporous
rumors concerning the awards at Chicago.
SHE prize of to-day is not worth as much by
1
considerable as it was a month ago.
famous band is to be congratu-
lated upon having secured such an able
and popular conductor as Mr. Victor Herbert.
injunction placed upon the judges of
awards in the musical section of the
World's Fair has been removed.
STONE god that has been lost for half a
ceutury has been found in Madison,
Conn. It is described as " a roughly hewn
stone image of a human being, dark brown
with age and weather stains and slightly
spotted with lichens. It is dumpish in figure,
like a Dorlon Point fat man, with a massive
body and neck, and weighs a ton. A Yankee
humorist propounds the question : '' Why does
this stone god resemble Blumenberg ? '' He
answers by saying, because it is a relic of the
past.
f
HE last trace of the recent fire was obliter-
ated in Jack Haynes' warerooms last week.
Mr. Haynes' headquarters have undergone
many changes and are now re-decorated in an
artistic manner. Writing of Jack Haynes—it
is always a pleasure to do that, because invari-
ably it means recording further progress of
"Hustling Jack." .He never sits down and
waits for trade to come, but he develops it.
This week he had a handsome line of orders
from different parts of the country, also a large
order for Newman Bros.' organs for shipment
to Australia. This order was obtained by means
of the handsome exhibit of Newman Bros.'
organs at the World's Fair, which attracted the
attention of Australian purchasers.
current issue of the Cosmopolitan Maga-
zine is devoted to an exhaustive study of
the World's Fair. Every department of activity
is treated by a specialist, Art receiving a large
share of notice. What surprises us is that
musical instruments, which represent so elo-
quently the progress we have made in musical
culture during the last century, should have
been so completely ignored. We know that Mr.
Brisbin Walker is deeply interested in music,
and we are consequently astonished that such
an important department of American industry
should have been overlooked.
Henry F. Miller Co. have reason to
be thankful that the reputation and stand-
ing of the Henry F. Miller pianofortes are not
now, nor have they ever been, dependent upon
awards, medals, or anything of the kind, from
fairs. They fully appreciate that in times past
medals and awards have been skillfully adver-
tised so as to create in some instances a very
favorable prejudice in favor of such pianofortes
as have taken advantage of such opportunities,
but they personally feel—with a large degree of
justification—that with the better class of people
to-day, too much stress placed upon medals and
awards will prejudice them against those pianos
that are advertised too much in that way. They
consider that the arrangements for displaying
pianofortes at the World's Fair have not been
artistic, and in many ways they are extremely
bad ; in some respects it is a reflection on the
ability of the trade to show to the world what
they, as an industry, can do artistically. How-
ever, for the opportunity given the Henry F.
Miller house to show some of the pianos which
represent their everyday production they have
reason to be extremely thankful. As they re-
cently wrote: "We have one of the largest
spaces, we feel that in many respects we have
one of the best locations at the Fair, and we
are having a constant call from intelligent music-
lovers and musicians who do not fail to express
their high appreciation of the character and
substantial display which we are making. We
are so much pleased with the expression of good
will and the compliments which come from com-
petitors as well as others, that we cannot help
feeling that any award which under present cir-
cumstances could have been given us would
have been of but little help to us.
The Henry F. Miller Co. are quite anxious
that the manufacturers, dealers, and the public
should be well informed of the fact that, while
they aie pleased for those who have striven
hard to receive awards, and who get them ;

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