Music Trade Review

Issue: 1893 Vol. 18 N. 5

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW.
1
pUB|JS|4ED
Hlfif R. H. R. MOORE, superintendent of the
•Cy^ A. B. Chase factory, at Norwalk, Ohio,
and his bride received a very graceful reception
from the A. C. Chase employees on arriving
home recently.
learned with regret of the loss sustained
by W. Dyer & Brother, St. Paul, through
the partial burning of their warerooms and
stock on the evening of August i6th. It now
seems that damage done cannot be covered by
less than $50,000. The musical goods destroyed
were chiefly the imported stock. Dyer &
Brother will carry on their business temporarily
at 44 East Third street until their new building
is put up and ready for occupation.
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.
. HUGO SOHMER is one of the Advis-
ory Board of World's Fair exhibitors
who are to hold a Prize Winners' Exposition in
New York next winter.
\R. J. N. MERRILL, of the Merrill Piano
Co., Boston, is by this time among his
London friends, and they are legion.
MUEHLFELD & CO. are about to bring
out a new style bijou upright for the
fall trade. They still continue to find business
satisfactory.
Wff R. GEORGE STECK has gone to Chicag O)
•w&% and the Jury of Awards, now fully organ-
ized, has entered upon its duties. Poor Marc,
left out in the cold, utterly sat upon, his super-
ior attributes altogether ignored, has been
haunting the Liberal Arts Division all the
week, striving to have a word in somewhere.
But alas ! as regards John Boyd Thacher and
the distribution of awards, he is a nonentity in
the abstract.
annual picnic of the exployees of Wes-
sell, Nickel & Gross was held at Lion
Park, Columbus avenue and 108th street, on
Saturday last, and in the absence of Mr. Wes-
sell and Mr. Nickel, Mr. Rudolf Gross acted as
master of ceremonies. He was assisted by Mr.
Neundorfer and Mr. Muhlenfels. The festivi-
ties were kept up until 12 o'clock, all the par-
ticipants were satisfied that they had had a
royal time, and the benefit society of the shop,
to which the profits of the festival went, re-
ceived a handsome sum.
SUBSTANTIAL proof that the business
of the Estey Piano Co. is founded upon a
sound financial system is evident in the fact
that their factory, at Southern Boulevard and
Lincoln avenue, notwithstanding the general
depression throughout the trade, has been
running right along all the summer. Estey
pianos are instruments of such established
worth, and the men composing the firm and
managing their production possess such exe-
cutive capacity and good judgement, that they
are enabled to hold their place in the race at all
times, during prosperous as well as depressed
seasons.
iVERY dollar saved in the making of a
Kimball piano is a dollar saved to the
purchaser. The four Kimball factories, cover-
ing eleven acres of floor space, are under one
management, and one operating expense. We
thus secure perfect construction at an absolute
minimum of cost."
The foregoing is an extract from an attract-
ive souvenir just issued by the W. W. Kim-
ball Co., Chicago. And yet "attractive" is
not a sufficiently satisfactory word to describe
it, for in many respects it is strikingly art-
istic. The souvenir is in the form of a little
book illustrated in an exceedingly tasteful
manner, with bijou half-tone portraits of Patti,
Sig. Tamagno, Lilli Lehmann, Max Alvary
Del Puente, Minnie Hawk, Sig. Galassi and
the other lights of the operatic and musi-
cal world. Then on the right hand pages
throughout may be found some interesting facts
regarding the Kimball piano, which are all
set off in a "catching " and profitable manner.
The Courier: "Mr. Steck has been
actively contending for many years that
the whole principle of piano construction in
America is false, and to emphasize this fact he
has always made uprights on fundamentally
different laws. His whole life as a manufact-
urer has been a living protest against the sys-
tem of piano construction embodied in 99 of
every 100 pianos on the Fair grounds. If he
should now decide that pianos made contrary to
his principle are worthy of an award, and if he
should sign such awards, he would destroy the
fabric he has erected and close the career of the
Steck piano." The foregoing will be read with
considerable amusement by a large number of
readers. The Steck piano is, in every structural
feature, American, and Mr. Steck has been
identified, in his time, as a practical manufact-
urer, with every principle of construction which
distinguishes the American from the European
instrument.
The writer of the extract given, who never
worked at any branch of piano making, writes
himself down a fool, despite his characteristic
foxiness. Mr. Steck cannot be injured in his
judicial capacity by any such attacks. The
influence of The Courier does not go outside the
musical and trade field, and Marc ought to
realize it by this time, after getting such a
snubbing from Director-General Davis and
John Boyd Thacher.
. WILLIAM STEINWAY signalized his
return to health and to his arduous cleri-
cal duties by attending the annual festival of
the employees of Steinway & Sons, at Silver
Spring, North Beach, on Saturday last. Mr.
Steinway appeared on the grounds late in the
day, when the picnickers were just entering in-
to the spirit of their outing, and the reception
he received was remarkable for its enthusiasm
and warmth.
He was accompanied by Mr. W. C. Foster and
his son-in-law, Mr. Louis Von Bermuth. The
head of Steinway & Sons made a characteristic
address of welcome to the workmen, their
families and friends, and the applause which
greeted him on its termination indicated the
feelings of his hearers. Few firms have done as
much for their employees as Steinway & Sons,
and it is pleasant to be able to note Mr. Stein-
way 's personal interest in those who serve the
house faithfully. That the Steinway employees
fully appreciate the way they are dealt with
was manifest in last Saturday's demonstration
alone. It was especially shown in the manner
in which they received Mr. Steinway. At
11 A.M. the workmen, their families and
friends, estimated to aggregate several thousand,
formed in line in the town of Steinway, under
the direction of Mr. George Steinway and Mr.
A. S. Menzel, and then marched to the Beach,
where they proceeded to enter on the day's
program. All present spent an enjoyable time,
and better still, a goodly sum was realized for
the benevolent fund of the Steinway Employees'
Mutual Aid Association.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW.
CHICAGO.
BUSINESS REPORTS CHEERFUL—THE JURY OF
AWARDS IN EVIDENCE—EXAMINATIONS OF
INSTRUMENTS BEGUN—GENERAL FACTS.
CHICAGO,
August 23d, 1893.
EDITOR MUSIC TRADE REVIEW :
My lugubrious plaint of last week, anent the
state of trade, I am glad to say, can with truth
and justice be given a more cheerful aspect this
week. Nearly every house reports prosperous
business and many extraordinary sales.
Chase Bros. & Co. have been exceptionally
busy, and that is saying a groat deal.
Mr. John W. Northrup, of the Emerson Piano
Company, says he sold thirteen high grade
pianos in the past six days at retail, and did a
very fair wholesale trade.
Mr. Charles H. MacDonald, of the "Popular
Pease Piano," is making things lively in this
and all the outlying territory, and says the
Pease is booming wherever introduced.
It is but fair to say that no house on Wabash
avenue has aught to complain of, as all seem
to be sharing in the rejuvenated trade.
Over on State Street, where Lyon & Healy
reign supreme in the trade, of course business
prospers. In fact their trade is a fair index of
the market at all times. If they complain of
dull times you may be sure it is indeed dull, and
when matters brighten you may be equally sure
they are full sharers therein.
The jury of awards on musical instruments
is now actively at work. Mr. George Steck has
arrived and is taking an active interest in the
examinations. In fact, after watching the jury
in the Hardman booth yesterday, and the Chick-
ering to-day, I may say that I think they are
not only making a very critical but an exceed-
ingly painstaking examination. As I saw them
at first Mr. Hlavac was playing for the delecta-
tion of the jury and an attentive outside audi-
ence. Among his associates on the jury who
seemed deeply interested in the intricate mech-
anism of the piano, I noticed particularly
Messrs. Schiedmeyer, Steck, Clark, Carpenter,
Ziegfeld and Pilchau. The jury began with
pianos and organs on Monday, and up to this
evening had looked upon and into and made
notes of the following in the order named:
Lawrence, Guild, Mason & Hamlin, Hardman,
Peck & Co., Mehlin, Jacob Bros., Krell, Schu-
bert, Starck & Strack, Adam Schaff, Bush &
Gerts, Schomacker, Bent, Chickering, Stieff,
BehrBros., Starr, Colby, Wegman, Newman and
Haake.
The instruments exhibited by the Dominion
Piano and Organ Company, of Bowmanville,
Ontario, have elicited no little interested atten-
tion, not only among piano men, but with all
visitors who have seen and examined the
pianos and organs shown by the company. In
addition to displaying first-class instruments,
the company has sent a wide awake man to re-
present it in the person of Mr. George Farwell,
who is thoroughly up to all the most acceptable
and worthy methods of putting the products of
his factory before the public in the most taking
way. He and his booth are popular on all
sides.
Robert Proddow and Mr. Simpson, of the
Estey Piano Company of New York, are here
for a few days.
Lyon, Potter & Co. report a very active de-
mand for second hand Steinway pianos, and,
strange to say, the squares are more sought
after than any other pattern.
Mr. Harry Raymore, of the Shaw Piano
Company, of Erie, Pa., is here to see the Fair
and look after his company's interests for a few
days.
William Knabe, Jr., of the great Baltimore
piano house of Wm. Knabe & Sons, is spending
a short while at the Exposition, and incident-
ally getting pointers at Lyon & Healy's, where
his pianos are sold by the cart and car load.
HARRY MANNING.
0RAUMUUUER PIANOS,
A FEW FACTS WORTH THINKING OVER—WHY
THE BRAUMULLER CO. HAVE BEEN SUCCESS-
FUL—WHAT THEIR PIANOS EMBODY—
A SIGNIFICANT RESUME OF STRIK-
ING POINTS.
opening of the handsome warerooms of
the Braumuller Co., corner of 18th street
and Fifth avenue, on Friday, August 18th, was
the first move to indicate the coming fall season
of the piano trade, and in itself it speaks volumes
for the prosperity of the firm. The Braumuller
Co. have secured a first-class position, and with
such pianos as they manufacture—instruments
of the highest musical excellence, replete with
new ideas of tried worth, and represented by the
principal houses throughout the country—they
cannot fail to build up a large and lucrative city
retail trade.
Regarding the success of the company, here
are some facts:
The Braumuller Co., rewarded by their pro-
gressive and original business methods, and the
intrinsic character of their instruments, found
it essential to retain the services of their able
traveling representative, Mr. Wigand, in the fac-
tory since March.
Why?
Because instead of sending Mr. Wigand seek-
ing orders, orders come crowding in, and it was
found that his valuable offices could be more
effectively employed in the factory for some
time.
This remarkable condition of things was not
the result of a temporary breeze of prosperity.
It has lasted throughout the summer up to
the present, and put them in magnificent trim
for the coming season.
In this era of competition in piano manufacture
the Braumuller Co. have truly effected a won-
derful development.
Beginning a few years ago with a small out-
put, by steady application to business, by
intelligent and progressive commercial judgment
as to ways and means, and by a dominating aim
to produce pianos of high character and indi-
viduality, the Braumuller Co. have written down
an enviable record in the annals of the music
trades of America.
A few words regarding Braumuller pianos :
They almost sell themselves.
Exteriorly
they represent an artistic aim, and their finish,
down to the smallest details, is first-class.
They are built upon the most correct scientific
principles, on scales drawn by a recognized ex-
pert. Consequently the tone is full of character
and individuality, the diapason is even through-
out and devoid of breaks, and from the lowest
point of the bass register up to the extreme
treble they yield a delightful series of tones.
The Braumuller action also fulfills every de-
mand. Adjusted and regulated by workmen of
the first order under expert superintendence,
every Braumuller piano is, in this respect, a
model of excellence and perfection.
Other important features in these instruments
are to be found in the valuable patents they
embody. They consist of a Pianissimo Centre
Pedal, a Dowel System for giving the strings a
bearing on the wrest plank, a Patent Key Bot-
tom Support, a Music Desk, and, in particular,
the Braumuller Harmonic Scale.
Each invention is of high practical value, and
their usefulness is testified to by their popular-
ity among a large body of the best dealers.
The Braumuller representation—beginning
with Lyon & Healy, Chicago, who have found
Braumuller pianos to be excellent sellers—
includes the Jesse French Piano and Organ Co.,
whose branches cover St. Louis, Mo. ; Nash-
ville, Tenn. ; Memphis, Tenn. ; Birmingham,
Ala., and various other leading centres ; Eniil
Wulschner & Son, of Indianapolis, Ind., who
have important branches in Louisville, Ky. ;
Terra Haute, Ind. ; Munice, Ind., and Rich-
mond, Ind. ; and the S. D. Lauter Company, of
Newark and Paterson, N. J., also sell the Brau-
muller.
Meanwhile these are only a few out of hun-
dreds. In all cases the pianos manufactured
by the Braumuller Co. are pushed by dealers
with an earnestness and devotion which spring
from sheer cognizance of their many fine quali-
ties.
At present, after working along steadily
through the summer, the Braumuller factory
has not been equal to the demands. But they
have taken in additional working room, and are
piling up a large stock to meet the additional
business which they will have with the coming
season.
The warerooms are now under the temporary
management of Mr. Wigand, and they contain
examples of piano manufacture of which any
house in the trade might feel proud. The
Braumuller style F, in walnut, with its hand-
some case, tone deflector, music desk, pianis-
simo pedal, and other features, which the writer
recently examined, is especially worthy of
commendation.
Everything done by the Braumuller Co. is
well done, and in everything they have been
successful.
Boardmar; 9 Qray f\\\ f\\q\)l
was a rumor that the firm of Board-
man & Gra} 7 had decided to close the busi-
ness up because of depression in trade and a
general lack of funds. Mr. James Gray, who is
in direct charge of the business, was seen by an
Argus reporter, and said : "The little depres-
sion that exists is only what might have been
expected in the World's Fair year. The talk
about our closing down is premature; still I
think we will cut the force a little. We will
not, however, stop entirely. To tell you the
truth, the piano-making business is always dull
at this time of the year. This year has been a
little worse than others in that respect, how-
ever. I am hopeful and I do not believe that
the shut-down will be at all a permanent one.
The great trouble, to my mind, is not that there
is not plenty of money, but that people are
holding their money back in the hope that
ultimately they will get higher rates of in-
terest. ''—Albany Argus.
CHANCELLOR MCGILL has appointed Chaun-
cey Parker, of Newark, N. J., permanent re-
ceiver for the Huner Piano Co., of Orange, in
place of Chas. B. Phelps, temporary receiver.

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