Music Trade Review

Issue: 1895 Vol. 20 N. 10

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW.
Haines Bros.' Affairs.
people, occasionally have what they con-
sider brilliant ideas, but they do not always
stand the test; but in this inventive era the
good things are bound to come mingled
with
those that
are valueless.
worthy of a trial.
All are
. . .
So let us bid God-speed to all our invent-
ors, be they successful or unsuccessful.
The Music Trade Dinner,
T
HE dinner of the Music Trades' Asso-
ciation, to be held at the Hotel Wal-
dorf, March 28th, is destined to be a
brilliant success.
Applications for seats
are far in advance of expectations. At the
meeting of the dinner committee, held at
the office of the chairman, Mr. Nahum Stet-
son, last Thursday, the list of speakers and
invited guests were considered, but final
action was not taken. In our next issue we
expect to give their names.
We under-
stand invitations will be extended to the
members of the allied trades to take part in
this reunion.
The most important thing
the dinner committee has to deal with now
is to find room for all anxious to partici-
pate.
The New Scale Steck Pianos,
G
EORGE STECK & CO. continue to
receive the very highest compliments
from dealers in all sections of the country
anent their new scale instruments. Opin-
ions from practical dealers who are thor-
ough judges of a good piano are certainly
worthy of appreciation.
The following is
one of the many letters recently received:
LIMA, OHIO, March 2,
1895.
GEORGE STECK & Co.
Gentlemen—-The Steck Style "E" new
scale has been received, and we think the
tone perfect, it being rich, brilliant and
powerful. We have handled the Steck for
ten years in Ohio and five years in St.
Louis, Mo., and We have always considered
them perfect, but the new scale is an im-
provement and highly appreciated. We,
as a firm, extend to you our heartiest con-
gratulations to your unbounding success.
Yours very truly,
B. S. PORTER & SON.
David H. Schmidt Busy.
D
AVID H. SCHMIDT, piano hammer
coverer, 312-4 East Twenty-second
street, is busy; in fact, so busy that he can
hardly handle the orders on hand with
present facilities; hence he will move on
May 1st to more spacious quarters at 163d
street and Brook avenue, where he will
have nearly double his present manufactur-
ing space. Mr. Schmidt has a large num-
ber of the leading manufacturers on his
books, who appreciate the excellent work
he turns out.
Miss FRANCES CLEAVES, musical merchan-
dise, Stockton Springs, Me., has com-
menced the sale of sheet music.
N. W. DOLLENS, music trade dealer,
Indianapolis, Ind., has just removed to
new quarters at 8 Pennsylvania avenue.
I
T was hardly a surprise to learn that
Haines Bros.' notes for $33,000, which
became due last Monday, were not honored
and went to protest. It is well known that
no apparent effort had been made to meet
these notes.
It is now learned that Mr. N. J. Haines,
Sr., has given a chattel mortgage to his
wife for $40,000, which covers the stock,
supplies and fixtures in the factory, and
also executed a chattel mortgage on ma-
chinery to his son, William P. Haines, for
$5,000. It seems Mrs. N. J. Haines, Sr.,
has placed Herbert Haines in charge of the
factory as her representative.
It is regrettable to see this old house,
which has played a prominent part in
piano trade history, brought to its present
place. Some of Mr. Haines' best friends
have expressed opinions time and time
again that he would best serve his own
interests and the interests of the house by
retiring. He has chosen otherwise, how-
ever, with the result chronicled above.
World's Fair Medals.
A
CCORDING to the following Wash-
ington dispatch, exhibitors may have
the privilege at this late day of making
use of cuts of medals awarded them at the
World's Columbian
Exposition:
"Ex-
hibitors who secured awards at the World's
Fair have at last been placed in a position
where they will be enabled to reap some
practical advantage from the distinction.
Under the existing law, supplemented by
red-tape regulations in the departments,
newspapers have been debarred from secur-
ing electrotypes of medals to be used for
advertising purposes, and have been de-
barred from printing them. A measure to
correct this evil was drawn up and slipped
into the sundry civil bill just before it
passed the Senate. It directs the Treasury
Department to furnish to exhibitors and
to newspapers as many electrotypes of
medals as desired, the cost of course being
paid by the applicant. The amendment
will undoubtedly be accepted by the House
and become a law. Its effect will be to
allow every exhibitor who received a medal
to advertise that fact in the best manner
possible, which is, of course, by printing a
fac simile of medal and award. This will
be good news for the thousands of firms
awarded medals, who, thus far, have been
inclined to believe that the distinction was
not worth having."
L
AST Monday the United States Supreme
Court, through Justice Harlan, gave a
pretty severe "black eye" to the monopolies
controlling the Bell telephone and other
important electric patents. It is estimated
that not less than six hundred million dollars
of capital is effected by this decision.
It
terminates the three Edison patents for the
carbon transmitter owned by the American
Bell Telephone Co., by which it hoped to
extend its monopolies for fifteen years more.
A considerable number of important pat-
ents owned by the General Electric Co.
were disposed of, including Mr. Edison's
patent upon the incandescent lamp, regard-
ing which there has been so much litiga-
tion, and also his patent on the multiple
arc system of distribution and his patent
on the socket for incandescent lamps, which
was recently held to be valid by Judge
Coxe. Thus all of the patents owned by
the General Electric Co., which have been
thus far sustained by the courts, have been
wiped out by this decision.
* *
*
A piano is playing a prominent part in
the contested election case of Timothy J.
Campbell against Harry C. Miner, theatri-
cal manager and now Congressman-elect
from the Ninth District, in hearing for the
past week. It is asserted that Mr. Miner
promised to give the Argyle Club—a great
power in the Ninth District—a piano if he
were elected. It is not stated, however,
whether Mr. Miner would present a Stein-
way grand,or one of these $500 "Harmony"
pianos sold by Bloomingdale Bros, for 99
cents. Anyhow, Mr. Campbell is having
quite a difficulty in proving that Mr.
Miner lived up to his promise.
But if
Harry Miner is "unseated" he will have
reason to look with abhorrence on the
"household orchestra," particularly when
he has secured a cosy nest in Washington
and furnished it a la Empire.
*
"The new industrial substance to which
we have referred on several occasions,"
Another Bradbury Baby Grand. says Industries and Iron, "is now known
as'Viscose.' . . . We formerly described
G. SMITH has just ready for inspec- this product as a fire-proof celluloid. This
tion, a baby grand, which is bound description, so far as it goes, is correct; but
%
to command unusual attention, both for it expresses only a portion of the new ma-
This can be manufactured with
its size, construction, design and tone. It terial.
is surprisingly sonorous, withal sweet and almost any degree of resistance, varying
of musical quality.
Mr. Smith is fully from ivory, ebony, or horn, to almost that
aware of the growing demand for these of india rubber. The process of manufac-
instruments, and he proposes to turn out a ture is, as we understand, comparatively
baby grand that will not be too high in inexpensive with that employed for the
price—an instrument that will win the ordinary celluloid, while the raw stock, con-
sisting mainly of waste products, conduces
favor of dealers and the trade in general.
F
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW.
still further to economy of production.
The manufacture of 'Viscose' is proceed-
ing simultaneously with this country in
America, where, as we have recently men-
tioned, the authors of the discovery were
awarded the John Scott Medal and Pre-
mium of the Franklin Institute.''
*
Ernest Alfieri, editor of the Piano, Organ
and Music Trades -Journal, of London,
Eng., is blossoming out as a composer of
some really meritorious ballads. A short
time ago we had the pleasure of saying
a few words about some compositions of his,
and we are again in receipt of two of his
latest songs, entitled "Waiting for You"
and "Sleep, my Treasure." The words of
both are from the Pall Mall Gazette, and to
them Mr. Alfieri has wedded unusually
pretty melodies. The arrangements are
effective and display a thorough knowledge
of harmony. Both ballads are above the
average in merit and of sufficient originality
to commend them to good singers. We
wish our esteemed confrere much success
in the field of composition.
* *
To all interested in the currency ques-
tion—which is occupying such a large share
of attention just now—the series of pam-
phlets being issued by the Sound Currency
Committee of the Reform Club, 52 William
street, are simply invaluable. Among the
latest are "The Canadian Bank Note Cur-
rency," "The New York Bank Currency"
and "The Currency Famine of '93."
These publications give the reader an
amount of invaluable information on these
subjects that has heretofore been scattered
and largely inaccessible. These pamphlets
are of peculiar value.
* *
In order to make the tariff bill intelli-
gible, the defunct Congress devoted a por-
tion of its time last Monday to rectifying
over sixty mistakes, which were recently
discovered in the bill. They were brought
to its attention by Secretary Carlisle.
Truly, what a record of incapacity!
THE
MASON & HAMLIN CO., Boston, sold
recently a very handsome grand piano to
Emil Mollenhauer, director of the Boston
Festival Orchestra and of the Germania
Orchestra. This gentleman is one of the
leading musicians of Boston and an excellent
judge of a good piano.
R. O. BURGESS is making a Southern trip
for the Wegman Piano Co.. Auburn, N.
Y. The Wegman concern are pretty busy.
MRS.
J. A. KIESELHORST, wife
of
J. A.
Kieselhorst, the well known dealer of St.
Louis, died last Monday.
this is something to gloat over when the
times are considered.
ALDIS J. GERY, autoharp soloist, will play
with Gilmore's band at a grand concert
under the direction of Victor Herbert, at the
Columbia Theatre, Brooklyn, to-morrow
night.
THE important deal whereby Lyon, Pot-
ter & Co. become leaseholders of the hand-
some new building on Van Buren street,
between Wabash and Michigan avenues,
Chicago, is referred to at length in our
Western letter.
A SPECIAL meeting of the Piano Manu-
facturers' Association of New York and
Vicinity, was held at the Union Square
Hotel at 4.30 p. M. yesterday for the
purpose of taking action on the forthcoming
dinner, and admitting new members.
IT is rumored that Mr. John Haines is
considering an offer made him to enter into
the manufacture of pianos. It is said that
Mr. Haines can secure the old agents of the
Haines house, and thus start out with an
assured trade.
IN our Mexican letter last week a typo-
graphical mistake gave the population of
the City of Mexico as 3,000—it should have
been 300,000.
"COUNT" CAVALLI predicts a great boom
WE are pleased to learn that William M.
Blight, of Keller Bros. & Blight, is rapidly
recovering from his recent illness.
ALFRED DOLGE & SON have secured judg-
ment for $1,511 against Haines Bros, for
supplies furnished.
HARVEY WENDELL,
of
the
Marshall &
Wendell Piano Co., visited the West last
week.
VERNON BROS., agents for
the Chicago
Cottage Organ Co., at Salina, Kan., suffered
through a big fire in that city last Monday
G. P. BENJAMIN is now connected with
the Emerson Piano Co. 's New York branch
as outside salesman. He occupied a similar
position up to a recent date with J. & C.
Ficher.
AT the annual meeting of the Brambach
Piano Co., Dolgeville, N. Y., held recently,
Alois Brambach was re-elected president
and treasurer and J. F. Boyd secretary.
J. N. MERRILL, of the Merrill Piano Co.,
Boston, says that February has been a very
for blue felt now that Congress has ad-
busy month with his house. The trade
journed. Congress, he says, has had such a
transacted was unusually large, considering
corner on everything blue that its melan-
the quietness prevalent in trade circles.
choly effect was felt all over the country.
Now there will be another kind of blue felt
C. C. CURTIS and A. M. Wright, who
all over the country.
were in town for the purpose of attending
AT the dinner of the music trade
men of Boston, to take place the latter part
of this month, the price per plate has been
placed at $6. This is rather steep, but it
includes everything except champagne.
The use of this beverage is not compulsory.
Some of the members of the trade may wish
to economize, particularly after the dull
season.
IN our next issue we will give an illus-
tration and description of a very important
patent—or improvement on a recent patent
—granted this week to Geo. P. Bent, of
Chicago.
A RADIANT smile illuminated the coun-
tenance of Mr. John Christman, manufac-
turer of the Christman piano, 54 East
Thirteenth street, last Tuesday. On inquir-
ing the secret of his happiness, he said:
" I have just sold a splendid mahogany
Christman upright for spot cash." Indeed
the Manufacturers' Piano Co.'s meeting,
left for home the early part of the week.
Differential Freight Rates to Be
Abolished.
A
N important meeting of the Board of
Presidents of the Trunk Line Asso-
ciation was held last Thursday in the build-
ing of the New Jersey Central Railroad.
It was determined that the differential rates
on freight for the West that have hereto-
fore been in use by the Erie, Delaware,
Lackawanna and Western, New York and
Ontario, and the West Shore Railroads, be,
after April 1 next, abolished, and that a
uniform rate be charged by all trunk lines.
A telegram was read from Mr. Blanchard,
Commissioner of the Central Traffic Asso-
ciation of Chicago, promising to sustain the
present rates of freight from the West.
Established
1840 . . .
THE
THE ARTISTIC PIANO
(Sranb
J. & C FISCHER,
OF AHERICA
HIGHEST STANDARD OF
GENERAL EXCELLENCE
110 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK

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