Music Trade Review

Issue: 1895 Vol. 20 N. 11

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
i6
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW.
RECENT LEGAL
DECISIONS.
cashier of a bank under an agreement
that it shall be invested by the bank in
bonds and stocks, the bank is liable for
the return of the money, no investment
having been made, though the agreement
for its investment by the bank was ultra
vires (L'Herbette vs. Pittsfield Nat. Bank,
Mass., 38 N. E. Rep., 368).
[PKEPAKELi FOR THE MITSIC! TKADE BEVIEW.J
PARTNERSHIP
DISSOLUTION
ATTACHMENT.
Where a writ of attachment was issued
against two defendants as partners, on
the motion of one of them to dissolve
the attachment, the Supreme Court of
Minnesota held (Rosenberg et al. vs.
Burnstein et al.) that it was no ground for
dissolving the same, that the property
levied on was his undivided property; that
he was not a partner with the other, and
never contracted and did not owe the debt,
but that evidence of these facts was ma-
terial to show that he was not responsible
for the fraudulent acts and intent of the
other defendant, which was made one of
the grounds of the attachment; that an
order dissolving the attachment would not
be reversed where the affidavits used on the
motion were conflicting, unless the pre-
ponderence of evidence was clearly opposed
to the decision of the court below, and that
where, on such a motion, the counter affi-
davits clearly and specifically stated a suf-
ficient badge of fraud, the same was not
overcome or contradicted by the general
statements in the moving affidavit denying
fraud.
Kl-X'OVKKY
Where money
OK DKI'DMT,
is deposited
with
the
STAflPS!
PRINCIPAL
AND
AdKN'T
SA1.K.
The Supreme Court of Georgia held, in
the case of Pitcher et al. vs. Lowe,
that where an agent, in behalf of his prin-
cipal, sold goods to another at a specified
price, the sale being conditioned upon the
principal's having goods in stock when the
order reached him (the goods, in case the
order was accepted, to be shipped when re-
quested by the buyer), and the principal,
upon receiving the order, which was signed
by the agent, sent a letter to the buyer ac-
knowledging its receipt, and, without stat-
ing that the goods w r ere not in stock, asking
for references as to the buyer's financial
standing, which the latter, in a letter recog-
nizing the validity of the order, gave, and
thereafter the principal, by his conduct, al-
lowed the buyer to believe that his financial
references were satisfactory, and that the
order was duly accepted, and to act upon
that belief, the buyer had the right to treat
the contract of sale as complete, to insist
upon its fulfillment, and to recover dam-
ages for a breach of the same, ilthough in
point of fact the goods in question were not
in stock at the time the order was received,
as above stated.
I OKI- K;N
CORPORATION- —-SKRVICK
CONTRACT.
The Supreme Court of Louisiana held,
in the recent case of Gravely vs. South-
ern Ice Machine Co., that any service
which would be sufficient as against a do-
mestic corporation may be authorized by the
statute of a state to commence an action
against a foreign or non-resident corpora-
tion; that it ma) T accordingly be made upon
the president of a foreign corporation during
the time he may be temporarily abiding
within the jurisdiction of the court when
the suit is brought; that a judgment to be
rendered in an action thus commenced
against a foreign corporation will be valid,
and can be enforced against any property
at any time found within the State, and
that a party having undertaken on behalf
of a foreign corporation to effect sale of an
ice machine and accompanying parapher-
nalia to persons domiciled in the State for
a designated and fixed commission on the
amount of the sale effected, payable when
the plant should be turned over to the pur-
chaser and settled for at a given date, was
entitled to payment of such commissions at
that rate, notwithstanding litigation arose
between the contending parties with refer-
ence to the vendor's fulfillment of its con-
tract, which operated a delay in settlement
between them.
FOR FIFTEEN CENTS
WORTH OF 'EM
.
"The Keynote is Home."
.
YOU CAN GET A COPY OF
•THE KEYNOTE-
WHICH CONTAINS; ASIDE FROM
A Magnificent Literary, Musical and Dramatic Department,
'.
Yearly
Subscription
A MUSICAL SUPPLEMENT
WORTH ONE DOLLAR.
$1.50 =
77R
All the News of Musicians, Special
Foreign Correspondence, and . •
fl LOT OP MIGHTY INTERESTING MUTTER.
BETTER SEND FOR A SAMPLE COPY, HADN'T YOU?
EDWARD LYMAN BILL, Publisher,
'•
3
• • : ' • • ' • •
EAST FOURTEENTH STREET,
"•
NEW VORK.
£':
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW.
Tuning a Piano.1
P
LUNK — plunk — kerchug — twang —
twang—bang!"
You have heard these sounds before,
though they look a little unfamiliar when
reproduced on paper. They represent the
performance of a piano-tuner from an out-
side and tympanic standpoint. They are
the tangible and disagreeable part of the
necessary business of putting in tune an
instrument which, alas! too many people
spend a deplorably large portion of their
lives in putting out of tune.
This business of tuning pianos, which
certainly looks rather mysterious as you
watch the manner in which the operator
pries up first one string and then another,
sounding meanwhile a confused jargon of
notes, until the puzzled listener does not
know an octave from a fifth, is not, how-
ever, as difficult and as mysterious as at
first it appears.
All that is required is an exact ear, and a
few simple tools, viz. : a tuning-fork
(usually a Cfork), a long, hammer-like key,
and a wedge, or mute. The accuracy of
the tuner's ear is partly a natural gift, part-
ly the result of long practice.
Even the most unpractised ear can readly
distinguish sound from noise.
Sound is
produced by regular vibrations, while noise
is a mixture of sounds thrown together
without reference to any law. High notes
have a large number of vibrations per sec-
ond, while low notes have a small number.
The highest A is calculated to have 3,480
vibrations per second, while the lowest A
has only twenty-sevenjmd*a half.
The majority of tuners have adopted a
method of tuning which includes but two
intervals -the octave and the fifth. The
ordinary square piano has two strings, and
most uprights have three strings to each
note, except in the lower octave.
The
pitch of one of^these strings is tuned in the
relation of octave or fifth to some previous
note.
The remaining strings are then
tuned in unison with the first string. As
the strings approach unison, a number of
strong and rapid beats or pulsations are
perceptible to the ear; as they come still
closer, the beats become slower, till finally
they are no longer to be heard. The unison
is perfect.
The ear in tuning is guided by progres-
sion from a confused sound to strong beats,
and then from smooth waves to one con-
tinuous sound. Unisons and octaves are
always tuned perfect; that is, the beats
must entirely disappear.
In the fifths,
when perfectly tuned, there will be neither
wave nor beat.
It takes generally about three years to
learn the business, and a good workman
will make from $18 to $35 a week. A few-
women have been employed as tuners with
rgeat success. — Musical Record.
"TV Highest Type."
* * * *
H. G.
(Successors to STARK & STRACK.)
PIANOS
MANUFACTURED BY
Bos. 171 and 173 South Coal Street,
FARNHAM and
wife, and
Mr.
L.
Blasius, of Blasius & Sons, Philadelphia,
have engaged passage on the new American
Line steamer St. Louis, now being com-
pleted at Cramp's shipyard, which will
make her initial trip early in May, from
New York to Southampton.
ADOI.PH MEVKR made a very interesting
and instructive address at the tenth annual
meeting of the shareholders of the Mutual
Loan and Building Association, of which
he is the president, held recently at Omaha.
THE death is announced of Harry Cole-
man, the well-known publisher and musical
instrument dealer, of Philadelphia.
Mr.
Coleman's death occurred at his home,
Philadelphia, Thursday of last week, and
was due to heart failure. He was in his
fifty-second year.
S. E. CLARK & Co., music trade dealers,
Detroit, Mich., have moved to their new
store, 187 Woodward avenue.
A VKRV handsome "Phonorium," style o,
No. 86, is on exhibition at the Estey & Saxe
warerooms, 5 E. Fourteenth street. It is in
tone effects a pipe organ, and is provided
with other accessories in the way of pedals
and stops, which render it as effective as
the smaller makes of these instruments.
CHICAGO*
THE
Sterling Company,
AI.HKRT WEUER left the early part of the
week for an extended business trip in the
interest of the Weber Piano Co. He will
journey as far as California, from thence to
the South, and home.
GEO. W. SF.AVKRNS, the well-known action
maker, Cambridgeport, Mass., who has suf-
fered for some time from a cataract on his
eye, had a successful operation performed
recently. He will be able to attend to busi-
ness again in a short time.
W. H. HOWARD will retire from the firm
of Howard, Farwell & Co., St. Paul, Minn.,
on the first of next month.
HARVEY
MANUFACTURERS OF
Pianos and Organs,
FACTORY:
DERBY, CONN.
Tt is admitted by all that no piano ever put upon the
market has met with such success as THE STERLING,
and thou ands will testify to their superiority of work-
manship and durability. Why ? Because they are made
just as perfect as a piano can be made.
THE STERLING ORGAN has always taken the lead, and
the improvements made this year puts it far ahead of
all others. J2^~Send for Catalogue.
Hallet £ Davis Pianos
WENDELL, of
the
Marshall
&
Wendell Piano Co., Albany, N. Y., is back
from his trip to Ohio. While Mr. Wendell
found trade not unusually brisk, yet he
managed to pick up quite a few substantial
orders.
JACK HAYNES' warerooms look "spic and
span" since the new flooring was laid down.
They now present a very attractive appear-
ance. Mr. Haynes finds trade picking up,
and is optimistic about the business outlook.
The Indicator w T ill occupy offices
May 1st in Steinway Hall, Chicago.
after
AN addition to the D. H. Baldwin Co.'s
factory at Cincinnati, is being built.
GRAND, SQUARE AND UPRIGHT.
Indorsed by Liszt, Gottschalk, Wehli. Bendrl, Straus, Soro, Abt,
Paulus, Titiens, lleilbron and Germany's Greatest Masters.
Established over Half a Century.
BOSTON, MASS.

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