Music Trade Review

Issue: 1895 Vol. 20 N. 16

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
76 PAGES AND THREE SUPPLEMENTS
VOL. XX.
No. r6.
Published Every Saturday at 3 East Fourteenth Street.
From A Traveler's
Note Book.
A DKSIRK
THE
TO
SPORT
SHE A BULL
FIGHT
GRATIFIED.
POSSESSES A STRANGE FASCINA-
TION— A STORY TOLD ON THE ROAD FROM
VERA
CRUZ
MULE
THE
TO
THE
ORIZABA
EFFECTS
A PECULIAR
OF
REFRESHMENTS AND
SARY OF MEXICO
TEQUILA.
COMMIS-
HOT TAMALKS
AND THE RESULT
POP WINS-
LOW AND TOBASCO ARE NOT
IN
IT
A
STORY
CALIFORNIA
OF
A
COLONEL.
HOW HE RODE TO THE CENTRE OF THE RIVER.
WAITING AT LAREDO—THE MAN WHO HAD
KILLED
OVER
TWO
THE
" GREASERS*'-—TRAVEL
"SUNSET
ROUTE."
HERE was a strong desire on
my part when I first went to
Mexico to be present at a
bull fight, and when I re-
turned from Vera Cruz I had
that desire gratified. Through
the courtesy of« Mr. Heuer, I
was present at one of the biggest fights
which has occurred in recent years in the
Republic. I had contracted a fever at
Vera Cruz owing to the tremendous climat-
ic changes which I had undergone during a
short time. My bones were aching, and I
was suffering untold agony, but still I
would not permit physical suffering to in-
terfere with my witnessing the bull fight,
which was the first and probably will be the
last that I shall ever see. It is a cruel sport
notwithstanding that it possesses that fas-
cination which always attracts when hu-
man life is in danger.
The afternoon was warm, and the bright
sun did not deter the thousands from filling
the amphitheatre. The black Spanish bulls
were full of fight as were the Matadors
from Madrid. I can't say that I had any
special desire to act as a substitute for
either Matadors the Toreadors or Picadors.
They seemed to have no waste time on
their hands as they were torturing and at
the same time evading the horns of the
angry bulls. The poor horses on which the
Picadors rode armed with long lances were
not very fortunate. They were ripped up
and gored without the slightest considera-
tion of the fact that they were blindfolded.
When the favorite Matador would deliver
the final stroke to the angry Taurus the
c
New York, April 20,1895.
rowd would simply grow wild with en-
thusiasm, which showed clearly the popu-
larity of the sport in Mexico. Hats, canes,
gloves and cigars would be tossed indis-
criminately into the ring. Matadors seem to
be great favorites with the people; quite as
much as famous actors are in our country.
They excite like enthusiasm to that created
over the winners in a game of foot ball.
* «
*
The refreshments and commissary of
Mexico; well, that reminds me, the late
Judge Gray, Minister to Mexico, said that
to get accustomed to that was one of the
most difficult tasks of his official life. To
a man from Kentucky this task is doubly
difficult. He cannot step into a palace of
art and pleasure and find any brand of
whisky with which long usage has made
him familiar. The drinks and the eatables
are unlike anything he ever saw before, and
some of them, he will declare, after an in-
troduction—unless said introduction be
performed with a good deal of tact—he
never wants to see again. In the East I
have seen what purported to be hot tamales
sold to the homeward bound theatre-goers,
but they were not even second cousins to
the tamale rampant upon its native heath.
The Eastern article is a mild concoction of
chicken and corn meal, slightly seasoned
with red pepper to give it a faint zest, but
the Mexican variety is compounded of
pork, meal, and ground pods of the Mexican
chili, and is robust in size and flavor. I
passed a tamale booth one night, and spied
a "tenderfoot" friend of mine standing
near it, working his jaws spasmodically,
while tears were chasing each other down
his cheeks.
"Hello," said I; "what's the matter?"
"Eating fire," said he. "Have a coal?"
as he held out a handful of tamales. "Now,
I'm used to these things at home, you
know," he went on; "but I think the cook
must have got his meal bag and pepperbox
mixed this time."
I offered to take him around and get him
a Mexican dish that would cool him off,
and he jumped at the offer, for, as he said,
his mouth was so hot that he was afraid to
draw his breath for fear he would fry his
lungs. We meandered around the plaza to
where the single word, "Euchiladas," was
displayed.
"That's the thing," said he, eagerly.
"If ever I wanted anything chilly it's
right now."
$ 3 .oo PER YEAR.
SINGLE COPIES, 10 CENTS.
We entered and gave our order, and in a
few minutes a smiling Mexican girl set
down before us a plate each of what looked
like two batter cakes, with boiled tomatoes
and grated cheese poured over them, and
surmounted by a beautifully poached egg.
I fell to it with a relish, and he, after a
suspicious look or two, cut off a huge bite
and proceeded to "chill" his mouth. Just
as he closed his eyes to enjoy the balmy
cooling he expected, the real nature of the
tinted sauce made itself known to him, and
with a whoop and a sputter he landed in
the center of the little room yelling for
w T ater. This was done quicker and with
more explosiveness and use of expletives
than was used by Pop Winslow on the his-
toric occasion at Buffalo, when he is said
to have absorbed about half a bottle of to-
basco sauce in lieu of catsup. The atten-
tive servant ran to him with a cup of
coffee, and you should have seen the tragic
gesture with which he repelled her ad-
vance.
•"Holy smoke!" he yelled. " I can blow
a hole through a two-inch plank now, and
you want to boil me! Water! Wasser!
Eau! What the devil do you call it, any-
how ?''
Thus appealed to, I said, "mescal," and
he repeated it: "Mescal, quick!" When
the obliging servant appeared again with
the clear, colorless fluid in a "pony," he
snatched it, saying: "You're mighty durn
saving of it," and tossed it off at a gulp.
Then he stood with both hands on his
stomach and looked at me with a stare that
seemed to say: "And is that Mexican
water?" Then he rushed out of the house
and straight to the fountain in the plaza
and buried his face in the brimming basin.
A few minutes afterward I came up to him
sitting on settees in the park, but he would
not look at me.
There are three principal drinks in Mex-
ico, and they are strictly national in their
character, though many Americans learn to
adopt them after a long stay. Mescal and
tequila are kindred spirits, and bear about
the same relation to pure whisky that a six-
foot buzz saw does to a grindstone, or a
streak of lightning to a parlor match. The
first impression produced by either of them
upon the novice who has just partaken is
that a torchlight procession has just
marched down his "swallow," and he can
almost hear the band play.
{Continued on page 7.)
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MURIC TRADE REVIEW.
EDWARD LYMAN BILL
Editor and Proprietor.
PUBLISHED
EVERY
SATURDAY
3 East 14th St., New York
SUBSCRIPTION (including postage) United States and
Canada, I3.00 per year; Foreign Countries, $4.00.
ADVERTISEMENTS, $2.00 per inch, single column, per
insertion. On quarterly or yearly contracts a special dis-
count is allowed.
REMITTANCES, in other than currency form, should
be made payable to Edward Lyman Bill.
Entered at the New York Post Office as Second- Class Matter,
",THE BUSINESS MAN'S PAPER."
A NOTABLE SERIES.
T
RADE in this city is not startlingly
brisk. There has, however, been a
steady improvement for the last two weeks,
which gives every evidence of continuing.
Manufacturers express themselves as quite
hopeful and encouraged at the business
outlook.
Meanwhile trade is not coming unso-
licited. There was never a time when it
was so necessary for business men to be ag-
gressive. Sitting down bewailing the
times is a poor policy to pursue. There
are plenty of examples in the trade, which
go to show that the firms which keep them-
selves and their products before the trade
find little time for complaining—they are
busy manufacturing and selling. It may
require unusual mental exertion and
physical labor to come out ahead just now,
but it can be done, and there is no reason
why it should not be done. Now is the
time for action.
• • • • • • • • • • • •
AN OPPORTUNITY FOR AMERICANS.
N Exposition of Industries and Fine
Arts will be opened in the City of
Mexico on the 2d of April, 1896, and will
remain open for a period of at least six
A
nonths. The general administration will
be under a corporate management controll-
ed by prominent Mexicans and foreigners.
The Mexican Government has obligated
itself to give awards consisting of diplomas
and medals. The awards will be made by
an international jury, and a full list of the
same published. Exhibits intended for
competition must be so stated, otherwise
they will be excluded from examination for
award.
All merchandise imported for the Expo-
sition will be exempt from duty except in
case of sale, bonds for security alone re-
quired. The material and machinery for
any buildings to be erected on the Exposi-
tion grounds, or the entire building im-
ported for erection there, will be admitted
free of duty. The concessionaires located
in the foreign department are exempt of all
Federal taxes with the exception of those
collected in the form of stamps.
This Exposition will afford a capital op-
portunity for American manufacturers of
musical instruments who desire to make
their goods known in Latin America.
We are prepared to give all necessary in-
formation to exhibitors regarding this Ex-
position. Also, we can, through our repre-
sentative in Mexico, see that each exhibi-
tor's instruments are given first-class
location in order that their wares may be
suitably displayed.
I
is the first
musical publication in America to speak to
our Sister Republics in their own musical
language. Aside from covering the United
States, this edition will reach every city
from Winnipeg to the countries which lie
south of the Equator.
Our purpose in publishing a portion of
this issue in Spanish is to draw the coun-
tries of Latin America into closer com-
munion with us. There is undeniably a
vast trade in musical instruments in the
Republics south of us, a trade which, to a
certain extent, has been ignored by Amer-
ican manufacturers. That trade has been
cultivated and fostered by Europe, particu-
larly France and Germany. There is no
reason why we should not come in for a
goodly portion of that Latin-American
trade. We can, if we will only pay atten-
tion to its development.
The illustrations which are published in
this number, of Mexican establishments,
give one a comprehensive idea of trade
quarters in Mexico.
The art work, the color work, the typo-
graphy of this volume are all worthy of the
closest inspection. This is truly the day of
art in advertising, and the work which we
present must furnish an indisputable argu-
ment that we are fully cognizant of that
fact and are amply prepared to give our
patrons not only the best up-to-date effects,
but something original as well. When you
read and admire some of the attractive ad-
vertising features of this paper, recollect
others too will read your business an-
nouncements if made in a similar manner.
The point is right here: When a paper
furnishes logical and convincing evidence
of its ability to exist, not only as a pur-
veyor of reliable news—of facts clearly
stated—of scientific advances—of all the es-
sentials in the conduct of a dignified jour-
nal, but a knowledge of the science of
modern advertising, for it is a science,
as well, it is worthy of patronage, is it
not?
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
N many respects this is perhaps the most
remarkable issue which has ever been
uttered of a musical publication. Can any
fair-minded individual, after
looking
through this volume from cover to cover,
say with sincerity, that there is not a place
—not a demand—not a reason—for a paper
designated in the vernacular as a special?
Every issue of THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
which we have characterized as a "special"
has fulfilled a certain specified purpose.
With this we complete a series which have
been the means of bringing the trade in
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW was the first
every section of America into closer ac- paper in this country to come out squarely
quaintance with each other. From a news- as a trade publication. W r e believe that it
paper standpoint we think that the series is not egotistical for us to say that we have
have not been lacking in enterprise. From fairly won "a place." Whatever position
a trade standpoint they have been product- this journal has in the music trade has not
ive of much good. In our opinion a good been gained by sacrificing one iota of cor-
paper—a paper of a high standard—reflects rect journalistic principles to the sensa-
not only credit upon its conductors, but tional, to the defamatory, or to the dam-
upon its constituency as well. A trade natory methods. We have moved steadily
paper is, in a large degree, a reflex of that ahead and say this: The marked improve-
trade of which it is an exponent; therefore ment which has been made in this paper
the high grade of publications which we during the past twelve months we propose
have issued in our special line surely digni- will be surpassed during the present year. .
fies and must act beneficially toward the We have in mind certain improvements
entire trade.
which will be announced in due time.

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