Music Trade Review

Issue: 1895 Vol. 21 N. 16

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
VOL XXI.
No. 16.
Published Every Saturday at 3 East Fourteenth Street. New York, November 9,1895.
In The West.
AN IMPORTANT DKAL BETWEEN THE CHICAGO
COTTAGE ORGAN CO. AND THE HOCKETT
ISROS.-PUNTK.NNKY CO. BUYS OUT MR.
HOCKET r ' s INTEREST THE PROTECTIVE
ASSOCIATION THE " L " LOOP ON WA-
BASH AVENUE BUSINESS SPASMOD-
IC
KIMHALL IN SIOUX CITY.
OTHER NEWS.
HE most important item of news in the
West this week is the deal just con-
summated between the Chicago Cottage
Organ Co. and the Hockett Bros.-Punten-
ney Co., of Cincinnati and Columbus,
whereby the former concern have pur-
chased the interest of I. N. Hockett, and
thus secure complete control of a wide ter-
ritory which has been fairly worked and
well prepared for that development which is
certain to occur under the direction of the
Chicago Cottage Organ Co. The Hockett
Bros.-Puntenney Co. have displayed remark-
able enterprise since they established their
business, and in conjunction with such a giant
corporation as the Chicago Cottage Organ
Co., it is certain that the new combination
will play a most important part in music
trade affairs of that section. One certain
result is that the Conover piano will assume
a leading position which will add to its
prestige throughout the West. But why
enter into details! Anyone acquainted
with the personalities who have made the
Chicago Cottage Organ Co. the great
power it is to-day can easily realize the ex-
tent and nature of the foregoing deal.
President H. D. Cable and his associates
are to be congratulated on this, their latest
move.
T
I understand that I. N. Hockett, whose
interest was purchased by the Chicago
Cottage Organ Co., will embark in the
music business in Southern California, and
will handle the C. C. O. C. line of goods.
The formation of a protective association
is still being discussed, and at a meeting
held last Friday in the Estey & Camp
warerooms, which was largely attended,
action was taken to the effect that a consti-
tution and by-laws be drafted and sub-
mitted to members for their suggestions.
In the meantime a meeting will be held
next Saturday night to take final action,
when it may be assumed the Music Trade
Protective Association will become a real-
ity.
There is much ado about the " L " loop
on Wabash avenue, and Lyon & Healy in
conjunction with C. R. Cummings, the
owner of their building, have secured a
temporary injunction from the courts, re-
straining the company from building the
railroad, on the grounds that their busi-
ness would be damaged by its construction
on that thoroughfare. Different opinions are
held on this " L " loop question; many
members of the trade believe that it will
be an advantage instead of a detriment to
business, as some anticipate. It will tend
to bring many people to the music trade
center who at present rarely visit that part
of the city. In my opinion the noise and
confusion of trains passing to and fro all
day long will make it utterly impossible to
sell or display pianos to advantage, owing
to the dust and noise, and the action taken
by Lyon & Healy is entirely justifiable. A
decision has not been rendered on this in-
junction up to the time of writing.
Business in this city is on the whole
quiet. Warerooms report business as spas-
modic and are earnestly hoping for a steady
condition of trade.
I clip the lo'llowing from the Sioux City
Tribune: The W. W. Kim ball Co. is now
located in its new quarters at 606 Fourth
street. It is unnecessary to say it is one
of the best locations in the city, and with
the elegant show window, the spacious and
tastily arranged warerooms, fine offices,
etc., it is certainly one of the finest, if not
the finest, piano warerooms in the West.
Sioux City is fortunate in having as pro-
gressive a firm as the Kim ball Co. repre-
sented in the city, and Mr. C. A. Elmen-
dorf, the local manager, is to be congratu-
lated on representing a house which en-
courages a rustler of his kind to vent his
ambition. It is unnecessary to wish the
Kimball Co. and Mr. Elmendorf success, as
that is a foregone conclusion.
Manager Price, of the Conover Piano
Co., is well pleased with the business of
his house, and states that it has far ex-
ceeded their expectations.
The local papers report that F. H. Fraz-
ell, of Benton Harbor, has lost property to
the value of $15,000 by fire, which occurred
in the Stevens Block.
The insurance
amounted to $13,000.
SIN
Ij.oo PER YEAR
COPIES, IO CENTS.
Sidney J. Wilson is now acting as travel-
ing representative of the Mason & Hamlin
house of tins city.
C. A. Hyde, of Norris & Hyde, Boston,
is expected in town this week.
Bent in Town and Full of Fight.
BRINGS SUIT FOR $ 1 0 , 0 0 0 AGAINST A. B. DE
FREESE FOR INFRINGEMENT OF PATENT.
POSSIBLY MORE TO FOLLOW.
EO. P. BENT, of "Crown" fame, came
in to see us Thursday. Mr. Bent is
as full of fight as ever, and proposes to
prosecute with unremitting vigor all those
who infringe upon his mandolin attach-
ments. He has just brought suit in the
United States Circuit Court for $10,000
damages and an injunction restraining
alleged infringement upon his patents
against A. B. DeFreese, receiver for the
Aiitomaton Piano Co. and Emil Klaber.
In this Mr. Bent alleges infringement on a
fourth claim of his patent, No. 533,661,
which was granted Feb. 6th, 1895. We
may further* state that Mr. Bent proposes
to proceed legally against any who manu-
facture and sell instruments which contain
mandolin attachments which are infringe-
ments upon his patents.
It may be well to state here the number
and dates at which times his patents have
been granted, and it may be well also for
some to obtain copies of the claims set forth
in order that they may not trespass upon
Mr. Bent's rights. They are Nos. 527,533,
Oct. 16th, 1894; 533,661, Feb. 6th, 1895;
535,190, March 5th, 1895, and another
patent just allowed.
G
ROBT. A. WIDENMANN, of Strich & Zeid-
ler, has returned from his visit to Atlanta
by way of the West.
J. L. MAHAN, well known as a dealer
both in Chicago and Clinton, la., has taken
the agency for the Behr Bros, pianos for
both places. Fourteen pianos was his first
order, and it is safe to say that with such
an excellent instrument he will be com-
pelled to place several new orders before
many moons.
IT is again rumored that Mr. Whitney
has sold his interest in the Whitney-Marvin
Music Co., of Detroit, Mich., to Mr. Mar-
vin.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC 1 >*DE RBVIRW
how nobly the Steinway stood the test.
Great is Paderewski, and great is the Stein-
Yes,
that is about the size of it.
This
delay in the delivery of the medals has all
along been puzzling, and we are pleased to
way grand.
learn something about the matter, even if
T
EDWARD L\MAN
HEY are rapidly making their way
Cottage Organ Co. have assumed an interest
in the Hockett Bros.-Puntenney Co., and
the present tariff
The information
which appears elsewhere that the Chicago
PUBLISHED
EVERY
SATURDAY
3 East 14th St., New York
SUBSCRIPTION (including: postage) United States and
Canada, $3.00 per year; Foreign Countries, $4.00.
ADVERTISEMENTS, $2.00 per inch, single column, per
insertion.
quarterly
. special
ertion. On q
t l or yearly
l contracts
t
i l dis-
di
i allowed
lled.
count t is
REMITTANCES, in other than currency fonc, should
bo made payable to Edward Lyman Bill.
HERE is apparently no let-up in the
increase of imports of musical instru-
ments, which has been so apparent since
law became operative.
thereby secured a large and well developed
The latest report on this subject, which ap-
territory in the leading cities of Ohio for
pears elsewhere in this paper, shows that
the instruments which they manufacture,
during September of this year $137,771
means that some fine day we will wake up
worth
and perhaps find a branch of the W. W.
ported, as compared with $70,822 worth
Entered at th* New York Post Office as Second Cla. > Matter. Kimball Co., or the concern engineered by
those brainy, energetic
THE BUSINESSMAN'S PAPER."
• • • • • • • • • • • •
T
facturers of the West.
Editor and Proprietor.
we have to go to Copenhagen for it.
Eastward, those progressive manu-
and
progressive
Cable Brothers, right here in our midst.
musical instruments were im-
imported September of last year.
The nine
months' total shows the formidable sum of
$888,157, against $384,532, which was the
value of the instruments imported during
••••••©••••
L
of
AST Tuesday's elections brought vic-
tory to the standard bearers of the
the same period of '94.
These figures afford
food for study to American manufacturers.
the
It means that an enormous sum of money
Our neighbor across the river—
has been spent in Europe for goods which in
New Jersey—and such rock-ribbed strong-
former years were purchased at home, and
holds of the Democratic party as Maryland
the most extraordinary thing in connection
and Kentucky, turned over a new leaf and
with the growth of imports is that the Gov-
surprised everyone by the size of their ma-
ernment seems unable to provide sufficient
Republican party in all sections of
Union.
jorities for the Republican candidates.
To
our minds this remarkable revolution is an
income from the duties to cover the ex-
penditures which they have made.
indication of the independence of the voters
to the dominancy of section and party.
The manufacturing
and laboring classes
feel that the present Administration has
not enforced a policy conducive to their in-
terests, and they have visited the sins of
the Administration on the party.
A CCORDING to a London paper, a
/~V
pronounced hostility to everything
English is rapidly spreading like an epi-
demic
throughout
Central
America—a
hostility which threatens to combat the
commercial supremacy of Great Britain in
the South and .Central American markets.
N
OTWITHSTANDING the temporary
interference
with
business
this
A
N exhibitor at the World's Fair from
Copenhagen, has written a letter to
This paper says: It behooves our exporters
to awaken
now or never to the actual
week, November has made a good start
the "Politiken,"-a prominent newspaper in
seriousness of the situation, and to be up
both in retail and wholesale lines, and the
that city, to the effect that he was awarded
and doing if they would combat successfully
trade looks forward to a marked increase in
a first prize in his class of exhibits, and
this powerful sentiment of "America for
business for this month as compared with
understood that an official
the Americans"—or the Monroe doctrine
October.
• • • • • • • • • • • •
T
HE statement of Government receipts
and expenditures issued last Saturday
named
John
Boyd Thacher was to issue medals and
applied
diplomas, and requests to be informed "if
growing.
this official really existed, or if he is a
of our trade in the Spanish-American mar-
myth."
kets that is threatened, but the entire vol-
day shows that the expenditures for the
He further says he is getting old, and
month of October will exceed receipts by
may not live to receive the medal, and
over six million dollars.
commercially—which
is
rapidly
It is no longer a small fraction
ume of it, which everybody concerned in
the foreign trade knows to be enormous.
Thus the good
would like to make some arrangement in
The writer of the foregoing lays all the
work goes on under the present Adminis-
his will to present the diploma, if it ever
blame for this condition of things at the
tration.
should
be issued,
to the
Danish
Riks
Museum.
door of the United States traders, who, in
his opinion, are strengthening their cam-
paign against British interests in an insid-
NYONE desirous of hearing a thor-
Our Copenhagen contemporary informs
ough test of a piano should have
his correspondent that as far as it is aware
ious manner.
been present at Paderewski's first concert
John Boyd Thacher is a living person, but
would be fatuous to continue blind to the
in Carnegie Hall last Monday night.
The
that the exhibitors ought not to expect a
true state of affairs, to underestimate the
Steinway grand piano was never before dis-
medal and diploma to be issued under a
magnitude of the menace launched against
played
Democratic Administration in the United
us.
seemed to make this instrument an orches-
States, as the present Government has no
cloud no bigger than a man's hand, may,
tra in the fullest sense of the word.
gold to spare for the making of medals, and
sooner than we wot of, expand and cover
almost thrilling, the majesty, individuality
that in a future age it will be a most inter-
the horizon.
and artistic finish of his rendition.
esting relic for the Riks Museum.
A
to such advantage.
Paderewski
It was
And
He ends up by saying: It
The shadow which is now like a small
Well, well.
We are afraid
our Brit-

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