Music Trade Review

Issue: 1896 Vol. 22 N. 15

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
REVI
VOL
XXII.
N o . 15.
Jj.oo PER YEAR-
Published Every Saturday at 3 East Fourteenth Street. New York, May 2,1896.
SIN GLE COPIES, 10 CENTS
Fire Attacks
Century Piano Co.'s Stock
Flechter Guilty.
CARL HOFFMAN S WAREROOMS AND CHICKERING
HALL—DAMAGE FROM $ 1 5 , 0 0 0 TO $2O,OOO.
INSURED.
GOES TO SATISFY A JUDGMENT.
ICTOR S. FLECHTER, the violin
dealer, who has been on trial in Part
1, of the Court of General Sessions, during
the last two weeks, accused of having had
in his possession the Stradivarius stolen
from the late Professor Jean Joseph Bott,
was found guilty of receiving stolen goods
at twenty-five minutes past two o'clock
yesterday morning, after the jury had been
out more than eleven hours. For ten and
a half hours they stood 11 to 1. The juror
was brought around finally by the reading
of the testimony of August Gemunder, the
violin maker.
Flechter wept bitterly when he heard the
verdict. Recorder Goff remanded him un-
til Monday, when sentence will be imposed.
**I TELL, you can turn over the shares
VY to the Sheriff, and let Henry F.
Miller & Co., of Boston, look out for them-
selves."
That was the way Judge Smith looked at
the application of the Northern Trust Co.
in an order to show cause whyC. A. Stickle
and M. A. Paulson should not be punished
for contempt for failing to turn over 108
shares of stock of the Century Piano Co. to
the Sheriff, on an execution issued upon a
judgment in the assignment of the
Farmers' and Merchants' State Bank.
H. D. Stocker claimed that the shares
were in the safe of the company, but Mr.
Stickles made affidavit that Mr. Paulson
had turned them over to him to be sent to
Boston to Miller & Co., as security for a
debt of $5,000; so that while they were
technically in his possession, they were
really in the possession of the Boston
parties. Judge Smith thought, however,
that as the Boston parties were not in the
case, they had no rights there, and so or-
dered the shares turned over. — Tribune,
Minneapolis, April 29th.
HICKERING Hall and Carl Hoffman's
piano
warerooms, Leavenworth,
Kans., were attacked by fire last Saturday
morning, and pianos, organs and other
musical instruments valued at $16,000 were
damaged by heat, smoke and steam. The
auditorium of Chickering Hall and the an-
nex were filled with the smell of smoke, and
the walls and ceiling discolored and
cracke'd. The stage accessories are ruined
by water and smoke.
The fire started in the packing and ship-
ping room in the basement and worked its
way to the elevator shaft, and in the room
between the base of the shaft and the alley
door reduced two pianos to ashes, and then
rushing up through the shaft destroyed the
pianos and other contents of the small
rooms that opened to it. The black track
of the fire extends from basement to
roof.
The general salesroom fronting on Dela-
ware street at the east side of the building,
escaped entirely, and in the office the only
damage done was caused by steam. It was
estimated last Monday that the damage to Wili McKinley be the Proper
the stock would not fall far short of $13,-
Patent fledicine?
000; damage to building, $2,500. The
insurance is ample and will cover all
R. L. CAVALLI is pretty much inter-
losses.
ested in political matters these days,
In an interview with Mr. Hoffman after and when we came across him yesterday he
the fire, he said: "Just as soon as I can was engaged in figuring out what the pres-
have the losses adjusted by the insurance ent Administration's free wool policy has
companies I will have a force of men at done for this country. The following are
work immediately to rebuild Chickering his conclusions:
Hall and to make it better and handsomer
Grover Cleveland's free wool has reduced
than ever."
our sheep flocks 9,000,000, and our wool
C
M
The Dyer & Hugnes P ano.
E would remind dealers who are look-
ing for a reliable and profitable in-
strument to handle, to keep in mind the
Dyer & Hughes piano, manufactured by J.
F. Hughes & Son, Foxcroft, Me. They are
turning out an honest instrument, attrac-
tive in design and carefully made, and their
enterprise is worthy of support. The deal-
ers handling the Dyer & Hughes piano find
it salable and an instrument that gives the
utmost satisfaction to purchasers.
W
clip 50,000,000 pounds from that of Janu-
ary 1, 1893. At 20 cents a pound the
farmers have $10,000,000 less to spend an-
nually than they had three years ago.
That amount of wool could be exchanged
for the product of 20,000 mechanics at $500
each yearly. That amount of money rep-
resents a trade of 1,000 merchants each
doing a yearly business of $10,000. Grover
Cleveland's "free wool" is transferring our
woolen manufacturing to England and our
wool raising to South America—thus drain-
ing us of our gold and playing into the
hands of the free silver party.
V
Autoharp Recitals.
| U R . W. B. WILSON states that the
I I popular Saturday afternoon Auto-
harp recitals at the Autoharp Studio, East
Twenty-third street, continue to draw large
audiences. Mr. Aldis J. Gery, Autoharp
soloist of Gilmore's Band, appeared in con-
cert at Rahway on Thursday evening last
with great success. The following is the
program for to-day's concert:
1. Overture, " Poet and Peasant"
.
.
Suppe
Symphony organ—ALDIS J. GERY.
2. Autoharp Duet, " Good Luck March,"
Pugh
MESSRS. ALDIS J. GERY and Louis MFLCHER.
3. Song, "Louisiana Lou,'"
.
.
Stewart
Miss ILMA PRATT.
Autohorp Accomp., ALDIS J. GERY.
4. Autoharp Solo, "Speak to Me," Fabio Campana
MASTER EDWARD GABLER.
5. Banjo and Mandolin Solos,
.
.
. •
FRED. B. CRITTENDEN.
6. Mezzo-soprano Solo, " Don't be Cross."
From " Der Obersteiger,'
.
Zeller.
7. Autoharp Duet, "Tyrolean National Song,"
Melcher
MESSRS. GERY and MELCHER.
8. Autoharp Solo, " Fantasie Carnival de
Venice,"
Wilson
ALDIS
J.
9. " H o n e y m o o n M a r c h , "
GERY.
.
.
.
.
Rosey
S y m p h o n y organ—ALDIS J. GERY.
STRICH & ZEIDLER report good business
for April. They are working full force and
time, and orders continue to come in most
satisfactorily. Mr. Robert A. Widenmann
is still in town, but takes a short "flyer"
from time to time.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW.
- ^ . E D W A R D LYMAN
Editor and Proprietor.
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. On quarterly or yearly contracts a special dis-
count it 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.
NEW YORK, MAY 2, 1896
••THE BUSINESS MAN'S PAPER."
liquidating the claims of the creditors of
the Cincinnati concern.
This question is certainly an interesting
one, particularly so to the parties involved,
and it seems to us that if the creditors are
satisfied with that disposition, why surely
the rest of the trade and the general public
ought to be.
Will the creditors be satisfied? That is
the question.
At present there seems to be consider-
able entanglement in the affairs at Cincin-
nati, but still the skein may unwind all
right.
#
#
Rumors, rumors, rumors! Have you
ever heard of so many? They seem to be
the stock in trade of the majority of men
you come across in the music trade these
days, and even our contemporaries seem to
be rather lavish in their paragraphs "it is
rumored," "it is said," "we have heard,"
"should so and so," "it is reported," and
other irresponsible and unnecessary sur-
mises regarding reputable houses.
The present condition of affairs is bad
enough without accentuating or augment-
ing it.
The Musical Courier in its current issue
laments "that some people are in the po-
sition to typographically present, to those
who see their papers, statements that are
garbled, untrustworthy and harmful, state-
ments concerning the happenings which it
would be to the best interests of all con-
cerned to guard," and yet in other parts of
the very same paper we find several breach-
es of these commendable remarks; but the
Courier is not expected to practice what it
preaches.
For instance, on the ^age opposite to
where this article appears will be found
several items—pure supposition—wherein
the credit of certain houses is questioned.
Is this correct journalism? Is it not
wrong to create a want of trust and faith in
business houses just now? Is it not the
time to present the news and nothing but
the news, instead of rumors and "industri-
ous hearsay ?"
We think so, and wish our esteemed con-
temporary—to quote its own words—would
not publish "statements that are garbled,
untrustworthy and harmful; statements
concerning the happenings which it would
be to the best interests of all concerned to
guard."
HPHE collapse of Smith & Nixon, Cincin-
1 nati, has been the prominent subject of
trade comment during the past ten days.
It has awakened wide-spread interest, not
only on account of the great amount in-
volved, and the prominept firms repre-
sented, but from the many intricate and
complex matters which seem to be arising
from the ruins of the historical house.
There is a settled belief in some quarters
—a belief entertained by many leading
members of the trade—that the formation
of the piano manufacturing concern, incor-
porated at such a time when the affairs of
Crawford, Ebersole & Smith were in such
a state as to necessitate the calling of a spe-
cial meeting in Cincinnati, means a side-
tracking almost, as it were, of a large por-
tion of the assets of the firm.
#
#
It is believed that the Chicago corpora-
Perhaps in no other branch of piano mak-
tion, owned and controlled as it is, princi-
pally by the stockholders of the old con- ing has there been a greater development
cern, should be reckoned in on the failure. recently than in the elaboration of case de-
That the assets of the manufacturing busi- signs. Compare the instruments to be
ness should go as far as possible toward found in the warerooms of the majority of
manufacturers to-day with those manufac-
tured say ten years ago, and then the full
force of the welcome improvement in case
structure becomes evident.
The funereal looking and ill proportioned
designs have been replaced by symmetri-
cal, graceful and elegant cases which demon-
strate the marked evolution in the tastes
of the manufacturers and primaril) 7 of the
people.
It is worthy of remark that the manufac-
turers who are casing their products in el-
aborate designs, and at the same time pay-
ing close attention to the perfection of the
quality of tone, are the men who are able to
report a marked demand for their wares.
Another proof of the growth of piano
elaboration is the increase in orders for
special instruments to suit some certain
style of furniture or to be specially designed
according to the fsncy of the artists who
design for these establishments.
All this demonstrates that piano and or-
gan cases will some time in the future be
so original and elegant as to be truly
"things of beauty and a joy forever."
#
#
A. & S. Nordheimer, the leading Cana-
dian music trade firm, have closed arrange-
ments with Geo. Steck & Co. whereby they
will handle the Steck piano as one of their
leaders in their Montreal establishment.
Mr. Albert Nordheimer was in town this
week and made a personal selection of dif-
ferent styles of instruments for the ware-
rooms, and as soon as extensive alterations,
now under way, are completed there will
be a formal opening early this month for
the purpose of introducing the famous
Steck to the musical public of Montreal.
In this connection the Nordheimer house
are already doing some remarkable adver-
tising in the daily papers of Montreal.
The advertisements are in line with the
policy of that famous house, and the many
strong tributes paid the Steck by celebrated
musicians and authorities are set forth con-
vincingly and artistically.
A. & S. Nordheimer are to be congratu-
lated on their admirable selection of such
a splendid instrument as the Steck as one
oFtheir leaders; and, on the other hand,
Geo. Steck & Co. have a right to feel well
pleased and honored in having such distin-
guished representatives of their pianos in
Canada as the firm of A. & S. Nordheimer.
#
#
A vote will be taken in the House of
Representatives to-day on the National
Bankruptcy Bill, an outline of which was
given in this paper some weeks ago. It is
expected that the bill will pass, although it
is meeting with marked opposition from

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