Music Trade Review

Issue: 1896 Vol. 22 N. 22

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW.
there is a scarcity of trade news, a news-
paper man can immediately follow up a
Weber rumor and he can get a column of
matter, whether readable or even truthful—
well, as Kipling says, that is another story.
Henry P. Hiller Product—"Colonial" Style 76.
JOHN WERNER, piano maker, sixty years
old, living at 1432 Second avenue, at-
tempted suicide by shooting himself last
Monday night. Werner has been out of
work for about two months, and became
despondent.
J. C. HEADINGTON has closed a contract
with D. H. Baldwin & Co., the well-known
piano manufacturers, of Cincinnati, ().,
whereby he will represent them in Cham-
paign, 111., and the adjoining territory. A
branch of the concern will be established
there. Mr. Headington is well and favor-
ably known in all parts of the territory
which he will control.
C. C. BEEDLE, of Keene, N. H., has es-
tablished a branch music store at Berlin,
which will be under the management of E.
A. Steady, of that town.
THE Braumuller Piano Co., of New York,
are kept busy filling orders. It speaks well
for the Braumuller instruments that a
steady demand is made for same, notwith-
standing dull times.
T
HE Henry F. Miller & Sons Piano Co. have been noted for their artistic and elegant
effects in case architecture. None has been more admired than their style 76 Colo-
nial, a cut of which appears herewith. It is charmingly conceived, well proportioned in
all its parts and exquisitely finished. Add to its exterior beauty a resonant and brilliant
tone quality, which delights and convinces the most critical, and the popularity of this
style with musicians and dealers is readily understood.
Falsely Assuming an Honorable
Name.
THE value of exports of musical instru-
ments from the port of New York for the
week ending June 10th, amounted in value
to $16,122. Of this amount Great Britain
purchased goods to the value of $4,475;
Germany comes next with $4,191, and
British Possessions in Africa purchased
sixty-nine organs, valued at $3,634.
MAN representing himself to be a
son of J. C. Fischer, the New York
piano manufacturer, is in the city solicit-
ing orders for piano tuning. J. A. J.
Friedrich knows Mr. Fischer's sons, and
says the stranger is not one of them.—
Press, Grand Rapids, Mich.
WASHINGTON TUCK
LEVEI.Y,
a blind
music teacher and piano tuner, of Freder-
ick, Md., committed suicide by hanging,
June 13, at 2444 Oak street, Baltimore.
Interesting to Inventors.
Miss MAY A DELI A PEASK, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Jehu D. Pease, was married
to Edvv. Marshall Van Kirk on June 13.
The ceremony took place at the First Bap-
tist Church, Mt. Vernon.
THE "Gramer, ' the new second piano
made by the Emerson Piano Co., Boston,
is being displayed in the local warerooms.
IT is said that Chase & Smith, of Syra-
cuse, N. Y., are contemplating organizing
as a stock company. The Smith & Barnes
Piano Co., Chicago, and Col. Chase, father
of Henry M. Chase, will be interested.
S. M. BARNES, of the New York house of
Knabe & Co., returned on Saturday last
from an extended road trip of four months.
CHARLES GKEENOUGH, formerly employed
by the Prescott Piano Co., has engaged in
the piano business in Connecticut,.
A
CUT THIS OUT FOR CONVENIENCE.
TELEPHONE No. 1745—48th St.
THE;
Review
EDWARD LYMAN BILL
NVENTORS and all having business
with the Patent Office at Washington
will be pleased to learn that among the
bills passed in the closing days of the re-
cently adjourned Fifty-fourth Congress,
and which is now a law, was one lowering
the prices for copies of patents from an
exorbitant to a merely nominal sum.
Hereafter, under the new law passed by
Congress and signed by President Cleve-
land, single copies of ordinary patents can
be secured at 5 cents each; copies of full
classes at 2 cents each, and if the entire
list is desired they can be obtained at 1
cent each. An inventor who desires to
know just what has been done in any par-
ticular field can now secure copies of all
patents embraced in it at the rate of 2
cents each—instead of from 10 to 50 cents
each, as heietofore—and can work much
more intelligently by reason of his com-
plete knowledge of the "state of the art."
The new law makes a reduction, there-
fore, of something like 500 per cent.
I
Brand's Opinion of the " Steck
T
HE following letter, which was received
this week by Geo. Steck & Co., is in
line with other strong tributes paid the
products of the house by prominent musi-
cians in all parts of the country. Mr.
Brand is one of the leading conductors in
the West, occupying a place similar to
Thomas in Chicago, or Damrosch or Seidl
in New York. His opinion of the Steck
is, therefore, of value, and his reference to
its staying in tune qualities are especially
significant:
CINCINNATI, O., June 15, 1896.
GEO. STECK & Co.,
New York, N. Y.
GKNTI.KMKN:—I can with pleasure testify to the
merits of the Steck piano. We have used one of your
grands for two years at the Cincinnati popular con-
certs and I know of no other piano that will remain
in such perfect tune for such a long period as the
Steck.
Such a point coupled with the beautiful Steck
tone makes it a very desirable instrument-
Wishing you continued success, I remain,
Yours Truly,
MICHAEL BRAND.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW.
From a Traveler's Note Book.
POLITICAL FLOTSAM AND JETSAM — TRADE IN BOSTON THE MEN WHO ARE DOING THE BUSI-
NESS TO-DAY — THE POPULARITY OK THE SEAVERNS ACTION — S. TOWER IN A REMINISCENT
MOOD — DOWN AT THE CHICK.ERING FACTORY—JAMES W. VOSE HAS ARTISTIC TALENTS.
HENRY F. MILLER'S WHOLESALE TRADE A CHAT WITH P. H. POWERS AT THE
HALLET & DAVIS WAREROOMS — THE BOURNE PIANO — A SILVER STORY STEIN-
ERT's TEMPORARY QUARTERS FRED. J. BRAND'S GOOD WORK—SCANLAN
ON WASHINGTON STREET
GUILD
PIANO
THE NORRIS * HYDE ATTACHMENT
THE
FRANK HALE AND THE MERRILL PIANO.
HE other day, while sitting in a
parlor car on my way back
from Boston, I had the pleas-
ure of chatting with one of
the best known politicians in
New England. He firmly
believes that the Republican party will
nominate McKinley at St. Louis on a gold
platform, notwithstanding this he believes
that Mark Hanna will do all in his power
to prevent the word "gold" being used
He predicts that an unequivocal gold
standard and the banner of protection wav-
ing over all will mean the speedy return of
good times in this country. In fact, he
claims that from the very hour that the
matter is definitely settled in St. Louis
there will be an increased demand for
American securities abroad, and conse-
quently a better tone in our home markets,
which will have a reflex that will be bene-
ficial upon all of our manufacturing in-
terests. Well, the people of this country
can stand that return tide of prosperity for
a few years. They have been floating on
the ebb since 1893, and will witness with
leasure the incoming flood. No doubt the
incoming tide of prosperity will be greatly
accelerated if we have in the next Con-
gress men who are competent to deal with
the important events of the times. When
the new leaders shall have received their
credentials from the people, they should
not sit motionless in the shadow of the
colossal memories of American statesmen
dead and gone. They should realize that
America in the past has developed men who
were competent to deal with the weighty
questions of the hour.
The great men of the past have stepped
from life's stage, but their gift to the
people is in statutes and constitutional
amendments.
Never in her history did America need
more capable men in the control of her
governmental affairs than at the present
time. It is the time now; for leaders—that
is, leaders in the truest sense—men who
can compare favorably in mental stature
with the giant intellects of the statesmen
in the days agone.
There is a chance to-day for the develop-
ment of a leadership that shall win the con-
fidence of the people, because this country
is stirred to its depth, and as an eminent
politician remarks, "There never wasa time
since the abolition of slavery when the
masses were so profoundly agitated as now
by the injustice of modern society and the
unequal distribution of its privileges and
its burdens."
Let us hope that the incoming Congress
may develop men to whom the people can
turn with instinctive confidence in their
ability to successfully maintain the honor,
dignity and the credit of America at home
as well as abroad.
* *
Mi
Trade in Boston is not particularly at
variance with trade in other commercial
centers. It is all nonsense for men to talk-
even on the fringe of summer that there is
no business. There is, and some firms are
doing a satisfactory trade without even
having interjected that oft-repeated and
chestnutty phrase, "times considered."
There is trade; of course sporadic, and the
men who are specially favored are the ones
who are metaphorically divesting them-
selves of superfluous garments and going
out hustling for it.
Now. I do not wish to be misunderstood
as to the term hustling being interpreted
to mean to go out on the road and force
goods abnormally beyond the power of dis-
tribution. I do not mean in the vernacular
of the day, that it is simply to "load a
dealer up" with a lot of stock for which he
has no immediate demand, and which he
accepts with the assurance that he doesn't
have to reimburse the manufacturer for
them unless it is convenient for him to do
so; in other words, taken at his own time.
I do not mean that. Because I consider
that it is just such methods that have in
the main a demoralizing effect upon trade.
There is another meaning to the term
hustling, and that is a careful analysis of
the business environments and conditions
of the men upon whom the manufacturer
relies for the distribution of his wares, an
encouragement to him in the way of some
local aid furnished by a salesman—close
consultation as to the best methods of dis-
posing of instruments and as to the needs
of the purchasers—in the line of case effects
and of detail work in the building and con-
struction of a piano which is essential to-
day, perhaps more so than ever before in
music trade history.
It is the men who conduct the business
on those modern and progressive lines of
keeping thoroughly in touch with the
dealer, studying his wants, and not in plac-
ing a stone wall of resistance against any
suggestion made by the man who sells the
goods.
If it were possible to hold a mental au-
topsy on the men who to-day conduct
successful business enterprises, that autopsy
would disclose the fact that they are the
men who seek earnestly to keep in touch in
every particular down to the minutest with
their trade. They realize fully that the
age is evolutionistic, and that forward, not
backward, the spirit of progression runs as
we go spinning down the endless grooves
of time.
I enjoyed a pleasant morning chat with
Mr. Geo. W. Seaverns, the well-known
piano action manufacturer, of Cambridge-
port, Mass. Mr. Seaverns is one of the
veterans of the trade, and throughout his
long career he has not only worked in touch
with pianoforte manufacturers, but has also
anticipated their wants by producing up-
to-date actions in every respect. In the
course of the many years which the
Seaverns action has been before the trade
it has found a resting place in thousands of
American homes. The trade of this con-
cern has not alone been confined to the
Boston manufacturers, but the largest
manufacturers in New York and in the
West have also been extensive buyers of
the Seaverns product.
The Seaverns, father and sons, take a
pride in their work which is clearly evi-
denced in the excellence of the product
which they are turning out.
* *
Sylvester Tower was in a reminiscent
mood when I dropped in to see him. No
matter how many failures there are, or how
deeply he may be involved, Mr. Tower
never loses the equanimity of temper for
which he is noted. Five minutes after the
report of some big failure in which he is
largely interested, he can discuss a hunting
tale or fishing story with just as ir.uch ease
and apparent relish as though the failure
were removed far beyond all possibility of
contact with him. In other words, he
never permits himself to be disturbed.
When I discussed the position of the
second mortgage holders on the property
formerly owned by Napoleon J. Haines
fH s rc, he appeared as unconcerned as though
his chances of recovering his money were
not entirely wiped out by the recent sale,
which they were, by the way, beyond per-
adventure.
Down at the Chickering factory I met.
Mr. George A. Endicott, and with him dis-
cussed trade and other matters. Mr. En-
dicott is calm—logical and argumentative
in his make up. He believes in calling a
spade a spade, but just because it is a spade
he doesn't believe that it will remove much
earth unless there is sufficient physical
force behind it.
He believes that while the Chickering
name and fame is great, that without
proper administrative and executive ability
behind it it would not retain its present
proud position. In other words, only the
firms who infuse the spirit of modern en-
terprise in their business calculations can
be successful. Tradition helps and assists,
but does not insure. In these days of
close business competition a firm must be
either active or passive; if passive, then

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