Music Trade Review

Issue: 1896 Vol. 22 N. 26

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW.
is a catalogue that will be read from cover
to cover by dealers and purchasers, and
after all, that is the secret of a good
catalogue.
The cover is beautifully embossed and
designed, and the reading matter right
through the book is set forth with a mar-
gin of two and a half inches on each page
—illustrations of the exteriors and interiors
of the three "Packard" styles appearing
therewith. The effect is original and high-
ly pleasing.
The topics of interest throughout the
catalogue are treated under the following
captions:
"The Good Piano:" " T h e
Strong Piano;" "Scale Perfectly Bal-
anced;" " Durability of Construction;"
"Tone Sympathetic, Pure and Rich,
Combined with Greatest Power;" "Quick
Repeating Action;" "Elegant in Design
and Finish;" "Good Pianos are for Ar-
tists;" "Pianos with Fads for Fakirs."
In the closing page the Ft. Wayne
Organ Co. announce that they have in pro-
cess of construction another style of "Pack-
ard" piano which will contain a scale that
will be two and a half inches larger than
those illustrated and now so generally pop-
ular. It is drawn on the same lines as the
others and will be in every way as good.
In the next catalogue, which will be issued
in about three or four months, the cut of
this piano will appear.
At some future time we hope to repro-
duce part of the contents of this volume;
it may help to explain, in a measure, why
the "Packard" piano has attained such a
large degree of popularity with discrimina-
ting dealers and purchasers.
Lew H. Clement Resigns
FROM THE ANN ARBOR CO. TO ACCEPT A
POSITION WITH THE F. W. 13AUMER
COMPANY.
L
EW H. CLEMENT has tendered his
resignation as manager of the Ann
Arbor Organ Co. to take place August i.
He does this to accept the position as man-
ager of the F. W. Baumer Co., of Wheeling,
W. Va., the largest music establishment
in that State. Mr. Baumer, the head of this
company, desires to retire from active busi-
ness and travel extensively, and some
weeks ago made Mr. Clement such an ex-
ceptional offer in the way of salary and an
interest in the business that Mr. Clement
felt that he could not refuse.
Mr. Clement went to Ann Arbor from
Chicago ten years ago and started in the
retail music business in that city. Three
years later he consolidated his business
with the Ann Arbor Organ Co. and soon
after was elected secretary and general
manager. The growth of this company is
due very largely to his enterprise, push and
hard work. Mr. Clement is a good sales-
man, a very successful advertiser and a
careful, systematic business man.
The company has not yet secured a man
to take Mr. Clement's place, but we under-
stand they have the matter under consider-
ation.
CABLE Car No. 526, northbound, collided
with the pole of a truck bearing the name
of the New England Piano Company, Fifth
avenue and Fifteenth street, last Tuesday
evening on Lexington avenue and 107th
street. The pole crashed through the
THEODORE PFAFFLIN, of Chickering &
double sash and door in the front of the car
Sons, New York house, accompanied by his and one of the horses was thrown to the
wife, leaves to-day for Swatara, Pa., on a pavement. The motorman
threw his
visit to his recently married daughter.
weight on the brake and the car was
E. S. VOTEY, of Farrand & Votey, De- brought to a standstill quickly. Fortun-
troit, Mich., was in New York the middle of ately nobody was injured.
the week; J. T. Rider, with the M. V.
IN connection with the report of an at-
Sprague Music Co., Chatham, N. Y., has
tachment being granted against A. L. Ban-
been in the city during the week.
croft, of San Francisco, it must be stated
P. J. HEALY, of Lyon & Healy, has been that that gentleman is in no way connected
in New York for some days; he left for with the house of A. L. Bancroft & Co.
Baltimore, Md., yesterday afternoon.
Incorporated.
B. TREMAINE,
of the ^Eolian Co., who
has been staying in the neighborhood of
Quogue, L. I., recently, for the benefit of
his health, is still far from well. Mr. Tre-
maine has been spending a couple of days
in New York, and leaves to-day for White
Lake.
S. M. BARNES, of Wm. Knabe & Co.'s
New York house, leaves to-day for Asbury
Park, N. J., on a two weeks' vacation.
Walter Holmes, of Bradbury fame, and J.
M. Elliott, a well known New York orches-
tral conductor, wall be in the neighborhood
at the same time. The three gentlemen
are duly equipped with a divine conception
in up-to date bathing attire, and expect to
play havoc among the goddesses of fashion
in that salubrious quarter.
JOHN MCKUNE, piano dealer of Kenosha,
Wis., has announced himself as a candidate
for sheriff on the Republican ticket.
DANA G. PRESCOTT, of the Prescott Piano
Co., Concord, N. H., was in town. Wednes-
day. Mr. Prescott is full of hope for the
future of the Prescott piano. The com-
pany are now located in their new factory
where they have splendid manufacturing
facilities.
EDWARD H. STORY of Story
& Clark,
Chicago, was in town last week.
EDMUND GRAMM, the well known dealer
of Milwaukee, Wis., who by the way is a
great admirer of the Steck piano, is passing
a few days in the Metropolis; while here he
is under the direct chaperonage of that past
master of entertainment, Geo. N. Grass.
J. FRED METCALF, music dealer of Essex,
Coun., has recently enlarged his business
facilities by securing additional wareroom
space.
H. G. HUNT, music dealer, Montreal,
Can., is under arrest at St. Thomas, Ont.,
charged with reusing once used postage
stamps. Other like charges are pending.
The music business must be pretty tough
in Canada when they have to cut out
stamps and use them over again.
JUDGMENT for a small amount has been
recorded against Victor Flechter, dealer in
violins, at the instance of Messrs. Pollack
and Goldstone. Flechter will be examined
in supplementary proceedings as soon as he
returns from Cincinnati,
RUFUS W. BLAKE, president of the Sterl-
ing Co., Derby, Conn., was in town Thurs-
day.
Louis P. DEDERICK, receiver of the Man-
ufacturers' Company, Chicago, visited New
York this week for the purpose of seeing
his wife and family off to Europe.
AMONG the visitors to the Metropolis dur-
ing the week was W. A. White, with Blas-
ius & Sons, who ran up from Philadelphia
on Thursday.
THE W. W. Kimball Co.'s branch store in
Dayton, O., which has just been opened, is
under the charge of J. M. Zimmermann.
F. S. PETRIE, an employee of the Chase
Bros. Piano Co., Grand Rapids, Mich., com-
mitted suicide last week by drinking a con-
siderable quantity of wood alcohol.
IT is said that the B. Shoninger Co., who
had contemplated making a second piano
to be called the "Yale," have, after due con-
sideration, determined to make only one
grade as heretofore—and that the Shonin-
ger.
ASSIGNEE D. D. Woodmansee, of Smith
& Nixon, has received bids for the stock in
Cincinnati and elsewhere, which will be
passed upon Monday in the Insolvency
court.
CHECKS, drafts, etc., "for collection" or
containing any other writing than name
will not be accepted by the associated
banks of New York. This rule went in
force last week.
JOHN F. LORFNZ, son of the former pro-
prietor of the vSt. Paul Pipe Organ Manufact-
ory, died at St. Paul, Minn., last Sunday,
at the age of twenty-five years. A widow
survives him.
THE Hagerstown Organ Co., whose or-
ganization was reported in last week's RE-
VIEW, will begin operations at once. The
factory will be located in the old agricul-
tural works, East Washington street, and
pipe and reed organs will be manufactured.
The directors of the company are all prac-
tical men.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW.
From a Traveler's Note Book.
A PRACTICAL ILLUSTRATION
OF THE SILVER QUESTION
CONFIDENCE, NOT CURRENCY, CON-
a good combination, and with the splendid
line of instruments which they carry are
becoming more and more prominent fac^
tors in the Cincinnati trade.
TRACTED—-HEDENBERG & SISSSON, SMITH & WEISENBORN, FRANK H. ERD's SUCCESS.
HE silver question was never
brought to my notice in such
a practical way as when I was
down in Mexico. It struck
me rather novel at first to sit
down and eat a meal for
which a regular charge of fifty cents was
made, to toss out an American silver dollar
in payment for my dinner, to receive back
as change, instead of fifty cents, a Mexican
dollar containing about seven grains more
silver and less alloy than the one which I
had tendered. In other words one of our
silver dollars is worth in Mexico two Mex-
ican silver dollars.
This talk about easy money, plenty of it
in circulation and all that, causes one to
believe that these wild Populists seem
rather to cherish the belief that all the Gov-
ernment has to do is to turn the wheel and
grind out the dollars and every one can
come and help themselves provided they
bring with them anything from a pint
measure to a bushel basket.
* *
* is the name of a re-
Hedenberg & Sisson
cently incorporated company in Brooklyn,
of which Mr. C. G. Hedenberg is resident
manager.
Mr. Hedenberg has made a
success of the retail music business since
Why is this? one naturally asks.
Simply because gold is the standard of the
United States. For one of our silver dol-
lars, one can procure a gold dollar if re-
quired; while in Mexico, the standard is
silver, and if they wish to purchase gold
dollars with Mexican silver dollars, they
must pay the difference in exchange values.
Gold is the standard of all civilized coun-
tries, and does not change its value when
it reaches the frontier of any nation. Sil-
ver is a fluctuating standard, and what the
silver men desire to do to-day is to forte a
depreciated
metal upon this country
through government mediumship.
The cry of sixteen to one is a fallacy.
Because silver has depreciated steadily all
over the world, while gold has maintained
a fixed standard, is it any reason why the
silver men should attempt to force by leg-
islative fiat silver to double its value any
more than the copper men have a right to
complain of the depreciation of copper and
that copper should be used more largely as
a money medium ?
A Kansas farmer has just as much right
to complain of his corn depreciating in val-
ue, and surely just as much legal right to
ask the Government to force the people to
pay twice the market value of the corn as
the silver men have a right to force this
country to endorse silver to twice its value.
. Make it thirty to one, that is the correct
ratio.
This howl about a contracted currency I
think is rot pure and simple. There is
four times the money in circulation that
there was during war times and the popula-
tion has little more than doubled. I ask
any of my readers who are silverites if they
can name any instance wherein a domestic
contract of any magnitude whatsoever has
been cancelled on account of gold not being
tendered in the purchase. I do not, of
course, mean to include in this, deals which
have occurred in times of panic, but in or-
dinary times of business prosperity.
his entrance therein some years ago. His
business is located at 1230 Bedford Avenue,
where he has built up a very substantial
trade in pianos, organs and musical instru-
ments. The company also publish music.
Has any contract ever fallen through be-
cause the payment was not made in gold?
Or take it the other way.
Can they cite an
instance wherein a contract would have
been made had the payment been tendered
in silver?
Smith & Weisenborn, Cincinnati, control
a steadily expanding trade. Mr. Weisen-
born is a hard worker and attends to the
wareroom trade, while his partner, Mr.
Smith, devotes most of his time to follow-
ing up outside sales. Together they form
C. C. HEDENBERG.
Speaking of pianos, have you seen that
piano which bears the shortest name of any
on the market? I refer to the Erd, made
in Saginaw, Mich. The Erd piano may
be short on name, but it is long on quali-
ties, excellent qualities at that.
The builder of this instrument, Frank
H. Erd, is a musician; has been from boy-
hood up. Being handy with the knife and
chisel, it was a practice with him in early
days to make violins and other musical in-
struments. There is one of these which
was made by F. Erd in earlier years which
is now located in Detroit, and its owner
would not part with it for a considerable
sum; he prizes it highly. All this shows
that Mr. Erd has musical taste.
He
became a dealer in Saginaw, and was suc-
cessful; satisfactorily so. His business
grew, enlarged, until he was selling all over
Northern Michigan.
He was not satisfied with remaining a
dealer all his life.
He wished to manu-
facture, and incorporate in the instruments
some of his original ideas. This he did, and
the Erd piano, from the very start, has been
successful.
Mr. Erd has not manufac-
tured them in such large quantities, but he
has found a ready market for all he has had,
and the Erd piano continues to grow in
popularity in Michigan and other States.
The Erd, it should be understood, is a
high grade piano. Since the hard times
have come on, Mr. Erd, like other manu-
facturers, saw the necessityof another grade,
so his ideas in this connection were incor-
porated in the "Rose" piano, an instrument
of comparatively recent inception. The
"Rose" has been a good running mate for
the Erd. They pair well together, and
dealers have found that the "Rose" has
made a splendid second for the Erd.
Satisfied with his piano results, Mr. Erd
paid his attention toward the manufacture
of harps. The Erd harp is being made by
competent experts under Mr. Erd's per-
sonal supervision, Mr. Erd is a musician
—he is a business man, and a genius at
that.
*
E. H. WEISENBORN.
The history of music shows that as a rule
composers barely earned enough to pay for
their daily bread, while the singers who in-
terpreted their works reveled in wealth.
Even Wagner received only $800 for the
score of "Tristan and Isolde," which it
took him several years to write, while Jean
de Reszke gets twice that amount each
time he sings in it. It is, therefore, seem-
ingly paradoxical that a composer should
provide for singers, as Verdi has done in
Milan. He lately visited that city and de-
posited $80,000 toward building an asylum
for aged and invalid stage artists. It is to
be located near the Porta Magenta. "The
singers," says Verdi, "helped me to win
my fortune; to them, therefore, in the first
place, I wish to dedicate it."

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