Music Trade Review

Issue: 1896 Vol. 22 N. 5

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW.
12
A New Leaf Turner.
EFFICIENT
AND
SIMPLE
IN
DESIGN
MANUFACTURED CHEAPLY
CAN BE
PATENT
RIGHTS FOR SALE.
T
HERE have been a great number of
patents taken out on music leaf turn-
ers during recent years, but up to date not
one seems to have filled the bill, as to sim-
plicity of construction, ease of execution
and cheapness in price, until Mr. George
Vix, a practical inventor, set to work.
The result of his labors can be seen in
the illustration herewith. This is a device
for attachment to a piano or organ or other
instrument, or to a music stand, and may
be readily manipulated by the performer to
turn the sheets singly from left to right or
right to left.
ing arm, and correspondingly depressing the
cylinder, or allowing it to rise, a distance equal to
the thickness of the arm, a lock-latch on each side
always engaging the arm next to the one that is
turued, so that only one arm will be turned at a
time. The mechanism works smoothly and with a,
minimum of friction, and the parts are constantly
in position to cause the leaf or music turning arms
to respond instantly and positively to the move-
ment of either of the key levers.
Mr. Vix, having no connection with the
music trade industry, is anxious to dispose
of the patent rights of this device to some
wide-awake manufacturer. It can be placed
on the market at a minimum cost, and
retailed at a reasonable price. He would
be glad to hear from any house anxious to
take up this device, and can be addressed
at 20 Pleasant avenue, Weehawken, N. J.
A perfect model of this device can be
furnished at cost price on application to Mr.
Vix, or it can be seen at the office of this
paper. It is worth looking up. There is
money in it for the pushing manufacturer.
Jacob Doll.
S Mr. Doll was busily engaged with an
agent when THE REVIEW represen-
tative called on Wednesday last, the inter-
view was naturally a short one. Mr. Doll,
however, found time to say that he had the
previous evening returned from a flying
Western trip of a week's duration, had
visited Milwaukee, Minneapolis, St. Paul,
Chicago, St. Louis, Rochester and Buf-
falo, and had found an encouraging
state of affairs. He had established four
new and valuable agencies, but preferred
not mentioning names at present. Busi-
ness was distinctly good, and, to use
Mr. Doll's felicitous language, "they had
enough orders in hand to keep them alive
for a week."
A
It has been patented by Mr. Vix, and all
who have examined it claim it to be one of
the best ideas in its special line, as it covers
the many points found lacking in the nu-
merous attachments at present on the
market and enumerated above.
The Scientific American, one of the best
authorities in the matter of patents, has
described the invention as highly efficient
and a "good thing" in every respect. The
reader may be enabled to get an idea of
the construction of this device from the
following description:
Attached to a lyre, a bottom board of which may
be conveniently placed upon or clipped to an instru-
ment or music stand, is a casing within which a
vertical stationary shaft is centrally journaled, and
on the shaft is loosely mounted a hollow cylinder
having a spiral opening around its front face, the
cylinder forming virtually a spring-controlled car-
riage for music-turning arms. The cylinder is
normally pressed upward by a spring, and the cas-
ing has a horizontal opening in its front and sides.
Upon the shaft are two collars between which fhe
hub ends of any desired number of music leaf turn-
ing arms are mounted to loosely turn, the arms
being placed one above another and graduated in
length, the lowest arm being the longest. Each
arm has at its free end a clip or fingers adapted to
receive and hold the marginal portion of a sheet of
music these fingers being preferably of celluloid,
as being light and transparent. By means of a
key or finger piece at the right hand and one at the
left hand of the casing, at the bottom, the music
leaf turning arms are carried successively either to
the right or left as desired, the key at its inner
end actuating a toothed segment and gear on a
shaft controlling the shifting mechanism. A
looselv mounted gear on the central vertical shaft,
above the hollow cylinder and adapted to move up
and down with it, is connected with the shifting me-
chanism, and as each key is pressed a shifting arm
is made to travel in a circle in front of the cylinder
to one side or the other, carrying with it a leaf-turn-
riehlin Piano Co.
AUL G. MEHLIN, who has been in
New York City for the past two weeks,
expects to return to Minneapolis in about
three weeks' time. On his return a stock-
holders' meeting of the Mehlin Piano Co.
will be held, after which it is expected the
Minneapolis factory will again start up.
Mr. Mehlin speaks very enthusiastically of
the future of the Mehlin instruments in the
Northwest, and is personally very anxious
to return to his favorite locality. In course
of conversation, Mr. Mehlin stated that he
thought good times were ahead, and that
business would soon improve very materi-
ally; wheat going up was a good sign, in
fact, the state of the wheat market was a reli-
able barometer for the whole country. He
thought that the general talk of there being
a superfluity of money in the country was
a little fallacious, and the commodity was
really tighter than existing conditions would
indicate. Mr. Mehlin stated that W. J.
Dyer & Brother had done an excellent busi-
ness with the Mehlin instruments, and the
general reputation of the piano in the
Northwest was very high.
P
THE "Leckerling" piano, a Brooklyn
product, is now ready for the market.
CHARLIE SISSON, the popular traveling
man, was one of our several callers this
week. Mr. Sisson is having great success
with the Shoninger, and during a conver-
sation stated that dealers from whom he
secured a first order have doubled and
tripled the number of instruments in later
orders. Mr. Sisson is on a short trip to
Eastern territory, and later will wend his
way West.
C. F. SHELLAND, treasurer of the McCam-
mon Piano Co. ,Oneonta, N. Y., was in town
Wednesday on his way South. He will
spend four weeks visiting. the important
trade centers in that section, journeying as
far as Florida.
JAMES MORGAN, president of the ^Eolian
Co., who has spent the last few months in
Europe in the interest of the yEolian,
returned home last Tuesday. During his
stay abroad he made some valuable connec-
tions for his house which will materialize
in due time.
M. J. REGAL, music trade dealer, of
Easton, Pa., has secured the agency for the
Steinway piano which was recently held by
W. H. Keller.
E. A. WILSON and Jacob Sheasley, trad-
ing under the firm name of E. A. Wilson
Co., proprietors of a number of music
stores in Oil City, Titusville and other
Pennsylvania towns, have dissolved part-
nership.
W. H. KELLER, of Easton, Pa., who
recently handled the Steinway, will, it is
said, take the Gildemeester & Kroeger as
his leader.
EDWARD BEHR, of Behr Bros. & Co., has
been making a short trip this week through,
the Eastern States.
THE Chicago Cottage Organ Co. have
filed a claim to the stock of organs which
were in the possession of Kirk Johnson &
Co., of Lancaster, Pa., when they failed.
THE thief who extracted a number of
musical instruments from the show case in
front of the Dunning-Medine Music Co.,
New Orleans, last week, has been arrested.
He proved to be a negro whose propensity
for music was stronger than his sense of
honesty.
BENJAMIN'S music store has been closed
at Carroll, la., and the goods re-shipped to
Marshalltown.
E. S. JOHNSON, of Tacoma, Wash., who
has conducted sales of Chickering and
Kimball pianos in Spokane once a year for
the last two years, has opened a perma-
nent branch music store in that city.
GEO. H. QUAID, piano dealer, of Lynn,
Mass., was married recently to Miss Mary
E. Hagerty, of that city.
' MR. AND MRS. V. R. ANDRUS, Kansas
City, were among recent visitors to New
York.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW.
A New Copyright Bill.
ONGRESSMAN TRELOAR intro-
duced an important bill in the House
of Representatives on Feb. 13th, to "pro-
vide for the Commissioner of Copyrights
and to revise the copyright law." A copy
of this bill, which was ordered to be printed
and referred to the Committee on Patents,
was received this week, but owing to its
length we can only give a synopsis of its
general contents outside of Sections 13, 14
and 15, which are of especial significance.
The new bill provides that "all records
and other things relating to copyrights and
required by law to be preserved in the
Library of Congress which have heretofore
been under the control of the Librarian of
Congress, shall from the day of this act be
under the control of an cfncer to be known
and designated as Commissioner of Copy-
rights, to be appointed by the President
and confirmed by the Senate, who shall,
under the supervision of the Joint Commit-
tee on the Library, perform all the duties
relating to copyrights which have heretofore
been imposed upon the Librarian of Con-
gress." For his services the Commissioner
of Copyrights shall receive an annual salary
of $4,000, and he will be provided with
nine assistants, who shall be appointed by
the President, and twenty-five clerks and
two messengers, who shall be appointed by
the Commissioner.
AW moneys received for copyrights or
from other sources shall be deposited in the
Treasury of the United States as often as
the Secretary of the Treasury shall direct.
An annual report is to be made to Con-
gress describing the publications and the
number of copyrights granted since the
last report.
Certificates of copyright shall be granted
for a term of forty years from the day of
registration. Copyrights shall be assign-
able when signed by the assignor and
acknowledged in the presence of two wit-
nesses before a Notary Public; such
assignment to be recorded in a book to be
kept for that purpose in the office of the
Commissioner of Copyrights within sixty
days after its execution ; in default of which
it shall be void.
The most important provisions of the
new bill are the following three sections,
which bear on the much debated copyright
case of Novello vs. Ditson, decided in favor
of the English house over a year ago, the
particulars of which have not been forgotten
by our readers:
Section 13 provides "that no certificate
of registration or certificate of copyright
shall be issued to a citizen of the United
States of America for any book, periodical,
map, chart, dramatic or musical composi-
tion, or other article unless the application
is accompanied by an affidavit setting forth
the fact that the type was set or the plates
engraved or the article manufactured with-
I
T is a compliment to the good sense of
the dealers and the musical public that
they have so readily recognized the un-
doubted merits of the Norris & Hyde trans-
posing keyboard pianos. While the trans-
posing device is the best and most perfect
in the limits of the United States, according of its kind on the market and a valuable
"talking point," yet the Norris & Hyde
to the provisionsof this act."
Sec. 14. That it shall be unlawful, during piano—as a piano—as worthy every praise,
the existence of such copyright, for any and both combined should help to "make"
person to import into the United States, the enterprising dealer. Norris & Hyde
sell, offer to sell, or expose to sale, any are going to do a "big" trade this year, for
book, periodical, map, chart, dramatic or
musical composition, chromo, photograph conscientious work and earnest efforts to
or lithograph, so copyrighted, or any edi- "give value for value" brings its reward.
tion or editions thereof, or any plates of the
same made from type set outside the limits
of the United States, or from engraved
Prizes for Piano flakers.
plates, or from negatives, or from drawings
on stone made outside the limits of the
United States. Any person violating this FRENCH PIANO MANUFACTURERS HONOR THEIR
OLD AND WORTHY EMPLOYEES.
Act shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and
upon conviction shall be fined not less than
fifty nor more than one hundred dollars for
HE latest Paris exchanges contain
each and every offence, one-half to be paid
lengthy accounts of the ceremonies
to the informer and one-half to the Treas- incident to the second distribution of prizes
ury of the United States of America.
Sec. 15. That it shall be unlawful for any to old and worthy piano makers, founded
person within the limits of the United last year by J. Faivre, an old piano maker
States, to buy, purchase, bargain, or barter who made considerable money on this side
for any book, periodical, map, chart, dra- of the water, but who has now returned to
matic or musical composition, photograph, benefit his fellow workers and enjoy the
chromo, or lithograph, so copyrighted and
printed from type set or from plates made luxuries of Parisian life.
The prizes amounted to one thousand
therefrom, or from engraved plates or
transfers made therefrom or from negatives francs each. This year, however, the
or from drawings on stone or from transfers Manufacturers' Association, or "Syndicale
made therefrom, made outside the limits of des Facteurs et Fabricants d'Instruments
the United States. Any person violating
this Act shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, de Musique," as it is called, decided to
and upon conviction shall be fined not less donate ten additional prizes of three hun-
than one nor more than twenty-five dollars dred francs each, which, like the Faivre
for each and every copy of such book, peri- prizes, were given to the oldest and worth-
odical, map, chart, dramatic or musical iest workers.
composition, photograph, chromo, or lith-
The meeting was held in the grand hall of
ograph found in their possession, one-half
the
new Sorbonne, which was crowded with
to be paid to the informer and one-half to
almost
four thousand people. M. Thibou-
the Treasury of the United States of
America. Provided, nevertheless, that in ville-Lamy, president of the Association,
the case of books in foreign languages, of presided, and addresses were delivered by
which only translations in English are
copyrighted, the prohibition of importa- M. Couvreur, vice-president of the Cham-
tion shall apply only to the translation of ber of Commerce; M. Nicolas, who repre-
the same; and the importation of the books sented the Minister of Commerce and In-
in the original language shall be permitted. dustry; M. Muzet, member of the Munici-
The new bill differs little from the present pal Council; M. Faivre and others.
The proceedings were highly interesting,
law as to form of application for copyright.
The fees are the same. The Commissioner and the remarks of the different speakers
of Copyrights shall acknowledge the receipt went to show that the most fraternal feel-
and filing of the two complete copies sent ings existed between the French employers
on application of the work and upon receipt and their employees.
At the meeting of the Manufacturers'
of an additional fifty cents shall issue a
Association,
held later in the month, M.
certificate of copyright which shall be duly
Faivre
announced
that he had decided to
recorded in a book kept for that purpose.
donate
three
new
prizes of a thousand
The closing sections of the bill cover the
francs
each,
which
he
would place at their
penalties to be incurred through the use of
disposition
to
be
distributed
at the next
the word "Copyrighted" without legal reg-
reunion.
istration of the articles to which it is affixed
as well as the publication of any copyrighted
dramatic or musical composition, print,
Regina flusic Boxes,
cut, or engraving without written consent
of the copyrightee.
HE Regina Music Boxes are among the
This bill, if passed, will go into effect on
specialties which will be in great de-
the first of July, 1896.
mand this year. The output is constantly
on the increase and a dealer's stock is not
complete without them. The factory at
THE next trade dinner or semi-annual Rahway, N. J., is such a busy place these
meeting of the Chicago Music Trade Asso- days that a visit stimulates one's faith in
ciation, will take place on March 7th.
the "good times coming."
PROVIDES FOR A COMMISSIONER OF COPYRIGHTS WITH STAFF OF ASSISTANTS—A NEW SYS-
TEM OF MANAGEMENT — A FORTY-YEAR LEASE OF COPYRIGHTS
COPYRIGHTED
WORKS TO BE PRINTED IN THIS COUNTRY UNLAWFUL TO IMPORT, SELL,
OR BUY FOREIGN PUBLICATIONS TO GO INTO EFFECT, IF
APPROVED, IN JULY.
C
The Norris & Hyde Pianos.
T
T

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