Music Trade Review

Issue: 1897 Vol. 24 N. 25

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE NEW YORK
PUBLIC LIBRARY
j
ASTOR, LENOX AND
<_ TILDEN FOUNDATIONS.
VOL XXIV.
N o . 25.
Published Every Saturday, at 3 Bast Fourteenth Street. New York, June 19,1897.
fvoo PER YEAK
SIN OLE COPIES, 10 CENTS
Can Pay 30 Per Cent.
George Dearborn's Will.
The ^Eolian Quarterly.
ASSIGNEE OF THE CENTURY PIANO COMPANY
MAKES A REPORT—FUTURE PROSPECTS
GOOD.
[Special to The Review.]
Philadelphia, Pa., June 17, 1897.
The will of the late George E. Dearborn,
piano dealer, was admitted to probate this
morning. Mr. Dearborn was at one time
wealthy, but was forced to make an assign-
ment to George R. Fleming in April last
for the benefit of his creditors. It is not
known how much can be saved from the
wreck of his fortune.
"It is my desire," says the testator,"and
I do hereby order and direct that my body
be cremated in any crematory in Philadel-
phia." He bequeaths $50,000 to his wife
Abbie; $15,000 to his grandchildren, Ar-
thur, George and Reyborn Smith, and
$5,000 to his daughter, Marion G. Gorham.
The residuary legatees are Abbie H. Dear-
born, Ella Frances Smith and Marion
Gorham.
AN UNIQUE CONTRIBUTION TO MAGAZINE LIT-
ERATURE— INTERESTING ALIKE TO THE
STUDENT AND /KOLIAN INTERPRETER.
[Special to The Review.]
Minneapolis, Minn., June 15, 1897.
H. O. Peterson, assignee of the Century
Piano Co., has made and filed his partial
report in the trust, and has asked the court
that he be allowed to declare a partial
dividend of 30 per cent. He makes no
specific demand for his fees, but leaves
them to the discretion of the court. The
fees of his attorneys are $2,500.
The report shows that there has been a
vast amount of work accomplished. The
company assigned June 20, and already the
bulk of the work has been done. In the
first place, the court ordered a bulk sale
of the stock, and $8,000 was all that was
offered. The assignee asked to sell in
single pieces, and the result was that by
his personal efforts, three times as much
was secured, and there are still 40 pianos
to be sold.
One important matter is in the disallow-
ance of claims. The assignee disallowed
$17,000 of claims,and of this amount $5,000
have failed to appeal within the time al-
lowed, and of the balance, not over $1,500
can secure payment on appeal. The ex-
pense in operating the factory was $4,147.-
21, which will result in an immense profit,
because the raw material was made up,
which will clear considerable, all the 40
pianos now on hand and some sold being
from that factory. April 27 the last piano
was finished and the factory was closed.
Up to June 9, the assignee collected $37,-
616.58 in cash, besides compromisingmany
matters which brought in actual assets to
the trust.
One of the most important pieces of
work was in connection with the collaterals
put out by the companies for loans. The
company had $12,000 of equity in these,
and in order to get the money the assignee
arranged with the holders that he might
collect them. He reports that he has col-
lected $12,178.72, and the holders have
agreed to allow the assignee to continue to
collect, with the result that not only will
the credits be lessened but an advance over
the $12,000 secured to the creditors remain-
ing. The matter will be heard at special
term.
Mason & Hamlin at Chautauqua.
An interesting item of news this week
is the shipment to Chautauqua of many
Mason & Hamlin pianos and organs, the
whole numbering more than a score of
instruments. The membership of this
popular institution is well into the hundreds
of thousands and during the summer sea-
son of each year myriads of people find
their way to the Chautauquan's Mecca,
where pure air, pure teaching and pure
influences, lay and clerical, can be absorbed
in quantities to suit all tastes and tem-
pers. In the midst of this exhilarating
atmosphere Mason & Hamlin have built a
number of small houses called "Practice
Cottages." In these structures pianos and
organs are placed, and members of the
Association so inclined can play secular
and sacred music to their hearts' content
"from early morn to dewy eve."
Young men and maidens in quest of
a musical education wend their way each
summer to these cottages from every point
of the compass, not infrequently traveling
thousands of miles to embrace the oppor-
tunity. Prof. W. H. Sherwood and his
assistants take these harmonic pilgrims
in charge and it is said that his success has
been such that musical discord at Chau-
tauqua is practically unknown.
Healthy, well-judged enterprise on the
part of the ^Eolian Co. has brought about
the first issue of a new periodical entitled
The /Eolian Quarterly, a magazine de-
voted to analyses and descriptions of the
operatic and classical music published for
the ^Eolian. No. 1 contains a number of
interesting articles by Henry T. Finck
and others, including a history of "Lohen-
grin," also the story, and musical selections
as prepared for the .*Kolian, the whole
described by Mr. Finck. Literary descrip-
tions are given of Saint Sacns' "Danse
Macabre" or "Dance of Death; " Rossini's
"Overture to William Tell;" Beethoven's
"Moonlight Sonata; " Gounod's "Faust,"
embracing the history, story, and musical
selections; Schubert's "Erl-King; " Greig's
"Peer Gynt; " Felix Mendelssohn-Barthol-
dy's "Consolation and the Poet's Harp"
—one of the most beautiful, as well as
familiar, of the forty-eight "Songs With-
out Words," and Raff's "Leonore Sym-
phony."
The idea of telling the story, in a bright,
breezy way, on which each of these famous
compositions is based, and then explaining
the yEolian's unique method of exact inter-
pretation, is clever and sure to be appreci-
ated. As a legitimate and useful plan for
bringing the possibilities of the yEolian
prominently to notice it must prove to be the
very best. It is announced that special feat-
ures are to be added to the next quarterly
issue.
Piano Factory in Glenbrook.
[Special to The Review]
Glenbrook, Conn., June 15, 1897.
The erection of a factory has just been
commenced in this town by John A.
Holmes for Mr. Lange, who will engage in
the manufacture of pianos. Mr. Lange is a
graduate of the Steinway and Weber
factories and is a thorough workman who
should succeed in turning out first rate
instruments. The people of this town
expect to see the Glenbrook piano factory
and the Lange piano rise rapidly to great
Richard M. Walters, the popular piano fame among musical people. The citizens,
man, will leave town to-day for an extended it is expected, will support the new enter-
prise very liberally.
sojourn at Richfield Springs.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
LYMAN
Editor and Proprietor.
PUBLISHED
EVERY
SATURDAY
• 3 East 14th St., New York
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Insertion.
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NEW YORK, JUNE 19, 1897.
TELEPHONE NUMBER 1745. — EIGHTEENTH 5TREET.
THE KEYNOTE.
The first week of each month, The Review
will contain a supplement embodying the liter-
ary and musical features which have heretofore
appeared in The Keynote. This amalgamation
will be effected without in any way trespassing
on our regular news service. The Review will
continue to remain, as before, essentially a trade
paper.
THE TRADE DIRECTORY.
The Trade Directory, which is a feature of
The Review each month, is complete. In it ap-
pears the names and addresses of all firms en-
gaged in the manufacture of musical instruments
and the allied trades. The Review is sent to
the United States Consulates throughout the
world, and is on file in the reading rooms of the
principal hotels in America.
UPHOLD THE TRADE HONOR.
NTIL a week after The Review had
published the announcement of the
refusal of the Secretary of State to grant
incorporation papers to Haines & Co., a
silence was maintained by the trade papers
upon this important subject.
We saw at once the seriousness of this
matter and stated in our first announce-
ment that the position assumed by Mr.
Foster and his confreres clearly called for
an explanation from them in order that
they might free themselves from the odor
of suspicion which surely must attach itself
to them from their connections with a con-
cern which desired an incorporation made
under certain representations which were
glaringly false in that a Haines & Co. ac-
tually existed in New York.
We saw that a tremendous issue was at
stake—one which affected the welfare of
the entire trade.
We are glad to see that our initial posi-
tion has now been warmly seconded by
other trade papers. The matter assumes
such weighty importance that it cannot be
lightly passed over, as a principle which
affects the very trade life itself is at stake.
It occurs to us that there is a way in
U
which to combat successfully operations
of this kind, and that is by organization.
Manufacturers should become fully aroused
to the fact that if men are successful in
trading upon the reputation of others in
so far that they can incorporate concerns
of similar name to those of long time
standing, and send out instruments which
seemingly bear the imprint of the origi-
nal name, then no concern is removed
from the possibility of such incursions.
If such methods obtain, who can tell
how soon some men will take from
a factory a workman bearing a similar
patronymic to that of the founder of the
business and incorporate an institution of
like name?
Suppose that there is capital behind the
move, intelligence and push as well.
vSuppose such were the case. Would the
men, that is the incorporators, push their
business on a legitimate basis, or would
not the incorporation mean solely that
they desired to profit by the artistic and
commercial value of the older name?
Keen business men would understand
that it would be much easier to capture a
large portion of public patronage simply
by a confusion ofnames—by trading on the
reputation of the older and greater—than to
found a new concern and work solely upon
the value of its product.
Now in the first place would such an
incorporation be honest? Would it not
virtually amount to a commercial theft,
the theft of a trade mark—of a name? For
after all, what is a trade mark but prop-
erty. An individual or a concern spend a
life time in creating a value therefor, and
a fortune is spent in acquainting the trade
and the general public with the merits of
that particular article. After it has a well
grounded position in the heart of the public
along comes a coterie of designing individ-
uals who look with hungering eyes upon
the position reached by industry and intelli-
gence. They desire some of it, and in-
stead of working on a basis of fairness
they at once find a man whose patronymic
is similar to that which is placed upon
instruments of world renown.
It seems to us that a correct way to
strike at this evil is to arouse the better
instincts of the trade against such encroach-
ment upon individual and corporative
rights.
If the move is made successfully with
the Haines name why not with others?
Why not Knabe, why not Chickering,
why not Weber?
Steinway had his fight years ago against
the " Steinweg" men and it is proven
clearly that in great cities there is still
continued a nefarious business, conducted!
almost under the shadow of the legitimate
institutions, whereby pianos of similar
names are being sold to a credulous afcd
ignorant public.
Tear out the whole ulcerous growth from
the body of the trade. Remove it and see
that no germs remain.
How?
By arefusalon the part of manufacturers to
sell instruments to dealers who countenance
such unjust commercial methods. If a
dealer should adopt this course towards
one manufacturer would he not pursue a
like attitude towards others?
In other words, the cure lies in the hands
of the manufacturers themselves, and it
would seem to us to be a correct and digni-
fied method on their part to refuse to allow
their wares to be offered for sale by men
who will seek to belittle commercial honor,
and poison the very fount of trade ethics
by their offering goods to the public on the
reputation fairly won by another.
It has been said that manufacturers will
never act together upon any important
subject. Let us see if this imputation is
not false. Surely such a blot should not
be permitted to rest upon the trade
escutcheon. Refuse to have business deal-
ings with men who sell "imitation" piano?.
This matter cannot be permitted to pass
unchallenged.
The honor of the trade is at stake. The
man who to-day deems his position im-
pregnable may to-morrow be the victim
of a trade mark theft.
The patent office affords no remedy.
A patronymic cannot be copyrighted
to give relief.
Trade honor should be upheld.
It must be or the labor of years counts
for naught.
Nordheimer Sells Out.
[Special to The Review.]
Montreal, Can., June 16, 1897.
The well-known firm of A. & S. Nord-
heimer have disposed of their business in
this province, where they have been es-
tablished for thejast thirty" years, to Mr.
C. W. Lindsey, the St. Catherine street
dealer, who will continue the St. James
street establishment, although it is under-
stood that some of the upper rooms now
occupied by the Messrs. Nordheimer will
be turned into offices. The terms of this
important deal have not yet been made
known, yet they are understood to have
been satisfactory to both parties. Mr.
Glendon, who has been manager of the
Nordheimer house for some years past,
will occupy the same position under the
new proprietor. Although the transfer
has already been signed, the deal is not
understood to go into effect before the first

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