Music Trade Review

Issue: 1898 Vol. 26 N. 13

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
W. W. Kimball Co.
REVIEWLETS.
THE POLICY WHICH HAS MADE THEIR HOUSE
AND PRODUCTS KNOWN THE WORLD OVER
EXEMPLIFIED IN THEIR ARTISTIC
ADVERTISING.
The bill introduced in the New York Sen-
ate by Senator Guy making it a misdemeanor
to fraudulently advertise or misrepresent
goods for sale, and which was passed by the
Senate ten days ago, was favorably reported
by the committee on rules to the Assembly
Wednesday.
The vote in favor of it was almost unani-
mous. This bill is supported by the Mer-
chants' and Manufacturers' Board of Trade,
and should be effective in preventing the
private house sales of pianos now so com-
monly made through misrepresentation. It
also affects fraudulent fire and auction sales,
and if properly applied, should be prolific of
good results.
Governor Black is said to be in favor of
the measure, so that almost insures it becom-
ing a law.
An unique and exceedingly artistic achieve-
ment in the line of publicity is the advertise-
ment elsewhere in this issue from the W. W.
Kimball Co., Chicago. The utilization of
such a charming and poetic idea as is ex-
pressed in the illustration is in keeping with
the trend—so apparent in this field particu-
larly—to subserve art to commerce. Such
advertising commands and holds the atten-
tion of the reader, and incidentally brings on
the mental stage the great Kimball firm,
which have been distinguished by the energy,
integrity and ambition of the men identified
with the destinies of this establishment.
The history of the Kimball house may be
said to be the history of the modern West.
The growth of the business—from the meagre
proportions of the past to the present, when
Kimball pianos, reed organs and pipe organs
have attained a world-wide popularity, with
an output yearly in the tens of thousands—
speaks more eloquently of the standing of the
house and the popularity of their products than
any words that might be printed.
In the development of this enormous busi-
ness, immense plant and the attainment of
such marvelous prosperity, the Kimball Co.
have ever recognized the value of advertising.
They have spent millions of dollars in bring-
ing their goods to the notice of the public,
and it has been a big dividend-paying invest-
ment.
In this department, Albert G. Cone, treas-
urer of the company, is entitled to especial
praise for his originality in ideas and masterly
ability in execution. He is an expert who
understands the value of art in advertising,
and moreover, has a proper comprehension
of the value of words.
Meanwhile, with due appreciation of the
part that advertising has played in the up-
holding of the Kimball interests, it is to the
commanding intellect of the head of the firm,
W. W. Kimball, aided by Messrs. Conway,
Cone and Kimball, Jr., all of whom are in full
possession of a knowledge of the possibilities
and tendencies of the music trade—that is
due the credit for the altitude occupied by
the W. W. Kimball Co. in the commercial
field of this country.
W. W. Kimball in his various moves re-
minds one of Gen. Grant. He says little,
arid as our Ethiopian friends would say, "does
a pow'ful lot of thinkin', 1 ' a n d mark you, just
like Grant, he "always gets there."
The New England Piano Co.
In the New York and Boston establish-
ments of the New England Piano Co. busi-
ness is reported as active. Some of the lat-
est productions of this concern now on ex-
hibition at the Boston headquarters are com-
manding unusual attention and have been
warmly praised by dealers. Thomas F. Scan-
Ian, president of the company, is making pre-
parations for an active campaign during '98,
and as a consequence the New England
pianos are going to be more in evidence than
ever before.
The foreign trade of the United States
during February, according to the preliminary
figures just issued by the Treasury Depart-
ment, showed a gain in exports of over
$15,100,000 and a decline in imports com-
pared with the same month a year previously
°f $6,155,000, the figures being: Exports,
1898, $94,981,017; 1897, $79,821,086. Im-
ports, 1898, $53,082,117; 1897, $59, 2 37,377-
For the eight months ending in February
there has been an increase in exports of $78,-
371,858 and a decline in imports of $28,-
806,428.
The musical harvest season is reaching its
end. Pol Plancon sailed away to Europe on
the Normannia Thursday, after one last sweet
song at Wednesday's Astoria matin6e. Raoul
Pugno gives his last piano concert at Indian-
apolis Thursday night, and will leave this port
for France one week from to-day. It is said
that the tidy sum of $30,000 will accompany
Monsieur Pugno on that trip. Other soloists
are buying the usual letters of credit for
presentation at European exchanges, and the
American season accordingly sees its finish.
No better proof of the healthy and normal
condition of the country is needed than to
note the amount of gold which is flowing in
every week from abroad. It furnishes an idea
of the growth of our foreign trade and the
confidence the moneyed interests of Europe
have in the United States; it, moreover,
blocks any drift toward a stringency in rates
for money.
"Order is Heaven's first law" and it is also
law at the small goods factory of the John
Church Co. in Cincinnati. A short time ago
an order was promulgated by the firm pro-
hibiting the workmen from "rushing the
growler" while at work. This, however, was
disregarded the other day, and as a result five
men are now hunting for positions. This
should serve as an object lesson to other em-
ployees.
On the Maine coast experimenters are try-
ing to get gold out of salt water. There was
a time, not very remote either, when experi-
menters were trying to get gold out of the
piano business. They, however, overlooked
the venerable proverb which refers to the
dangers which beset him who "hasteth to be
rich."
Frederick L. Wing, a real estate broker
and at one time connected with the firm of
Wing & Son, dealers in pianos at 449 West
Thirteenth street, this city, committed suicide
while delirious from pneumonia at his home
in Brooklyn, last Tuesday morning. Mr.
Wing was thirty-eight years old, and was a
member of several prominent Brooklyn clubs.
Ferdinand Mayer, manager of the local
house of Wm. Knabe & Co., has been given
some very gracious "send-offs" by the daily
papers in connection with the recent an-
nouncement that he had been admitted to an
interest in the Knabe corporation as well as
directorate.
The Gabler showrooms are now filled with
choice examples of the latest Gabler styles in
grands and uprights. Local trade, whole-
sale and retail, and out-of-town business in
air sections, is active—so active that the im-
mense resources at the factory are continu-
ally brought into play in order to keep pace
with the demand.
The music store of Voliva & Johnson at
Havana, 111., has been purchased by the Rev.
C. A. James. This is rather a harmonious
combination—the saving of souls and the
selling of pianos. They are both mighty hard
to accomplish sometimes.
Mr. Nahum Stetson, of Steinway & Sons,
is at Old Point Comfort for a short vacation.
C. M. Southall's music store in Florence,
Ala., was damaged by fire and water on March
19th, to the extent of $750. There is an in-
surance of $6,500.
Among the dealers who called at the Soh-
mer warerooms during the week was Mr.
Kluppelberg, of Hagerstown, N. J.
"Very busy," is the report this week at the
Gibson factory. Mr. Boothe left town on
Monday for a three-weeks' tour.
Thos. La M. Couch left town on Tuesday
for a lengthy tour in the interests of the "G.
& K." His last trip was very successful.
flay Sell the $6,000 Strad.
The genuine Stradivarius, valued at $6,000,
now on exhibition at the Krell warerooms, is
likely to find a purchaser. A visitor who
called early in the week saw it and was seized
with a violent desire to become its possessor.
Money is no object to the man who wants it,
and as he knows it is worth infinitely more
than the price asked, its sale is likely to be
recorded in the near future.
SGHAEFFER PIANOS
Established in New York 1876.
The daily papers for the past few days re-
port the annual spring tale of floods, with the
opening chapter in Ohio. The towns flooded
included Springfield, in which are located the
piano plants of Wickham, Chapman & Co.
and the O, S, Kelley Co.
In Chicago, 188
HIGH GRADE AT MODERATE PRICE
Factory at Rlvervlew, III.
Capacity, Two Hundred Pianos per month
SGHAEFFER PIANO MFG. CO.
Office, 239-241 Wabash Avenue, Chicago
Reorganized and Incorporated January, 1898
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
The Everett Piano Warranty.
Plant to be Rebuilt.
Schiller Piano Factory Burned.
THE ANNOUNCEMENT BY THE EVERETT PIANO
CO. OF THE GUARANTEE FOR A LIFE-
TIME CREATES MUCH NOTICE.
ONLY TEN VOTED AGAINST THE LOAN TO
DOHERTY & CO.
FACTORY AND MATERIAL COMPLETELY
CLEANED OUT LOSS $35,OOO, INSUR-
ANCE $ 2 3 , 0 0 0 .
The announcement a short time since by
the Everett Piano Co. that every piano here-
after made by them would be guaranteed
throughout the entire lifetime of the instru-
ment has compelled considerable notice.
It was a new and bold departure from the
conventional, and demonstrated clearly and
forcibly the faith which the Everett Piano
Co. have in their instruments.
Knowing how the Everett pianos are made,
of what they are made—in fact their intrinsic
merits, musically and architecturally—they
took this forward step in the matter of war-
ranty after due consideration of the various
phases of the situation.
Those dealers and musicians who have ex-
amined the new scale Everett pianos can
understand fully why the makers resolved on
such a broad declaration.
Much interest has been evinced in the form
which this warranty would take, and we take
pleasure in reproducing the text:
Clinton, Ont., March 21, 1898.
The Clinton citizens voted last Tuesday on
the proposed loan to W. Doherty & Co., or-
gan manufacturers, who were burned out on
February 1st, and were almost unanimous in
expressing their approval of it. There are
about 475 available votes in the town; 457 of
these were for the loan, and only 10 against
it. The loan is $25,000, for twenty years,
without interest.
After the result of the vote was announced
a large crowd assembled around the Doherty
office and greeted Mr. Doherty with three
hearty cheers. Mr. Doherty, in a very neat
speech, thanked the Mayor, Council and citi-
zens generally for their loyal support and ap-
preciation of himself and the factory, and
assured them that no time would be lost in
getting the factory rebuilt and in running
order.
Work wiU commence at once on the new
factory, which will be built near the G. T. R.
tracks. It will have accommodation for 250
employes and a capacity for turning out 500
organs a month.
[Special to The Review.1
THE EVERETT PIANO COriPANY,
Of Boston, Mass., U. S. A.
We hereby guarantee Everett Piano No.
— to be scientifically made of the best ma-
terial, and we fully warrant this piano
(ordinary wear, and the below named con-
ditions excepted) for an unlimited period of
time. We do not guarantee against var-
nish checking; extreme or sudden varia-
tions in temperature are usually the cause
of this defect. We do not guarantee against
results of exposure to dampness. The
presence of rust on the metal parts of a
piano is absolute proof that the piano has
been affected by dampness, in such event
we will not be responsible for damage re-
sulting therefrom to either the interior or
exterior of the piano.
Should any defect occur not the result of
neglect nor improper use, nor exposure, we
agree to either satisfactorily repair the
piano at our factory or replace it with a
new piano of the same make and similar
style.
THE EVERETT PIANO COMPANY.
Sold bv
Appraisers Still Worrying.
Whether certain musical instruments, so-
called, are to be considered as such under the
present tariff and dutiable at forty-five per
cent, ad valorem, or whether they are toys and
therefore dutiable at thirty-five per cent., was
the main point discussed last Saturday at the
special hearing before the Classification Board
of the General Appraisers. A large variety
of instruments was. exhibited and their uses
explained.
Will Not Remove.
In a letter to the Bridgeport, Conn., Board
of Trade, the Bridgeport Organ Co. deny
having had correspondence with the Board of
Trade of Meriden with the idea of a removal
of the plant of the company to that place.
With such an unequivocal warranty, the
purchaser is, if ordinary care is taken, as-
sured of a piano for a lifetime.
And what stronger point is needed for the
dealer handling the Everett?
It is but natural that the move made by the
Everett Piano Co. in this matter should have
occasioned unusual comment. It marks an
epoch in the matter of piano warranties.
Indicted by the Grand Jury.
[Special to The Review. 1
Baltimore, Md., March 21, 1898.
Joseph Barnolak, who was arrested in Chi-
cago on a charge of the embezzlement of
$700 from the U. S. Zither & Guitar Co.,
211 St. Paul street, has been brought back
on requisition papers on an indictment by the
Grand Jury.
Barnolak claims that, as manager of the
company, he opened branches in Hagerstown,
Frederick and other places, and the money
he is charged with embezzling was used to
run those branches. He is well known in
East Baltimore as a Polish interpreter, and at
one time edited a Polish paper.
t)o yew own
a piano?
If so, this lj(
(advertisement/
•will interest
you.
It describes the
ANGELUS ORCHESTRAL.
< Played like the Symphony.)
Estey Co. to Exhibit.
A new and wonderful invention that instantly converts any piano
into a 8elf-playing instrument. In every house where there is a
piano the ANGELUS ORCHESTRAL is needed. It is
[Special to The Review.]
The Master-key that unlocks
the gates of Melody for all!
Omaha, Neb., March 19, 1898.
The Estey Organ Co. have secured 1630
feet of space at the forthcoming Exposition.
They are going to make a magnificent display
of their various lines of manufacture in pianos
and organs. It promises to be an important
feature of the Fair.
The Bowlby Organ factory at Washington,
N. J., was disposed of last week at a sheriff's
sale,
[Special to The Review.]
Oregon, 111., March 20, i<
The Schiller Piano factory was discovered
on fire yesterday, and in less than an hour
the entire structure with its contents was
consumed. The fire originated in the dry
kiln of the factory, and it was never once
under control from the start. Some surround-
ing buildings were also eaten up by the fire.
The loss is estimated at about $35,000 with
an insurance of $23,000.
F. G. Jones, president of the company,
says that it is the intention of the firm to at
once procure manufacturing quarters. They
may eventually rebuild or perhaps seek a new
location. The company have not exactly
made up their minds in this matter, and will
not take definite steps until the insurance is
adjusted.
The present officers of the company are:
F. G. Jones, president; C. D. Etnyre, vice-
president; Geo. H. Jones, secretary and
treasurer. The concern at the time of the
fire were quite busy. They manufacture the
"Schiller" and "Waverly" pianos.
The
offices and warerooms are at 24 Adams street,
Chicago.
No musical talent on the part of the
performer is required. A child that
has never before seen a piano can, with
the aid of the ANGELUS ORQHKS-
TRAL, render the most difficult com-
ositions in a manner possible to only
le most accomplished and practised
of pianists. Contains (in addition to
the piano-playing mechanism) two f u 11
sets of organ reeda, which may be
played separately or in company with
the piano.
S
" '-L.v ANGELUS ORCHESTRAL
ALONE
Instantly applied to any piano —
grand, upright or square — and UB
easily removed. No technical knowl-
edge required j the performer has
merely to work the pedals and operate
the stops that control the time and ex-
ression and thereby render the most
ifncult pieces in a truly masterly
way. Does not scratch or Injure tho
piano in tho least.
Made in all varieties of polished
woods to match any piano.
S
The above is a very brief and incomplete account of the
ANGELUS ORCHESTRAL. Send your name and address on a
postal card and we will gladly mail photos and full description.
Whether you intend to purchase or not, you will be interested
In learning more about this musical marvel of the century.
THE WILCOX A WHITE CO., MERIDEN, CONN.
SALESROOMS: na FIITH AVC, NEW YORK.

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