Music Trade Review

Issue: 1898 Vol. 27 N. 7

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
Husic Trade Should Exhibit.
AN UNUSUAL OPPORTUNITY OFFERED FOR AN
EXHIBITION OF-MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS AT
THE ANNUAL FAIR OF THE NEW YORK
STATE AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY.
The Merchants' Association of New
York has been asked by the New York
State Agricultural Society, of which the
Hon. Benj. F. Tracy, Ex-Secretary of the
Navy, is president, to take charge of an
exhibit of manufactured products from the
Greater New York.
The exhibits will be made at the Annual
State Fair to be held at Syracuse during
the last three days of August and the first
three days of September of this year.
Favorable arrangements have been
made with the railroads to transport arti-
cles to be exhibited to the Fairgrounds
and to return them. Those railroads run
directly into the Fair grounds. Favorable
arrangements have also been made for the
transportation of persons to and from the
Fair, who may be sent by exhibitors to
take charge of exhibits.
The members of the music trade indus-
try will be interested to learn that the
committee in charge of the Fair has
agreed to give space to exhibitors from
New York free of all charge, and to look
after such exhibits so that they will be
properly protected.
All details can be
ascertained by sending to, or calling at,
the rooms of The Merchants' Association
on the ground floor of the New York Life
Building, corner Broadway and Leonard
street, New York City.
It is the desire of the Managers of the
Fair to broaden the scope of the Fair, and
to make an effort to bring the people from
the upper part of the State, and the
Manufacturing industries of New York
into closer relations. It is this same de-
sire which animated the Merchants' Asso-
ciation in accepting the responsibility of
arranging for an exhibit.
An Art Exhibition has been arranged
for already; and there will also probably
be a good display of Electrical matters.
Quite a number of persons have an-
nounced their intention to make exhibits
with The Merchants' Association. All
those who desire to take advantage of this
opportunity would better make their appli-
cation as early as possible, so that the
floor space they may desire can be allotted
them.
The buildings have been inspected by
representatives of The Merchants' Associ-
ation. They are in good condition, and
are a credit to the State Fair Committee.
The grounds are beautifully located
near Syracuse, there being several rail-
roads running directly into the grounds,
as well as a trolley road, and a beautiful
boulevard runs along the edge of the lake
from the city to the grounds.
\\
New Concern Incorporated.
Kimball Enterprise.
[Special to The Review.]
What a wonderful institution is the W.
W. Kimball Co., of Chicago! Time and
time again we have chronicled the growth
of their immense factory plant in Chicago,
which occupies now an entire square, six
stories high, and yet even this immense
hive of industry is not adequate to supply
sufficient instruments to meet their grow-
ing business.
A few weeks since we announced the in-
tention of the Company to erect another
addition to this plant—a structure 80 x 400
feet in dimensions and five stories high.
This building is now in course of con-
struction, and will give much needed ac-
commodations during the coming fall
trade.
When it is known that the new addition
with the present mammoth factories give
the institution no less than eighteen acres
of floor space and afford a capacity of
fifty-five pianos and sixty organs a day,
the extent of the Kimball institution and
the Kimball business may be estimated.
The progress of the Kimball Co. is not
surprising to those who have made a study
of the requisites necessary to success in
this present age. Study the plant, the
methods of manufacture, the men in
charge of the different departments, and
back of all, the giant minds of W. W.
Kimball and his co-workers, Messrs. Cone,
Con way and Kimball, Jr., and it occasions
little wonder that we record the success of
such an institution. It is a logical evolu-
tion, for it is built on advanced lines; it i>s
governed on advanced lines, and it keeps
in touch with the enterprise of the present
year of our Lord 1898.
Factory additions! More of them are
bound to come. They are inevitable, in
view of the Kimballian policy of go-ahead-
eduess.
Evansville, Ind., Aug. 8, 1898.
The Kevekordes Mvisical Company have
filed articles of incorporation in the county
recorder's office, the capital stock being
$5,000, divided into 100 shares at $50 each.
The incorporators are Leo Clements and
Theodore Kevekordes.
Zimmerman's Vagaries
FOUND
VENT IN IMITATING THE SOUNDS OF
VARIOUS INSTRUMENTS.
Carl Zimmerman is believed to be mu-
sic mad.
His sanity is being inquired
into at Bellevue Hospital. He is a maker
of musical instruments and lives in Little
West Twelfth street, this city. He spent
hours every night imitating various musical
instruments by putting his hands to his
mouth.
The neighbors wondered how the pale
young man could play on the violin with-
out a violin, and on the flute without a
flute, and on the trombone without a
trombone. An ambulance drove up to
the house. A crowd followed the surgeon
to Zimmerman's room. Then the mystery
was explained. There sat the pale young
man playing on the trombone by placing
his hands to his mouth in the shape of a
conch.
Another Piano Swindler.
THOMAS C. HOWARD IN J A I L FOR SWINDLING A
LOT OF PEOPLE OUT OF SMALL SUMS
OF MONEY.
[Special to The Review.]
Omaha, Neb., Aug. 8, 1898.
If Thos. E. Howard, an alleged agent
for the Kimball Piano Co., had been a
man of his word nearly every colored fam-
ily in the northeast part of the city would
have a grand piano in its parlor. Mr.
Howard is now in jail for failing to be
truthful.
Howard, a few days ago, made a tour of
the homes of the colored population in the
guise of a piano agent who was fairly giv-
ing pianos away. His alluring speeches
captivated nearly everybody he talked to,
and he completed his work with his pock-
ets bulging with good green dollars, for
which his victims had his receipt.
Howard promised his dupes that on pay-
ment of tw T o dollars he would sell a $200
piano for $100, to be paid for in weekly
payments of two dollars each after the
first six months' trial.
The first six
months nothing was to be paid on the in-
strument, the initial payment of two dol-
lars simply being to defray the expenses
of shipping the piano to the prospective
purchaser's residence. In addition to get-
ting a six months' trial use of the piano, a
music teacher was to be furnished who
was to give free lessons for one year.
Twenty-five people who paid the two
Thimbles made of rubber to be slipped dollars to Howard have thus far been dis-
over the fingers like gloves are the latest covered by the police, but it is believed
fad advocated as a cure for any nervous that this number does not near represent
trouble which may be brought about the total defrauded. Howard was arrested
through incessant piano study.
What yesterday afternoon. Ten of his dupes
filed complaints against him.
next!
, A Novel Piano Contest.
Of all voting contests, perhaps the most
original idea is the one adopted by Perry
Brothers, of Scranton, Pa., who will give
to the school, church, society, hospital or
any other institution receiving the greatest
number of votes up to Jan. 1, 1899, a fine
Ludwig Piano. The novelty lies in the
vote, which will consist of any advertise-
ment or reading notice, unless otherwise
mentioned, which contains the name Perry
Brothers. As Perry Brothers advertise in
all the Scranton papers, no doubt the vote
will be very large and it offers great op-
portunities for all societies, schools, etc.,
to take part with good chances of success.
The prize offered is one of the best Lud-
wig instruments. The contest is open to
any organization in the vicinity.
New Stores Just Opened.
G. J. Rolfstad, Crookston, Minn. ; A. B.
Imme, Greensburg, Pa. ; H. L. Brown,
Ragle Grove, la. ; Mr. Helfrich, Cantar,
S. D. ; Mr. Konzen, Lawler, la. ; J. O.
Loch, Ottumwa, la. ; H. E. Irish, Santa
Cruz, Cal.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
Popularity of the American Harp. mechanism fora disabled part; the plac- nobles, the fact should be kept clearly in
A MAGAZINE WRITER PAYS LYON & HEALY A
WELL-DESERVED COMPLIMENT.
A great and well-deserved tribute is
paid the harp of American manufacture
and Lyon & Healy in the Chautauquan,
by Forrest Crissey. He declares it is due
to Yankee ingenuity that the harp has
been rescued from oblivion, its imperfec-
tions corrected, and defects long regarded
as fundamental to harp construction have
been eliminated, thus liberating the in-
strument from the shackles which have
fettered it in the race for modern favor.
"Practically all important steps in
bringing the harp to its present high de-
gree of perfection are the fruits of Ameri-
can inventive genius," says Mr. Crissey,
" and it is a matter of national pride that
the royal orchestras of the Old World,
with few exceptions, have been compelled
to send to the great harp factory of Lyon
& Healy in Chicago for their instruments
of this character. This harp is universal-
ly recognized to contain features so dis-
tinctive and important as to mark an era
in the history of the instrument, making
possible its general iise in private and ama-
teur circles as in a professional way.
Those modern improvements, which are of
genuine historic moment and upon which
the . harp must depend for the future
eclipse of its former greatness and popu-
larity, are principally these: construction
upon a system of interchangeable parts,
making possible the immediate and con-
venient substitution of a new piece of
ing of each pedal rod inside a special tube,
thereby overcoming a general and trouble-
some tendency to rattling; the use of a
novel disk-screw for the sharpening and
flatting forks, by which each is easily ad-
justed independent of its octaves. The
best modern harps also have enlarged
soundboards, by which the volume of tone
is greatly increased and its quality im-
proved. The liability of the harp to de-
rangement of its intricate parts has long
been a terror to the performers upon this
instrument and has done much to prevent
its popularity, But this objection has
been effectually silenced, along with many
others, by the triumph of ' Yankee' in-
genuity.
"By a mechanism delicate as that of a
watch, the modern harp has been made
proof against these ' demons of discord '
so dreaded by the owners of less improved
instruments. . . . Other improvements
have so greatly lengthened the life of the
harp that the best instruments are good for
an active service of one hundred years.
These improvements have eliminated
from the profession of harp-playing an
element of great precariousness which pre-
vented many from entering it. The in-
strument is likely to increase in value in-
stead of to collapse at a moment best cal-
culated to inflict serious disaster of a pe-
cuniary and professional character upon
the artist by preventing the latter from
"filling profitable engagements."
In reviewing this splendid history of the
harp, and tracing its legal lines of descent
from the hands of kings, priests and
mind that in the height of its imperial
favor, the instrument did not approach in
quality, power, scope, and sweetness, the
product of the new-world factory; that the
improved modern harp is the most superb
representative of its long and regal line,
and that the makers of instruments lavish
upon this the highest quality of hand
workmanship at their command.
Packard Popularity.
The Ft. Wayne Organ Co. continue to
report the greatest activity in both piano
and organ departments of their business.
They are working their full force twelve
hours a day, and this in midsummer is a
convincing demonstration of the big de-
mand for their wares—it moreover
indicates a tremendous trade during the
fall season. Anyone acquainted with the
Packard pianos and organs will not be
surprised at their popularity.
Music Dealer in Trouble Again.
Newton, Kan., Aug. 8, 1898.
Frank Miller, the Halstead music dealer,
who attempted assault upon a little girl of
that city, is again in trouble. After his
crime he escaped from his tarring and
feathering experience and kidnapped his
little child at Wichita. His divorced wife
recovered the child through the courts,
and now Miller has taken it a second time,
a severe penitentiary offense. He is sup-
posed to be hiding somewhere in the
county.
Music on Your Own Terms
THE GRAPHOPHONE requires no skilled performer to play
it, and yet it will furnish any kind of music desired.
It is vastly
superior to other so-called talking machines, because on the
GRAPHOPHONE one can easily make records of his own music, song
or story, to be instantly reproduced.
Its performances are not
confined to the reproduction of specially prepared and stereotyped
subjects.
It is fascinating and marvelous as an entertainer
Music dealers will find the GRAPHOPHONE a great attraction in their
stores, and more than that, a most profitable addition to their stock.
Liberal terms offered to dealers; can be learned on application. .
Graphophones are Retailed at $10 and up*
Manufactured under the patents of Bell, Tainter, Edison and MacDonald.
Our establishment is manufacturing head-
quarters of the world for Talking Machines and Talking Machine Supplies.
Write for Catalogue M
Columbia Phonograph Company,
NEW YORK, 1155, 1157, 1159 Broadway.
PARIS, 34 Boulevard des Italiens.
CHICAGO, 211 State Street.
ST. LOUIS, 720-722 Olive Street.
Dept.
PHILADELPHIA, 1032 Chestnut Street.
WASHINGTON, 919 Pennsylvania Avenue.
BALTIMORE, 110 East Baltimore Street.
BUFFALO, 313 Main Street.

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