Music Trade Review

Issue: 1901 Vol. 33 N. 26

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
ii
Music TRKDE
NEVADA HAS A RAG-TIME DITTY.
So impressed is Mme. Nevada, the opera
singer, with "rag-time" songs that she has
already learned one composed for her, enti-
tled "Since Malinda Joined the Army." An-
other is now being written by Williams and
Walker, the comedians.
Two years ago Mme. Nevada first heard
Bert Williams sing one of his "rag-time"
songs in Detroit, and then and there she be-
came a lover of such melodies. Accompan-
ied by a party, she occupied a box by spec-
ial invitation. Before she departed for Eu-
rope she asked Messrs. Williams and Walk-
er if they could compose a song for her, with
just a touch of "rag-time" in it. "Since
Malinda Joined the Army" is the result of
their labors.
The song is written about a colored wo-
man who is attracted by the Salvation Army
singing on a street corner.
"There is nothing vulgar—as some peo-
ple call it—about the air of the song we sent
Mme. Nevada," Comedian Williams says.
"It runs along very smoothly, but still it is
a rag-time song: I think she is very much
pleased with it."
STARR PIANOS
Embody generous artistic values and have
*
been found most desirable instruments for
the dealers to handle.
THE BOGART APPRECIATED.
Chatting with E. B. Bogart, of E. B. Bo-
gart & Co., the well-known Harlem manu-
facturers, this week, he spoke enthusiastic-
ally about business conditions. "Not only
are we busy," said Mr. Bogart, "but what
is better still, we find that the intrinsic mer-
its of our pianos are steadily being better
appreciated. A short time since we found
it necessary in consequence of the value we
are embodying in our instruments to raise
the price slightly, and although some of our
customers demurred at the start yet we have
received letters from them stating that there
are such values both architecturally and mu-
sically in the Bogart piano that they more
than willingly pay our prices. You know
it is pleasing to receive letters of this kind,
particularly when so many cheap pianos are
being called for. We are closing a very
satisfactory year and believe that 1902 will
be even better for the Bogart piano, because
there has been an unceasing demand for the
Bogart among first-class dealers who com-
prehend what a piano is.
J*
«*
Factories: RICHMOND,
IND.
Simplex flMano
I THE BEST I
THEODORE P . BROWN
Write
for
WORCESTER,
territory
and
MASS.
terms.
You want an easy seller
THEN
SECURE T H E AGENCY FOR T H E
5TULTZ
BAUER
c4 Leader and a Seller as cA.ttracti've Cases & Superb Tone
LETTERS THAT TALK.
These are the kind of letters received by
Dave Fitzgibbon, Butler & Co., and show
plainly how the wind blows.
Messrs. Dave Fitzgibbon, Butler & Co.:
Dear Sir:—Please send on at once full
orchestrations of the following music. We
will put them in our stock and use regularly:
"Broadway for Mine," "Choc'late Babe,"
"The Story of the Daisies," "The Fatal Let-
ter," and any other good ones.
Respectfully yours,
Lew H. Carroll,
Musical Director, Palace Theatre, Boston.
Here is another:
Dave Fitgibbon & Co.
Dear Sirs:—The song, "Fatal Letter," is
perfectly beautiful and I would like to know
whether you have slides for same, and if
you will loan us a set. We can make a big
go of it out here and further West. Hoping
to hear from you soon,
Yours truly,
Harris & De Lano.
Deadwood, S. D.
•*
FACTORIES AND WAREROOMS:
338-340 EAST 3tst STREET
NEW YORK
Smitb & Barnes
Most Profitable for the
Dealer to Handle j» j&
Factory, 477 to 481 Clybourn Avenue,
CHICAGO, ILL
HALXXT
©DAVIS
Endorsed by Leading Artists
for more than Half a Century
...BOSTON. MASS.
THE HAGEN & RUEFER PIANOS'
RE MADE to satisfy the desire of
the buying public. Honest in
construction, tasteful in design;
touch, light and elastic, and
musical quality unsurpassed. The
prices are low, making them just the right
instrument for dealers who wish to make
^ money, while building up a good reputation.
WRITE FOR PARTICULARS AND
TERRITORY TO THE FACTORY AT
PETERBORO,
(7hri$tman pianos
CHRISTUM i SON,
N. H.
A PIANO MADE FOR
MUSICAL PEOPLE.
RICH IN VALUE
FOR THE DEALER.
Office and Ware room si 21 East 14th St., New Yor
Factory: 665-667 Hudson Street, New York.
RADLE
PIANOS
are built to wear, of the best
material and sold at a remark-
ably low price. A money-making
instrument for the dealer.
Factory, 611 & 613 West 36th Street, NEW YORK.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
THE KING OF PIANO PLAYERS
33
7V^USIO T R R D E
BUSY TIME FOR PIANO TUNERS.
!
OARDMAN
"This is about the time of year when we
are nearly driven crazy with work," said a •
tired-looking piano tuner to a reporter of
the New York Times. "Everybody wants
the piano tuned for the holidays, and most
Pronounced by experts, who have given it the
people forget about it till the last moment.
most complete tests, to be the perfect player.
And besides being the busy season, we have
Territorial allotment Is being rapidly made to
been having the most trying weather.
agents.
"These cold dry days throw pianos out Made upon Honor for 6a years.
Have no Superior^
New. "Up-to-date," Attractive Style*.
of tune, and besides that the sounding boards
SEND FOR NEW CATALOGUE.
are beginning to split. It always surprises
Factory and Warerooms t
me
what
poor
care
most
people
take
of
their
Manufacturers of the
Apollo and Orpheus Piano Players
pianos. Let a man buy an expensive watch, 543 to 549 BROADWAY, (opposite Depot)
ALBANY, N. Y.
and the Melville Clark Pianos
and he'll treat it as though it were a living
nnoafketnrcra of
Factory and Warerooms:
thing. But people don't seem to realize NEWMAN BROS.
399-405 W. Madison St., Chicago, HL what a delicate piece of mechanism a good pi-
D i j I M A t f A Parlor and
Grade
New York: The Apollo Co., 101 Fifth Ave.
ano is. Pianos are not so much affected by
heat or cold as they are by dryness or damp- Chicago Ave. and Dix St., CHICAGO. J*
ness. Of course if you stick one end of a
piano up against a stove, or a heater, or reg-
of
ister, and let the other end come near a cold, Wareroom—250& 252 Wabash Ave.,
leaky window, it'll raise Ned with it, but Factory—1025-1035 Dunning St.,
Grands and Uprights
most persons are onto that. The trouble
GRAND
Manufacturers and Dealers ift
is the piano is too dry.
PRIX
PIANO AND ORGAN LEATHERS,
"You know the sounding board—the life
530-540 Atlantic Avenue. Boston. Mass
PARIS
of
a
piano—is
forced
into
the
case,
when
1900
Por Catalogues and Information Call on or
it is made, so tightly that it bulges up in
Address:
the centre, or has a 'belly,' as we call it, on
" O W N - M A K E "
the same principle as a violin. The wood
BAND INSTRUMENTS
is supposed to be as dry as possible, but, of
CINCINNATI
are used by prominent soloists in the following
CHICAQO
organizations:
course, it contains some moisture, and gath-
U. 5 . Marine Band. Theo. Thomas' Chicago
LOUISVILLE
ers a lot more on damp days, and in handling.
Orchestra, Rosenbecker's Symphony Or-
INDIANAPOLIS
chestra, The Kilties. Canada's Crack Band,
Now, when you put a piano in a dry, over-
TERRA HAUTE
T. B. Brooke's Band, Banda Rossa, Indian-
heated room, all this moisture is dried out,
ST. LOUIS *
apolis nilitary Band, Illinois First Regiment
Band, DeBaugh's Band, American Band,and
ESTABLISHED 1869
and the board loses its 'belly' and gets flabby,
many others.
and finally cracks. Even if it doesn't crack,
LYON & HEALY have been appointed sole agents
for
the celebrated
Manufacturers of HKJH ORADE
the tone loses its resonance, and grows thin
and tinny, and the felt cloth and leather used
which can be played with either closed or open O Sharp
in the action dry up. Then the whole ma-
Key. I he greatest invention ever applied to a flute.
East *32d St. & Alexander Ave., New York chine rattles and everybody kicks.
FARRAND ORGAN COMPANY, "How can you prevent it? Easily enough.
DETROIT, MICH.
Keep a growing plant in the room, and so
Manufacturers of High Grade
199 WABASH AVENUE,
CHICAQO
long as your plant thrives your piano ought
Reed Organs, Cecilian Piano Players and
to, or else there is something wrong with it.
Olympia Self-Playing Organs.
Just try it, and see how much more water
you'll have to pour on the flower pot in the
room where your piano is than in any other
_
Manufacturers of
^
MANUFACTURERS OP
room.
08
Fine Piano
v$
"Some people keep a huge vase or urn PIANO BASS and
MALL MUSICAL
with a sopping wet sponge in it near or un- NSTRUMENT
Montclair, New Jersey. der the piano, and keep it moistened just as
312, 316 East 95th Street.
a cigar dealer keeps his stock. They keep
NEW YORK.
this up all the time the fires are on."
Apollo
at GRAY-
PIANOS
ESTABLISHED—IN—1837.
Melville dark Piano Co..
THE
BALDWIN
PIANO
LYON & HEALY
D: H. BALDWIN & CO.
Kroeger Piano Co*
Schreiber-Boehm Flutes
PIANOS
N. Y. Co-operative
Piano String Co.
STRINGS
VARNISH
PIANOS
Siiake Money for the Tfealers
Catalogue and Information can be had by addreaaln*
FELL DOWN ELEVATOR SHAFT.
IANOS
Arthur Walsh, fourteen years old, of 1520
Washington Avenue, the Bronx, an errand
of Sterfiqg
boy employed by the Weber-Wheelock Co.,
Quafity aod fow Priced. 108 Fifth avenue, was killed in that build-
THE SCHUilANN IS THE OREATEST VALUB
ft
pays Deafers to fjarydfe tftem.
POR THE nONEY HADE.
ing last Saturday afternoon by falling down
Schumann Piano Co.
Correspondence
the elevator shaft.
Solicited
uj-iafl LaStlle Avenue, Chicago^ II.
How many stories the boy fell no one
FACTORY AND OFFICE.
4O2 to 4IO West 14th Street, New York.
knows.
The
elevator
had
stopped
for
the
L, MHRSHKLL
day, and it is assumed the boy was running
(E. M. BOOTHE, Treas.)
it and in some way toppled out of the car.
Walsh was found at the bottom of the el-
of
NEW YOKK evator shaft dead. The elevator was at
Office, Warerooms and Factory,
the fourth floor and all the doors leading to
1881
and J883 PARK AVE.,
it were closed.
Corner
128th Street, New York.
. . NEW YORK . .
A second motion has been filed, this time Dealers «*curlng: territory will be protected
Address Office, 503 Fifth Ave., Cor. 42d St.
by a creditor, for the removal of the receiver
Piano Keys and Cases
appointed recently to take charge of the bus-
T h e N e w Y o r k P i a n o K e y C o . In not only maintaining Its repu-
tation or making the best Planu ami Pi)w Organ Keys In this country, but hava
iness
of
the
Wolfram
Guitar
Co.,
Columbus,
•dded to their plant a first-class H i u u o C a s e M a k i n g D e p a r t m e n t .
PIPE ORGANS
»nd guarantee to furnish th» very best of case work at the lowest price puMlhla.
O.
>4MB«* and Factory ferfaotb department! » t Fetert>or». * H-
HAQERSTOWN, VD.
, 524-534 E. 134th St., N. Y.
ScDMtnann Pianos
KOHLER & CAMPBELL,
American Piano

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