Music Trade Review

Issue: 1903 Vol. 37 N. 22

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE
JOHN C. HAYNES CO. OUT.
After Jan. 1st Business Will be Merged With the
Oliver Ditson Co.—Charles C. Bobzin Will As-
sume Command—A Number of Retiremsnts.
[Special to The Review.]
Boston, Mass., Nov. 25, 1903.
The musical merchandise house of John
C. Haynes & Company, which for many
years have conducted a retail and whole-
sale business from Boston, will cease to ex-
ist after January 1st. The business will
thereafter be conducted as the musical mer-
chandise department of the Oliver Ditson
Co., the change to take effect when the
Oliver Ditson Co. will move into their new
quarters at 150 Tremont street.
Chas. C. Bobzin, who for many years has
been identified with the eastern interests of
Lyon & Healy, will assume charge of this
department. Mr. Bobzin is a man of wide
experience, admitted ability and as chief of
this department will have entire control.
Chas. C. Williams, who for many years
has been manager of the John C. Haynes
business will retire, also Geo. H. Brown,
who has been road representative for this
concern, and other men who have been con-
nected with John C. Haynes & Co.
An important announcement in connec-
tion with this move is that the new depart-
ment under Mr. Bobzin will discontinue
the lines heretofore carried by John C.
Haynes, such as the Bay State guitar and
others. In their place will be substituted
the entire line of the great firm of Lyon &
Healy, Chicago.
The same policy will control the New
York house of Chas. H. Ditson & Co., and
the Philadelphia house of J. E. Ditson &
Co., and in both of these stores the Lyon &
Healy brands will take precedence even to
the exclusion of all others.
REVIEW
In this connection John C. Haynes, the
head and front of the Oliver Ditson Co.,
and John C. Haynes & Co. said, to-day:
"From its foundation the firm of John
C. Haynes & Co. was always a part of the
Oliver Ditson Co. The only reason for
using a separate name for the Haynes con-
cern was because, when the Oliver Ditson
Co. (then called Oliver Ditson & Co.) pur-
chased the bankrupt stock of Elias Howe
from his trustees, in 1861, we were com-
pelled to conduct the Howe warerooms, on
Court street, separately and distinctly from
the Ditson warerooms. Since then we
have always conducted our musical mer-
chandise department in Boston under the
name of John C. Haynes & Co., while our
small goods as well as our publications
have been handled in New York and Phila-
delphia, respectively, by our branch
houses, known as Chas. H. Ditson & Co.
and J. E. Ditson & Co.
"After January 1st our entire business
will be under one roof for the first time in
the history of the Ditson concern. We
shall close the wholesale department of
John C. Hayes & Co., on Franklin street,
and remove it, with our retail small goods
department, to the new Oliver Ditson Co.'s
warerooms, No. 150 Tremont street, cor-
ner of West Street. There, on January
1st, the business of John C. Haynes & Co.
will be merged in that of the parent con-
cern, and we shall open a new set of books
for all our accounts in the name of Oliver
Ditson Co.
"In order to help their business and ours,
Messrs. Lyon & Healy, of Chicago, have
made the Oliver Ditson Co. sole agents in
the East for all the goods manufactured by
the great Chicago concern. Mr. Charles
N. Post, vice-president of Lyon & Healy,
came here, last week, to perfect this ar-
rangement. Mr. Charles C. Bobzin, east-
ern traveling representative of Lyon &
Healy, will become the manager of our
new musical merchandise department. It
will be known as the 'Musical Merchan-
dise Department of the Oliver Ditson Co.'
"Meanwhile the musical merchandise
departments in our New York and Phila-
delphia branches will be continued as
usual, and will handle exclusively in their
respective territories the goods made in
the Lyon & Healy factories.
"Mr. Bobzin is regarded by all parties
concerned in the new management as be-
ing the man best fitted for the position of
manager of our musical merchandise de-
partment, from which Mr. C. C Williams,
its present head, will retire on January 1st.
I am unable to tell you anything about
Mr. William's plans for the future. Mr.
Bobzin has been the eastern representa-
tive of the Lyon & Healy goods for many
years, with headquarters in Philadelphia,
but his house has consented to release
him. Mr. Bobzin has been in the music
business from the start. He went with
Lyon & Healy when a very young man,
and is familiar with every branch of the
trade.
"Lyon & Healy do an enormous general
music business and are noted as being the
largest importers of miscellaneous musical
instruments in the United States. The
house of Lyon & Healy was originally
started by Oliver Ditson & Co. in 1864, and
it is very fitting that the most cordial re-
lations should exist between the two
houses."
Chas. N. Post, vice-president of Lyon &
Healy with James F. Bowers were in The
Review office this week and related details
in connection with the new moves. It will
be seen at once that under the new order
of things it will mean an immense output
of Lyon & Healy goods in the eastern terri-
tory.
THE SALES OF
Black Diamond (:zJ and Bell Brand
Strings for all musical instruments have more than
doubled during the past year.
Every first-class wholesale dealer in musical mer-
chandise in America and Europe handles them*
All are delighted with the increase in their
string trade and are enthusiastic in their praises of
BLACR DIAMOND and BELL BRAND
and unanimously say they arc the BEST IN THE
WORLD and THEY SOUND DIFFERENT.
Owing to the greatly increased demand for these lines, dealers should place their orders
for the Holidays without delay, as we cannot guarantee to make immediate shipment.
APPLY TO YOUR JOBBER OR DIRECT TO US
NATIONAL MUSICAL STRING CO.,
LONDON.
PARIS.
NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE:
NEW WURLITZER CATALOGUE
A Publication of Exceeding Merit to Dealers in
Small Goods and Supplies.
One of the largest and most complete
catalogues devoted to small goods of all
kinds which has made its appearance in the
trade for some time is that issued by the
Rudolph Wurlitzer Co., Cincinnati, O.
Space prevents recounting the innumerable
instruments pictured and described in this
volume.
Suffice it that everything in
music that a dealer requires, and every
supply in this connection, is described and
priced in this volume. For purposes of
reference it should be in the hands of every
dealer.
The Rudolph Wurlitzer Co.'s line of
small goods is one of the most complete
and most satisfying in the trade, and in-
vites the investigation of wide-awake
dealers, desirous of making their small
goods department a profitable adjunct to
their business.
WHOLE WORLD KNOWS THE HOHNER.
One of the cleverest of the many in-
genious and effective designs published by
the Hohner firm to attract the attention of
purchasers and the trade is a humorous
pen-and-ink sketch in cartoon form repre-
senting a Hohner harmonica on end, en-
dowed, for the occasion, with arms, legs
and a broad smile, extending a hearty
greeting to the whole world, which, also
fitted out with legs and arms and a happy
expression of countenance, towers above his
musical friend. With the picture goes the
MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
lating with his little savings as well as the
rich man with his thousands or his mil-
lions. When you remember that the aver-
age man is naturally a bull you can realize
how immense the loss has been.
"Now, when a man has lost the hundred
dollars that he had in the bank the first
thing he will think about is how to get it
DULL ONLY IN NEW YORK.
back there, and buying luxuries will be the
last thing in his head. Until the empty
Jobbing Trade in South and West in Excellent
bank accounts are replenished business
Condition.
around New York will be less than normal.
"Jobbing business throughout the Fortunately, however, the country at large
country at large is in good shape," said a is in excellent condition, and I hope it will
prominent jobber who has just returned not take long for the local stringency to
from an extended trip. "The volume of pass."
business is entirely normal for this time of
year. The South, with ten and eleven cent
REGINA MUSIC BOXES
cotton, has money to burn, and is buying
freely, and the West with its immense corn Finding Their Way Into a Larger Measure of
and wheat crops is in excellent shape,
Favor Through the Club Plan.
and is consuming as rapidly as ever. In
fact in the country at large business is en-
The idea of selling the Regina Music
tirely normal.
boxes on the club plan is being favorably
"The only section in which it is poor is received wherever introduced. Hundreds
Xew York City and the country for a few of persons who have for years past desired
hundred miles around it. This is due in to possess a Regina box, but could not af-
my opinion to a variety of causes. The lo- ford to pay cash with orders have, within
cal labor troubles are one very important the past two months, been able to satisfy
cause, the unseasonably warm weather is their wishes completely and are more than
another, but undoubtedly the losses in pleased with the opportunity to provide.
Wall street constitute the greatest cause of The following extract from a recent Regina
poor business around New York.
announcement to music dealers will bear
"These losses have been enormous, and repetition here, and may be of service to
they have affected not only the poor, but such as have not yet availed themselves of
the rich as well. Every town and a good the plan:
many pretty insignificant villages had their
Almost without exception those dealeis
bucket shops, and the poor man was specu- who have made the wonderful successes
legend. "The whole world knows the
Hohner harmonicas."
The new Hohner accordeons are being
widely accepted by experts as remarkably
satisfactory in tone and general value.
Business with the Hohner house continues
large in volume.
THEY BEAR THE NAME OF
M. HOHNER
WHICH MEANS
THE BEST
M. Hohner's new catalogue, just out. If you
haven't one, get it. Most complete book of its
kind ever published.
ASK YOUR JOBBER.
... M. HOHNER .

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