Music Trade Review

Issue: 1906 Vol. 42 N. 18

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
45
& Jacobson, New York, is an example of a num-
ber addressed their coast trade, respectively:
Among Musical Merchandise Men—The Situa- A New Hohner Specialty That Is Destined to
"In view of the awful catastrophe which has
Have a Large Market.
tion on the Pacific Coast Improved and
befallen your city, we though) it advisable to
inquire in advantfe whether you have suf-
Every Aid Will be Extended to the Stricken
Ones—Buying Is on Liberal Scale in All One of the new products promised to the trade fered the loss of your business, or whether you
Parts of the Country—Music Trade Men by M. Hohner is the Chimewood harmonica, a Jiave been fortunate enough to escape the ca-
Journeying to Markneukirchen—The Situa- new instrument of that variety that should im- lamity that has overtaken your fellow-beings.
mediately leap into popular favor. It is a radical We shall be pleased to hear from you by return
tion Reviewed.
departure from anything yet placed on the mar- mail. At the same time, we take this oppor-
ket, and consists of a regular Hohner harmonica tunity of offering our heartfelt sympathy for
Very good, indeed, is the general report of
business in the musical merchandise trade. The and a decidedly novel device for beautifying and your loss. We trust the energy which you and
spirit of depression apparent last week, due alto- softening the tone. This device, called a resona- your fellow citizens have shown in the past, to-
gether to the Pacific Coast calamity, has worn tor, is made of thoroughly seasoned wood, and is ward building the city of San Francisco, the New
off, following cheering advices from the stricken nnished in three different colors: Imitation York of the West, will enable you to rebuild your
firms in that section. The buoyant feeling dis-
played by the trade in San Francisco, Oakland,
Santa Rosa, San Jose and smaller cities was ex-
tremely gratifying to the importing wholesalers
and jobbers of Chicago, St. Louis, Cincinnati,
Philadelphia, New York and Boston, who lost
no time in extending prompt aid and encourage-
ment. The gloom engendered in one of the
best small goods markets in the country has
about passed away, and which is succeeded by a
determination to stand by the brethren on the
Coast to the limit.
1KII1NKII I ' l l [MKWUOD H A R M O N I C A .
Other sections are abundantly prosperous, a
condition reflected in the orders received. In ebony, mahogany and bird's-eye maple. It is beautiful town, and make it the monument of
brief, it is a market most satisfactory, the buy- attached to the rear of the harmonica so as to which the rest of our country will be proud."
ing is on a liberal scale, and the only drawback form a hollow tube into which the tone passes
The story is told that one prominent company
io with collections, which are slower than usual, and resounds, giving a violin effect. Due to the of San Francisco wired ten eastern manufactur-
for some unwarrantable reason. The advance fact that numerous harmonica novelties have ers for $1,000 each. Seven responded promptly
guard of American representatives are in the been placed on the market during the past, which with checks for the amount.
foreign small goods centers, and between now leave very little chance for any diversion, the ex-
and early June the full contingent will have treme originality of this latest creation is bound
VITALITY OF REDWOODS.
registered at the Wurlitzer Hof-brau in Mark- to make the Chimewood a big seller. Furnished
An illustration of the wonderful vitality and
neukirchen. A lively time is anticipated regard- in fine hinged boxes and in half dozen packages
reproductiveness of the redwood is reported from
ing prices and stocks in this ancient German containing assorted colored resonators.
Ukiah as existing in the forests of Mendocino
burg, where the manufacturer, producer, exporter
The jobbers have already received a full sup-
and buyer hold their annual sessions and ar- ply of the harmonicas, and will supply their deal- County. It consists of the trunk of a redwood
tree felled for the manufacture of shingles,
range the trade campaign for the ensuing year.
ers at once. Every dealer should request his which, after lying on the ground undisturbed for
Referring to general conditions an unusually jobber to send him a sample at once.
several months, sprouted a number of young
clever manager said to The Review: "The small
trees, whose roots had developed in its own body.
goods, people certainly felt the loss and misery
SYMPATHY FOR 'FRISCO SUFFERERS
Travelers* through the coast forests have fre-
entailed by the Coast earthquake. Every house
sent out their condolences to their particular Is Most Manifest Among the Musical Mer- quently observed the phenomenon of rows of well
developed trees growing out of the bodies of
chandise Men of New York.
customers, who make up the most splendid mar-
those that have lain long enough on the earth
ket in the Union, as they were liberal buyers at
Feelings of the broadest sympathy have been to perish and decay. Some years ago a news-
good prices and paid their accounts promptly
and cheerfully. No kicks from out there, such awakened among the leading small goods dis- paper correspondent reported the strange phe-
as are common in the Eastern trade, especially tributers and wholesalers for the afflicted trade nomenon of new redwood growths on a bridge
through New England. It seems trade grows in San Francisco and other places on the Coast built of redwood logs across a Humboldt County
better as you leave New York going West, until which have suffered by the recent earthquake stream.
The sides of this bridge consisted of two large
when San Francisco, Los Angeles and other and fires following in its dreadful wake. These
places are reached, then it is at its very best. concerns have given practical expression to their redwoods, which had been felled so that the ends
Therefore, you may readily understand how we attitude by the unlimited extension of credits rested in the soil on each bank. All along the
feel toward the splendid fellows who have lost and the offer of goods, actions both prompt and upper side of each log a row of sturdy redwood
their all in a business way, and must practically sincere. The following letter sent by Buegeleisen saplings developed after the bridge was built.
start over again. You may wager that so far as
credit and goods are concerned we are extending
every possible assistance. Outside of this busi-
ness is brisk and strong, buying excellent, but
collections slow. The principals are quietly de-
parting for European shores to have their an-
nual scraps with the foreign producer, some of
whom are right, but the large majority are built
In Quartered Oak, Golden; Mahogany or
on peculiar lines so far as straightforward busi-
Circassian
Walnut; 45 inches high, 19 inches
ness methods go. No one can appreciate this
wide, 15 inches deep. Six Compartments.
until they have been up against the game in
Germany."
BUOYANT FEELING PREVAILS
THE CHIMEWOOD HARMONICA
A Beautiful Music Cabinet
IN OAK OR MAHOGANY, $U.OO
IN CIRCASSIAN WALNUT, $J2.50
Same pattern with beveled mirror, 6x16 inches,
No. 1154^.
RECEIVER FOR STOOL CO.
Creditors
Bring
Application
Haven Firm.
Against New
IN OAK OR MAHOGANY, $*2.25
IN CIRCASSIAN WALNUT, $*3.75
We'd like to send you our special catalogue,
covering the Music Cabinet subject com-
pletely, and showing many handsome designs
in Music Cabinets and Piano Benches.
f Special to The Urview.)
New Haven, Conn., April 28, 1906.
Application has been made to Judge Platt in
the United States bankruptcy court for the ap-
pointment of a receiver for the New England
Stool Co., of 440 Elm street, this city. The lia-
bilities of the concern are estimated at $10,000
t y Carl A. Mears, who represents most of the
creditors, and through whom the bankruptcy pro-
ceedings are being pushed. C. D. Brickett, of
Wilmington, Del., is president of the Stool Co.,
and Edgar C. Sloan, of this city, is manager.
The company organized two years ago with a
capita] of $10,000. Piano stools are the firm's
specialty.
No. 1154.
Our Universal Music Cabinets will interest you.
Cadillac Cabinet Co., Detroit, Michigan
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46
THE
ACTIVITY OF EASTERN JOBBERS.
Their Recently Organized Association a Live
Body of Earnest, Sincere Men—Work Ac-
complished—Next Meeting Tuesday.
Since the formal organization of the Eastern
Talking Machine Jobbers' Association, April 24,
in New York, by the Edison jobbers and Victor
distributers, the committees in charge of matters
referred to them for action have lost no time get
ting down to business. It is safe to say that when
the association meets Tuesday evening next, May
N, all the reports will be presented for further
procedure. The committee on the Victor con-
tract—C. V. Henkel, Douglas Phonograph Co.; .1.
Newcomb Blackman, Blackman Talking Machine
Co., of New York; R. H. Morris, American Talk-
ing Machine Co., Brooklyn, N. Y.; W. E. Henry,
Powers & Henry, Pittsburg, Pa., and President
Andrews, Syracuse, N. Y., ex-officio—have sent
the trade their recommendations for approving
signatures.
Regarding the shipment of records by the Na-
tional Phonograph Co., the following circular was
forwarded to Edison jobbers, with a supplemen-
tary letter to dealers, which meets all objections
raised, besides dealing adequately with the sub-
ject:
To save our jobbers the expense of having new
monthly records shipped by express, as well as to re-
lieve us of our present congested condition ; also TO
enable us to give better service to th£ trade on orders
for current selections, it has been decided :
1st. To dropi the June list of new records entirely.
lid. That, beginning with the July list, all first or-
ders for new monthly records will be shipped to jobbers
by freight, each jobbers' order going forward as soon as
it can be gotten ready, but the records not to be placed
on sale, or leave the jobber's store or possession, before
date specified and authorized below.
.''.(1. Beginning with July list, new monthly records
must not be put on sale, either at wholesale or retail,
until S a. m., on the 27th of the month preceding the
month under which they are listed. That is. the July
records cannot go on sale or leave the joMber's store or
possession until June 27, August record on July 27.
and so on. When the 27th falls on Sunday, the records
are not to go on sale, until same hour the day following.
4th. In making shipments by freight, we will get
them off in ample time to be delivered ahead of the
date on which the records are to go on sale, all things
being favorable; but should any delay occur in transit
or on the part of the transportation companies of car-
riers, we will not be held in any way responsible or
liable.
5th. Samples of new monthly records will continue
to be sent out at same time as though the June list
was not ln-ing dropped, and first orders must be sent us
at the same time as heretofore: that is, samples of
July records will be shipped nlxmt May 1, samples of
August records about June 1. etc.. and first orders for
July records must be mailed us not later than May 10.
first orders for August records not later than June 10,
etc.
6th. Any jobber selling or offering for sale, or in
any way disposing of new records in advance of the
date and time specified, forfeits his right to the priv-
ilege other jobbers receive, and thereafter his orders
for advance records will not be shipped until after the
date on which they are put on sale by other jobbers.
7th. The foregoing conditions are hereby made part
of the Conditions of Sale forming part of the jobbers'
agreement, and any breach thereof will be subject to
the penalties provided for in said agreement.
O. H. WILSON.
General Manager of Sales.
MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
those present at the funeral were F. K. Dolbeer,
manager credit department of the National Pho-
nograph Co., Edison Mfg. Co., and the Bates Mfg.
Co.; C. H. Wilson, manager of sales; Wm. Pelzer,
of the legal department, and W. C. Patrick, of the
Chicago office of the National Phonograph Co.
Mr. Logue was formerly manager of the Edison
phonoplex telegraph system at the Orange, N. J.,
works, subsequently in charge of the National
Phonograph Co.'s Chicago branch, then manager
of the Edison Mfg. Co.'s battery department, and
late manager of the Bates Mfg. Co., and was con-
sidered a business man of extraordinary ability
and force of character.
FROM ALL POINTS OF THE COMPASS.
Big Call for Goods—Eckhardt West—Thos. A.
Edison Returns—J. N. Blackman—"Talker"
Litigation—Prescott to the Pacific Coast—
Other Items of Interest.
George. H. Ornstein, chief of the Victor Talking
Machine Co.'s traveling staff, who was in New
York last week looking around, was buttonholing
trade and feeling the pulse of things in New
England the past few days. As a diplomat Mr.
Ornstein is considered a suave proposition.
MORE VICTOR BUILDINGS.
To be Devoted to Offices and Laboratories-
An Addition to Factory Also Under Way.
That the call for goods is urgent may be judged
from the fact that, jobbers are wiring in for
(Special to The Review.)
quick shipments to the manufacturers. The
Philadelphia, Pa., April 30, 1906.
shortage on machines and records is astonishing,
Ballinger & Perrot, architects and engineers,
and it now looks as if business will continue act-
have completed drawings and specifications, and
ive through the summer.
invited estimates, due May 1, for an office build-
Walter L. Eckhardt, manager wholesale depart- ing and laboratory to be erected at the northwest
ment Columbus Phonograph Co., general, left corner of Front, and Cooper streets, Camden, N.
New York Monday for a trip west, touching the J., for the Victor Talking Machine Co.
The building will have a frontage of 89 feet
leading cities en route between here and Chicago,
his ultimate point. He is dated for two weeks, on Cooper street, and 100 feet on Front
and may be gone longer, doubtless returning with street, and will be four stories in height,
a bunch of new Columbia jobbers dangling at his with provision for two additional stores in
belt. Walt is truly a wonder when in working the future. It will be fireproof throughout,
harness, his trusty weapons being facts, figures, having the walls, columns, floors and roofs of
reinforced concrete construction, and slag roof
proven profits and a great product.
covering. Wall columns will be used in the ex-
By an oversight the names of the Eclipse Talk- terior wall construction, with triple windows In
ing Machine Co., Hoboken, N. J., and R. B. Cald- between, giving the largest amount of light ob-
well, with the Blackman Talking Machine Co., tainable. There will be provision for a com-
New York, were omitted as attendants at the first bined freight and passenger elevator.
They also have completed drawings and speci-
meeting of the Eastern Talking Machine Jobbers'
fications, and invited estimates, due May 1, for
Association.
an addition to the manufactory building of the
Thomas A. Edison—the "old man." as he is same company on Front street, south of Cooper
called by every one of his business associates— street. The addition will include an entire fifth
has returned from his Florida winter home to story for the existing building, 78 by 170 feet,
with walls of brick, floor of steel I beams and
Orange, N. J., and W. E. Gilmore, president of
the National Phonograph Co., got back from his planking, and roof of wood construction with
Southern vacation on Monday, appearing at the slag covering.
New York office the following day, for the first
UNIQUE TALKING MACHINE CO.
time in several weeks, looking the picture of
health and thoroughly rested.
On account of increased business, the Unique
With a high power "bubble," J. Newcomb Black- Talking Machine Co. have closed a lease for the
man, proprietor of the Blackman Talking Ma- next three years on the three-story brick store
chine Co., New York, speeds from the office to his building, No. 1016 Prairie avenue, Houston, Tex.,
home in Orange, N. J., and thence wherever fancy and are now doing business there. They have
dictates. This is J. N. B.'s respite from business installed the Hawthorne & Sheble unit record
cares, for he is a hard worker and the auto gives system. It is claimed this concern hold the
record as "the pioneer talking-machine house in
him an excuse to "sneak" occasionally.
Texas." They became interested in them as far
John O. Prescott, manager of the American back as 1890, when they used the old-style ma-
Sheble Co.'s New York office, also of Hawthorne, chines in connection with court reporting work,
Strobel & Prescott. started Wednesday for Los and from that graduated into the first Houston
Angeles, Cal., to attend the annual conclave of the (if not Texas) dealers. Their present store is
Mystic Shrine. He will be gone about a fortnight 30 feet front by 100 deep, and is devoted ex-
and will visit San Francisco and other coast clusively to talking machines. They handle the
cities en route home. J. O. has made special rec- Victor, Edison and Columbia machines, and the
ords of Shriner music, and has taken a full talk- American and Zonophone records.
The committee on credits had a very satisfac-
tory interview with F. K. Dollbeer, chief of the
credit department National Phonograph Co., and
their report has cleared up a number of knotty
points.
Jobbers east of Buffalo. N. Y., and Scranton, Pa.,
are earnestly solicited to attend the meeting Tues-
day evening at 8 o'clock, in the sumptuous ware-
rooms of the Douglas Phonograph Co., 89 Cham-
bers St., New York. The association is composed
of representative firms, with an eye single to the
improvement of trade conditions, not to mention
the pleasing relations generated by the exchange
of social amenities, consequently the board of
officers and trustees urge upon the prominent and
influential houses in their respective localities the
ing machine equipment which will be used to
wisdom of being present.
while away many a tedious hour of the long and
tiresome trip across the continent.
PROMINENT EDISON OFFICIAL DEAD.
Wm. S. Logue, who had been identified with the
Edison interests in various capacities for twenty
years, died at Chicago, where at a time he was
manager of the National Phonograph Co.'s branch
office, Wednesday week, aged fifty-five years. He
was buried in Baltimore, Md.. Saturday last, with
Masonic honors, the deceased having been an
active member of that order and the Elks. Among
Talking Machine Co., complainant, and the above
companies, was reported exclusively in last week's
Review, in which the defendants were enjoined,
though a stay was granted pending final hearing.
Lawyers familiar with the question declare the
patent's adjudication is one of pure law, depend-
ing upon so fine a point that but two decisions are
in the books, one of which was rendered by the
United States Supreme Court, where, they state,
the case will ultimately go, unless a "lay down"
occurs.
Being a preference case, a hearing on the ap-
peal of the Talk-o-Phone Co. and Leeds & Catlin
Co., from the decision of Judge Townsend, will
likely come on at the June term of the United
States Circuit court of Appeals about, the latter
part of this month. Judge Townsend's opinion,
a lengthy review of 1be I'SSHA jn controversy on
the Berliner stylus patent, between the Victor
THE MULTI-RECORD RACK.
The new style "Multo-Record" rack which is
being introduced to the trade by the Syracuse
Wire Works, Syracuse, N. Y., is destined to
prove a great favorite. This rack appeals to
dealers who are desirous of using the pasteboard
trays and Rapke labels. The indications are that
there will be a heavy demand for this style as
soon as it is known that the Syracuse Wire
Works have it in their catalogue.

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