Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
10
THE
south and will then be open for a new connec-
tion. Mr. Hill is quite an inventive genius, and
an aluminum bow frog of his devising has had
quite a sale.
H. S. Maynard, of the R. K. Maynard Piano
Co., is now ready to market his new adjustable
tilting seat bench for player-pianos. He also has
patents pending for an adjustable piano bench.
The Cable Company recently shipped a carload
of pianos to Sydney, Australia.
Secretary Page, of the Melville Clark Piano
Co., and E. .1. Delfraisse, the company's southern
representative, left yesterday on a trip, which
has for its object the rescuing of some of the
finny denizens of the Michigan lakes from their
aqueous obscurity.
B. F. Wren, representing the Clough & Warren
Co., Detroit and Adrian, Mich., in Texas, with
headquarters at Port Worth, was met in the Chi-
cago trade yesterday. He says that the crop
prospects in his State are very good. The rains
caused some damage to crops in the lowlands,
but the area affected has been replanted and
prospects for big cotton and other crops are
excellent. Corn is in excellent shape.
L. M. French, of the retail department of the
Baldwin Co., and a well-known player expert,
is spending his vacation at Brown's Lake, near
Burlington, Wis., where, of course, he stops at
the Oak Park Hotel, managed by Edgar F. Waite,
formerly a well-known Chicago piano man.
None of the stores in the remodeled Wellington
Hotel have been leased as yet. The corner store
should make a good location for a piano concern.
Bert Pond, secretary of the Gerner Piano Co.,
is fishing up at Chetek, Wis.
Brooks Mays, a prominent dealer of Dallas,
Tex., is a visitor this week, as is also J. Fuer-
stein, of Sturgeon Bay, Wis.
Major Jonas Cleland, of the Cable Company,
visited, his family at Mackinac Island over the
Fourth. President F. S. Shaw spent the glorious
on his farm near Holland, Mich.
H. L. Draper, secretary and treasurer of the
Cable Company, will leave with his family for
his cottage at Pelican Lake, Wis., and remain
through the hay fever season.
E. P. McPherson is taking his vacation by in-
stalments on the golf grounds.
Edward Sherman, the large dealer of Butte,
Mont., is a visitor. He is accompanied by his
wife.
H. D. Cammack is a welcome visitor at the
Kimball Co. this week. He is their agent at
Minneapolis, Minn.
The Dunlap & Stovall Piano Co. is a new con-
cern which has just opened a piano store at
Memphis, Tenn. J. H. Dunlap was formerly
treasurer of the O. K. Houck Co. and Mr. Stovall
their head salesman. They have the agency for
the Price & Teeple and Packard pianos. They
are therefore making an auspicious start. Both
members of the firm were in Chicago recently
selecting stock.
The house of Adam Schaaf shipped twenty
pianos on Monday of this week and the same
number yesterday. That big new factory for
which the ground has been purchased looms up
as a very near future probability. P. R. Rucker,
of their sales force, is in from Texas, where he
reports crops as distinctly O. K. and the deal-
ers, looking forward to a fine fall trade.
C. R. Dickerson, treasurer of the Smith, Barnes
& Strober Co., spent the Fourth with relatives
at Diamond Lake, Wis.
C. F. Dickinson, manager of the extensive
interests of the Baldwin Co. in this neck of the
woods, left last night for Cincinnati to go over
general matters with the powers that be.
On the floor of the fine warerooms of the
Cable-Nelson Co. in the Republic building stands
the new mission style Cable-Nelson player-piano.
It is a work of art in every respect; further-
more, the panel covering the music roll box is
so cleverly arranged that there is nothing to
LESTER
MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
indicate that the piano is played other than
manually. The Cable-Nplson player-piano, what-
ever the style of case, has proved a distinct suc-
cess.
T. J. Rochford & Co. have their new factory
at Tipton, Ind., in operation and will be ship-
ping pianos ahd player-pianos inside of ninety
days.
E. A. Walter, of the Schaeffer Piano Mfg. Co.,
has returned from a trip through the East and
South. He reports that present business is very
fair, considering the season, and that everybody
looks forward to a normal fall trade.
E. H. Story, president of the Story & Clark
Piano Co., always conservative in his remarks
in that business, says that everything points to
a good trade for Story & Clark pianos and
player-pianos this fall.
John A. Norris, vice-president of the Smith,
Barnes & Strober Co., left Sunday evening for a
trip to the Pacific coast. He will return early in
September. E. W. Furbush was in Chicago Mon-
day on a western trip connected with private
business interests.
Among the other visitors of the week were E.
H. Howland, traveling representative, and Mr.
Wagner, factory superintendent of A. B. Chase
Co., Norwalk, O.; Alfred Dolge, of the Dolge Mfg.
Co., Dolgeville, Cal.; E. A. Lake, of the Schaff
Bros. Piano Co., Huntington, Ind., and L. A. Voell,
eastern traveling representative for the Story &
Clark Piano Co.
The Marshall-Bennett Co., organ manufactur-
ers, Moline, 111., have changed the corporate name
to that of the Bennett Organ Co., owing to the
retirement of Mr. Marshall six months ago. The
present officers are: President, R. J. Bennett,
father of the Bennett organ; vice-president, E.
Harris, and secretary and treasurer, M. R. Metz
gar. New machinery is to be installed and addi-
tions to the building made. A Chicago office is
to be established in the Republic building, with
Lamoth Wells in charge.
Dealers Make Encouraging Reports—"Every-
body Happy"—Metropolitan Music Co. Aver-
age Steinway Grand a Day—W. W. Kim-
ball Stock Cleaned Out—What Other Houses
Have to Say Regarding Business.
(Special
Minneapolis and St. Paul, July 6, 1908.
Highly encouraging reports as to business con-
ditions are made by the piano dealers of St. Paul
and Minntapolis. Something has given the trade
a strong push, just when or how is not entirely
clear, but ill the dealers feel the effect and are
profiting from it. Your correspondent has not
seen the men in the trade look so bright and
cheerful since last October as they did this week.
Whether it is a belated spring activity which
has just come to the surface or the people have
concluded that there is nothing to be afraid of,
is not so easy to determine just yet, but it is
certain that the piano men as a rule are a much
happier lot than they were some months ago.
"Very nice business, indeed," replied Edward
R. Dyer, manager of the Metropolitan Music Co.,
when asked the stereotyped question as to what
was doing. "For several days we have been
averaging a Steinway grand a day with other
classes of instruments in proportion, and this
kind of business makes us feel happy again.
Trade has not been so bad, though, for our an-
nual inventory shows a reduction in liabilities
and an increase in surplus and undivided profits
over the showing of a year ago, and such a
showing of course is gratifying."
In the show rooms of the W. W. Kimball Co.
the floor could be used for dancing purposes as
there are not enough pianos in the place to cause
any interference. "It's the same way in the
warerooms," says Manager Cammack. "During
the past week trade has been excellent and we
are fairly cleaned out of almost everything. Some
of the recent sales are of the kind that pleases
RAILROADS PREPARE FOR RUSH.
particularly well, as they include a Kimball
Those who have felt discouraged over the re- grand and two Kimball inner players at $600
ports- of the thousands of idle freight cars in each. We have two carloads of instruments on
all sections of the country should cheer up at the way and will try to prevent the store becom-
the report of W. F. Allen, secretary of the Amer- ing so deserted again."
ican Railway Association, in which he claims
"Trade has been excellent, fully as big in vol-
that up to February, 1908, the various railroads ume as during the holiday season," said Elmer
connected with that organization had purchased
A. Brooks, of the Brooks-Evans Piano Co. "This
over 300,000 more freight cars than were de- activity is somewhat unexpected at this time of
manded by the average conditions of 1907. Truly, the year, but we are not going to get alarmed
things are never as bad as they seem, and the and ask too many questions, just take everything
above statement is simply another illustration that comes our way."
of the old adage.
The Foster & Waldo people find business gen-
erally good, keeping up very nicely while the
BUY THE WORK MUSIC STORE.
indications for a fine fall trade never were bet-
ter, as the crops upon which the northwest
The C. C. Mellor Co., Pittsburg, Pa., have pur- mainly relies for its prosperity are coming finely.
chased the S. M. Work Music Store, Indiana,
George Raudenbush, of the S. W. Raudenbush
Pa. Mr. Work had been located in Indiana for Co., is taking a trip into Northern Wisconsin this
twenty years and handled Packard, Bush & Lane week, no fishing this time, just selling Rauden-
and Ivers & Pond pianos, as well as organs and bush and Wesley pianos.
talking machines.
THE RADLE PIANO IN THE BRONX.
F. Radle will shortly open retail warerooms on
Tremont avenue, the Bronx., with Mr. Lang as
manager. Only Radle pianos will be handled.
C. A. Harrall, who handles the J. & C. Fischer,
Hardman, Newman Bros., King and other makes
of pianos, and the Playola player-piano, in Mar-
tinsville, 111., may be classed among the younger
element in the retail business, but during the
several years he has been in business he has
built up an excellent trade, attributing his suc-
cess largely to the fact that he makes it a rule
to buy for cash and carry all his own paper.
C. W. Young has opened a new music store In
Wittenberg, Wis.
Brand, Upright aid Player
High Ondi.
Qt—t Durability.
H M T«n« Qaallty.
Tb« Prica U Right.
Ftetirfis: LESTER, ML
Offl
(80S Chestnut St.. PIIU.
The Schmoller & Mueller Music Co., Omaha,
Neb., recently had several rolls of moving pic-
tures made of their store and plant and made ar-
rangements with the concessionaire of the pic-
ture show at a local amusement park to have the
views shown at every performance. The idea
was unique and the amount of attention and com-
ment created by it was well worth the effort.
W. Goodrich Jones, president of the Temple
Book Concern, piano and music dealers of Tem-
ple, Tex., is a forestry expert, having studied the
subject abroad and is now busily engaged in
creating a State Forestiy Department in Texas.
F. E. Brown has opened a talking machine
and sporting goods store at 429 Fulton street,
Waverly, N. Y.
PIANOS