Music Trade Review

Issue: 1908 Vol. 47 N. 3

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE
HORSE POWER OF MUSIC.
Professor Webster of Worcester Tells Ameri-
can Academy How to Measure the Intensity
of Tcnes and to Preserve Their Description
for the Use of Future Scientists.
A very interesting corner of physical science
was considered at the last meeting of the Ameri-
can Academy of Arts and Sciences by Prof. Ar-
thur Gordon Webster, of Clark University, that
of the "Pressure of Sound." "Sound," said the
speaker, "consists in a rapidly varying pressure
of air. If the ton^ be a musical one, the varia-
tions are uniform, as for example in the middle
C they are at the rate of 256 per second." It has
been a work of investigation by Professor Web-
ster during the past ten years to try to deter-
mine certain of the peculiarities of sound, and
in this work he has invented a number of pieces
of apparatus. One of the most important of these
is a device which for want of a better name he
has called the "phone," which will produce always
the same tone, and of a desired intensity. This
in theory and in practice is a standard whereby
Ihe strength of other tones may be measured, and
if one should desire in the future to know
whether a. tone is as loud then as it was to-day,
it will be perfectly practicable to determine the
fact. Such an instrument has many uses. In
his various experiments trom year to year in
which the ear was concerned, Lord Kelvin was
always questioning: "Can I hear as well to-day
as yesterday?" The deaf are always desirous of
getting a precise statement as to whether their
hearing is improving or becoming poorer. Such
an instrument will refer them to a standard, and
give them a scientific statement for comparison.
To-day they depend upon the guess of the aurist.
It is evident at the outset in the matter of
pressure, which is the one considered first by
Dr. Webster, that if a measure could be taken of
amount that the pressure is varied by the sound,
facts with reference to the conditions existing
would be made known. Accordingly physicists
have been at work more or less upon the prob-
lem. But even with an intense sound the varia-
tion in pressure is exceedingly minute, and much
more so in any sound that we are able to bear.
One millionth of an atmosphere variation in the
air pressure would be a large amount to be due
to sound, yet scientific men have set themselves
to measure this infinitesimal variation.
It will occur to any student that if the air is
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mark a decided advance in the art
of piano-making. "We court inves-
tigation. Some territory still open.
CHRISTMAN SONS,
FACTORY AND OFF'CK:
W AREROOM8'
St9-873 EMI 137th St.
35 W«» 14th St.
NEW YORK
REVIEW
varying in pressure it might be measured by
optical means, because denser air will have a
different index of refraction from rarer air, and
rxperiments along this line have been made by
a German. There lies in the method, however,
this difficulty, that the air is affected to so slight
a degree that a very loud noise must be made
before the variations are visible. The efforts
to solve the question have been taken, therefore,
to the mechanical ground and experiments have
been made with diaphragms. The phonograph is
a machine that uses a diaphragm, but this while
it produces a sound that the ear decides to be
like the original, the result is from the scientific
point of view very different, but the principle
of the phonograph is a good one. So Professor
Webster has been experimenting with diaphragms
of different kinds. Membranes are sensitive to
light pressures, but they are also affected by
moisture, so that for the purposes of a standard
they are useless. Metals have been tried, but
they are affected by heat, and in these minute
measurements they become also unreliable, so re-
course has been had a t last to glass. It has
been found that thin glass, the cover glass for
microscope slides, will be affected by the varying
pressure of the air produced by sounds, and so
the later experiments have been made with this.
Even then the movement is so slight that the
microscope cannot read the displacements.
Modern science affords much more delicate
means that the microscope for the viewing of
minute displacements, when these can be made
in light, Michaelson's interferometer being an
instrument of this character, so Professor Web-
ster's next move was to cement a little mirror to
this bit of cover-glass and by means of the in-
terference of light determine the motion of the
glass. By this means a movement of less than
a millionth of an inch is visible and measurable.
Meanwhile the strength of the sound was in-
creased by the use of a resonator, which might
make it even as much as forty times more in-
tense. One of the devices employed by this in-
genious scientist was to measure the vibrations
of the plate by a telescope that was itself set
on a tuning-fork which gave it an opposing mo-
tion so that it nullified in part the rapid vibra-
tions of the glass plate. Meanwhile a German
investigator, Max Wien, of Dantzig, a college
mate of Webster's, in Europe, had been at work
on the same problem. Wien mounted on the
glass plate a little mirror set on a bit of watch
spring, and put the whole within a second resona-
tor, thus by the magnification of two resonators
and the spring of the steel the motion was
brought within the reach of the microscope.
In the statement of his results, Professor Web-
ster made use of many of those graphic curves
with which mathematicians delight to set forth
their work. Some of the ideas, however, may be
expressed popularly, and some of the results
show the enormous waste of energy that our ordi-
nary mechanical methods entail. The "phone"
with which he is experimenting can be heard
for half a mile in the open air, yet it takes no
power to run it, an infinitesimal current merely.
The output of the ordinary cornet (at the bell)
is not more than a millionth of a horse-power,
so that all but the merest fraction of power that
the player puts into his mouthpiece is thrown
away. The organ pipe is a very wasteful device,
for most of the motive power is chrown away and
but a fraction of the wind from the bellows is
really utilized in making music. The power
expended in noise is very great in places, on the
coast of Maine there is a fog whistle that takes
GO horse-power, while in England there is one
consuming about 600 horse-power.
In these not more than a tenth of one per cent,
is really used to make the signal. The outcome
of the investigations is that scientists can now
measure sound without using the human ear, and
that they can express the energy and activity in
units. One sound may be compared with an-
other, sounds may be compared at different times
with other sounds even in different places, and it
is now possible to, so to speak, pack away the
sounds of to-day so that the scientists of the
future can compare them.
Mr. Piano Dealer,
why not the Victor
in your business?
Th e Victor has
brought
finest
the world's
music
into
thousands of homes.
The
demand for
the Victor is increas-
ing steadily.
1 lundreds of piano
dealers
w h o have
added the Victor to
their stock are piling
up rich Victor profits —
permanently estabhsh-
l n o" tlie m se 1 ves as
prosperous
dealers,
Victor
and at the
same time increasing
their piano sales.
And yetjy^ hesitate!
Write
us for par-
ticulars.
Victor Talking Machine Co.
Camden, N . J., U. S. A.
Berliner Gramophone Co., Montreal
Canadian Distributors
To preserve your Victor Records
and get best results, use only Victor
needles.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
8
TH
NEW BILLS OF LADING.
MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
ENGROSSED RESOLUTIONS PRESENTED TO MR. J. B. FURBER
Commerce Board Decides on a Form After Four
Years' Consideration.
(Special to The Review.)
Washington, D. C, July 13, 1908.
A new uniform bill of lading, designed as a
substitute for the bills now in use for the move-
ment of miscellaneous freight and general mer-
chandise, was to-day approved and its adoption
recommended to the common carriers of the
country and the shipping public by the Inter-
state Commerce Commission.
It provides two forms, printed on the face side
in different colors, one for "straight" and one
for "order" consignments. The "order" bill will
possess a certain degree of negotiability, while
the "straight" bill will be non-negotiable. The
"order" bill must be surrendered upon delivery
of the property to the consignee.
This plan is expected largely to meet the re-
quirements of the banking concerns of the coun-
t y which advance vast sums of money upon bills
of lading. The changes have all been in the di-
rection of greater simplicity in the interest of
the shipping public. The bill is more or less a
compromise. It imposes important obligations
which carriers have not heretofore assumed, but
retains exemptions to which some shippers may
object.
The Commission believes the bill is the best
adjustment practicable of a long-standing con-
troversy which affects the business interests of
the country. It expressly retains the right to
exercise its corrective authority which, under the
test of experience, may be proper.
The Commission does not undertake to pre-
scribe the bill of lading because it is convinced
such action would exceed its authority. It is un-
derstood, however, that the new .bill will be
adopted by all the railroads in the Official Classi-
fication territory on September 1.
WHICH \VP HAVE I(R
DO nr.y O Yt>! IX) ,*W
THIS TOHliS AS ,A
GI i T WO ' I* KSH H )S
ot't<||icH Rrx;-\RD
MUSIC FOR THEJVEAK=MINDED.
Members of a Brass Band in English Asylum
Show Quick Improvement.
An illustration of the efficacy of music in the
treatment of the feeble minded occurred at the
home for youths of this description belonging to
the Metropolitan Asylums Board at Witham, Eng-
land, where a great change has been effected
since the introduction of a brass band. The mas-
ter of the home stated the other day that ever
since the interest of the boys had been aroused
in the instruments given them to play, they had
advanced by leaps and bounds toward complete
sanity, some of the most obstinate cases having
recovered. It has become recognized in the in-
stitution that the band boys were distinctly su-
perior to other patients. Several boys whose
cases were regarded as hopeless before are now
quite rational.
BELLS ON METROPOLITAN TOWER.
Four of Them, the Deepest Toned in the World,
at the 46th Story.
A set of bronze bells, the deepest toned and
most costly in the world, is to be installed on the
marble base running around the forty-sixth story
of the Metropolitan Life Building in Madison
Square. The company awarded the contract
Monday to the Meneely Beil Co., of Troy, N. Y.,
and the bells will be cast in about four months.
There will be four bells, weighing respectively
7,000, 3,000, 2,000 and 1,500 lbs., which will be set
solid on stanchions at each of the four corners.
They will be operated every fifteen minutes by a
clock which will chime the Cambridge Quarter.
They will exceed in weight and cost the famous
bells in St. Mary's at Cambridge, England; St.
Peter's, Rome; Notre Dame, Paris; the Cathedral
at Milan and the House of Parliament in Lon-
don.
The bells will not only have the deepest toned
clock peal in the world, but will be more than
twice as high above the street level as any tower
bells in existence. The idea was adopted from
St. Mary's Cambridge.
When J. B. Furber, who has been general man-
ager of the Regina Co., Rahway, N. J., for up-
ward of six years, resigned on June 30 to go in
business for himself as secretary and treasurer
of the Manufacturers Outlet Co., New York, the
officers and general selling staff presented him
with a set of engrossed resolutions expressive
of their personal regard and appreciation, and of
which a reduced reproduction is herewith shown.
With the heavy gold frame this elegant souvenir
measures 27 by 36 inches. The portraits of the
donors, personal admirers of Mr. Furber—a corps
of loyal supporters at all times during his suc-
cessful management of the Regina Co.'s affairs—
appear in the resolutions surrounding a splendid
picture of the happy and highly pleased recipient,
who spoke of the gift as "the handsomest thing of
its kind he ever saw."
A GREAT KIMBALL ORGAN
agement erected a fireproof wall around it. Thus,
hidden and out of commission, the organ was
allowed to remain in the dust of the Studebaker's
stage for many months.
Then news of its existence was brought to
Milwaukee and the priests of the Gesu Church
heard of it. The Kimball Co. offered to bring it
here. At an expenditure of $10,000 this was
done. The organ's form was slightly changed
that it might not interfere with the beautiful;
rose window of the Gesu. Otherwise the Instru-j
ment was re-erected in its entirety,
j
Recently Installed in the Gesu Church in Mil-
waukee—Instrument Has a History.
(Special to The Review.)
Milwaukee, Wis., July 13, 1908.
One of the most magnificent pipe organs in
this city has recently been installed by the W. W.
Kimball Co., of Chicago, in the Gesu Church at
a cost of $10,000. The organ is one of unusually
interesting history. It was originally built for
the Studebaker Theater of Chicago at a cost of
$16,500. It was set up in this theater several
years ago and used there. Then came the Iro-
quois Theater fire. The holocaust occasioned the
passing of stringent fire protection laws in Chi-
cago. And under the ban of these laws the
organ of the Studebaker was ordered out of the
building. In lieu of tearing the magnificent in-
strument from its setting the Studebaker man-
W. A. Burgess, of the factory office staff of the
Estey Piano Co., left Friday last for a two weeks*
vacation trip to Nova Scotia and other points of
interest thereabout.
Otto Heinzman, with the Gordon Piano Co., 162
West 27th street, returned the fore part of the:
week from a flying business trip to Boston.

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