Music Trade Review

Issue: 1912 Vol. 55 N. 14

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
8
THE
MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
ORDERS FOR SPECIAL CONOVERS.
MANY SALES OFJiSZT ORGANS
State of Illinois Places Order for St. Charles
Institution—Beautiful Special Conover for
East Coast Steamship Much Admired.
Made by Manager Brockington, of the Mason
& Hamlin Co., to Prominent Institutions and
Persons Recently—Export Trade Growing.
(Special to The Review.)
C. E. Brockington, manager of the organ de-
partment of the Mason & Hamlin Co., at 313 Fifth
avenue, New York, has had a very busy fortnight,
and among his many recent sales of Liszt organs
are the following: New Orpheum Theater, Jersey
City; an organ in a white enameled case to Miss
Louise Dresser for her musical act; Scarsdale
Congregational Church; Indestructible Phonograph
Co., and Raul Pereira, for use in connection with
his string quartet. Mr. Brockington also reports
the sale of a beautiful chapel organ for use in
the chapel of the Raymond Street Jail, Brooklyn,
N. Y. Business in the organ department is very
brisk, and all indications assure a prosperous fall
season.
Foreign shipments of the Liszt organs were also
made to Syria, Porto Rico and Buenaventura, Cen-
tral America.
Chicago, 111., Sept. 30, 1912.
The Cable Company of this city has been hon-
ored with an order by the State of Illinois for
a special Conover piano in dull finish walnut, to
be made after the design of the Style 44 for the
State Institution at St. Charles. A special Con-
over has also been completed for the Merchants and
Miners' Transportation Co., whose steamships are
engaged in the East Coast trade. This instrument
was made specially to harmonize with the finish of
the cabin, and is a superb creation both in archi-
tecture, and musically. Joseph M. Mann, the Cable
representative in Baltimore, was almost as enthusi-
astic over the beauty of this instrument, as the
fact that the Conover had been selected as the
official piano for the Chicago Grand Opera Co.
SUGGEST J. C. TOOMEY AS TRUSTEE
Of the Affairs of Kaffenberger &. Cantor—No
, Offer from Bankrupts—Committee Recom-
mend Administering Assets in Bankruptcy.
At a recent meeting of the creditors of Kaffen-
berger & Cantor, New York, L. K. Wakefield, of
Cheney Bros., C. S. Mitchell, vice-president of the
Century Bank, and J. C. Toomey, were selected
as a committee to receive any proposition of ad-
justment proposed by the bankrupts, and then to
investigate the situation and report their findings
and recommendations as to such offer. The com-
mittee reported this week that no offer has been
received for the bankrupt, and in view of this
recommend that the assets be administered in bank-
ruptcy. The committee has requested C. J. Too-
ir.ey, credit manager of the Hinds & Harrison
Plush Co., the largest creditor, and member of
the committee, to act as trustee in bankruptcy,
and he has consented to assume this responsibility.
single sale of pianos ever consummated in Western
Pennsylvania. The seventeen drays loaded with
Krakauers and flaunting large banners on the sides
compelled the attention and interest of thousands
of persons.
REMODELING QUARTERS.
Wester Piano Co. to Have One of the Finest
Piano Houses in the South.
(Special to The Review.)
Atlanta, Ga., Sept. 30, 1912.
The quarters of the Wester Music Co., at
64 Peachtree street, this city, are now being en-
tirely remodeled, and when the alterations are
completed, it is believed that the company will
have one of the finest buildings devoted to the
sale of pianos and music in the South. The altera-
tions include a broad expanse of plate glass front,
separate rooms for the display and demonstration
of the various lines of pianos, a new lighting sys-
tem, hardwood floors and other features that will
attract public attention and make for the con-
venience of purchasers.
SCHOOL PIANOS ON PARADE.
Twenty-nine New Krakauer Pianos Purchased
by the Board of Education of Pittsburgh,
Pa., Make a Very Imposing Parade When
Delivered to Their New Abiding Places.
(Special to The Review.)
Pittsburgh, Pa., Sept. 30, 1912.
Twenty-nine Krakauer pianos loaded in seven-
teen large drays, were paraded about the down-
town street the other day and attracted consider-
able attention. The twenty-nine Krakauers were
consigned to the various public schools of Pitts-
burgh, and represent the largest single purchase of
pianos ever made in this city for public schools.
The instruments were received direct from New
York in two large cars. The sale of these instru-
ments to the Pittsburgh School Board was made
by the C. C. Mellor Co., of 604 Wood street, on a
competitive basis, and it is said to be the largest
BUFFALO FIRM_ DISSOLVES.
Truda & Gould, a firm of piano dealers at 310
West Ferry street, Buffalo, N. Y., have dissolved
partnership, and the business will be continued by
Mr. Truda. The line handled includes the Board-
man & Gray, Wegman, Bjur Bros., and Daven-
port-Treacy pianos.
INTERESTING TOJMANO MERCHANTS.
A decision recently handed down in the courts
of Arkansas in the case of the Hollenberg Music
Co., Little Rock, vs. Barron, is of interest to piano
men, which, briefly put, holds that one who sells
a piano on conditional sale may recover posses-
sion in replevin if buyer defaults. If seller re-
sumes possession and property is destroyed through
no fault of his, buyer is not relieved from liability
for balance due. On default, seller may retake
property, recover debt and affirm sale.
"MADE BY THREE GENERATIONS"
" As a result of this
new combination of
aound-board, rim and
pressure posts, the
small upright piano
can produce a tone
comparable with a
Grand piano, and the
full round tone of the
new instrument is pre-
served because the
tound-bcard is main-
tained in its original
arched position."
Fiom an editorial in the
SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN,
April 9, 1912.
The patent tone re-
flecting sound-board
will revolutionize the
piano of to-day as
surely as the patent
over strung scale did
the piano of a half
century ago.
'UNEQUALLED
UNCHANGING TONE"
OWNED AND MANUFACTURED BY
HENRY & S. G. LINDEMAN
5th Ave., at 142d St., NEW YORK
CONTROLLING ALSO
HOLMES & SON
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
THE PARCELS POST AND THE MUSIC TRADE INDUSTRY.
Evident That a Large Proportion of Men in the Music Trade Have Not Yet Awakened
to a Realization of How the Parcels Post Will Further Their Interests—Will Be of
Special Utility in Supplying Stock to Dealers Who Handle Small Musical Instru-
ments as Well as Player-Piano Rolls, Talking Machine Records, Sheet Music, Etc.—
Interesting Analysis of the Situation Written for The Review by Waldon Fawcett.
The new United States Parcels Post is to begin
operations on January 1 next and the interim be-
fore that date is none too long for the prepara-
tions of manufacturers and merchants who desire
to take advantage in the fullest measure of this
important new method of distribution. The very
system on which the parcels post is to operate—
Transferring
Parcel Mail from
Trolley Car.
Wagon to
rates varying as to distances—will necessitate a
close study of local and national geography by
firms and individuals that desire to make the most
advantageous use of the new institution, whereas
a close comparison of parcels post rates with ex-
isting express rates will be essential if a shipper is
to put himself in a position to pick the most econ-
omical service at all times.
Music Trade Not Yet Awakened.
There is reason to suspect that a large propor-
tion of the men in the music trade have not as yet
awakened to a realization of how much the parcels
post can do to further their interests. Irdeed,
some piano merchants have bee;i heard to say that
stricts himself absolutely to the piano line. Ad-
mittedly the parcels post as it is inaugurated can
do nothing to further the delivery of instruments
but who knows what may happen some day, if the
plan is the success that is anticipated. In some
foreign countries parcels post packages are al-
lowed in all weights up to 110 pounds and should
the limit be thus extended here and manufacturers
meanwhile pursue their present policy to produce
smaller and smaller organs and baDy grand pianos
and boudoir players for use in flats and apart-
ments who can predict what may come to pass
some day. But seriously, in the meantime, the
exclusive piano dealer can receive much aid from
the parcels post. It will afford quicker and more
economical carriage for all manner of small parts
and for player piano rolls and it will facilitate in-
terchange on these items not only between dealer
and customer but also between dealer and factory.
Great Help in Emergency Wants.
This last is one of the significant possibilities of
the parcels post and one that seems to have been
strangely overlooked by the business community in
general. You will find plenty of people in vari-
ous lines of trade who are enthusiastic over the
9
possible and the parcels post is going to serve as
the next best thing.
It is a foregone conclusion that for such emer-
gency wants the new postal carrier system is going
to prove speedier than the express route. Espe-
cially is this likely to be the case during "rush
seasons'' such as the Christmas holiday when,
with all due respect, the postal service of the
Tri-Car for Postal Delivery.
country does not get quite as hopelessly congested
as the express service. Furthermore the fact that
city post offices are open at almost all hours of
the day and night will facilitate the dispatch of
such emergency orders as compared with the rou-
tine that would be followed were it necessary to
await the collection of the parcels by an express-
man on his regular round of the business district
where the shipment originates. And while on the
jobber-wholesale end of the proposition it may be
added that the parcels post is liable in many in-
stances to have an advantage over express service
as a means of placing in the hands of the dealers
Farcel Postal Delivery in Winter.
prospects of the parcels post as a marketer of
manufactured goods, either direct from producer
to consumer or via the usual manufacturer-jobber-
retailer channel, but comparatively few have awak-
ened to the aid that the parcels post can give as a
connecting link between" manufacturer or jobber
on the one hand and retailer or sales agent on the
other. And it is just here that the music trade
stands to be especially benefited. The very char-
Modern Mailing Room for Packing and Mailing
acter of many musical commodities is such as
Parcels.
cause the customer to be impatient for prompt de-
livery. A new string for a violin; the latest popu- bundles of circulars or catalogs designed for
local distribution. Especially will this be the case
lar "hit" in sheet music, talking machine record
with reference to special circulars, new lists of
or player-roll form; an operatic libretto; an instru-
music, etc., which it is desired to get into the
hands of the buying public just as promptly as
Postman with Parcel Mail.
possible after they come from the hands of the
printer.
since the parcels post with its eleven-pound limit
As has been said the obvious mission of the par-
cannot handle pianos or player-pianos, nor yet any
cels post is as a distributor of merchandise to the
of the principal individual parts that enter into
"ultimate consumers." And many music men will
the manufacture of these instruments, they can-
he surprised when they discover what a variety
not see how the new postal utility can be of much
use to them. Now this is an erroneous and short-
sighted view of the situation, even in the case of a
dealer handling only pianos and players. And
how many dealers thus restrict themselves in this
progressive age? Nine chances out of ten your
representative dealer handles in addition to pianos
and players, one or more of the important sup-
plementary lines, such as small instruments, talk-
ing machines, disc and cylinder-records, player-
piano rolls, sheet and folio music, etc., etc. And if The Postoffice Department at Washington, D. C.
any or all of these are carried, either as side lines
—Headquarters of New Parcels Post.
or as the main stock, it ought not to take half an
eye to foresee how the parcels post is going to ment to complete a hand outfit—all these and a
Delivery of Parcels by Post.
benefit the purveyor in the music trade.
dozen other classes of articles of everyday de-
Shipments of Piano Parts and Player Rolls.
mand are in the category that most emphatically of their standard items of trade may be trans-
But let us look at the situation first, supposedly, are wanted when they are wanted. Theoretically, mitted in this fashion. Violins, mandolins, gui-
from the most unfavorable angle and take as a of course, the dealer ought to have all these in tars, horns, drums, flutes, all the smaller models of
case in point the situation of a retailer who re- •stock all the time but practically it is all but im-
(Continued on page 10.}

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