Music Trade Review

Issue: 1914 Vol. 59 N. 22

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
12
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
STUDENTS FORM ASSOCIATION.
THE SUBJECT OF PNEUMATICS.
(Continued from page 11)
line of Pianos
and Player-
Pianos creates
business of the
best kind for
the dealer.
Bear in mind that there
are no complaints
of hard times with
those who handle the
BEHNING.
Remember also that
all standards for com-
parison in the Player-
Piano field are meas-
ured by the Behning
Player-Piano.
lever attacks the problem by working directly on
the motor governor. But it is a patented device
and cannot be used by all. The "temponome" used
in the Auto Pneumatic action is open to similar ob-
jection, being also exclusive. Still we greatly need
something different from the ordinary gate valve,
something that will work more directly on the
source of power. We make the hazard that the
thing could be done by using a form of cylinder
and piston, the latter capable of depression and re-
traction. Such a piston, interposed in the motor
wind-way and capable of manipulation by a light
finger lever, would, in our opinion, give something
like the desired flexibility of motor control, with-
out the necessity for elaborate and difficult manipu-
lation now experienced with the ordinary tempo-
lever working an ordinary sliding valve over a slot.
Of course, according to the random notion pro-
posed, depression of the piston would raise the in-
ternal pressure in the wind-way and slow the mo-
tor; and vice-versa. Here is also a suggestion of
the possibility of building motors to run normally
at extreme speed with only a speed reduction pis-
ton for tempo control. There are great possibili-
ties here.
All these and more might be thought of. The
ideas here presented seem anyhow worth consider-
ation.
PUT NEW TRACKER_ON OLD PLAYER.
Brooklyn Dealer Then Sold Sixty-Five Note
Instrument as Modern Eighty-Eight Note
Model and Purchaser Recovers His Money.
Because William Damrau, Jr., who operates a
piano store at 968 Flatbush avenue, Brooklyn, was
charged with having sold as a modern eighty-eight-
note player-piano a player of the old sixty-five-note
type but provided with an eighty-eight-note
tracker bar, Judge Kelly in the Supreme Court
declared the methods of the piano man were
not square, and gave judgment in favor of Dun-
ning B. Bradford, who had sued to recover $150
he had paid for the instrument.
The instrument in question was advertised, to-
gether with a typewriter and some Angora kit-
tens, as being part of the furnishings of the pri-
vate house at 163-A Halsey street, at which ad-
dress Mrs. Emma Damrau resides. Bradford re-
ceived six rolls of music with the instrument, but
when Mrs. Bradford grew tired of hearing the
six tunes and purchased some new eighty-eight-
note rolls the new rolls would not play. Investi-
gation showed that an eighty-eight-note tracker
bar had been attached to the sixty-five-note instru-
ment. Damrau declared in his defense that there
was no demand for sixty-five-note players and
therefore the instrument had been advertised as of
a full range. It was shown in the evidence that
Damrau had been engaged in the "private house"
type of business for some time past.
Damrau's lawyer asked for a stay so the sheriff
would not go to the Damrau store to execute the
judgment.
"You'll be lucky if the sheriff don't take the
whole place, if you keep on doing that kind of
business," responded Justice Kelly.
The Lucas Piano Co. has opened a store in the
St. Paul Arcade, St. Paul, Minn., where it will
feature the Baldwin and Howard pianos.
The Behning
Piano Co. Royal
FACTORY AND OFFICE
132d Street and Alexander Avenue
NEW YORK
Warerooms, 425 Fifth Avenue
Music
Rolls
There are all
kinds of music
rolls and ROYAL
ROLLS.
Royal rolls are cut in
conformity with the estab-
lished standard measure-
ments and we guarantee that
they will fit ALL standard
players.
You won't know roll satisfaction
until you play the Royal.
Royal Music Roll Co., BU £ F Y LO
At
Banquet Danquard Player-Piano Classes
Organize Alumni Association—Over Sixty
Enrolled in School—A Happy Augury.
A.t a banquet of the students of the Danquard
Player Action School, which was held recently at
the Associated Industries Restaurant, West Fifty-
lirst street, New York, an Alumni Assciation of
the school was organized. This was one of the
most interesting features of the meeting, at which
there was an attendance of over twenty-five of the
sixty students who are enrolled at the school.
The school orchestra furnished music through-
Dinner of Danquard Player School Students.
out the evening and Cyril M. Anton, of St.
George's, Grenada. British West Indies, gave an
interesting address. George E. Martin, chief in-
structor of the school, also spoke and was pre-
sented with a gold diamond-set cigar cutter. John
W. Payne, the first graduate from the school,
spoke on the value of the school work as it ap-
plied to him.
Among those present were player-piano repair
men and tuners from various parts of the country
Avho have come especially to New York to take up
the course in player construction, which is offered
free from any cost to them by the school.
SOME CARLOAD SHIPMENTS.
The Mueller & Haines Player Piano Co., of Chi-
cago, 111., recently shipped a carload of players to
prominent houses in Texas and New York. This
in itself demonstrates that business is not so bad
as some people paint it, and that the Mueller &
Haines players are mighty popular.
THIS IS IT!
The Christman
Attachable Player
which can be installed in any grand or
upright piano, regardless of size or style,
without altering the case.
Write us for Further Information.
CHRISTMAN PIANO CO.
597601 East 137th Si, New York
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
MUSIC
TRADE
ONFIRMED readers of this Section—and we shall suppose,
for purposes of publication, that there are such—will no
doubt observe with some interest the appearance in, and as part of,
The Review a new department or branch known as the Automatic
Section. It is not our purpose to call any special attention to the
possibilities of this new extension of The Review's activities, for
this has already been done better by the proper persons in the
proper place. But it is our intention to point out that the mere
fact of this special Section being deemed necessary shows the auto-
matic business, so called, to have arrived at a state of prosperity
and a condition of magnitude which player men in general would
be well advised to consider thoughtfully. On the one hand, we
are not among the believers in a player made as nearly as possible
like a refined and elaborate coin-operated electric piano; a refined
and highly elaborated form of pure automatism, no doubt, but such
a form in real meaning and no more. On the contrary, we believe
thoroughly in the idea of personal control as the distinguishing
feature of the player-piano as distinguished from its humbler
brethren. On the other hand, we are obliged to admit that the
player man may learn much from his automatic (if we may so
speak) colleagues in the way of mechanical ingenuity. For while
the player-piano has been gradually refined mainly by the elimina-
tion of the useless and the superfluous, the automatic, per contra,
has progressed through increasing complexity; using this term in
its best sense. The parallel lines of direction, however, which have
guided the two industries, begin to converge. The coming of the
film-player introduces into the so-called automatic field the per-
sonal work of a more or less skilled "player-pianist"; and thus
the two ideas begin to approach within speaking distance of each
other. Just how far the tendencies will converge it is not now
possible to say; but it is a safe guess that just as the player-piano a
few years ago began to look for a time as if it would end up by be-
coming purely automatic, so now the automatic begins to show signs
of becoming an immensely elaborate, ingenious and efficient form of
personally played player-piano. The progress of this industry as it
will now be so carefully and completely reported in the Automatic
Section of The Review will have more than passing interest.
C
w
E have no sympathy with the professional optimist; with the
man who "optimizes" (to commit a barbarism for the sake
REVIEW
13
of the sound) as a matter of business; who thinks it necessary to
talk loudly about how good he feels, when really he does not know
how to feel at all, except to feel bad. So, we have little sympathy
with the sort of talk that is so often handed around concerning the
possibilities of trade quickly recovering from the troubles caused
by the European situation. In very fact, we believe now, as we
have always believed, that the European war need necessarily make
no difference whatever to those who go about their business intelli-
gently. Of course, those who have been careless, or have frenziedly
financed, are suffering. But then, nobody will pretend that these
persons have been intelligent. As Huxley says about Nature (we
quote from memory), "It is not a word and a blow and the blow
first; it is the blow without the word. And you are left to find out
why your ears are boxed." Those who sow the wind should not
complain if they have to reap the whirlwind. Still, this is not in-
telligence, and never was intelligence. What we mean is that if you
use intelligence about your business, it will take more than an Euro-
pean war to spoil it. Those who doubt the accuracy of this state-
ment are respectfully requested to read the remarks published in
the Point of View Department of this Section this week.
T
HE fact of the matter is that the player business, anyhow, is a
business which has been astonishingly free from retail in-
telligence in most quarters, ever since it began to be a business.
Certain great houses from the first, of course, saw the light, saw
what they had to do, and set the minds included within their organi-
zations to work to devise intelligent means for selling. And these
houses have won out. To-day, the dealer who has used inteiligence
finds that he can still sell player-pianos. And the truth is*that so
long as these men continue to use intelligence they will C5ontm«e"t6
sell player-pianos. It is simply a matter of approaching the tlj|t*g
from an entirely impartial aspect, and working out your conclusions
to their logical end. Such men as those who have talked to us this
week in the Point of View Department are illustrating in their daily
business the successful application, in these very times, of the prin-
ciples for which they contend. And what they have done others
can do. Napoleon said, "Circumstances: I create circumstances,"
and while he perhaps exaggerated the personal note, he did at least
speak one great truth: that the things which surround are, ulti-
mately, our own creation.
PRAISE SCHULZJ>LAYER BOOK.
In Connection with Comments on "What the
Manual for Ultimate Consumer Should Con-
tain," This Book and Its Making Wins Fa-
vor of Editors of the "Little Schoolmaster."
Under the title, "What the Manual for the Ulti-
mate Consumer Should Contain," a writer in last
week's Printers' Ink refers to the recent player
publication issued by the M. Schulz Co., Chicago,
111., as follows :
"Good use of illustrations in a consumers'
manual is shown in the Schulz Player Book, re-
cently issued by the M. Schulz Co. as a help- for
users of its player-piano. In this book the text
descriptive of the player mechanism is paralleled
the full depth of the page by a cut of that portion
of the instrument which is being described; and
in the case of the first appearance of a word or
technical term indicative of an essential feature
of the mechanism the word is surrounded by a
red arrow which leads direct to the corresponding
feature in the illustration.
"This gives the reader little excuse for not
knowing what the author of the manual refers
to in his comments. The player-piano is an ex-
ample of a product which naturally needs to be
supplemented by a comprehensive manual if a
satisfied customer is to be secured. The mechan-
ical phases of the subject are so interwoven with
the artistic that only by approaching the proposi-
tion from just the right angle may truly
factory resujts be obtained,"
THIS IS "IT"
Our
"Duplex"
No. 125
Player-Roll
Cabinet
Capacity 60 Rolls
At Player Piano Height.
(Patented June 16th, 1914)
JUST WHAT YOU HAVE BEEN LOOKING FOR
A practical combination Bench with Music Roll Cabinet all combined in one.
The illustration shows it at player height. To make it piano height simply
raise the top, revolve the center, and you have a regular duet size piano bench
15x36.
It will prove a money-maker for you. Write for catalog and price?'
CHICAGO PIANO BENCH CO.
1115-1125 W. Lake St.
CHICAGO,- ILL.

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