Music Trade Review

Issue: 1915 Vol. 61 N. 6

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
PRATT, READ & CO.
THE LARGEST AND OLDEST IVORY GUTTERS AND KEY MAKERS IN THE WORLD
ESTABLISHED 18O6
General Office and Factories, Deep River,
F. RAMACCIOTTI, Inc.
WM. BOOTH & BRO.
IMPORTERS AND MANUFACTURERS OF
PIANO BASS STRINGS
421-423 WEST 28th STREET
NEW YORK
JULIUS BRECKWOLDT &
jK35&
432 to 438 Washington St., and
33 Desbrosses St., NEW YORK
Manufacturers of Sounding Boards, Bars, Backs, Bridges, Mandolin and Guitar Tops, Etc.
Also Agents for RUDOLPH GIX3E Music Wire in United States and Canada
STRAUCH BROS.
SffBMSSS" Piano Actions and Hammers
22, 24, 26, 28, 30 TENTH AVENUE.
MAHOGANY LUMBER and
Finely Fiqurcd VENEERS
R U D O L P H C . K O C H MANUFACTURER OF
NEW YORK
O. S. KELLY CO.
PIANO PLATES
The Highest Grade of Workmanship
3 8 6 and 3 8 8 Second Avenue,
Foundries i SPRINGFIELD, OHIO
WM. G. KERCKHOFF, President
H.BEHLEN BRO.
Q. C. WARD, Vie* President
STANDARD FELT CO.
Manufaoturera and Daalars In
SUPPLIES FOR PIANO, ORGAN, FURNITURE
EVERYTHING FOR THE VARNISH, POLISHING
AND FINISHING ROOM
Successors to the Alfred Dolge Felt Co.
SHELLACS
ANILINES
Manufacturers of FELTS
for all purposes
SPECIALTY: SUN-BLEACHED PIANO FELTS AND HAMMERS
FACTORIES:
West Alhambra, Oalllornla
NEW YORK WAREROOMS:
115 East 23d Street
LACQUERS
FILLERS
871 PEARL STREET, NEW YORK
OTTO R. TREFZ, Jr.
Manufacturer of
QUALITY
FIRST
PIANO PLATES
PIANO BASS STRINGS
2 1 s t St. and Fairmount Ave.
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
THE WICKHAM RIAISO PLATE COMPANY, SPRINGFIELD, O.
ISAAC I. COLE & SON
F»IANO ACTIONS
Manufacturers
of All Kindt of
Are noted for their elasticity, responsiveness and durability. They satisfy In all eases.
W A S L E
STAINS
VARNISHES
OILS
S B M M RrMhM lor Iho Trad*
OHICAQO OFFIOE i 404 So. Fifth Avenuo
BEO, M. EHUSTON, Sales Manager
THE CELEBRATED WICKHAM
WASLE
NEW YORK
& C O . , Brown Place and Southern Boulevard, NEW YORK
ALL STEEL TRAP WORK
Simple, Silent, Strong
Continuous Hlngas, Bearing Bars, Pedals, Castors
Uenem
MAKE A SPECIALTY OF
PIANO CASE VENEERS
FACTORY AND WAREROOMS
CHAS. RAMSEY CO.
We are now looatedat our newfaotory, Klngaton, N.Y.
Root 8 t h S t . , E. R.
lNe>w York
Decalcomanta
"SUPERIOR" THE SUPERIOR \
Piano Plates FOUNDRY CO.
CLEVELAND, O.
THE STAIB-ABENDSCHEIN CO.
—:
;

'
134 h reet
i ji
Brook Avenue
Piano Actions and Hammers NEW YORK
THE PIANO & ORGAN SUPPLY CO.
PIANO KEYS, ACTIONS 333.83
The Largest Manufacturers in the West of
OUR FACILITIES INSURE UNEQUALED SERVICE
FACTORIES and OFFICES: 2100-2138 N. RACINE AVE.
CHICAGO
for Fall Board Names—Warrantees, etc.
Brown-Sinramm Co.
Manufacturers, 1 W. 34th Street, N. Y.
Designs Submitted Free
E. KOPRIWA CO.
ARTISTIC WOOD
CARVERS
MANUFACTURERS OF
Fine Piano Trusses,
Pilasters, Panels,
Etc.
dttigu furaiaa
e4 if aesired.
A«»U
fufiitiw—Premvt tanrias.
2220-24 Ward Street
(Near Clybourn Ave.)
CHICAGO
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
BIRCH COMING JNTO ITS OWN.
Should Never Have Been Substituted for Ma-
,. hogany or Cherry—HE.S SO Many Merits Pe-
!j culiar to Itself—Some Pertinent Comments.
' Bircli should never have been substituted for
mahogany or cherry. It should have stood on its
own merit from the first. It is not a second-place
wood, not an apology for or a substitute for any-
thing. While it may be a compliment to birch that
it has passed as mahogany for a hundred years,
the time for compliments of that kind is now over,
and the day is not distant when no one will wish
to conceal real birch behind the false claim that it
is a tropical wood. Without detracting one iota
from the genuine worth of mahogany, it can be
stated that birch possesses certain qualities which
are superior to mahogany. It is stronger. It
stands strains which would snap the tropical wood.
It cannot be truthfully asserted that in beauty of
grain when properly finished birch goes ahead of
mahogany, because it does not—no wood does.
But in combining strength and beauty it ranks
above mahogany. It takes finishes which no ma-
hogany has ever yet received.
It is not necessary to claim for birch that it is
superior as a furniture and finish wood to all
others in America, says the Hardwood Record.
There are other extremely high grade cabinet
woods in this country, and all that need be claimed
for birch is that it ranks with the best of them.
It is strong, hard, stiff, takes fine polish, responds
remarkably well to the application of stains and
fillers, and if a figured wood is wanted, selected
birch supplies it. All of the qualities of a superb
cabinet material are here. It is no experiment. It
has held its place and gained ground from the
first, and it has reached a point where it is able
to stand on its own merits and against all comers,
either domestic or foreign. This claim extends to
lower as well as to the best grades of highly col-
ored and finely figured stock. Birch fills plebeian
as well as aristocratic places; it is the camp stool
as well as the rocker; the bed slat as well as the
carved legs of the grand piano. It is fit for nearly
every part and class of woodwork. It detracts
nothing from its long and honorable reputation to
know that excavations have shown that the ter-
41
rible war chariots of the Assyrians, with scythe
blades on the hubs and spears on the ends of the
poles, were made of birch—rims, hubs, spokes,
axles, poles and body. Then why hide the identity
of ibis splendid wood under aliases and disguises?
DUTY ON ALUMINUM.
All
in Form of Sheets or Strips Must Pay
20 Per Cent. According to New Order.
We're here to
do your bid-
ding and are
at your serv-
ice.
The Treasury Department,- with a view to uni-
formity in the assessment of aluminum products,
has notified Collector Malone that these products
should after the expiration of thirty days be re-
turned for duty under the present tariff at the rate
of ~!0 per cent, ad valorem as manufactures of
aluminum. Recently, when a mixed importation
arrived at this port and was classified, the depart-
ment decided to make x. construction applicable to
this line of imports.'
Summarizing the results of the investigation and
the authorities, Assistant Secretary Malburn says:
"In view of these decisions the department is of
the opinion that aluminum in the form of sheets
or strips, even though not cut to size, if in fact
T
foil, is subject to duty as manufacture of alumi-
num. I 1 or the puipose of such classification you
NEW YORK
will consider aluminum in the form of either
sheets of strips not more than .0015 of an inch and
not less than .0003 of an inch in thickness as foil,
SUBSTITUTE FOJTRUBBER TUBING.
and will assess duty on such merchandise imported
or withdrawn from warehouse thirty days from
Successful attempts have recently Ixen made to
date at the rate of 20 per cent, ad valorem as man- manufacture a substiute for rubber tubing out of
ufactures of aluminum undr Paragraph 1U7."
masses of solidified glue, says the Scientific Amer-
ican These tubes, whose trade name is Sonjatin,
are even better than those of rubber for certain
FIRE IN PIAN0_LEG PLANT.
purposes, since they arc more impervious to gases
(Special to The Review.)
WESTFIELD, MASS., August 2.—A fire in the piano and more resistant to heat. It is also claimed that
leg factory of Beckwith Bros, on Meadow street, they do not grow rotten so quickly as rubber and
last week caused a loss of several thousand dol- that when encased 111 a suitable envelope they will
lars in lumber and finished stock before it was withstand high pressure.
extinguished. The blaze is believed to have been
due to spontaneous combustion. The lumber
HELPING NEW YORK COMMERCE.
burned was all kiln dried and expensive.
Thanks to the prompt action of the Merchants'
Association, New York City's commerce will not
Raphael Fassett, for a number of years con- be forced to bear the added burden of advanced
rates by the railroads for lighterage and storage
nected with the piano trade in Chicago in various
charges.
The Interstate Commerce Commission
capacities and recently engaged in the manufacture
of art piano cases in that city until forced by ill has sustained in all important details the associa-
tion's protest against the new rates to go into
health to give up business, died last week at Point
Peasant, N. J., where he had gone for the benefit effect on November 1. It is estimated that the
saving to shippers and receivers of freight here
of his health.
will run into hundreds of thousands of dollars a
year.
REPORTS IMPROVING BUSINESS.
This is well. The commission ruled that a charge
Steadily improving business is the rej ort from
by the railroads of 1- cents a ton for loading or
the factory of the Staib-Abendschein Co., l.'Mth
unloading lighters at other than railroad piers or
street and Brook avenue, New York The demands
vessels would be gro sly unfair. Likewise it dis-
for the Mastertouch action from manufacturers is
approved the minimum charge of $•! for lightering
very large volume of business this fall.
less than carload lots, a fixed rate of .'? cents per
hundredweight being allowed. As the New York
Mail says, there were other similar rulings pre-
venting
unwarranted taxation of the traffic of this
The Census Bureau places the value of manu-
factured products in this country at $14,<>9:5,8 cramped dock facilities and the high cost of local
most gratifying, and they are looking forward tn a
business operation. It is time conditions were
"I am passionately fond of music," said the bore. remedied.
"In fact, music always carries me away."
The girl hastened to the piano and played several
popular airs; then she swung round on the piano
stool.
"You still here?" she queried. "1 thought you
said music carries you away."
"So I did—music !"—Transcript.
C.EG0EPEL*C0
137 E A S T I3 -? ST.
DEATH OF RAPHAEL FASSETT.
PRODUCTS OF THE FACTORIES.
The Ohio Veneer Co.
INVISIBLE
HINGES
"OUT OF SIGHT
EVER IN MIND"
CINCINNATI, O.
When you fail
to see an un-
sightly hinge
protruding
you know
SOSS is the
answer.
Importers a n d Manufacturers of
Figured Mahogany, Circassian Wal-
nut and Foreign Woods for high-
grade piano cases and cabinets.
New York Office and Sample Room
Grand Central Palace Building
Write to.day.
Lexington Ave. and 46th St.
G. H. VAUGHAN, Eastern Representative
4 3 5 Atlantic Ave.
BROOKLYN, N. Y.
SOSS MFG. O.

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