Music Trade Review

Issue: 1916 Vol. 62 N. 11

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
NEW STRINGED INSTRUMENT BRIDGE.
Chicago Inventor Patents Improved Bridge
Which Holds the Strings Securely.
THE ORIGINAL HAND=ORGAN.
Street Piano Is a Descendant of German Lyre
—Originally Used at Holiday Celebrations.
The New York Tribune published recently an
interesting article describing the ancestor of the
No.
modern hand-organ, or street piano. According to
1.170,999 was last week granted to William J. F. the Tribune, the early type of hurdy-gurdy orig-
Schultz, Chicago, for a bridge for stringed instru- inated in Germany during the ninth century, and
ments, such as guitars or the like, and is designed under the name of bauren-leyer (peasant's lyre?)
to provide an improved bridge whereby the ends attained great popularity throughout Europe, fall-
of the strings will be securely held and which is ing into a decline only at the beginning of the last
provided with a rigid adjustable strip to hold the century. Even to-day a slightly modernized type
strings properly spaced from the top of the in- of this instrument may be seen upon the streets
strument.
of the smaller towns of Savoy.
It has heretofore been proposed to fold a piece
The instrument consisted of a violin-like frame
of sheet metal to form the base of the bridge and and sounding board, provided with from three to
to slidably connect the bridge piece to the base and six strings. The music was produced by a small
secure it by screws. In devices of this character crank-actuated wooden wheel, whose rosined edge
it is important that the bridge shall be of sufficient bore against the strings. The two outer strings
strength to securely hold the ends of the strings were keyed in unison, and when the wheel was re-
in spaced relation without pulling the base away volved gave forth a bass note which served as a
from the top of the guitar because any looseness musical background. The remaining strings were
will cause the bridge to sing or vibrate and affect attached to keys, by means of which their tension
the tone of the instrument.
and their tone might be varied. This adjustment
One object of the invention is to provide an im- was the only control possessed by the player.
proved bridge which serves to effectively connect
Needless to say, the hurdy-gurdy was suited only
tlie strings to the instrument, which is provided to the most elementary of selections. While orig-
with a bridge strip, means for adjustably, rigidly inally much used at fetes and celebrations, it later
and securely connecting said strip to the base of
was used only by itinerant street musicians, a posi-
the bridge, and which is adapted for steel as well tion now occupied by its successor—the hand organ.
as gut strings.
A very good specimen of this ancient musical in-
strument, bearing the date of 1458, is in the private
BRITISH SOLDIERS MAKE VIOLINS.
collection of a prominent business man in this city.
(Special to The Review.)
WASHINGTON, D. C, March 6.—Patent
British violins are being manufactured in Lon-
PATENTS CORNET MUTE.
don at a factory established a few months ago,
Leroy W. Allen, Berkeley, Cal., was last week
where none but disabled soldiers and sailors are
granted Patent No. 1,171,163 for a cornet mute, or
employed. The factory is under the supervision of
the Government and was established to enable sol- muffler, for wind instruments and it is especially
diers to earn their livelihood after they had become adapted to aproximating the sound of the French
horn with a cornet.
unfit for further army service.
MUSIC
Made of Highest
Quality Gut
STRINGS
Large Stocks —
Prompt Delivery
Full
Bench
Desired in Decision
$25,000,000.
Involving
(Special to The Review.)
WASHINGTON, D. C, March 6.—The Supreme
Court to-day reassigned the 5 per cent, cases for
reargument. When* they were argued last week
only six justices sat, and it is believed the court
was closely divided on the issue and it was deemed
advisable to hear the arguments repeated before a
full bench.
The case is brought to test the validity of the
action of the Secretary of the Treasury in refusing
to allow a 5 per cent, rebate to importations
brought into the United States in American ships.
About $25,000,000 is held in the Treasury awaiting
decision in the case.
FIDDLED FORJ,659 PARTIES.
The Fifty-three Years' Record of a Wisconsin
Dance Musician.
(Special to The Review.)
AMHKRST, W I S . , March C>.—John Een, at Am-
herst has filed a claim to a world's record for
providing music for dances, for he has computed
his record of the past fifty-three years as being
1,(>59 dances, a record he defies any musician in
America to equal.
His career dates back to January 1(5, 18(>2, when
he came with his violin to Amhcrst, then a village
in the heart of the pine woods. In those days he
was the only musician who could be obtained for
triles around, and he was in constant demand.
His banner year was 1880, when his record was
-l*iO dances, or an average of more than one a day
for the entire year. Since then the country has set-
tled and he has had more competition.
In the old days he would not only play, but would
call off the square dances, and many is the time
when he would make up a missing set on the floor
by taking his fiddle to the dancing floor, and dance,
call and play at the same time. He is still playing
for the country dances, and says he will continue
to play as long as he can finger the strings.
Send for Price Ll«t
Ashland Manufacturing Co.
4I00S
dA
A* hl ™ ILL
"
CHICAGO,
Manufac-
turers of
Superior Quality MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
Victor Distributors
1010 Chestnut Street,
TO REARGUE FIVE PER CENT. CASES.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Established over half a century-
Black Diamond
Strings
THE WORLD'S BEST
lational Musical String C».
New Brunswlok, N. J .
EXCELSIOR
DRUMS ™ STANDARD
Som* dealers may say that they cost more than
others.
Excelsior drums cost more because they are
worth more. Cost more to make.
We could make them cost less by using' cheaper
material, use less care in making 1 them, and dis-
pense with the new patented Improvements.
If we did, however, Excelsior Drums would not
be the Standard as they are to-day. Write for
catalogue.
EXCELSIOR DRUM
WORKS
A. a. SOXSTXAjr, Vioe-Pres. and Cren. Manager,
Vemtk an« Market Street*.
OaJCDBW, W. J.
The oldest and
largest musical
merchandise house
in America ~ -
SEND FOR
CATALOG
C.Bruno & Soiunc
351-53 4? Ave. Newark
PATENTS MUSICJOOK HOLDER.
(Special to The Review.)
WASHINGTON, D. C, March 6.—A music book
bolder, Patent No. 1,171,943, has been invented
by George Gunderson, Grand Forks, N. D.,
which is primarily adapted to be attached to string
instruments such as the guitar, banjo and man-
dolin, and it comprises a supporting bracket
adapted to be secured either to the side of the
linger board or to the head of the same and a rack
operatively associated with said bracket.
Consult the universal Want Directory of
The Review. In it advertisements are inserted
free of charge for men who desire positions.
OLIVER DITSON CO
BOSTOxV. MASS. i«.
Manufacturers
Importers and Jobbers of
MUSICAL
MERCHANDISE
Attractive Specialties
Modern Service
ESTABLISHED 1834
S3EGELEISEN
& IACOBSON
113- 115 University" Place
•"""' YORK
MUSICAL
Merchandise
Cincinnati
Chicago
Largest Jobbers in America
ODERN
USICAL
ERCHANDISE
W .CAT;
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
52
Conducted by B. B. Wilson
OLIVER DITSONTORCES DINE.
NAT'AN
Get-Together Club Holds Banquet in Boston—
President Clarence A. Woodman Makes
Fine Address on the Value of Co-operation.
(Special to The Review.)
BOSTON, MASS., March 6.—Seventy-five or more
members of the Get-Together Club of the Oliver
Ditson Co. sat down to a well-served dinner at the
Boston City Club on Thursday night. The affair
was devoid of all conventionality, and following
the meal Clarence A. Woodman, the president of
the organization, gave an address, in which he
spoke appreciatively of the trade press.
Then followed an entertainment of wide variety,
ranging from exquisite violin solos by Antonio
Gerardi, one of the talented members of the Bos-
ton Symphony Orchestra, to ragtime and imper-
sonations. Mr. Gerardi, who uses a $2,500 violin,
the property of the Ditson Co., had the assistance
of his talented brother, Gennaro Gerardi, as ac-
companist, and was most generous in his contribu-
tions. Mr. Gerardi's playing was highly appre-
ciated, and it is to be hoped that he will be heard
at some future gathering of the Get-Together Club.
A word should be said for the sympathetic accom-
paniments of his brother.
Bernard Ferguson, the Boston baritone, who has
been heard before at the Oliver Ditson gatherings,
sang a group of songs, one of them being "I Heard
:i Cry," by William Arms Fisher, of the Ditson
house, this being the first time the composition had
been sung in public. Victor Viveiros, of the Leo
Feist combination, sang three numbers, "Siam,"
'Sweet Cider Time" and, as an encore, "Mother."
Billy Try, a well-known local entertainer, sang
and told some stories, and two negro entertainers,
Day and Washington, gave specialties. Mr. Wood-
man, in his address, said in part:
"In behalf of the members of the Get-Together
Club of the Oliver Ditson Co. I extend cordial and
hearty greetings to the representatives of the four
great papers devoted to the interests of music—
The Music Trade Review, The Music Trades, The
Musical Courier and Musical America—and also
to t our guests who have so kindly volunteered
to entertain us this evening and thus do their
share to make this meeting a brilliant success.
"The co-operation of all these gentlemen is high-
ly appreciated, and I desire every member of the
club to have in mind their generosity in our behalf
and be ready at any time to give them, all or any
one of them, a boost to signify appreciation of their
efforts and their presence here to-night.
"The representatives of the music papers are so
well and favorably known to us, we having gone
fishing with them, that they seem to know each
and every one of us, and while we do not all of us
know our other guests so intimately, the fact that
they are here is a guarantee of their friendship,
and friends arc precious and must not be forgotten.
"This is the third banquet given by our club. The
other two were tremendously successful, and it
seems to me that this one is in no way inferior.
What Are You Waitin' For?
You hear it everywhere. It is the biggest hit of the
season. Send your first order through. Fifteen cents
in quantities of one hundred copies or over, eighteen
cents in quantities less than one hundred copies.
"KENDIS. • 145 We.t 45th Street. New York City
Other Hits—Popular Prices
"We've Got Another Washington And Wilson Is His Name"
"At Breakfast Time He Always Has A Lily"
"You're Just Like An Angel To Me"
"It is a matter of congratulation that we can
get together and keep together, for, while in the
course of daily events there is sometimes a little
friction, I am confident that there is not a man
here but that is broad enough to shake and make
up, and if there are any little differences that need
to be adjusted, now is the time to do it and start
again with a clean slate. These little differences
that come to us are as ripples on the surface; the
depths of character and of friendship that lie be-
neath are still true, still steadfast. No one can be
blamed for losing his temper. It is a human fail-
ing, and it is claimed by some that, instead of a
failing, it should be called an asset, but that de-
pends upon the man and the conditions. Righteous
indignation is one thing and wounded self-love is
another, but under whichever heading you place it,
there is no excuse for staying angry, and I claim
that a well-balanced man will not do so."
HAS TWO NEW SUCCESSES.
Latest Songs by Ernest R. Ball Promise to
Measure Up to Previous Hits.
The success that has attended Ernest R. Ball
with the great majority of his clever ballads has
not in any sense deserted him in the case of his
two latest numbers, "My Wonderful Love for
Thee" and "Good-bye—Good Luck—God Bless
You," the lyrics of both songs being by Keirn
Brennan. Both songs are being featured strongly
in vaudeville by prominent singers, among them
Grace Fischer, Rev. Gorman, Jack Richards, Bison
City Four, Honey Boy Minstrels and others.
COSTS_QOING UP.
The war is sending up the costs of production
in England for books and roll music, according to
reappraisements made recently by Judge Fischer,
sitting as a reappraisement official. He sustained
the local customs officials in taking duty on a
higher ,aluation on the English-bound edition of
TWO BIG SUCCESSES BY HENRI CLIQUE
LA SEDUCCION
TANGO ARGENTINO or FOX TROT
TREMENDt US SENSATION
As Featured by Mr. and Mrs. Carlos Sebastian
IN NEW YORK AND CHICAGO
TAMBOURINES AND ORANGES
NOVELTY FOX TROT
CHICAGO
McKINLEY MUSIC CO.
NEW YORK
the "Magic Fishbone," shipped to this country by
Constable & Co., London, while the rolls of music
from Hawkes & Co., also of London, came in for
an advance averaging three shillings per roll over
the entered prices.
COLLECTION OJ^CHURCH MUSIC.
Excellent Collection of Music for Catholic
Choirs Just Issued by the Ditson Co.
Among the recent publications of the Oliver
Ditson Co., Boston, are included a collection of
"Seven Sacred Pieces for the Catholic Church,"
arranged by A. Werner; a Mass in F for one, two
or four voices, by Theodor von La Hache, and
twenty separate selections of Catholic choir music
by various noted composers.
"ALONE AT LAST^ FOR BOSTON.
The successful operetta "Alone at Last" will
leave the Shubert Theatre after another week and
go to Boston for a run, after which it will return
to another Shubert Theatre here.
The Arcadia Music Co., Paterson, N. J., has
just published an attractive and melodic ballad,
entitled "Playtime of Love," with words by Ellis
Lane and music by M. M. Gilbert, president of
the company.
We Guarantee Our Music To Sell. You Lose Noth-
ing by Dealing With Us. Special Prices to Dealers.
G. M. TIDD, Music Publisher, Lancaster, 0 .
JEROME H.REflKMO:
Sensational Song Hits
"MOLLY DEAR, IT'S YOU I'M
AFTER"
"THEY DIDN'T BELIEVE M E "
"UNDERNEATH THE STARS"
"SHE'S MY PRECIOUS BABY"
LOADING UP THE MANDY LEE"
"MEMORIES"
AN OLD-FASHIONED GARDEN
IN VIRGINIA"
INSTRUMENTAL
ROSEMARY WALTZES"
KANGAROO HOP
Fox T r o t
TINKLE BELL Waltz

Download Page 51: PDF File | Image

Download Page 52 PDF File | Image

Future scanning projects are planned by the International Arcade Museum Library (IAML).

Pro Tip: You can flip pages on the issue easily by using the left and right arrow keys on your keyboard.