Music Trade Review

Issue: 1916 Vol. 62 N. 15

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
53
Victrola VI, $25
Oak
Victrola XVI, $200
Victrola XVIII, $300
Victrola IX, $50
Victrola XVI, electric, $250
Mahogany or oak
Victrola XVIII, electric, $350
Mahogany or oak
Mahogany
Victrola supremacy
Victrola supremacy is the surest index
which way the trade goes.
t
Of
It spells success for every Victor dealer.
Victor Talking Machine Co., Camden, N. J., U. S. A.
Berliner Gramophone Co., Montreal, Canadian Distributors.
Important warning. Victor Records can be safely and satisfactorily played only with
Victor Needles or Tungs-tone Stylus on Victors or Victrolas. Victor Records
cannot be safely played on machines with jeweled or other reproducing points.
Victor Distributors
Albany, N. Y
Altoona, Pa
Atlanta, Ga
Gately-Haire Co., Inc.
W. F. Fredericks Piano Co.
Elyea-Austell Co.
Phillips & Crew Co.
Austin, T e x
The Talking Machine Co., of
Texas.
Baltimore, Md
Cohen & Hughes, Inc.
E. F. Droop & Sons Co.
H. R. Eisenbrandt Sons, Inc.
Bangor, Me
Andrews Music House Co.
Birmingham, A l a . . Talking Machine Co.
Boston, Mass
Oliver Ditson Co,
The Eastern Talking Machine
Co.
The M. Steinert & Sona Co.
Brooklyn, N. Y
American Talking Mch. Co.
G. T. Williams.
Buffalo, N. Y
W. D. Andrews.
Neal, Clark & Neal Co.
Burlington, V t . . . . American Phonograph Co.
Butte, Mont
Orton Bros.
Chicago, III
Lyon & Healy.
Chicago Talking Machine Co.
The Kudolph Wurlitzer Co
Cincinnati, O
The Rudolph Wurlitzer Co
Cleveland, O
The W. H. Buescher ft Sons Co.
The Collister & Sayle Co.
The Eclipse Musical Co.
Columbus, O
The Perry B. Whitsit Co.
Dallas, T e x
Sanger Bros.
Denver, Colo
The Hext Music Co.
The Knight-Campbell Music Co.
Des Molnes. la
Chase & West Talking Mach. Co
Mickel Bros. Co.
Detroit, Mich
Grinnell Bros.
Elmira, N. Y
Elmira Arms Co.
El Paso, Tex
W. G. Wall Co.
Galveston, Tex
Thos. Goggan ft Bro.
Honolulu. T. H . . . . Bergstrom Music Co., Ltd.
Indianapolis, Ind.. Stewart Talking Machine Co.
Jacksonville, F l a . . Florida Talking Machine Co.
'XV
Kansas City, Mo., J. W. Jenkins Sons Music Co.
Schmefzer Arms Co.
Lincoln. Nebr
Ross P. Curtice Co.
Little Rock, Ark. O. K. Houck Piano Co.
Los Angeles, Cal. Sherman, Clay & Co.
Memphis, T e n n . . . O. K. Houck Piano Co.
Milwaukee, WIs.. Badger Talking Machine Co.
Minneapolis, Minn Beckwith, O'Neill Co.
Mobile, Ala
Wm. H. Reynald*.
Montreal, Can
Berliner Gramophone Co., Ltd.
Nashville, Tenn.. O. K. Houck Piano Co.
Newark, N. J
Price Talking Machine Co.
New Haven, Conn Henry Horton.
New Orleans, La. Philip Werlein, Ltd.
V \i
VV»
_N VT
New York, N. Y . . . Blackman Talking Mach. Co.
Charles H. Ditson ft. Co.
Landay Bros., Inc.
New York Talking Mach. Co.
Ormes, Inc.
Silas E. Pearsall Co.
Emanuel Blout.
C Bruno & Son, l«c.
I. Davega Jr., Inc.
S. B. Davega Co.
Omaha, Nebr
A. Hospe Co.
Nebraska Cycle Co.
Peorla, III
Putnam-Page Co., Inc.
Philadelphia, Pa.. Louis Buehh Co., Inc.
C. J. Heppe.
Penn Phonograph Co., Inc.
The Talking Machine Co.
H. A. Weymann ft Son, Inc.
Pittsburgh, Pa
C. C. Mellor Co., Ltd.
Standard Talking Macbiae Co.
Portland, Me
Cressey ft Allen, Inc.
Portland, Ore
Sherman, Clay ft Co.
Providence, R. I... J. Samuels ft Bro., Inc.
Richmond, Va
The Corley Co., Inc
W. D. Moses & Co.
Rochester, N. Y . . . E. J. Chapman.
The Talking Machine Co.
Salt Lake City, U.. Consolidated Music Co.
The John Elliott Chirk Co.
San Antonio, T e x . Thos. Goggan & Bros.
San Francisco, Cal. Sherman, Clay ft Co.
Seattle, W a s h . . . Sherman, Clay ft Co.
Sioux Falls, S. D Talking Machine Exchange
Spokane, Wash..
Sherman, Clay ft Co.
St. Louis, M o . . .
St. Paul, M i n n . . Koerber-Brenner Music Co
J. Dyer ft Bro
Syracuse. N. Y.. W.
W. D. Andrews Co.
Toledo, O
The Whitney ft Currier.
Washington, D. C. Robt C. Rogers Co.
E. F. Droop ft Sons Co.
11 V ~3TBT
-vvr
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
54
SMALL GOODS SHORTAGE REPORTED
THE S. S. STEWART BANJO-MANDOLIN VERY POPULAR
Samuel Buegeleisen, head of Buegeleisen &
Jacobson, New York, in a chat with The Review
this week, commented upon the steadily growing
PHILADELPHIA, PA., April 3.—President H. W. popularity of the entire line of S. S. Stewart in-
Weymann, of H. A. Weymann & Son, one of struments. S. S. Stewart banjos, banjo-mando-
the largest jobbers in small goods in the East,
reports that no consignments of any kind of
musical merchandise are to be expected from
Germany until after the end of the war. The
cutting off of the European supply is taxing the
American manufacturers of small goods to their
capacity, and the Weymann factory is working
day and night to fill the orders which are being
received. The greatest scarcity is being felt in
violins, bows, band instruments, strings and ac-
cordeons, and the lack of brass is seriously
hampering the manufacturers of band instru-
ments. Business, however, is active.
H. W. Weymann States That No Future Ship-
ments of German Goods Will Be Received
TUNING SLIDE FOR CLARINETS
D. C, April 3.—William F.
Reynolds, Dayton, O., was last week granted Pat-
ent No. 1,171,647 for a tuning slide for clarinets,
which relates more especially to the class of ad-
justable tuning barrel joints for clarinets. The
primary object of the invention is the provision
of a tuning slide of this character wherein the
construction thereof is novel in form and can be
conveniently applied to a clarinet so that the latter
can be accurately tuned, and in the use thereof
enlarged air gaps are avoided, which ordinarily
take place when drawing out the barrel joints of
the clarinet.
Another object of the invention is the provision
of a joint of this character wherein the parts
thereof are assembled in a novel manner to permit
easy adjustment without liability of separating the
joints from the mouthpiece or the body of the
clarinet.
WASHINGTON,
MUSIC
M«fe of Highest
Quality Gut
lins, banjo-drums, banjeaurines, and in fact, all
the various instruments in the S. S. Stewart line
are meeting with a sale that has even exceeded
Mr. Buegeleisen's highest expectations.
The S. S. Stewart line has for many years been
recognized by leading professional and amateur
A further object is to provide a musical in-
strument of the character referred to comprising
WASHINGTON, D. C, April 3.—George Resslcr,
a series of tubular chimes suspended within a
Canton, O., was last week granted Patent No. frame and adapted to be played upon by means
1,177,537 for a key-operated tubular chimes, es- of a manually operated hammer action connected
pecially that type of chimes adapted to be played with the same.
by means of a manually operated hammer action.
The object of this invention is to produce a
NOVEL PIPE INSTRUMENT
simple and inexpensive device capable of being
WASHINGTON, 1). C, April 3.—A musical pipe
easily and quickly knocked down for storage
instrument has just been invented by Niklas
purposes.
A further object is to provide a device of the Schilzonyi, Whittier, Cal., for which patent No.
character referred to which may be easily played 1,169,358 was recently granted. This invention
relates to mouth-blown musical pipe instruments
by those not skilled in music.
STRINGS
Prompt Dmltomry
S M J far Prfa* Ltot
WEYMANN
Superior Quality MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
Manufac-
turers of
The oldest aivd
largest musical
merchandise house
irv America —
Victor Distributors
1010 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
Established orcr bait m ctntury.
Black Diamond
Strings
THE WORLD'S BEST
instruments of the banjo family are ideal for
dancing purposes. This demand has proven to
be permanent and not spasmodic, and during the
past few months, Buegeleisen & Jacobson have
shipped S. S. Stewart instruments to practically
every corner of the globe.
KEY-OPERATEDJUBULAR CHIMES
Lmrf Stock* —
Ashland Manufacturiiif Co.
players as embodying distinctive musical quali-
ties and numerous constructional merits. The
advent of the dance craze a few years ago
brought about a phenomenal demand for the S.
S. Stewart instruments, as it was found that the
CBruno&Soiunt
351-53 IF Ave. Newark
and may be embodied in instruments having a
single reed for each mouth, thus resembling instru-
ments of the clarinet family, that is to say, clari-
nets, saxophones and the like; and may also be
embodied in instruments having a plurality of
reeds for each mouth, and it may also be em-
bodied in instruments of the flageolet family.
The invention is pioneer in that a musical mouth-
blown pipe instrument is provided which is capable
ot being played by one person using both hands
and which will produce two sounds at the same
time, and in which the sounds of simultaneously
played notes may differ in color, in range and in
tone quality, and may be played in any interval of
the full chromatic scale of two or more ovtaves,
as the intervals of seconds, thirds, fourths, etc., at
the will of the player.
An object is to give a richer color effect by a
single player than was heretofore possible and to
increase the orchestral effect with a given number
of players.
OLIVER DITSON GO.
BOSTON. MASS.
) >
Manufacturer*
Importers and Jobbers of
••final Mnital Strife Ct.
New Brunswlok, N. J .
EXCELSIOR
DRUMS ™ STANDARD
Bom* dsalan may mmj tfcat tkaj cost more taaa
MUSICAL
MERCHANDISE
Attractive Specialties
Modern Service
MUSICAL
Merchandise
Chicago
othmn.
Bxoelslor drama eort more ••eaiu* tfcsjr are
worth more. Ooet more to make.
We ooald make taem cost leee fejr aataf eaeaper
material, use lees oar* la makUiff taem, aad dle-
peaae wlta tae aew peteated improTemeata.
If we did, k o m r w , Bxeelalo* Drams womld set
be tao ataadard as taey are to-day. Write fer
oatalofme.
EXCELSIOR DRUM WORKS
a. • .
ITE^FOR NEW CATALO

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