Music Trade Review

Issue: 1918 Vol. 67 N. 3

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
46
JULY 20, 1918
DE LUXE PLAYER ACTIONS ARE THE DISTINGUISHING FEATURE OF
PLAYER PIANOS FAMED FOR REMARKABLE EXPRESSION POWERS
Auto Pneumatic Action Company,
Acknowledged
6
Sffll > ®& 1 8& YSl -
Leaders in the Art of Player Action
w
Ve.Kf- EY
Manufacture
CHRISTMAN PIANOS STERLING
PIANOS
The Most Artistic made for the Price.
"The First Touch Tells"
Exceptional In TONE and FINISH
Write for details
DECKER & SON
The Styles For 1918
Excel AU Preriou
Creations
597 E. 137th Street, NEW YORK
Pianos and Player-Pianos
Eatabliahml 1SS6
697-701 East 135th St., New York
Krakauer
THE STERLING COMPANY
DERBY, CONN.
Represent in
their construction
Pianos
Factories
Cypress Arenne
136th and 137th Streets
New York
It's what is inside of the Sterling that has made its repu-
tation. Every detail of its construction receives thorough
attention from expert workmen—every material used in its
construction is the best—absolutely. That means a piano
of permanent excellence in every particular in which a
piano should excel. The dealer sees the connection be-
tween these facts and the universal popularity of the
Sterling.
the highest
Matchless
MILTON PIANOS AND
"INVISIBLE" PLAYERS
mechanical and
have exceptional value*
artistic ideals
EXAMINATION and comparison with other in-
p struments will prove this—but there is noth-
•*-* ing like seeing one of these instruments to
convince you.
1 As an aid we will ship a sample instrument to
any financially responsible dealer in open territory.
KRAKAUER BROS., Makers
KURTZMANN
win
C . KURTZMANN & C O .
MILTON PIANO COMPANY
=
12th Ave., 54th and 55th St.., New York
ML 1 A . I N KJ O
Friends
for
the
De"aler .
J. H. PARNHAM, President
=
=
: FACTORY
= = = = = =
526-536 Niagara St., Buffalo, N. Y
YOU PROFIT MOST
JAMES & HOLMSTROM
SMALL GRANDS
PLAYER-PIANOS
TRANSPOSING
KEY-BOARD ™SOS
Eminent at an art product for ovmr SO year*
By Selling
GULBRANSEN DICKINSON
EDWARD B. HEALY
Players and Pianos of
Quality and Tone
Our ONE-PRICE. Profit Sharing Plan Is
Liberal and Attractive. Write tor Details.
Prices and terms will interest you. Write us.
GULBRANSEN-DICKINSON CO.
Office: 23 E. 14th St., N.Y. Factory: 305 to 323 E. 132d St., N.Y.
Chicago. Sawyer and Kedzle Aves., CHICAGO
BAUS PIANOS
B A U S P I A N O CO.. Inc.
Have been before
the trade for a
third of a century
Factory, Southern Bouleyard and Cypress Are.
Becker Bros.
N E W YORK
Factory and
Warerooms.
767-769
High Grade Pianos and Player-Pianos NEW YORK
UPPOSE we sent a man to your store
to tell you how to analyze your terri-
tory and how to get more business?
You'd be willing to pay his expenses and a
big fee. Instead of this man talking face to
face with you, he writes his story and it
is published in The Music Trade Review.
You get it for less than 4 cents. You are
then called a "subscriber," but you really
are a buyer of merchandising knacks, as
every week's issue is full of bright things.
$2 in any kind of money buys this service
for 52 weeks.
S
The Music Trade Review
373 Fourth Avenue
New York, N. Y.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
47
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
JULY 20, 1918
BRUNO SAXOPHONES POPULAR
MAKING THE SOLDIERS HAPPY
DISLOYAL BANDMASTER SENTENCED
The "Perfection" Brand Have Found a Large
Constituency of Admirers
Instruments Collected by Mr. and Mrs. Rouland
Proving of Great Benefit to Soldiers—Ditson
& Co. Co-operating by Doing Repair Work
Former Band Sergeant Given Thirty Years for
Disloyal Actions
C. l?runo & Son, Inc., New York musical
merchandise wholesalers and importers, report
an unusually active demand for saxophones.
This instrument is steadily increasing in popu-
larity throughout the country, and dealers han-
Bruno C Melody "Perfection" Saxophone No. 144
dling the Bruno products are placing large or-
ders in anticipation of a heavy call this fall.
The Bruno "Perfection" saxophones have met
with general favor among the dealers and dis-
criminating saxophone players. This line is
one of the leaders in the extensive stock featured
by the House of Bruno, and the C. Melody "Per-
fection" saxophone No. 144, a new model with
a single octave key, is one of the most popular
sellers in this line of saxophones.
JAZZ INSTRUMENTS AT DITSON'S
The display window of C. H. Ditson & Co.
this week is given over to a display of jazz in-
struments. Almost every instrument or con-
traption used in the production of this kind of
music is shown.
I WILL BUY
FOR CASH
Sheet Music and Small Goods
Peate's Music House,
Utica, N. Y.
The work recently started by Orlando Rou-
land, the artist, and his wife, to supply musical
instruments for soldiers and sailors has been
far more successful than even they anticipated.
The slogan, "Get a fiddle for a fighter," proved
to be an open sesame which brought in every-
thing from a mouth organ to a grand piano.
All instruments donated for this purpose are put
in perfect order by Charles H. Ditson & Co.,
well-known music house of New York City.
Manager H. L. Hunt, of the Ditson concern,
has been very enthusiastic over the project,
and has given his personal attention to over-
seeing the work of putting the instruments in
perfect playing order.
Some of the instruments have already found
their way into the training camps, both in this
country and abroad, and Mr. Rouland is re-
ceiving letters acknowledging the receipt of
these instruments from soldiers in many of the
cantonments here, as well as from boys in the
service in France. Without exception the let-
ters speak enthusiastically of the pleasure the
fighters are receiving through the medium of
the instruments donated, and the evident need
for musical instruments in the camps has in-
duced Mr. Rouland to continue the good work,
so that anyone having any kind of a musical in-
strument, who does not desire to keep it any
longer, or who desires to make it "do its bit,"
can be assured that it will be put to excellent
use if sent to Mr. Rouland at 130 West Fifty-
seventh street, New York City.
DEATH OF G. C. KAMPE
G. Christian Kampe, of 109 South Orange ave-
nue, Newark, N. J., passed away last week, aged
seventy-one years. Mr. Kampe was a maker of
musical instruments, and also had quite some re-
pute as a musician, being a member of several
large bands in this locality at different times.
He is survived by a widow, four sons and two
daughters. Interment was made in Fairmount
Cemetery.
TENSIONINO DEVICE FOR TYMPANA
Recent Invention Is Lighter in Weight Than
Similar Devices Hitherto in Use
WASHINGTON, D. C, July 15.—Charles B.
Wanamaker, Indianapolis, Ind., was last week
granted Patent No. 1,269,984 for a tensioning de-
vice for tympana, which he has assigned to the
Leedy Mfg. Co., same place.
The object of this invention is to provide an
improved tensioning device for tympana, where-
in the weight of the parts is reduced to a consid-
erable degree below that of standard construc-
tions of the present time, and wherein the parts
are so associated as to avoid unsightly exten-
sions.
BLACK DIAMOND STRINGS POPULAR
The National Musical String Co., of New
Brunswick, N. J., reports an increasing demand
for its justly popular line of Black Diamond
strings. The adequate manufacturing facilities
of the concern are being kept busy in large part
due to the popularity of the Black Diamond
strings, and retailers throughout the country
report the strings are giving great satisfaction.
JOHNFRIEDRICH&BRO
NEW NAME FOR STRING CONCERN
The Italian-American Surgical & Musical
String Co., of 3399 Third street, San Francisco,
Cal., has changed its name to the California
Gut String Co. The concern manufactures a
full line of musical and surgical strings, in ad-
dition to strings for tennis rackets and drums.
OLIVER DITSON GO.
BOSTON. MASS.
DURRO
AND
STEWART
Largest Wholesale
Musical Merchandise
House in America
Buegeleisen & Jacob son
Manufacturers
' Importer* and Jobbwr* ol
MUSICAL
MERCHANDISE
T H E OLDEST AND
LARGEST MUSICAL
MERCHANDISE HOUSE
INAMERICA
Exclusively Wholesale
SAN ANTONIO, TEX., July 15.—Band Sergeant
Oscar Biermann, convicted at Camp Travis of
disloyalty, was sentenced last week to.life im-
prisonment. The reviewing officer reduced the
term to thirty years.
Bierman was a band sergeant for more than
twenty years and was well known in the army.
It was proved that he had once refused to play
"The Star Spangled Banner" at a concert and
had played a German air, "Kaiser Frederick,"
at guard at Fort Sam Houston.
Attractive Specialties
Modern Service
ESTABLISHED ISM
113 University Place
NSW YORK
Black Diamond
Strings
THE WORLD'S BEST
ESTABLISHED 1834
Superior Quality MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
Victor Distributor*
Victor Distributors
l l 08 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
Established ormr half a eantuiy
National Musical String Co.
New Brunswick, N. J.

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