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Music Trade Review

Issue: 1902 Vol. 34 N. 23 - Page 47

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Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE 7V*USIC TRRDE
REVIEW
. B. CHASE PIANOS
In tone, touch, action, durability, and every requisite that goes
to make up an artistic instrument, there are none superior
factory and Principal Office
NORWALK, OHIO
New York Warerooms
10 EAST 17th STREET
ANGELUS
P |aiw
f
ORIGINAL
L U T E effects, Violin effects, etc., are brou-ht
into play combined with the PIANO,
making a veritable Orchestra. N o other
Piano Player like it or will do what the
cANGELUS can.
Any one can Play it.
Tt Plays any Piano.
Endorsed by highest musical authority.
Josef Hofmann, Marcella Sembrich, Jean de
Reszke, Edouard de Reszke and many others
of note.
CIK Wilcox * Olbitc € o .
main Office and factory:
meridett, Conn., U. $. B .
new VorR:
164 TITth
JACOB DOLL
Manufacturer of
fflgh-Qrade
Grand and Upright
Pianos
for all
Occasions
Pianos
Factories : Southern Boulevard and Cypres* Ave.
East 133d and 134th Streets
First Avenue and 30th Street
Warerooms: 92 Fifth Ave., bet. 14th and 15th Sts.
N F W VODkT
^ ^ "
* UI^IV
Send for Catalogue, Prices and Terms.
DVIX'S COLONIAL 8TYLB "C"
CHASE=HACKLEY PIANO CO.,
Manufacturers of the
CHASE BROS., HACKLEY
and CARLISLE
MILLS AND OFFICE : DOLGEVILLE, N. Y.
'
PIANOS
MUSKEGON.
JULIUS. BREGKWOLDT
.
MICH.
Manufacturer of «J* J*
SOUNDING BOARDS, BARS, GUI-
$& TAR AND MANDOLIN TOPS AND
SOUNDING BOARD LUMBER.
Cbc Stevens Organ and Piano Co.
C R. STEVENS,®Generai Manager.
MANUFACTURERS OT
Stevens Combination Reed-Pipe Organ
iys OCTAVE.
PIANO CASE.
47
WEAVER PIANO PRAISED.
Mr. J. Frank Frysinger, the talented mu-
sician and composer and successful teacher,
gave two recitals by his pupils at his resi-
dence in Hanover, says the York City
Despatch. The Weaver piano was used on
both occasions, and Mr. Frysinger is most en-
thusiastic in his praise of the merits of the
instrument. The program included numbers
from such composers as Mendelssohn, Bee-
thoven and Bach, which required a piano
capable of every possible shade of expression.
Mr. Frysinger is familiar with all the stand-
ard makes of high grade pianos. His testi-
monial as to the superiority of the Weaver
piano, made in York, is therefore very sig-
nificant. It reads as follows:
Weaver Organ & Piano Co.
Dear Sirs—Herewith I beg you to accept
my sincere thanks for the superb Weaver
piano you sent me for my pupils' recitals,
May 22d and 29th. I am amazed at the pro-
longed vibration of its tones by which the in-
strument becomes somewhat organ-like, at
the lightness of touch and at the precise and
perfect cessation of the tones which the
dampers effect—an element so essential to
distinctness in playing. With such an instru-
ment as yours placed before me, I must mod-
ify many of my former expressed views re-
garding pianos.
Again thanking you for your kindness, be-
lieving me to be,
Yours gratefully,
J. Frank Frysinger.
A RULING ON BANKRUPTCY.
The United States Circuit Court of Ap-
peals held in the recent case of Kimball vs.
E. A. Rosenham Co., reported in the New
York Law Journal, that the receipt by a cred-
itor of payments upon an account current,
in the usual course of business, which are
followed by new credits for property de-
livered to the debtor, which becomes a part
of his estate, for which the creditor is not
paid, and which equals or exceeds in amount
and value the payments, does not constitute
a preference under section 60a, and does not
require the creditor to surrender such pay-
ments as a condition of the allowance of his
claim under section 57g of the Bankrupt
act of 1898. The court also held that the
claim of a creditor for a balance due upon
an account current with the bankrupt is one
single claim, and that in determining its al-
lowance and the existence of alleged pref-
erences arising out of the acts it evidences
it must be so considered, and that it may not
be divided into its items or into separate
claims for that purpose.
THE EVERETT IN BUFFALO.
Writ* for catalogue and prices.
Chas. H. Utley, the prominent dealer of
Buffalo, N. Y., has secured the agency for
the Everett piano, which he intends to bring
Embodies the best vakie for the dealer.
to the attention of the musical public of that
#
a*
Attractively gotten up. city in a thoroughly up-to-date manner. The
Everett has already won such a national
prominence,
which is certain to be augmented

PETER DUFFY, President.
during
the
coming
musical season, that its
•••j
appearance in the Utley warerooms will un-
SCHUBERT PIANO CO., 535 EAST J34th STREET, NEW YORK. questionably result in many of these artistic
A. * * , BOTH
UPRIGHT
F.ENGELHARDT,
instruments finding their way into the elite
aa^a aa ava ^*. a* ^*.-a-a **. a».a « «
Formerly Foreman
of the Pan-American city.
F* I A IM O A C I I O IM S
STBMWAY * SONS Action »••«,
L. M. Locke, of Springfield, 111., has opened
a branch store in Petersburg, 111., which is
FACTORIES:
OFFICE:
in charge of Miss May Morgan,
JWndsor Arcade,t2 E. 47th St., IS. Y.
St. Johnvvlllo. N. Y. v on N.Y. C
MARIETTA, OHIO.
ROTH <& ENGELHARDT

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