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Music Trade Review

Issue: 1904 Vol. 38 N. 26 - Page 42

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Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MU3IC TRADE
42
make him a millionaire. To quote from the
article:
"Boyhood friends who went to London at his
invitation found him master of an extensive
business, with an army of subordinates and the
possessor of an estate of twenty acres in Surrey.
Yet with all the splendor of life in England, Mr.
Owen felt the call of the Vineyard, and last year
THE GRADUATING TONE POST.
tried to sever his connection with the enterprise
A Recently Patented Invention for String
so that he might return to his island home.
Instruments.
"He was not entirely successful in this, the
English
directorate prevailing upon him to re-
In our issue of the 11th of June, 1904, we men-
main at the head of the company, but he did
tioned a recent device for improving the tone and
make an arrangement, permitting his spending
overcoming certain defects in string instruments.
W. BARRY OWEN'S SUCCESS.
six months of the year on Martha's Vineyard."
The manufacturers of the Graduating Tone Post,
In Seven Years Has Made a Million Dollars—
Mr. Owen shows his love for his home city by
with offices at 27 East 22d Street, inform us that
His Investments at Martha's Vineyard, His purchasing a hundred thousand dollars' worth of
the Graduating Tone Post is a device which is
Birthplace.
real estate, upon part of which he is about to
inserted through the sound holes of instruments,
erect a $50,000 residence. He has also erected a
all in one complete part; it has not to be assem-
Last Sunday's "Herald" contained an extended fine stable for the accommodation of English
bled inside of the instrument, but is merely
story
from Vineyard Haven, Mass., in which W. stock to be brought here this month, and desir-
placed in position as is any ordinary sound-post.
The inventor claims he has experimented for 15 Barry Owen, well known in the trade through ing an electric lighting plant for his own prem-
years with this device, and not until very re- his connection with the McPhail Piano Co., and ises, he will probably start an electric plant, and
sell electricity to all who wish to buy. Further
cently did he succeed in perfecting it so that it his later association with Alfred Dolge, figured
in a prominent way.
up the island, overlooking a beautiful lake, has
slides easily through the sound holes.
According to the facts submitted, Mr. Owen been acquired a long ridge, which is to be
Some of the best-known musicians have in-
has in seven years developed a talking machine crowned with summer cottages when Martha's
dorsed this invention, and tests w«re made which
business which has branches in a dozen prin- Vineyard has become the Isle of Wight of
demonstrated that this Graduating Tone Post
cipal cities in the world, outside the United America. With the exception of the site for his
actually fills a defect in string instruments, in-
States. In the development of this concern Mr. own house, Mr. Owen's investments have been
asmuch as it prevents all reaction, assists the
Owen has acquired a fortune of a million dollars, made with a view to future returns.
vibration, and dispenses with the so-called
and as managing director draws a salary reputed
Another enterprise of his is the establishment
"woody" tones. In the tests made in the pres-
to be equal to that of the President of the of a poultry farm of 150 acres, where he has
ence of eminent musicians new and cheap violins
United States.
six hundred fowls, some of them most expensive,
were fitted with a graduating tone post, and
Mr. Owen's success in London came about and rare birds. When Mr. Owen returns to the
musicians played on these as on old and high-
priced instruments in an adjoining room. The through his association with the man who country this month, i t is expected that he will
fact that frequently one of the new violins was owned the American rights in a talking machine take personal charge of his Vineyard enterprise.
proclaimed to be "the old, high-priced one," indi- which at that time was not a success. Appre-
ciating the possibilities abroad, Mr. Owen made
cates that this invention has excellent merits.
M. E. SCHOENING DUE FROM EUROPE.
a deal with Berliner, who patented a talking
machine record, for the English rights. This
Monday M. E. Scheoning will be at his place
VICTOR RECORDS FOR JULY.
was in 1897. Mr. Owen opened a small business of business, having reached New York from his
The new "Victor" records for July are now in London, interested British capital, started a European trip the preceding day. He left Bremen
ready for distribution by the Victor Distributing company, put the machine on the market, ob- on itie 16th instead of the 26th, and has teen
& Export Co., New York. The "Victor" and tained the favor of royalty, and in six years abroad about two months, in that time visitiug
developed an enterprise successful enough to all the leading musical merchandise centers on
the continent.
wherever the harmonica is loved, and that is the
world over. The trade of the dealer who han-
dles the- Hohner harmonica and accordeon is
always growing, because of the well considered
and ceaseless publicity which these goods re-
ceive at the hands of the Hohner institution.
^
REVIEW
"Monarch" lists include many new selections and
compositions. Among them is the Japanese na-
tional anthem, the "St. Louis Rag," "On a Good
Old Trolley Ride," "Never Bank on a Traveling
Man," and "Uncle Jim's Race Track Story." The
new De Luxe 12-inch records include, among
many others, Wagner's "Bridal Chorus,"
Michaeli's "Forge in the Forest," and Faure's
"Palm Branches." In the list of latest American
Red Seal records is Handel's "He Shall Feed His
Flock," from the Messiah. Many other records
are now in preparation.
The Columbia
Graphophone JgL
Type AR.
^^^^/fJ^Smt^^L
Grand Opera at Home
The Graphophone will reproduce for you the voice of your fa-
vorite artist, with all its beautiful modulations and all its wealth of
tone color. Send for catalogue of records by the world's greatest
singers—De Reszke, Sembrich, Schumann-Heink, Campanari, Su-
zanne Adams, Scotti, Gilibert, and many others.
N
Columbia Disc Records
Absolute perfection of sound reproduction.
volume and beauty of the original rendition.
All the sweetness,
Seven inch, 50 cents each; $5.00 per dozen. Ten inch, $1 each;
$10 per dozen. Grand Opera. Records, $2 each.
O CS.
Columbia. Gold Moulded
O CZ
ArOC
Cylinder Records
JLf^DO.
Hj^^^^^HlP^^
fl^^^HK
Perfected PKono-
graph, $4 to $100
Send for catalogue M, containing vocal quartettes, trios, duets,
solos, and selections for band, orchestra, cornet, banjo, flute, clar-
inet, etc., etc.
Columbia Records Fit Any Make of Talking Machine
FOR SALE BY DEALERS EVERYWHERE, AND BY THE
COLUMBIA PHONOGRAPH COMPANY
PIONEERS AND LEADERS IN THE TALKING MACHINE ART
GRAND PRIZE, PARIS, 1900
NEW YORK, Wholesale, Retail and Export, 353 Broadway.
UPTOWN, RETAIL ONLY, 872 Broadway.
CHICAGO, 88 Wabash Ave.
PITTSBURG, 615 Perm Ave.
KANSAS CITY, 1016 Walnut St.
PHILADELPHIA, 1019-1021 Market St.
NEW ORLEANS, LA., 628-630 Canal St.
ST. PAUL, 386 Wabasha St.
ST. LOUIS, 908 Olive St. (Frisco Building).
DETROIT, 272 Woodward Ave.
DENVER, 505-507 Sixteenth St.
BOSTON, 164 Tremont St.
MILWAUKEE, 391 East Water St.
OMAHA, 1621 Farnam St.
BALTIMORE, 831 N. Howard St.
WASHINGTON, 1212 F St., N. W.
LOS ANGELES, 323 South Main St.
CLEVELAND, Cor. Euclid Ave. and Erie St.
TORONTO, ONTARIO, 107 Yonge St.
MEMPHIS, 302 Main St.
BUFFALO, 645 Main St.
MINNEAPOLIS, 13 Fourth St., South.
PORTLAND, ORE., 128 Seventh St.
SAN FRANCISCO, 125 Geary St.
INDIANAPOLIS, 48 N. Pennsylvania St.
TERRE HAUTE, 23 S. Seventh St.
\
CINCINNATI, 117-119 W. Fourth St.
LONDON, Wholesale, Retail, 89 Great Eastern St., E. C. RETAIL BRANCH STORE, 200 Oxford St., W.
BERLIN, 71 Ritterstrasse.
PARIS, 111 and 113 Rue Montmarte.
ST. PETERSBURG, 53 Nevski Prospect.

VIENNA, Seilergasse No. 14.

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