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Music Trade Review

Issue: 1905 Vol. 40 N. 26 - Page 9

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THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
assert with the greatest freedom that no really
PIANOS FOR INDIANS.
fine scale has yet been brought out, except as the
result of that combination of theory and prac- Assessors Find Both Pianos and Organs as Well
tice upon which we have so consistently built
as Other Luxuries at the Rosebud and Chey-
sermons and preachments.
enne River Reservations.
The closing remark of our correspondent's in-
teresting communication set into operation the
(Special to The Review.)
train of thought that led to this present state-
Chamberlain, S. D., June 24, 1905.
ment of ideas. The latter will be found not ma-
How can it be said that the Indians are not be-
terially to vary from others that we have fa- coming civilized.
thered, and we make no apology for thus dinning
Even if they have a habit of celebrating their
the same text into the ears of all our readers. feasts with fat dogs or wolves as the piece de re-
sistance, even if they are taking advantage of the
Communications for the Department should be recent ruling of the Supreme Court to absorb the
addressed to the Editor, Technical Department, output of several breweries, impressive evidence
The Music Trade Review.
that they are taking on the ways of the white
man is to be found in the reports of assessors,
STEINWAY'S LONDON MANAGER.
who, while going over the Rosebud and Cheyenne
River reservations, listed the property of the In-
The Subject of a Graceful "Appreciation"—
dians.
His Work for the Steinway House—New
These reports show the following luxuries are
Steinway Hall in London.
possesed by the Sioux Indians of these two reser-
vations :
In connection with a very excellent portrait of
Three hundred and twenty telephones.
Edwin Eshelby, our esteemed contemporary, The
Eighteen automobiles.
Music Trades Review of London, in its latest is-
Nine hearses (used as carriages).
sue, contained the following appreciation of this
Twenty-eight pianos.
esteemed and popular gentelman:
Sixty organs.
"Mr. Edwin Eshelby was born at Gloucester on
Add to these the forty-seven divorces secured
February 13, 1852, and is therefore in his fifty- by Indians in the past year, in the courts of
fourth year. He stayed in his native city till his Chamberlain and Oacoma, and it cannot be denied
thirteenth year, and there received his education. that the haughty Sioux who, a few years ago,
In 1865 he was apprenticed to the old firm of were the terror of settlers and even soldiers, have
Hale & Co., of Cheltenham, a business now car- been apt pupils of the white man's civilization.
ried on by Messrs. Dale, Forty & Co. After five
years' apprenticeship a desire to see the world
$100,000 IN BUSINESS FOR MAY.
came over Mr. Eshelby, and at the age of eighteen
he shipped himself to America, a lengthy voyage This is the Record Made by W. F. Frederick—
full of adventurous possibility, in the year 1870.
Orders 500 Haines, Foster and Marshall &
Arriving at New York, the young traveler sought
Wendell Pianos.
a position in which the knowledge he had gained
during his Cheltenham apprenticeship would be
W. F. Frederick, the enterprising dealer of
of practical value to him. On his second day in
Pittsburg, and other cities in Pennsylvania, states
the great Western Republic he called on Messrs.
that during the month of May his various houses
Steinway & Sons and applied for work as a tuner.
did a business approximating $100,000. This
On his third day he entered the service of the
record, in view of the complaints of many dealers
firm, a service he has continued in ever since—
regarding business for May, is one of which Mr.
a matter of thirty-five years—with satisfaction to
Frederick and his manager, Mr. Schroeder, can
himself and the firm.
well feel proud.
"In 1877, having acquired a full and practical
During the visit to the Frederick store last
knowledge of the methods and possibilities of the week of Silas Maxon, who represents Haines
house to which he had given his allegiance, he re- Bros., Foster & Co., and Marshall & Wendell, of
turned from New York to Great Britain, and Rochester, N. Y., he closed a very important
traveled the provinces in the interest of the pro- deal with Mr. Frederick whereby he will supply
ductions of the Steinway factory. It will be in five hundred pianos made by the houses named,
the memory of many of the dealers in the coun- this year, to the various establishments controlled
try that he was an excellent representative of by Mr. Frederick.
that interest for ten years. At the end of that
period, with a widely gathered experience of the
requirements of British pianoforte dealers, he CONCERNING THE BUSH & GERTS CO.'S
GRANDETTE.
was appointed sole manager of the London house
(Special to The Review.)
at Steinway Hall, Lower Seymour street, W., a
Chicago, 111., June 27, 1905.
position he has held ever since. Following in his
The Bush & Gerts Piano Co., as an original
successful footsteps, his son, Mr. George Eshel-
by, is now well-known to dealers in London and proposition, proposes to keep up its reputation
the provinces as the traveling representative of in this line with new captions concerning pianos.
They have adopted and covered with copyright
Messrs. Steinway & Sons.
"The first Steinway pianoforte brought into the term Grandette, as most applicable and ar-
this country was shown at the Great Exhibition tistically appropriate to the quality of their
of 1862. A little later Messrs. Cramer, Beale & piano line of the small grand style. The one
Co. took the agency for the instruments, and in illustrated in this issue is a Grandette type of
1874 the agency was transferred to the Anglo- the Louis XV. period, which exemplifies the most
Continental Pianoforte Company, of 28 Baker perfect period of the French decoration and de-
street, W. In 1877, the year that Mr". Eshelby re- sign. In selecting the line formulated during
turned to England from New York, direct rep- the decorative work when the Orient was exer-
resentation in London was started, and the pres- cising a powerful influence upon the French
ent premises, with the Steinway Hall, later to ideas, indicates that this modern appeal was far
become a favorite concert center were opened. removed from the conventional, and in this case
Those premises have now proved too small for was more artistic than commercial.
the continuously increasing business, and a re- W. L. Bush, president of the Bush & Gerts
moval to a much larger site is in contemplation. Co., says that "the Grandette type of Bush &
There it is proposed to erect a concert room about Gerts pianos embodies the largest surface of
the size of St. James's Hall, now in course of sounding-board, with the greatest length of
demolition, and the addition to the London mu- string in the bass as the most distinctive tri-
umph of its skilfully drawn scale. A number of
sic-making institutions will be very welcome."
experts, after instituting exhaustive tests as to
Egleston Bros., of Champaign and Urbana, 111., quality and freedom of vibration, declare that
announce the discontinuance of their business the Grandette more nearly approaches the rich,
in these cities. They are now offering their full full musical qualities of the parlor grand than
line of pianos, organs, piano players and other any small instrument of its class that has here-
tofore been placed before the musical public,
specialties at specially low prices.
9
which should certainly have an appeal to all musi-
cians who care for the tonal quality of a grand
comprised in the smallest possible space."
The Grandette is finished in two styles in the
Bush & Gerts line.
RUNAWAY SMASHES SHOW WINDOW.
Horse Frightened by Automobile Dashes Into
the Show Window of Hardman, Peck & Co.,
Damaging
Magnificent
Grand Piano Dis-
played Therein.
Two large plate glass windows were smashed
and an expensive grand piano behind them was
badly damaged Saturday morning when a run-
away horse, with a delivery wagon, owned by
Lord & Taylor, plunged through the show win-
dow of the Hardman, Peck & Co., at 136 Fifth
avenue, New York. No one was hurt by the run-
away, though several persons had narrow es-
capes. The animal was badly cut about its chest
and forelegs.
The horse was standing near the Lord & Tay-
lor store, in 19th street, between Broadway and
Fifth avenue, when it was frightened by the
"chugging" of an automobile which passed it. Its
driver, Thomas Whalen, of 542 West 44th street,
was on the sidewalk at the time. The horse was
out of reach in an instant. It ran to Fifth ave-
nue, and then diagonally across the street to the
west side, into the Hardman establishment, in
the middle of the block. Mounted Patrolman
Hyams put his horse at top speed to stop the
runaway, but he could not reach it in time.
The runaway plunged into the show window
with a tremendous crash, and the fragments of
the show window were scattered over the side-
walk and inside the store. The stout steel up-
right between the two sections of the window
was bent inward like a straw. The front wheels
of the wagon caught on the sill of the window
and stopped the horse, with its hind legs outside
and its body and forelegs resting upon a $1,000
baby grand piano in the window. Fragments of
the windows were thrown a dozen feet into the
store, but the clerks and customers escaped in-
jury from them. The horse, bleeding badly from
its lacerated chest and legs, was extricated from
its position with some difficulty and taken to its
stable. The delivery wagon was undamaged. The
damage to windows, store and grand piano is es-
timated at about $2,500.
STARR PRIZE GRAND SOLD.
The Instrument Which Won the Gold Medal at
St. Louis Purchased by the State Agricul-
ture College of Ft. Collins.
The Darrow & Sharp Music Co., of Denver, Col.,
have sold the magnificent Starr grand piano
which was awarded a gold medal at the St. Louis
Exposition, to the State Agriculture College of
Ft. Collins, Col., for the new music hall. The
architecture is after the Louis XVI. style, and
the wood is of the finest South African mahog-
any.
PLAYED THE EVERETT GRAND PIANO.
At the recital given by Mme. Birdice Blye be-
fore the New York State Music Teachers Associ-
ation, Rochester, N. Y., on June 26th, the Everett
concert grand was used, and as usual commanded,
equally with the artist, the very highest praise
from the critical audience in attendance. Mme.
Blye is a very clever artist and the Everett af-
forded her a splendid medium for displaying her
ability.
The Everett grands now on the floor at the
warerooms in this city are magnificent creations,
and certainly add to the reputation for thorough-
ness of Superintendent John Anderson.
The Braumuller Piano Co., 767 Tenth avenue,
New York, have just issued a catalogue of pocket
size containing illustrations and descriptions of
their latest styles. The introductory contains
much of interest regarding these instruments,
while the closing pages are devoted to testi-
monials from eminent artists.

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