Music Trade Review

Issue: 1925 Vol. 80 N. 19

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
as in them lay, the pinnacle of their aspiration.
On their trade-mark, so admirably depicted at
the rear of this platform by one of the com-
pany's present-day artisans, they placed the
motto, 'Palmam qui meruit ferat,' 'Let him
who deserves it bear the palm,' and, to this
stimulating and fair-minded appeal to competi-
tion, they added the significant phrase, 'Sui
generis,' 'In a class by itself.' The result of
MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
I recall the vivid impression made upon my
boyish mind that it was a cheerful place. Each
man at his work radiated joy; this was catching
and refreshing; indeed, an atmosphere of cheer-
fulness permeating the scene transported me,
as it were, to a sense of gladness such as I
had seldom if ever known. If I asked a ques-
tion concerning some miraculous machine, some
tool of mysterious shape, or the like, the an-
The Mason & Hamlin Co. Employes' Orchestra
their efforts is common knowledge, and,
happily, they lived to find the name of their
company not only known but esteemed, as well,
at home and abroad. This implies on their part
ability, determination, fidelity to principle,, and
vision, in short, and best of all, soundness of
character. Therefore, we do well to render
honor to the memory of these men and their
associates, and, in gratitude, to appreciate, in as
full a sense as may be, the real and vital signif-
icance of the inheritance which from them we
have received.
"But this occasion is unique from another
point of view. We meet to render honoiyalso,
to a second group; to the master-mechanics and
other members of the organization who, while
loyal to treasured traditions and to the ideal
of their predecessors, have conspicuously con-
tributed, through periods of service ranging
from five to fifty-six years, to the company's
progress and nearer approach to that selfsame
ideal, to the initiation of its product into richer
and more and more fertile fields, and to its ever-
expanding reception by those who know and
demand the best."
A Tribute to Harold Bauer
At this point Mr. Mason digressed a moment
to pay high tribute to Harold Bauer, who se-
lected the Mason & Hamlin piano as his con-
cert and recital medium over a quarter of a
century ago, and who has played it continuously
ever since, and to present to the pianist a hand-
some silver bowl as a mark of esteem from the
Mason & Hamlin Co.
"John Ruskin has said that all wise work must
be honest, useful and cheerful," Mr. Mason
went on. "Let us here apply this test. Ex-
amine, if you will, the product upon which these
craftsmen have worked; I am confident that the
first requisite called for, honesty, will be at once
apparent. Listen to the finished product of
their labors, as we shall shortly do, and at the
hands, furthermore, of a master, and judge
whether the second condition is complied with,
usefulness. Then visit the plant of the organ-
ization, observing the men in their own environ-
ment, and, again I am confident, you will agree
that as to cheerfulness it certainly abounds
there. I remember being taken as a child to
the factory by my father over forty years ago;
swer was never futile or stupid, like that of
the immortal 'P. Toots, Esq., Brighton, Sus-
sex,' but always intelligent and explanatory,
and, let me add, cheerfully given as well.
"Fascinated by the whole-heartedness, the
case and the calm assurance with which the
men applied themselves, I marveled at the ex-
quisite workmanship of each, and I was struck
by the expression of happiness in the faces of
MAY
9, 1925
given in those far-off years. To-day, on fre-
quent visits to the factory, many of the same
experiences are lived anew, and many of the
same faces, furthermore, with the same kindly
expressions, greet me just as they did over two-
score years ago.
"Such are the effects, I take it, of allegiance
to principle, wise work and high ideal. Do you
wonder, then, that the instruments made by
these men hold the supreme position they do
among the musically intelligent? Do you won-
der, I say, that this is the case when the multi-
farious details which enter into the finished
product are treated with such infinite care?"
After paying tribute to those who carried on
the work in the various departments of the
factory, from the case department to the ship-
ping-room, Mr. Mason continued:
"We have just been listening to a perform-
ance by the Mason & Hamlin Employes' Or-
chestra. Could anything be finer, finer than the
idea of having such an orchestra! These men
who delight in making a musical instrument
also delight in making music The thought is
pregnant with suggestion; for music, that is to
say, worthy music, is a thing of beauty; the
more one appreciates and cultivates one's sense
of beauty, the stronger and better by just so
much one becomes. Through the study and
practice of orchestral works these men of our
orchestra develop their sense of the beautiful,
and hence, in a word, the better and stronger
men they become. The bettor the man the
better his work. Again, music is a universal
language and its- social influence is incalculable;
its effect is elevating and ennobling; it empha-
sizes to man his relations to his fellow, his duty
and responsibility to family, community and
country. Surely the more closely we consider
this affair of the orchestra, the more clearly we
see its importance. All success to it, and in the
words of Rip Van Winkle, 'May it live long
and prosper.'
"I have referred to the inheritance which we
have received from the founders of this busi-
ness. May I now refer to the present-day work-
ers, to the fidelity, the unswerving allegiance,
and the success with which they, in turn, ex-
Mason & Hamlin Co. Factory Management
Hack Row, left to right: Carl Peterson, General Foreman Finishing Depts.; Albert A. Hartmann, Planning Dept.; Wil-
liam C. Camack, Paymaster. Front Row, left to right: Stephen E. Woodbury, Research Dept.; Agnes M. Grove, Secre-
tary and Purchasing Dept.; Paul H. Taylor, Vice-president and General Manager; Frederick H. Fiske, Office Manager.
all. Although perhaps unconscious of it at the
time, I have looked back in later years to the
influence of those early experiences with pro-
found gratitude, and I like to think that what-
ever there may be in me of the sense of definite-
ness, directness and order received its earliest
impulse in the lesson so simply and cheerfully
emplify in their work and efforts the principle
so typical of the founders themselves? It is
much that each man to-day does his best and
does it cheerfully and honestly, and while this
is so the finest kind of success must crown his
endeavor.
"And now one closing word. May I express
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
MAY
9, 1925
the hope, my friends and fellow-workers, that,
as in the past, so in the future, we and our
successors may ever bear in mind the aims and
purposes of the founders of this business; and
may we so act that those who come after us
THE
MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
pany's president, for his thirty-six years of serv-
ice, and to Harold Bauer, the famous pianist,
for his twenty-five years of loyalty to the Mason
& Hamlin piano as the medium for the inter-
pretation of his art.
Harold Bauer Plays
Following the presentation ceremonies, Mr.
Bauer, as an honored guest of the occasion,
played a well selected group of numbers, in-
cluding Chopin's ballade in A-Flat, his own ar-
rangement of a group of tunes from the eight-
President Henry L. Mason
may be justified in saying, as we now say of
those who preceded us, they were practical
idealists, and in the product of their achieve-
ment lay reflected the guiding principle of their
lives—integrity of character."
The Presentation of the Awards
The actual presentation of the awards was
Vice-President Paul H. Taylor
made by Paul H. Taylor, vice-president and
factory superintendent, but Mr. Mason could eenth century, Schubert's impromptu in A-Flat,
not resist the opportunity of shaking hands with and San-Saens etude in waltz form, all of which
each of the veterans personally and extending were received enthusiastically.
At the conclusion of the set program, a col-
his own felicitations, particularly to those who
lation was served in one of the ante-
had passed, or were approaching,
rooms of the hall, in the course of
the half-century service mark.
which the members of the audience
To those who had been with the
had an opportunity for congratulat-
company continuously for periods
ing personally the veterans of the
ranging from five to twenty-five
organization who had been honored.
years, there were presented attrac-
In addition to President Mason,
tive "Honorable Service" medals of
Vice-president Taylor and Harold
gold richly decorated in enamel,
Bauer, there were on the stage dur-
each medal bearing on its face the
ing the ceremony F. H. B. Byrne,
years of service of the recipient. To
director of publicity of the Mason
those who had been in the com- The Service Medal
pany's service from twenty-five to fifty years & Hamlin Co., who was in a large measure
there were presented, in addition to the responsible for the success of the arrangements,
medals, handsome gold watches suitably en- and Arthur L. Wessell, of Wessell, Nickel &
Danquard Traveling School
Now in Session in Buffalo
Eastern Division Opens Course in That City
After Successful Class in Boston—Hub Men
Plan Local Association
The Eastern Division of the Danquard Player
Action School has begun its sessions in Buffalo,
N. Y., taking up headquarters in the Hotel
Lafayette. The four-weeks' session in Boston,
Mass., was completed April 22, under the per-
sonal direction of Milton L. Cheek, who was
well pleased with the attendance there, as were
the supporting companies of the school.
The headquarters for the Danquard School in
Boston were located in the Hotel Bellevue, situ-
ated on Boston's historic Beacon Hill. About
one hundred students registered for the course,
and both the afternoon and evening sessions
were well attended. Tuners and repairmen were
pleased at the opportunities afforded to study
at first hand under expert guidance the Stand-
ard Pneumatic and Auto Pneumatic actions, as
well as the Welte-Mignon (Licensee) reproduc-
ing action.
Among the speakers before the school in Bos-
ton was John T. Gibson, manager of the Welte-
Mignon (Licensee) De Luxe Roll Recording
Department, who gave an interesting address
on the methods of recording the music rolls, for
which this company is famous. A. K. Gutsohn,
general superintendent of the plant of the
Standard Pneumatic Action Co., also spoke on
the principles of player construction, and upon
the high quality of materials necessary to pro-
duce a quality action.
The men attending the classes came not only
from Boston, but from surrounding towns, one
man, C. Taylor, coming from Nova Scotia, Can-
ada, to attend the sessions. Edwin Fowler, of
Watertown, Mass., was enrolled for the course,
being a student at the Perkins Institute for the
Blind in that city. One of the most popular
men taking the course was Frank Read, a well-
known and capable Boston tuner. Mr. Read
boasts of two distinctions: that he has not worn
a hat in twenty years, and that he carries the
lightest kit of any tuner in town, weighing only
nine pounds. After the sessions were closed the
greater number of the men got together to con-
sider the formation of a branch of the National
Association of Piano Tuners, and Mr. Taylor
was prevailed upon to remain in the United
States a few extra days as temporary chairman
to complete the organization of such a branch.
Shellac Name Gases
WASHINGTON. D. C, May 3.—Use of the words
"pure shellac" or "shellac," alone or in connec-
tion with a color adjective unless the product
designated is indeed pure gum shellac, is pro-
hibited under the terms of cease-and-desist
orders directed by the Federal Trade Commis-
sion against Dings & Shuster, Long Island City,
N. Y.; Baer Bros., Stamford, Conn., and New
York City; and the DeGolyer Varnish Works,
Troy, N, Y. These concerns are manufacturers
of paints and varnishes and allied products.
In the cases of the first two named, the orders
are modifications of previous orders issued
against them in October, 1923. Commissioners
Nugent and Thompson dissented from the issu-
ance of the orders, based upon their views in
the Don-O-Lac case.
Back of Presentation Watch
graved, and for the two men who had passed
the half-century mark, each with a record of
fifty-six years, there were also purses of gold.
The roll of honor appears elsewhere in this
account.
Mason and Bauer Among Veterans
Two particularly interesting features of the
presentation ceremony were the awarding of
service medals to Henry L. Mason, the corn-
Face of Presentation Watch
Gross, New York. The stage was decorated
with potted palms and flowers in a manner
that indicated that the purse strings had not
been held tightly.
In every way the occasion was a memorable
one for those privileged to participate in it, and
the character of the program was such as to
enhance in every particular the spirit of loyalty
of the Mason & Hamlin organization.
.
Buys Platteville Shop
PLATTEVILLE, WIS., May 1.—Lambert Groenier,
of Lancaster, has recently purchased the stock
of pianos, phonographs and small goods of the
Platteville Music Shop, of this city, which re-
cently has been operated by Charles H. Schefft,
of Milwaukee. The store will be continued by
Mr. Groenier, and his nephew, Ray Groenier,
who has been identified with him for ten years,
will manage the business,

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