Music Trade Review

Issue: 1951 Vol. 110 N. 4

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
Musical Instruments, Pianos, Organs
Price Controlled by Amend. 2, Reg. 7
USICAL instruments of all types,
including pianos, organs, elec-
tronic attachments, r a d i o s ,
phonographs, recorders, television and
a host of other consumer durable goods
were placed under the "frozen mark-up"
regulation of price control, when
Amendment 2 to Ceiling Price Regu-
lation No. 7 was issued by the Office
of Price Stabilization April 5th, to be-
come effective on April 10th. This re-
moves these items from the general
ceiling price regulation and places them
under specific control, as follows:
Each retailer must make up a chart
that lists all items he sells, showing the
cost, the selling price and the per-
centage mark-up which existed on
March 31, 1951, the "list date" for
these commodities. After the dealer
has filed his chart, he must figure his
ceiling prices by using the chart mark-
ups for every item, whether he received
it before or after March 31, 1951. He
may begin to price under the chart,
just as soon as the chart is filed.
This chart must be filed with the
Office of Price Stabilization by April
30, 1951, and none of the items may
be sold after May 30th, unless the dealer
has received acknowledgment of the
filing of his chart from the OPS dis-
trict office.
The new amendment allows the dealer
to raise his prices and pass on to con-
sumers certain increases in costs of
goods he buys. OPS pointed out that
some regulations allow manufacturers
and wholesalers to raise costs to re-
tailers, which may then be passed on
as above, on the percentage mark-up
basis.
Under the original order issued in
February, retailers were required to
absorb the increases. Now they can
add the costs after figuring ceiling
prices on their basic or original cost
of items.
Amendment 2 names musical instru-
ments in the following categories:
Category 860—Pianos, Electric Organs
and Electronic Attachments for Pianos
or Organs. Category 861—Other Musi-
cal Instruments, which include all
musical instruments other than above,
such as (but not limited to) : Stringed
Instruments, Wood-winds. Brasses, Per-
cussion and Miscellaneous. (It is inter-
esting to note that no mention was made
M
of musical accessories.)
Other categories mentioned in Amend-
ment 2 include radios of all kinds,
phonographs and recorders of all kinds,
records, television, housewares, notions,
luggage, sporting goods, silverware,
china ware, glassware, jewelry, watches
and clocks.
Commodities affected by the original
order included men's and women's ap-
parel, shoes, furniture, floor coverings,
etc. Amendment 2, therefore, broadens
extensively the list of consumer goods
now covered by percentage mark-up
regulations.
For the benefit of retailers the OPS
New York office issued a series of ques-
tions and answers as follows:
1.—Q. I have had 3 invoices since
January 1, 1951, all containing exactly
the same cost. I have not changed my
offering price since January 1. May I
list the last invoice showing a different
cost (one which I received in December,
1950) when I list my net cost under Sec-
tion 16-A?
A. Yes. "Next to last invoice" means
an invoice showing a net cost different
from that on the "last invoice you had
received." It must be the latest invoice
showing a different cost received prior
to the last invoice, where you have re-
ceived a series of shipments at the same
net cost shown on the last invoice you
had received you should consider collec-
tively as the "last invoice" all the in-
voices showing the same net cost as the
last invoice, and list on your chart the
last invoice received which show a dif-
ferent net cost, as being the next to
last invoice.
2.—Q. Under Section 17C how far
back must I go to determine whether
I had re-marked an article?
A. The re-marking referred to in sec-
tion 17-C refers to the marking of the
article on the invoice listed on your chart
and the subsequent re-matking of the
article covered by that invoice.
3—Q. If I have preserved the chart
I prepared under OPAS MPR 580 and
have operated generally at the same
markups since, may I use that chart?
A. No. You must prepare a new
chart according to the instructions in
CPR 7.
4—Q. Must I wait to receive acknowl-
edgment of the filing of my chart before
I begin to price under the regulation?
A. No. You may begin to use your
pricing chart and the pricing rules of
CPR 7 as soon as you file your chart.
Note these two things. First, you must
begin to use the pricing rules not later
than April 30, and second, after May 30,
you may not sell articles covered by the
regulation unless you have received an
acknowledgment of the filing of your
chart.
5—Q. We have leased a department in
our store to X. Are we responsible for
preparing the chart and pricing under
the chart of X's department?
A. No. X is a separate seller. The
entire responsibility for preparing fil-
ing and pricing is his.
6—Q. Are individually or specially de-
signed Spencer Supports for back, breast,
or abdomen made after order by a
particular customer, where the dealer
carries no stock, covered by CPR 7?
A. Individually or specially designed
supports for surgical or medical use in
connection with physical abnormalities
and disabilities are not covered by any
of the categories in CPR 7. The refer-
ence to "supports" in category 204 and
the reference to "abdominal, athletic,
ankle and similar supporters" in cate-
gory 351 are not meant to include such
specially designed articles.
7—Q. I own and operate one store and
wish to open another. May I proceed
under SR 1 CPR 7 and price uniformly
in both stores?
A. No, one store does not constitute a
chain. This does not preclude the opera-
tor of one store from opening anther
unit and pricing uniformly if Table E
Markups are the same or greater than
the markups in his own chart or if he
can qualify under Section 39 of the
regulation and applies for and receives
an order which permits him so to price.
8—Q. Must a department store wait
until all of its departments have pre-
pared their charts before filing?
A. No. A department in a depart-
mentalized establishment which is a
separate seller under CPR 7, may file
its chart separately.
A. G. Langenus Presser Vice-Pres.
The Theodore Presser Co., Philadel-
phia, Pa., announces the appointment
of Alan G. Langenus as Vice-President
in Charge of Sales, Promotion and Edu-
cational Activities. He assumed his duties
on March 19, 1951.
Mr. Langenus was formerly associated
with Boosey & Hawkes, and previously
with Carl Fischer, Inc.
Sperrys on Mediterranean Cruise
Ralph Sperry, technical expert of the
Rudolph Wurlitzer Co., DeKalb. 111., ac-
companied by Mrs. Sperry, is now on a
Mediterranean cruise for two months,
which started on February 6th. They
sailed on the S. S. Atlantic.
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW, APRIL, 1951
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
The Jfu
Established 1879
VOL. 110-No. 4
THE
PIONEER
April, 1951
2,853rd Issue
REVIEW
PUBLICATION
O F T H E MUSIC
I N D U S T R Y
National Music Week to Include National
Defense Programs and for Service Men
National and Inter-American Music
Week will be held from May 6th to
13th this year, and according to reports
from the National Recreation Associa-
tion, whose responsibility it is at the
present time to promote this week, it is
expected that there will be more than
3,000 cities, towns and smaller com-
munities participating, to mark the oc-
casion in some organized way in 1950.
According to T. E. Rivers, Secretary
of the project, the basic aims of Music
Week will continue as they have been
from the beginning: to advance the love
of music and impress upon the con-
sciousnses of the people its value in
modern life; to increase the perform-
ance of music by groups and individ-
uals; to multiply opportunities for young
talent and widen acquaintance with good
music by American composers. Inev-
itably, progress in these directions will
strengthen the unifying influence of
music, and if ever there were a time
when that influence was deeply needed
it is now. The keynote for 1951, selected
by the national committee for the 1951
observance is "Enrich Your Living
Through Music." In addition to the
many special projects, which have al-
ways featured music week, this year
there will be a definite program in con-
nection with the national defense, a
great deal of effort being devoted to the
needs of servicemen and industrial
workers, particularly in towns near
training camps and defense industries.
Musical entertainment for the men and
women in these groups is considered
a real help from the morale, good fel-
lowship and other points of view, and
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW. APRIL. 1951
A It
III
NAMM NATIONAL MUSIC WEEK
POSTER.
can be a most favorable and public-
spirited contribution. The programs will
be arranged by civic and musical groups
acting independently or in combination
with one or more other groups. If talent
is available among the servicemen and
workers, this is an aid to the program.
Audience participation can be secured
through group singing under capable
leadership. There is a further advan-
tage : outdoor programs may be possible
in many places, but indoor programs
may be equally successful if the hall is
a sufficient size and members presented
are well-chosen.
Church and church group participa-
tion has been increasing each year and
is taking on new forms. Sermons on
music and special programs by organ-
ists and choirs are now being supple-
mented by concerts in hymn singing,
designed to revitalize the entire musical
side of the church service. Inter-church
and inter-denominational events are
using music to strengthen the coopera-
tive as well as religious spirit. The clos-
ing Sunday of Music Week coincides
with Mothers Day this year and is fre-
quently marked in the church school by
musical programs honoring the mothers
of the congregation.
In his letter of suggestions for the
local chairmen and workers, for Na-
tional and Inter-American Music Week,
Mr. Rivers continues:
"Youth groups of both boys and girls
have been coming to the fore in Music
Week with demonstrations of what they
are doing in music.
"Many adult groups—women's clubs,
parent-teacher associations and rural
groups, like the Granges, Four-H and
Homemakers Clubs, are taking advan-
tage of the observance effectively to
climax their season's musical activities
and sometimes to arrange public pro-
grams. Men's luncheon clubs, service
clubs and civic organizations are not
only taking part more prominently, with
music for their own members, but are
furthering movements for the general
musical development of the town.
"The music clubs, of course, are one
of the leading contingents in the Music
Week participation. The Federated
Music Clubs have long had a national
chairman of Music Week and state
chairmen who head up the observance
in their respective state branches. The
individual club programs have usually
been of high order of merit. Often too,
several music clubs have joined together,
or have cooperated with school officials
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