Music Trade Review

Issue: 1952 Vol. 111 N. 6

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
Selmer Marks Music Week
With "Silver Dollar" Payday
Manual Arts Has 100 Styles
Of Fabric Top Benches
Music Week in Elkhart, Ind. this year
was marked by the merry jingle of sil-
ver due to the "Silver Dollar Payday"
The Manual Arts Furniture Co., Cin-
cinnati, Ohio, has for a number of years
furnished piano benches that carefully
duplicate styling and color of all pop-
ular makes of pianos. A line of gen-
eral use benches, with individually
styled legs, has also been manufactured.
The #^9 Series Bench of this group
has proven to be so popular that it is
now added to the Manual Arts standard
line. This decorative fabric top bench
is now available with over 100 styles
of piano matching bench legs.
Manual Arts, has designed a smart
fabric selection display to assist cus-
tomers in making a choice of fabric that
will match their color scheme in the
and Miss Mildred Patschke, both of
Chicago.
Mr. Palma is the famed Chicago in-
dustrial designer who is best-known in
the music industry for his many artistic
Story & Clark cases.
Mr. Palma is a partner in the firm of
J. M. GROLIMUND SUPERVISES
MOVING OF "SILVER DOLLAR PAYROLL"
of H. & A. Selmer, Inc. of which Jesse
French Sons is a division.
J. M. Grolimund, president of the
company, thought the annual Music
Week merited more than casual observ-
ance by Elkhartans with the result
that all Selmer employees on Wednes-
day, May 7th, were paid in silver dol-
lars.
The result was that the heavy silver
coins caused talk and the "Elkhart
Truth" publicized the event both in its
editorial and news columns.
Through the cooperation of the St.
Joseph Valley Bank, arrangements were
made to have 8,000 of the big coins
shipped to Elkhart in sacks of 1,000,
each weighing over 60 pounds. The
Elkhart police department sent out a
squad car with an armed guard to con-
voy Selmer officials to the bank and
back.
It took the better part of a day's time
for members of the payroll department
with some of the firm's officers pitching
in to get the counting job done.
i;ii
PIANO
JOSEPH PALMA, Jr.
Palma-Knapp Associate. In addition to
Story & Clark, the firm serves such
clients as Cory Corp., Johnson's Wax,
Admiral Radio and Television, Scott
Radio, Teletype Ditto, etc.
NEW
MANUAL ARTS
TOP BENCH
FABRIC
home, concert hall or school. The fab-
ric sample display and company cata-
log provide the dealer with an effective
sales tool. Dealers are furnished the
new fabric display free upon request.
The fabric display shows four leath-
erette swatches and 20 fabric swatches.
Students of Story & Clark
Piano Designer Win Awards
Two students of Joseph Palma, Jr.
were recently awarded $300 in prizes in
a nationwide furniture-designing com-
petition. They are Mr. Howard Sersen
VNE of the few pianos now on
the market that is made, owned
and operated by the same family
that created it.
I OUR generations of the Kra-
kauer family have produced the
Krakauer piano—over 75 years
in the same family.
I HE Krakauer is the best piano
for "Tone," "Responsiveness" and
"Case Design."
Established 1869
K R A K A U E R
Factory:
401 WEST 124th STREET
BROS.
Retail Warerooms:
25 WEST 57th STREET
NEW YORK
Mrs. Nin to Play on
"Piano Playhouse" July 27th
Mrs. Rosita E. Nin, wife of Salvador
R. Nin, head of Salvador R. Nin, Inc.,
San Juan, Puerto Rico, teacher and con-
cert pianist will appear on Maggy
Fisher's "Piano Playhouse" program on
Sunday, July 27th, over the ABC net-
work. This is the Sunday preceding the
opening of the Convention of the Na-
tional Association of Music Merchants,
which takes place in New York at the
Hotel New Yorker.
In view of Mrs. Nin having been
chosen to play on the "Piano Play-
house " program. "El Mundo", the San
juan paper, published a column ar-
ticle regarding Mrs. Nin, reproducing
her photograph, on May 31st.
BEACH
CARILLONETTE CHIMES
TOWER BELL REPRODUCER
and the
MINI-CHIMES
"Nothing But a Bell Rings Like a Bell"
SEND FOR CATALOGS
BEACH INSTRUMENT CORP.
165 Oraton St.
22
Newark 4, N. J.
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW. JUNE, 1952
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
NPMA MEETING
(Continued from Page 15)
Ohio, and he also gave a demonstration
of lessons in piano which are being
given by Grinnell Bros, over the radio,
transmitting one lesson by wire recorder
to those present.
Eugene Wulsin of the Baldwin Piano
Martin B. Colwin, Harold F. Hage-
meyer and Eugene A. Schmitt, Hardman
Peck & Co., Clarence H. Pond and Rich-
ard W. Stevens, Ivers & Pond Piano
Co., Webster E. Janssen and Hugh Heli-
on, Janssen Piano Co., J. V. Sill, W.
W. Kimball Co., Charles K. White,
Kohler & Campbell, Inc., Maurice Bretz-
PRESIDENT FEDDERSEN HOLDS ALOFT THE "HAND BOOK FOR TEACHING PIANO
CLASSES" WHILE MAKING REPORT AS TRUSTEE TO AMC — HENRY Z. STEINWAY
REPORTS PROGRESS OF CLASS PIANO LESSONS — WILLIAM R. STEINWAY ON
THE ACTIVITIES OF THE NATIONAL MUSIC COUNCIL.
Co., Chairman of the Manpower Train-
ing Committee and Tuners Coordinating
Committee, gave a brief report on what
was being done by that activity and he
was followed by William R. Steinway,
N.P.M.A. representative on the National
Music Council.
Webster E. Janssen, Chairman of the
Committee on Good Pianos in Public
Institutions, made a very brief report.
This was followed by a long discus-
sion on a proposed change in the by-
laws, which was voted down.
After the report of the Nominating
Committee and the Election of Officers,
stated above, Mr. Feddersen took the
chair and called for new business.
J. A. Gould, President of Pratt, Read
& Co., after a brief talk, proposed a
resolution that the association be put
under a management committee which
would study a proposed promotion plan
which over a period of years would run
into considerable money, with the sug-
gestion that the funds be raised bv tax-
ing each manufacturer $5 or $10 per
piano. After considerable discussion,
this motion was laid on the table for
future consideration.
The members and guests were then
entertained at luncheon, at which time
President Feddersen called on Carleton
Chace, Editor of THE REVIEW, to tell
about the New Rochelle Piano Festival
which he attended on May 27th. which
was conducted under the supervision of
Fav Temoleton Frisch. at which 150
students from kindergarten to junior
hipfh school age participated, the story
of which appears on Page 5.
Among those present were: Robert
A. Hill. Aeolian - American Corp.,
Eugene Wulsin, Baldwin Piano Co.,
George H. Stapely. Everett Piano Co.,
Jack F. Feddersen, Jesse French & Sons.
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW, JUNE, 1952
felder and A. S. Zeisler, Krakauer Bros.,
C. Albert Jacob, Mathushek Piano Mfg.
Co., William Perlman, National Piano
Corp., Harry J. Sohmer and Harry J.
Sohmer Jr., Sohmer & Co., William R.
Steinway, Henry Z. Steinway, Charles
H. Steinway, and E. B. Orcutt, Steinway
& Sons, William H. Bowles, Story &
Clark Piano Co., W. G. Heller, John H.
Gettell, Winter & Co., Perk Bowers, Ru-
dolph Wurlitzer Co., William Hessmer,
Amsco Wire Products Corp., J. A.
Gould, and George C. Seeley, Pratt,
Read & Co., George A. Rest, Tonk Mfg.
Co., Henry G. Wickham and Henry G.
Wickham, Jr., Wickham Piano Plate
Co., Harmore V. Cook, Cornwall & Pat-
terson, George Barandes and Irving
Sacks, Sacks & Barandes and others.
New Weaver Royale Spinel
For Convention Display
PMA Plans Nightclub Setting
For Second Annual Banquet
The second annual banquet of the
Phonograph Manufacturers Association
will be a rollicking evening with excel-
lent food and great entertainment, ac-
cording to Joseph Dworken, secretary-
treasurer of PMA and chairman of the
dinner committee. As part of a climax to
the NAMM Show the affair will be held
on Wednesday evening, July 30th, and
is to start at 7:30 with a deluxe dinner
at Bill Miller's Riviera, atop the Pali-
sades in Fort Lee, N. J., followed by the
famous Riviera floor show. The fea-
tured attraction, usually of the coun-
try's leading names in the entertainment
world, will be announced when book-
ings are cleared, said Mr. Dworken.
He added, however, that the number
of tables available to PMA is limited.
Accommodations at the renowned night
spot, located on the New Jersey shore
near the George Washington Bridge,
are always in great demand during
warm summer evenings and only 200
places are reserved for the Association.
N.A.M.M
(Continued from Page 16)
sent to members early last month re-
ceived splendid response, with a 21 per-
cent return. Only the states of New
Hampshire and Vermont were absent
from the tabulations. Among the rev-
elations shown by the questionnaires
was that 85 to 95 percent of all pianos
sold are for music education purposes.
Piano Makers Meet With NPA
At the recent meeting of Piano Manu-
facturers and National Production Au-
thority officials, the industry requested
higher allocations of copper and steel.
Requested, also, was a single base per-
iod for the industry as a whole; length-
ening of the 45-day inventory restric-
tion; and elimination of materials con-
trols would fare as well or better without
them. Results of NAMM's member
questionnaire were used to support pi-
ano manufacturers position.
New NAMM Members For May
NEW WEAVER ROYALE SPINET
A new model piano known as the
Weaver Royale will be shown for the
first time at the NAMM Convention by
the Weaver Piano Co., York, Pa. Fur-
nished in mahogany and walnut this
spinet piano is 39" high, 24" deep and
56" long.
Clark Brothers Piano Co., Knoxville,
Tenn.; Durlauf Music Shop, Louisville,
Ky.: Easy Appliance Company, Hono-
lulu 3, T.H.; Egyptian Music Co., Du-
Quoin, 111.; Fawley-Simmons Music Co.
Daytona Beach, Fla.; Paige's Music
Store, Terre Haute, Ind.; Piano Sales
Co., Inc., Mobile 13, Ala.; Stillman
Piano Co., Pueblo, Colo.; Weir Music,
Inc., Huron, S. D.
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