Music Trade Review

Issue: 1954 Vol. 113 N. 3

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
W . W . Kimball Sales Staff Preview
New Type Piano to Be Announced Soon
The factory of the W. W. Kimball
Co., Chicago, 111. was the scene of a
three day meeting, recently of all key
men in the Sales Division and the en-
and District Sales Managers Gene E.
Strange, Roy S. Johnson, A. V. Hors-
man, Trice W. Burger, E. F. Roller.
F. W .Grosser, George J. Rest, and Wm.
Garfield Chalmers, Kimball Factory Manager addresses front row—L. to R.: T. H. Krum-
wiede, Ass't. Wholesale Mgr.; W. W. Kimball Jr., Production Control Mgr.; R. A. Burke,
Chicago Retail Store Mgr.; Wm. D. Parsons Jr., Ass't. Whoesale Mgr.; Jack B. Strange,
Ass't. Wholesale Mgr.; Gene E. Strange, District Repr.; Torbin Yates, Chief Engineer;
Ben F. Duvall, Vice-President and General Mgr.
Back Row—L. to R.: F. W. Grosser,
District Repr.; Roy S. Johnson, District Repr.; A. V. Horsman, District Repr.; George J.
Rest, District Repr.; Trice W. Burger, District Repr.; Curtis P. Kimball, Ass't. Wholesale
Mgr.; E. F. Roller, District Repr.; Wm. E. Day, President of Kimball Pianos Inc. of Calif.
gineering and design department. All
nine Kimball travelers, from New Eng-
land to California, attended.
At this meeting there was revealed
very extensive plans and new develop-
ments scheduled to take place within
the the next six months.
Each new product development "un-
veiled" at this meeting will be publicly
announced as soon as it is in produc-
tion and available. Each one is an in-
tegral part of the long-range six
months Kimball plan which includes
styling, product advancement, engin-
eering and design.
Included in the preview of the "new
look" is an entirely new type of piano
that will be announced formally in the
near future. The new program also
involves greatly increased appropria-
tions for the Engineering Department.
New Merchandising ideas, and engin-
eering developments, will be released
to the trade in the course of the six
months plan, and during each year sub-
sequently until Kimball's lOOth-year
is reached in 1957.
All parts of the country were repre-
sented with William E. Day, President
of Kimball Pianos Inc., (Los Angeles),
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW, MARCH, 1954
D. Parsons, in attendance. Also present
were Curtis P. Kimball, T. H. Krum-
wiede and Jack Strange Assistant Man-
agers of the Wholesale Sales Division,
and R. A. Burke, Chicago Retail Divi-
sion Manager.
Speakers at this semi-annual sales
conclave in addition to G. Chalmers,
Factory Manager, and Torbin Yates,
Chief Engineer were: W. W. Kimball,
President; Ben F. Duvall, Vice-Presi-
dent and General Manager; A. Witter-
raan. Factory Technical Specialist; Os-
car Steinhauser, Designer; and all
members of the Wholesale Division
Sales Department. After three very full
days at the Kimball factory, the men
took time out for a special wind-up
dinner at the Union League Club in
Chicago's Loop, with W. W. Kimball
as host.
In the words of Vice-president Du-
vall: "This new program was the
most enthusiastically received of any
in my almost thirty years of associa-
tion with the Kimball Company! It is
not just a collection of several isolated
new ideas. It is a well integrated,
broad project of many facets to be
brought together into a comprehensive
whole.*'
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Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
Krakauer Bros. Buy Haddorff
Now Making 2 Models in N.Y.
Maurice Bretzfelder, president of
Krakauer Bros., New York, has just
announced the purchase of the inven-
tory, patents, designs, patterns and the
name of the Haddorff Piano Co., for-
merly a division of C. G. Conn. Ltd.
Local conditions in Rockford, 111.,
where the Haddorff has been manufac-
tured, became such as to make it im-
practical to continue the manufacture
of pianos in this city. Accordingly the
Haddorff factory there had to close up
a short time ago. Manufacture is being
immediately resumed in New York
City where skilled piano craftsmen are
readily available.
Under its new directorship the Had-
dorff Piano will continue to be made
in the same design and the same high-
standard for which it has been noted.
In commenting on this new venture,
Mr. Bretzfelder said: "It is common
knowledge that different piano mak-
ers, producing fine instruments, all
make their respective pianos with dif-
ferent types of tone quality. The dis-
tinctive and well liked tone of the
Haddorff, stemming from its balanced
high tension scale, will be retained as
will be the distinctive styling and the
Vertichord construction untilizing the
patented double sounding boards. In
this way the Haddorff and the Kra-
kauer pianos will each find their own
niche within the industry and will be
non-competitive with each other."
Manufacture has already been ini-
tiated on the Haddorff style 0 Verti-
chord as well as a style B Console.
Both of these will be available in a
variety of finishes. Other styles will
follow.
The new executive offices of the Had-
dorff Piano Co., division of Krakauer
Bros., will be at 25 West 57th Street,
New York, 19, and sales will be under
the direct supervision of the well known
Vice-President of Krakauer Bros., Al
S. Zeisler.
Minshall Esley Dealers (an
Win Trip To Europe
A new dealer incentive plan designed
to boost electronic organ sales in 1954.
has been announced by Burton Min-
shall, president of the Minshall Organ
Co. of Brattleboro, Vt.
The sales incentive program makes
it possible for more than 300 Minshall
dealers from coast-to-coast to partici-
pate in the "European Holiday" sweep-
stakes—the first contest of this type
ever attempted in the industry.
The contest will begin immediately
and will continue through the end of
December. 1954 when the winners will
be selected by a board of judges. The
prizes will iclude all-expense two week
trips to Europe for three dealers with
one companion each.
Winners will be selected on the basis
of total sales during the contest period.
Each dealer is eligible to compete in
one of three derbies in the sweepstakes,
depending on his store's volume and
the population of his marketing area.
In other words Mr. Minshall said, "no
matter how large or small a dealer
may be, he has a chance to win one
of the free trips to Europe. All of the
participants will be competing against
dealers of similar size and volume.
Anyone in the dealer's organization
may win—the dealer, or the dealer's
manager, buyer, salesman, etc.
A point system has been devised to
fairly evaluate all sales and to help
ihe dealer keep a month-lo-month rec-
ord of his progress in the sweepstakes.
Mr. Minshall said that a complete
and detailed itinerary has been planned
by the world-famous Trans-Globe Trav-
el Agency for the winning candidates
while they are in Europe. Included
among their stops will be many histor-
ic spots in London, Paris. Home, Nice,
Monte Carlo, etc.
Each dealer in the sweepstakes will
receive a portfolio made up to simu-
late a large passport in which he will
be able to chart his own progress in
the contest.
Baldwin Executives and Representatives Hold Round Table Discussions
Seated, left to right 1st row: Bruce Smith, J. A. Gisriel, G. A. Pelling; Lucien Wulsin, President; Philip Wyman, Vice President; James T.
Sokola, A. A. D'Amico, J. R. Armstrong; second row: Harold S. Morse, R. E. Fanning, J. A. Volz, George Stanley, J. B. Hemphill,
Jack Bertholdt, Ralph Louis, Paul Mooter; Standing: John Ortiz, James M. E. Mixter, F. W. Bertholdt, Robert C. Cosgrove, Leroy Mooney,
O. J. Olinger, George McCarvey; A. J. Schoenberger, Vice President; Richard A. Fluke, Irwin Stumborg; Walter Reneker, Manuel Fernan-
dez, John Busch, Robert Lapp, Dex Kline, Thomas Wulsin, Orland E. Armstrong, Randall Kine, James M. Gisriel; Eugene Wulsin, Vice
President; Thomas Goben, Geo. W. Lawrence, Olney Wilson, G. W. Fahrer.
The Annual Sales Meetings of The
Baldwin Piano Co. were held recently
at the company's general offices in
Cincinnati. The company's executives.
retail store and sales division man-
agers, and wholesale field representa-
50
tives—participated in round table dis-
cussions of important phases of the
business. General plans were made for
the marketing of Baldwin pianos and
organs in 1954.
While those attending the meeting
were in general agreement that the
coming year would be one of more
competitive selling, there was a similar
agreement that Baldwin's position in
the industry, and Baldwin's over-all
sales would continue to grow.
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW, MARCH, 1954

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