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Music Trade Review

Issue: 1951 Vol. 110 N. 6 - Page 47

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Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
Wurlilzer Officers; Directors
Re-Elected at Annual Meeting
R. C. Rolfing, President of The Ru-
dolph Wurlitzer Co., reports that at the
meeting of the shareholders of the Com-
pany held recently in Cincinnati. 0., all
Directors were re-elected for the follow-
ing year and include: F. R. Wurlitzer,
J. M. Hutton, Jr.. C. R. Wright, R. G.
Lockwood, B. G. McCloud and R. C.
Rolfing.
Unanimously approved were three
plans recommended by the Board of
Directors: (a) Employee Savings and
Profit Sharing Plan; (b) Continued
Compensation Plan; and (c) Stock Op-
tion Plan. These are calculated to stab-
ilize employment at all levels, reward
those employees who wish to practice
thrift, prolong the period of usefulness
of executives and key empolyees, and
induce competent people to join the
Company.
President Rolfing also reported that
to date more than $12,000,000 of de-
fense contracts have been awarded to
the Company, and that by mid-summer
or early fall the Company would be in
full production on these contracts.
At the directors meeting immediately
following the meeting of shareholders,
the following officers were elected: Farny
R. Wurlitzer, Chairman of the Board;
R. C. Rolfing. President; R. C. Haim-
baugh, Vice-President and Manager
North Tonawanda Division; R. F. Walte-
made, Vice-President and Manager De-
Kalb Division; E. C. Payton, Vice-Presi-
dent and Manager Retail Stores Divi-
sion; Hugh A. Stewart, Vice-President
and Sales Manager DeKalb Division;
Morris C. Bristol, Vice-President and
Counsel; R. E. Walline, Vice-President
and Comptroller; E. L. Halme, Secre-
tary and Treasurer; B. J. Stemann,
Assistant Treasurer; R. W. Carlson,
Assistant Secretary and Comptroller
North Tonawanda Division; H. B.
Home, Assistant Secretary and Comp-
troller DeKalb Division; G. J. Weiler,
Assistant Secretary; Josephine Koe-
brick. Assistant Secretary.
A dividend of 20 cents per share of
common stock was declared, payable
September 1. 1951 to holders of record
August 15.
WICKHAM
Piano Plates
WICKHAM piano plates with over SIXTY YEARS
of "KNOW HOW" and experience in GREY IRON
FOUNDRY PRACTICE behind them, continue to
be a strict specification in the building of America's
finest pianos, BECAUSE . . .
1. The great WICKHAM GREY IRON FOUNDRY
is the largest and oldest piano plate foundry in the
United States making plates for the piano trade.
The WICKHAM organization has consistently car-
ried on extensive research work to improve the
physical properties of piano plates so necessary to
the long life of fine pianos.
2. WICKHAM PLATES are made from high qual-
ity pig irons carefully selected and blended by
chemical analysis resulting in GREY IRON CAST
PLATES of the tensile strength and rigidness
required to properly withstand the tremendous
string tension of the piano scale for the lifetime
of the piano.
3. WICKHAM PLATES are the finest quality
GREY CAST IRON and no SOFT or LIGHT-
WEIGHT METALS such as magnesium, aluminum,
etc., are used as substitutes. Piano manufacturers
insist on the WICKHAM CAST GREY IRON
PIANO PLATES so vitally necessary to give the
piano a long life of fine service.
4. Lightweight metals (aluminum, etc.) have been
tested and rejected for piano plate construction
by practically every piano manufacturer maintain-
ing an engineering department.
HENRY WICKHAM.
F*unde
ESTABLISHED J885
INCORPORATED 1903
PLAYERS REBUILT
• Airmotors
• Bellows
• Pneumatics
• Rebuilt
CELEBRATED WICKHAM PLATES.
Write:
TOLBERT F . CHEEK
11 Beauport Avenue , Gloucester, Mass.
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW, JUNE, 1951
47

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