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Presto

Issue: 1928 2212 - Page 14

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14
December 22, 1928
PRESTO-TIMES
BAND CONTEST BOOK OUT
Amazingly Large Growth of School Band
Movement Within Recent Years Dis-
closed in Bureau Publication.
The 1929 year book of the state and national school
band contests has just been issued by the National
Bureau for the Advancement of Music, and it is by
far the largest and most impressive of the series
published annually since 1924, the year of the incep-
tion of these contests with the cooperation of the
Bureau and the Music Supervisors' National Con-
ference. The present edition contains eighty pages
and represents thirty organized states. It also con-
tains the pictures of seventy-one first prize winning
bands in the different classes of the state contests and
the national contest last spring. Some 500 school
bands participated in these events, with a total of
approximately 30,000 players now actively identified
with the meets.
Some of the attractive features of the book are the
illustrations of the prizes given winning bands and
their players, and donated by the National Associa-
tion of Band Instrument Manufacturers. Prominent
place in a box on the inside front cover page is given
to a public tribute made by the Music Supervisors
Committee to the members of this association, who
are Vincent Bach Corporation, Buescher Band In-
strument Company, C. G. Conn, Ltd., Frank Holton
& Company, Martin Band Instrument Company and
H. N. White Company. About 300 of these prizes,
including state championship trophies, bronze tablets
of various sizes, and sets of medals in gold, silver and
bronze were included in the awards of 1928.
Tells About Contest.
The booklet starts off with a brief resume of the
national contest in Joliet, 111., last May, which was
the culmination of the first five years of the com-
mittcc's work, and in which twenty-seven picked
bands from fourteen states participated. Then follows
a review of the committee's cooperation with state
school band contests since their inception and a state-
ment of its aims and policies regarding the contests.
Attention is called to the fact that warm personal
interest has been manifested in the contests, and
expert counsel freely given by the most prominent
band directors in the country, including John Philip
Sousa, Edwin Franko Goldman, Captain Taylor
Branson, Herbert L. Clarke and others, some of
whom are now serving on the advisory committee,
and all of whom have given their services as judges
in the national events. Above all the contests have
greatly stimulated the interest of school authorities
and the public in school bands and school instru-
mental music in general, which in many states has
led to a notable increase in the number of new bands
established and a wholesome expansion and improve-
ment of those already in existence.
Which It Fosters
The committee emphasizes that it is consciously
fostering through its rules for the national and its
recommendations in the state contests a better in-
strumentation for the school bands, and that the
concert or symphony band is the ideal it has in mind.
It is also working for interest in and performance of
high grade music, feeling that both these lines of
development are necessary if the band is to realize its
full possibilities as an educational factor and as a
means of securing more adequate recognition for in-
strumental music in the curriculum.
A new feature of the contest this year is the addi-
tion of a fifth class of participants to the four
previously provided for. This new class is a special
division for small high schools, with an enrollment
of less than 250, and is aimed to give particular en-
couragement to the development of bands in these
institutions.
Worry Over Player Details
OTTO R. TREFZ, Jr.
PIANO BASS STRINGS —PIANO REPAIR SUPPLIES
TUNERS AND REPAIRERS
Our new Illustrated Catalogue of Piano
and Player Hardware, Felts and Tools
is now ready. If you haven't received
your copy let us know.
1305-09 North 27th St.,
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
Philip W. Oetting & Son, Inc.
is avoided by the manufac-
turer who uses the
A. C. Cheney Player Action
in his products. He knows
everything is all right and
that the best musical quali-
ties of his pianos are develop-
ed by the use of this player
mechanism.
213 East 19th Street, New York
A. C. CHENEY
PIANO ACTION COMPANY
Sole Agents for
CASTLETON, N. Y.
and Damper
Felts
Grant and Upright Hammer*
Made of Weickert F*lt
Fine Action Bushing Cloths, etc.
SCHAFF
Piano String Co.
A voting choir singer from Washington, D. C .
and a college hoy from California stood acclaimed
the winners today among 60,000 contestants in the
second national radio audition sponsored by the At-
water Kent foundation. Miss Hazel Cecilia Arth, 25
years old. a contralto, was adjudged the best of the
girls' division in the finals. Donald Novies, 22, of
Pasadena, Calif., a lyric tenor and a member of the
glee club of Whittier College, where lie is a student,
won the boys' first prize by singing "La Revo" from
tie opera "Manon." Each received $5,000 in cash, a
&okl decoration and a two-year college scholarship.
The other winners were: Dove Irene Kilgore, Oak-
land, Cal., and Kenneth Hines, Buffalo, N. Y., second
awards, $2,000 cash and one year scholarships; Anna
Mae Chandler, Fayetteville, Ark , and Wilfred A.
Engleman, Detroit, third award of $1,000 cash and
one-year scholarships: Gladys Morrison Ball, Kansas
City, Mo., and Patrick H. Wilson, Jr., Galveston,
Tex., fourth awards of $500 each; Carmen Rosell and
Ernest P. Ferrata. both of New Orleans, fifth awards
of $250 cash each.
SUCCESS IN MAJESTIC SALES.
How fifteen Majestic radio receiving sets were sold
within a period of eight weeks in the little town of
Carrollton, Miss., which has a total population of
515 people, was told recently by Mr. E. A. Seagrave,
Majestic field representative in that territory.
The man who made th ; s unusual record is A.
Fancher, for some time cashier in the Bank of Car-
rollton. The town was not big enough to boast a
radio shop, so Mr. Fancher decided to open a radio
business of his own, without a store, however. When
his day's work was done at the bank he proceeded
to call on every family in and around Carrollton, tak-
ing a Majestic Model 72 in his car for giving a home
demonstration. Within eight weeks he had sold 15
sets and has ordered five more for immediate ship-
ment.
The Plaut Music Co., 852 Broadway, Los Angeles,
opened a branch at Whittier boulevard and McDon-
nell avenue, last week. Pianos, phonographs and other
musical lines are carried.
PIANO KEY REPAIRING
KEYS RETURNED IN 24 HOURS
BEST GRADE IVOBINE
RECOVERING
$8.00
BUSHING
3.50
SHARPS
2.50
NEW FRONTS
2.00
PLAYER ACTIONS REPAIRED
Prompt and efficient service
Striking: Pneumatics
Air Motors, Governors, etc., Recovered
E. A. BOUSLOG, Inc.
2106 Boulevard Place
WEICKERT
Hammer
THE ATWATER KENT CONTEST
The Piano Repair Shop
Pianos and Phonographs Rebuilt by
Expert Workmen
Playei-actions installed. Instruments
refimshed or remodeled and actions and
keys repaired. Work guaranteed. Prices
reasonable.
Our-of-town dealers' repair work solic-
ited. Write for details and terms.
THE PIANO REPAIR SHOP
339 South Wabash AT*.
Manufacturers of
Chicago
INDIANAPOLIS, IND.
PIANO KEYS RECOVERED
General Key Repairs,
Sharps, Etc.
Ivory Sanding, Polishing
and Re-Gluing
Our Ivorine Keys
Heaviest
and
Highest Quality
Mc.MacRin
P i anoScrVice
1719-21 IMONDAMIN AVE
DESMOINES.IOWA.
at
Standard Prices
Very Prompt Service
KEYS RECOVERED AND REBUSHED
FRIELD MILLER & COMPANY
Samples of Work on Request
Prorrmt and Efficient Service
3355 North Illinois Street, INDIANAPOLIS, IND..
Piano Bass Strings
2009-2021 CLYBOURN AVENUE
Corner Lewis Street
CHICAGO
LATES
F A I R B A N K S a*£»i
THE FAIRBANKS CO., Springfield, Ohio
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