Music Trade Review

Issue: 1931 Vol. 90 N. 3

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
ii
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FOR THE GENERAL MUSIC MERCHANT
P A L M A M QUI MERUIT FERAT
THE NEW YORK
"LET HIM W H O DESERVES IT BEAR THE P A L M '
PUBUCLIBRARY
IENOX
THE
SUI GENERIS
n u n i n i i i i i i i in
'IN A CLASS BY ITSELF'
The Mason & Hamlin is the
m
costliest piano in the world.
The reason is obvious . . From
the initial purchase of raw ma-
kimong people of critical
taste, there is a constant and increasing de-
mand for the utmost degree of excellence in
the things which affect their cultural life.
Recognizing this, the makers of the Mason &
Hamlin Piano are unswerving in their purpose
of supplying to this discriminating clientele
instruments of the highest possible artistic
merit.
Progressive Music Merchants appreciate
the value of the Mason & Hamlin name, both
as a builder of prestige, and for its distin-
guished and ever-increasing following.
terials to the final hand-rubbed
finish, the watchword of the
Mason & Hamlin organization
is " Q u a l i t y
A t A n y Cost"
MASON & HAMLIN CO.
General Offices:
!
Aeolian Hall, Fifth Ave. at 54th St., N. Y.
Factory, Boston, Mass.
i
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
MUSIC
TRADE
REVIEW,
M a r c h , 1931
The House of Kimball
believes
that opportunities for success in the retail piano business
are constantly increasing and is actively soliciting the
business of desirable dealers in those localities where the
Kimball is not represented.
Kimball is primarily interested in the success of its
dealers as a necessary precedent to its own success.
Kimball therefore furnishes not only attractive
pianos of the highest quality, invulnerable in competi-
tion, but gives its dealers access to the cumulative Kimball
experience of nearly three-quarters of a century of suc-
cessful business operations.
This experience includes that of its own methods, con-
stantly improved to meet changing conditions, in retail
selling, in collecting, of handling salesmen, of soliciting
and financing, and its observations in co-operating closely
with dealers in industrial centers, in mining districts, in
agricultural communities, in the cotton belt, in small
towns and large cities.
The House of Kimball believes that any music dealer
can operate more profitably with the Kimball line than
with any other and supports this belief with an array of
facts which are convincing. These facts cheerfully sub-
mitted to dealers in unoccupied territory upon request.—
Write us today.
WWKIMBAllCO
Kimball Building
CHICAGO

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