Music Trade Review

Issue: 1950 Vol. 109 N. 12

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE SATURDAY EVENING P O S T
HOUSE BEAUTIFUL
one C6wufi*tg> t&e&e 2 fay, (fyntetmab
etween now and Christmas, some 32,000,000
people with better-than-average incomes
will see these two large, colorful Story & Clark
national advertisements. Thousands and thou-
sands of these people live in your own trading
B
INSTRUMENTS OF QUALITY-BY
area. They see these national advertisements
regularly. When you use the name "Story &
Clark" in your selling efforts, you put this big
advertising campaign to work for yourself. A
weli-advertised name is the salesman's best tool.
ONE FAMILY-FOR
NINETY-THREE
':r^Z?X
n
' > : 'X;,'"* *
YEARS
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
Now appearing in
The Saturday Evening Post,
The New Yorker,
and Etude Magazine.
Runs consistently through
the heavy selling season,
with concentration at
peak periods.
crescendo
Announcing a new,
augmented advertising
campaign for
the Steinway
Aggressive, reason-why
copy, dramatically presented
in black and white
half-pages.
i
_!
Full recognition and
support of leading Steinway
artists in every
advertisement.
Merchandising support-
window poster, mailing
pieces, illustrated booklet,
"How to Choose a Piano."
Forceful advertising further
strengthens the Steinway
dealer's preeminent position
S T E I N W A Y & SONS
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW. DECEMBER, 1950
Special advertising for
local dealer use, newly
prepared and tied-in with
aggressive national themes.
Steinway Hall • 109 W. 57th Street • New York 19, New York

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