Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
GES.
THE
flUJIC TRADE
V O L , X L I V . N o . 2 1 . Published Every Satorday by Edward Lyman Bill at X Madison Aye,, New York, May 25,1907.
SING
$ a E o£°P P E I g S Y^ ENTS -
More Money
for Music Men!
Columbia Records are as appropriate a part of the music
store stock as sheet music—and altogether more profitable.
Thousands of music dealers have proved it—including
some of the biggest houses in the country.
You can figure not only the profit on the records—
but their business-building force. They bring more people
into the store—people who like music and are ready to pay
for it, people who own or will own pianos and piano-players,
people who will pay their good money for tuning and who
will influence their friends.
COLVMBIA RECORDS
(Disc ^ n d Cylinder)
are made in the largest talking machine factory in the world, and
under the original patents covering the recording of musical sounds.
It is easy to see why the Columbia name stands for every point of
quality that a record can embody.
In spite of their far superior quality, Columbia Gold-Matrix
Cylinder Records sell for ten cents less than the price of their nearest
competitor. Columbia Disc Records sell from 50 cents up to $5.00
and it is a significant fact that the business is developing every day
along the line of the higher priced goods. This one thing means more
to a music dealer who is building for the future than any development
in the music business since the graphophone was invented.
Columbia Records fit any machine—and the owner is never
satisfied with any other after he has once heard a Columbia Record on
his own machine.
COLUMBIA
Phonograph Co., Gen'l
Tribune Building, New YorK
DEALERS WANTED WHEREVER WE
ARE NOT NOW REPRESENTED
GRAND PRIX. PARIS. 1900
GRAND PRIZE. MILAN, 1906
DOUBLE GRAND PRIZE. ST. LOUIS, 1904
STORES IN ALL PRINCIPAL CITIES
Are You Getting Your Share ?