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Music Trade Review

Issue: 1910 Vol. 51 N. 13 - Page 79

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Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
TH
MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
Thousands of music dealers through-
out the United States have found that
there is more real profit in handling
EDI S ON
PHONOGMPH
than in all the rest of their
business combined.
Because everybody wants a Phonograph and everybody wants an
Edison.
Because everybody knows that if it isn't an Edison it isn't
the phonograph. Everybody wants the sound reproducing instrument that
offers all that other instruments can offer, besides the features that other
instruments can't offer.
The long playing Amberol Records, rendering
all of every kind of entertainment, home recording, which gives more
than half the pleasure that a sound reproducing instrument has to offer
and the sapphire reproducing point that does not wear out, and does not
wear out the records, does not scratch and never needs changing, this sap-
phire reproducing point is the point of contact between the Phonograph
and the record and the secret of Edison purity of tone.
You want to handle the instrument that everybody wants—the
Edison Phonograph.
Find your nearest Edison jobber in the list below.
National Phonograph Company,
67 Lakeside Avenue
Orange, N. J.
JOBBERS WHO HANDLE EDISON PHONOGRAPHS AND RECORDS
Albany, N. Y.—Finch ft Hmhn.
Allentown, Pa.—G. C. Aschbach.
Atlanta, Go.—Atlanta Phono. Co., Phillip*
ft Crew Co.
Baltimore—Cohen & Hughes, Inc., E. F
Droop & Sons Co.
Bangor, Me.—S. L. Crosby Co.
Birmingham, Ala.—The Talking Machine
Co.
Bout, Idaho—Eilers Piano House.
Boston—Boston
Cycle & Sundry Co.,
Eastern Talking Machine Co., Iver John.
son Sporting Goods Co.
Brooklyn, N. Y.— John Rose.
Buffalo—W.
D. Andrews, The Neal,
Clark & Neal Co.
Burlington, Vt.—American Phono. Co.
Calgary, Aha, Canada—The R. S. Will-
iams & Sons Co., Ltd.
Chicago—Babson Bros., James I. Lyons,
Lyon & Healy, Montgomery, Ward ft
Co., Rudolph Wurlitzer Co.
Cincinnati, O.—Ball-Fintze
Co., Milner
Musical Co., Rudolph Wurlitzer Co.
Columbus, O.—Perry B. Whitsit Co.
Dallas. Tex.—Southern Talking Mach. Co.
Dayton, O.—Niehaus & Dohse.
Denver—Denyer Dry Goods Co., Hext
Music Co.
Des Moines, la.—Harger & Blish.
Detroit—American Phono. Co., Grinnell
Bros.
Ecu ton. P*.—The Werner Co.
Elmira, N. Y.—Elmira Arms Co.
El Paso, Tex.—W. G. Walz Co.
Fitchburg, Mass.—Iver Johnson Sporting
Goods Co.
Fort Dodge, Iowa—Early Music House.
Fort Smith, Ark.—R. C. Bollinger Music
Co.
Forth Worth, Texas—D. Shepherd & Co.
Gloversville,
N. Y.—American Phono-
graph Co.
Helena, Mont.—Frank Buser.
Hoboken, N. J.—Eclipse Phonograph Co.
Houston—Houston Phonograph Co.
Indianapolis — Kipp-Link
Phono. Co.,
Wulschner-Stewart Music Co.
Kansas City—J. W. Jenkins' Sons Music
Co., Schmelzer Arms Co.
Knoxville—Knoxville
Typewriter and
Phono. Co.
Lincoln, Neb.—Row P. Curtice Co., H.
E. Sidles Phono. Co.
Los Angeles—Southern California Music
Co.
Louisville—Montenegro-Riehm Music Co.
Lowell, Mass.—Thos. Wardell.
Manchester, N. H.—John B. Virick Co.
Memphis—F. M. Atwood, O. K. Houck
Piano Co.
Milwaukee—Lawrence McGreal.
Minneapolis—Minnesota Phono. Co.
Mobile, Ala.—W. H. Reynalds.
Montgomery, Ala.—R. L. Penick.
Montreal, Canada—R. S. Williams ft Son
Co., Ltd.
Newark. N. /.—A. O. Petit
Newark, O.—Ball-Fintze Co.
New Bedford, Afajj.—Household Furnish-
ing Co.
New Haven—Pardee-Ellenberger Co., Inc.
New York City—Blackman Talking Ma-
chine Co., J. F. Blackman & Son, I.
Davega, Jr., Inc., S. B. Davega Co.,
Jacot Music Box Co., Victor H. Rapke,
Siegel-Cooper Co., John Wanamaker.
New Orleans—William Bailey, Nat Auto.
Fire Alarm Co., Philip Werlein, Ltd.
Richmond—C. B. Haynes & Co.
Rochester—Talking Machine Co.
Salt Lake City—Consolidated Music Co.
San Antonio, Tex.—H. C. Rees Optical
Co.
San Francisco—Pacific Phonograph Co.
Schenectady, N. Y.—Jay A. Rickard & Co.
Scranton—Ackerman
k Co., Technical
Supply Co.
Seattle, Wash.—Eilers Music House.
Sioux City, Iowa—Early Music House.
Spokane, Wash.—Spokane Phono. Co.
St. John, N. B.—W. H. Thome & Co.,
Ltd.
St. Louis—Koerber-Brenner Music Co.
Silverstone Talking Machine Co.
St. Paul—W. J. Dyer k Bros., Koehler k
Hinrichs.
Syracuse—W. D. Andrews.
Ogden, Utah—Proudfit Sporting Goods
Co.
Oklahoma City, Okla.—Smith's Phono-
graph Co.
Omaha Neb.— Nebraska Cycle. Co., Shultz
Bros.
Oswego, N. Y.—Frank E. Bolway.
Toledo—Hayes Music Co.
Pater son. N. /.—James K. O'Dea.
Toronto—R. S. Williams k Sons Co.
Peoria, III.—Putnam-Page Co., Inc., Pe-
Ltd.
oria Phonograph Co.
Philadelphia—Louis Buehn & B r o . , C . J. Trenton, N. J.—John Sykes.
Heppe & Son, Lit Bros., Penn. Phono- Utica—Arthur F. Ferriss, Wm. Harrison.
graph Co., John Wanamaker, H. A. Vancouver, B. C—M. W. Wsitt k Co.,
Weymann & Son.
Ltd.
Pittsburg—Standard Talking Mach. Co.
Washington—E. F. Droop k Sons Co.
Portland, Me.—Vf. H. Ross & Son.
Waycross, Ga.—Youmans Jewelry Co.
Portland, Ore.—Graves Music Co.
Pa.—W. A. Myers.
Providence,
R. I.—J. A. Foster Co., Williamsport,
Winnipeg—R. S. Williams ft Sons Co.,
J. Samuels & Bro.
Ltd.
Worcester^ Mass.—Iver Johnson Sporting
uebec— C. Robitaille.
Goods Co.
uincy, III.—Quincy Phono. Co.
8
79

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