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Music Trade Review

Issue: 1912 Vol. 54 N. 11 - Page 1

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Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
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VOL. LIV. N o . 11 Published Every Saturday by Edward Lyman Bill at 373 Fourth Ave., New York, March 16, 1912
SINGLE
COPIES,
SINGL
E
C 0
There Is A Difference!
W
HAT a piano merchant most desires in his
warerooms is a piano that satisfies. There is
a vast difference in pianos in this particular. There
are some which appeal strongly to customers, but
after a while it is found they do not "stand up"—
that they do not live up to the claims made for them.
Dissatisfaction creeps in which means loss for the
dealer in the way of time, and a dissatisfied customer
invariably works some kind of an injury to the
business. Now the Doll 8c Sons pianos have directly
the opposite results. They please customers—in fact
they delight them—and every Doll & Sons piano, or
player-piano, sold means a satisfied customer and
more trade for the dealer. These are facts that are
worthy of the most careful consideration, because
value and service are the keynotes of modern business
success.
JACOB DOLL & SONS, Inc.
98-116 Southern Boulevard, New York
!• CENTO.
? ».O O PERVKA«"

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