International Arcade Museum Library

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Music Trade Review

Issue: 1915 Vol. 61 N. 7 - Page 14

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Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
14
The phenomenal Columbia increase
over a very remarkable 1914 business
has been largely in records.
Naturally. They are great records. And
the price is attractive. And the guarantee is
as good as gold. And plenty of the records are
made by artists that record buyers want to hear,
and can't hear anywhere else.
A piano store with no records by Bonci, or
Seagle, or Ferrari-Fontana, or Nielsen, or Garden,
or Fremstad, or Destinn, or Bispham, is getting
away entirely from the larger side of the
music business—the vocal side.
People are constantly calling for these
records. Dealers are making big money on them.
What's the sense of limiting your income?
Graphophone Co., Woolworth Building, New York
Creators of the talking machine industry. Pioneers and leaders in the talking machine art.
Owners of the fundamental patents.
(Writ?
for "Music Money," a book full of meat for those dealers
frequent turnover of capital.)
interested
in quick and

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