Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
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The Player Section
The Automatic Player Section
VOL. LXIX.
REVIEW
NEW YORK, AUGUST 30, 1919
I • J. Jacob Atojr • Piano Forte
B A C O N
P I A N O
COMPANY
W. P. H. BACON
President
H E N John Jacob Astor established the
first American Piano House in 1789, he
laid the foundation of the present Bacon
Piano Company. The instruments he sold,
now cherished heirlooms in distinguished
American families, were the best that
could be imported from England. With
his business he established a high stand-
ard of quality, which has been maintained
through the years—through the evolution
from the quaint spinnet of '79 to the
luxurious pianos of today.
Francis Bacon Pianos represent an
experience of 130 years in piano building.
They are the handiwork of the fathers of
the American Piano Industry. They offer
the dealer representative American pianos,
with a prestige and name built by satis-
faction to discriminating buyers of over
a century.
To the dealer who wishes a line of
distinction—of gallant ancestry in addi-
tion to quality, Francis Bacon Pianos
present an opportunity.
Your territory may be open.
601-611 West 50th St.
NEW YORK CITY
Entered as second-class matter September 10, 1892, at the post office at New York, N. Y., under the Act of March 3, 1879.
No. 9