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Music Trade Review

Issue: 1922 Vol. 75 N. 13 - Page 47

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Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
SEPTEMBER 23,
1922
THE
MUSIC
TRADE
EDISON TAKES OVER KIPP BUSINESS
PHONOGRAPH FACTORY FOR CHINA
Prominent Indianapolis Edison Jobber Forced
to Retire Because of 111 Health—Edison In-
terests to Operate Business Under the Man-
agement of John M. Vandervoort
Massachusetts Man Leaves to Take Charge of
Selling End of New Enterprise
A. H. Curry, vice-president and manager of
Thomas A. Edison, Inc., announces that the Edi-
son interests have purchased the jobbing busi-
ness of Walter E. Kipp at Indianapolis, Ind.
The new organization will have for its name
Phonograph Corp. of Indiana. The headquar-
ters will be in Indianapolis and the territory
covered will be that tributary to this city. John
M. Vandervoort, who assumed his duties the
early part of September, is manager of this job-
bing organization.
Mr. Kipp, who has been an Edison jobber for
more than twenty years, has lately suffered
from extremely poor health. He was told by
his physicians that he could avoid serious con-
sequences only by completely severing his con-
nection with active business.
Apart from their regret at losing Mr. Kipp's
valuable and energetic services, the Edison in-
terests immediately decided that his business
was of too much importance to be entrusted to
strangers. They accordingly decided to form a
new corporation to take over the Indianapolis
jobbing business. This new corporation has
purchased the Kipp interests outright.
"Walter is really one of the family," said Mr.
Curry, when interviewed recently at West Or-
ange. "He would have been as discontented at
allowing new people to succeed to his business
as would we. We're going to try to carry on
the fine establishment he has built up with the
least possible number of changes."
It was Mr. Curry's intention to make a trip
to Indianapolis for the purpose of being present
at the inauguration of the new regime under
the management of John A. Vandervoort.
43
REVIEW
NORTH ADAMS, MASS., September 15.—Harold
Bradley, of this city, who spent nearly five years
opening up sales agencies for the Standard Oil
Co. in China, is shortly to return to that coun-
try as sales manager for the first phonograph
factory to be established in the Celestial Re-
public, of which he is one of the promoters.
The company, organized by men of long and
intimate experience in Oriental commercial en-
terprises, has just been incorporated under the
laws of Canada, and Mr. Bradley will leave for
Montreal in about two weeks to take part in the
completion of the organization. He expects to
be ready to sail for China in about two months.
The factory for the manufacture of both
phonographs and records will be erected in
Shanghai, and will be under the supervision of
a man who for more than twenty years has
been prominently identified with both the ex-
perimental and manufacturing business in this
country.
At the outset the recording will be confined
entirely to the reproduction of Chinese music,
of which there is said to be an almost univer-
sal appreciation among all classes of Chinese.
BRAND NEW

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HI
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Here is the handbook of the talking machine
industry for which you have long been
waiting. It is a directory you can keep
on your desk to give you, in an instant, de-
tailed knowledge about this and that com-
pany, which would otherwise consume much
of your time to secure.
TERMINAL PHONO. SHOP CHARTERED
The Terminal Phonograph Shop, Inc., of
Boston, Mass., has been chartered in that State
with a capital of $10,000. The incorporators of
the concern, which will deal in talking machines
and musical instruments, are Marion Dunn,
Louis Rosenthal and Bernard K. Cohen.
ONLY 50 CENTS
For instance, it will give you a complete
up-to-date list of the manufacturers and
jobbers who comprise the talking machine
industry, including invaluable data about
each concern, such as location of factories,
names of officers, location of branch offices,
trade names controlled, policy of marketing
product, etc., etc.
The Eclipse Talking Machine Co., of Pater-
son, N. J., has purchased a three-story brick
building at 169 Main street, that city.
FOUR VERY ATTRACTIVE MODELS OF THE NEW EDISON
N. J., September 14.—Thomas A. Edison,
Inc., recently announced four new models of
the New Edison, which are of a revolutionary
character insofar as price is concerned. Hith-
erto the New Edison instruments have com-
prised what the trade regarded as a high-priced
line and at one time the lowest-priced model
was $167. The new machines are all priced to
cater to a demand for instruments selling
1
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...
These New Designs, Which Range in Price From $60 to $135, Have Made a Great Impression on
the Trade and Public and Orders Have Been Coming in From Distributors in a Lively Way
ORANGE,
fl
ONLY 50 CENTS
Also it will give you a full, up-to-date list
of the manufacturers who make any given
class of product, such as talking machines,
records, parts, accessories, store equipment,
etc.
ments of the further additions to the line have
amplified this enthusiasm to a great extent, as
it is the unanimous feeling of the Edison trade
that the new models broaden the market and
turnover volume of the Edison trade by about
100 per cent.
Deliveries throughout the country will be
made on these new models in plenty of time to
cater to the Fall trade. In the words of a
ONLY 50 CENTS
This book contains the kind of data about
each concern which cannot be put into the
company's current advertising for lack of
space and which is nevertheless a kind of
data that is valuable from your standpoint.
ONLY 50 CENTS
This volume also contains a number of
pertinent articles on highly important topics
and much other material too extensive to
enumerate here in detail.
ONLY 50 CENTS
It is the only book of its kind ever pub-
lished and is a volume which no enterprising
member of the industry can fairly afford to
do without. It has been produced by the
publishers of The Talking Machine World.
1. London Upright. 2. London No. 1.
around $100 and less. Certain economies have
been effected in the casework in order to make
possible the low prices on these models, but in
every instance the mechanical features of the
New Edison are similar to the more expensive
models.
The new instruments were announced to the
trade a short time ago and already orders have
been placed for an extremely large quantity of
each model—a quantity which will keep the Edi-
son plants and assembling centers busy to ca-
pacity throughout the balance of the year. For
some time past the Edison jobbers and retailers
have been demonstrating their enthusiasm for
the new models brought out earlier in the year
in a most convincing manner. The announce-
3. London Console. 4. London No. 2.
prominent Edison official, these models bring
the New Edison "within the reach of all." The
new models include:
The London No. 1, mahogany finish (brown);
width, 17^2 inches; height, 19j/£ inches; depth,
18}^ inches; price, $60.
London No. 2, mahogany finish (brown);
width, 17^2 inches; height, 40 inches; depth,
I8J/2 inches; price, $75.
London Upright, mahogany finish (brown);
width, \7}/2 inches; height, 42 l / 2 inches; depth,
\Sy 2 ; Re-Creation capacity, 33; price, $100.
London Console, mahogany finish (brown);
length, 35 inches; height, 35 inches; depth, 20y 2
inches; Re-Creation capacity, 34; 2-piece top;
price, $135.
USE
T H I S
COUPON NOW
Send Cash, Stamps or Check
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EDWARD LYMAN BILL, Inc..
373 Fourth Ave., New York City.
Gentlemen:
Please send me postage prepaid a copy of the
1922 edition of The Talking Machine World Trade
Directory, in payment for which I enclose SO cents.
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