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Antique-Vintage Hobby and Recreation Ads from the Roaring Twenties
 
 
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Victrola homes are happiest.  The Victrola is the one instrument that presents in the home the best music of everykind and description in the tones of actual reality.  The genius, the power, the beauty of every voice and every instrument--the diverse gifts possessed by the foremost artists of this generation.  Their Victor Records played on the Victrola--a combination that is essential to perfect results--duplicate in the home the public triumphs of these great artists.  Victrolas in great variety--$25 to $1500.  His Master's Voice.  Victor Talking Machine Compny, Camden, New Jersey. a Antique-vintage 1922 ad-advertisement. Victrola homes are happiest.  The Victrola is the one instrument that presents in the home the best music of every kind and description in the tones of actual reality.  The genius, the power, the beauty of every voice and every instrument--the diverse gifts possessed by the foremost artists of this generation.  Their Victor Records played on the Victrola--a combination that is essential to perfect results--duplicate in the home the public triumphs of these great artists.  Victrolas in great variety--$25 to $1500.  His Master's Voice.  Victor Talking Machine Company, Camden, New Jersey.  1922 advertisement.
 
Keeping fit to music is fun.  1922 fitness and exercise advertisement. Keeping fit to music is fun.  Record set with free trial offer.  Health Builders, Dept. 186, Oyster Bay, New York.  1922 fitness and exercise ad.
Keeping fit to music is fun.  1922 fitness and exercise advertisement.  
 
Which will succeed?  Dr. Eliot's Five-Foot Shelf of Books.  P.F. Collier & Son Company, 416 West Thirteenth Street, New York City, New York.  Dr. Charles W. Eliot, President of Harvard University.  Antique-vintage 1922 ad-advertisement for a collection of the "great books" which create a "really well-read man." Which will succeed?  Dr. Eliot's Five-Foot Shelf of Books.  P.F. Collier & Son Company, 416 West Thirteenth Street, New York City, New York.  Dr. Charles W. Eliot, President of Harvard University.  1922 ad for a collection of the "great books" which create a "really well-read man."
 
 
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