RURAL NEW-YORKER 
1433 
Copyright, 1918, G. D. Co. 
What Do You Think They’re Singing? 
Gulbrangen Trade Marie 
K -K-K-Katy’'? “Smiles”? “Sweet¬ 
heart”? “That's the Kind of a 
Baby for Me”? “The Tickle 
Toe”? Well, what would your crowd 
be singing at a lively party? 
You can sing all these—and thou¬ 
sands more—old and new—if you 
have a Gulbransen to play them. 
No trouble to read a song roll. The 
words are printed as big as XHIS 
right on the paper and each w^ord 
appears at the moment it should be 
sung. 
Is Your Home Dull ? 
1^0 people seldom “drop in”? Do 
your parties drag? Cheer things up 
with music—songs the folks can join 
in. Nobody ever tires of music—the 
variety is endless. 
The songs a mother sings to her 
baby—the rowdy chorus things the 
boys let out at stags—the good old 
hymns that mean so much in church 
—the love songs a man likes to hear 
his dearest girl sing— 
Yes, and the waltz the girls could 
“just die dancing to”—and today’s 
r 
jazz fox-trot with the words every¬ 
body wants to know. 
Do You Know These Pieces? 
These 24 pieces are the most jiopular right 
now. Several kinds of music are represented. 
Which of them would you pick out to play on 
your Gulbransen if you owned one? 
Smiles Everything Is Peaches 
Oh ! How I Wish I Could Down in Georgia 
Sleep Until My Daddy Indianola 
Comes Home '• When ^ on Come Back, 
’Till We Meet Again and You Will Come 
Oh! Frenchy Back 
Oh! How I Hate to Get A Little Birch Canoe 
Up in the Morning and You 
My Belgian Rose Sweet Hawaiian Moon- 
I’m Always Chasing light 
Rainbows Pi^i Sorry. 1 Made \ou 
K-K-K-Katy ' Cry 
There’s a Long, Long Dreamy Hawaiian Moon 
Trail For Your Boy and My .• 
Over There Boy 
Beautiful Ohio Blue Danube 
Oui, Oui Marie I’m Glad I Made You 
If I’m Not at the Roll Cry 
Call Kiss Mother National Emblpm 
Good-bye for Me 
It’s So Easy to Play 
—this Gulbransen 
Its pedals work so easily a baby can play the 
Gulbransen—just as shown in our famous 
trade mark. In fact, a certain baby did play 
the Gulbransen; that’s where we got the idea 
for the trade mark. 
You can be breathless from dancing—or 
exhausted by a hard day’s work—yet play 
your Gulbransen enjoyably, delightfully. It 
seems to read your thoughts, so sympatheti¬ 
cally does it respond to your touch. 
Musical Possibilities 
That Equal Your Desires 
If you appreciate the finer music—if your 
taste in quiet moments runs to the master 
composers—the Gulbransen is your instrument 
of instruments. 
(Pronouticed Onl-BRAN-sen) 
Muratore—world-famous tenor—plays a 
(lulbransen at home. Harold Henry—Amer¬ 
ica’s distinguished pianist—uses a Gulbransen 
in his studio to study the recorded playing of 
other virtuosi. 
You must put preconceived ideas behind you 
when, you come to consider the Gulbransen. It 
has taken the drudgery out of piano playing. 
But left in it—yes, put into it for most of us— 
the opportunity to i)lay with all the expression 
our imaginations can conceive. 
The Leading Player—and 
Nationally Priced 
For two years, more Gulbransens have been 
made and sold than players of any other make. 
’ Think what this means. It is an astonishing 
record. 
Two things have made it possible. The sheer 
quality of the instrument—its sweet singing 
tone—its delightfully easy operation. And the 
Nationally Priced plan of doing business— 
each model has but one price, the same to 
everybody, everywhere in the U. S.—burned 
into the back of each instrument before it 
leaves our factory. 
Thinking men respect us for this policy. It 
makes the Gulbransen the standard of value 
wherever it is sold. National prices, war tax 
paid: 
White House Model $600 Town House Model $485 
Country Seat Model 535 Suburban Model 450 
The most substantial piano dealers have 
naturally made the Gulbransen a feature of 
their business. There is such a dealer near 
you. Look for the Gulbransen trade mark— 
the Baby at the Pedals—in his window, or ask 
us for his name and address. We will gladly 
send you our catalog. 
GULBRANSEN-DICKINSON COMPANY 
815 No. Sawyer Ave., Chicago 
