Vol. 3, no. 3-4 (double-issue) of 'The Phonogram' magazine, published March/April 1893.
An Admirable Statement of the Merits of the Phonograph
A Leading New York Merchant
A Noted Record Maker, Dan Kelly, of Cincinatti, OH
A New Field for Bread Winners
Another Triumph for the Phonograph
A Soothsayer and Admonisher
Authors and Publishers
A V(o)ice Everybody Approves Of
Cabinets Made for J. Pierpont Morgan
Change
Current News
Directions for Adjusting "Wright" Action for Operating Phonograph in Nickel-in-the-Slot Cases
Electric Devices in Berlin
Ever Varying, Ever New
Exhibition of the Phonograph in the Auditorium of the Drexel Institute
Expert Opinion
Fact Stranger than Fiction
From the Crescent City
Headquarters of the North American Phonograph Company, Edison Building, New York
How Musical Records are Made
Hungarian Telephonic News Service
Improvements in Phonograph Records
Is the Phonograph Difficult to Operate
It's a Wise Man That Knows His Own Voice
Musical Bulletins
Nature is God's Phonograph
Need of a Railway Annunciator
Noble Edifices and their Exhibits
Plan to Forward the Interests of the People in the Matter of Common Roads
Points on the Automatic Reproducer
Poughkeepsie Enterprise
Prize for High Schools Scholars
Shorthand Cripples Enemies to the Profession
Testimonial from the Westinghouse Cable Company to the Company
The Columbian Era
The Phonograph in Missionary Work
The African and the Phonograph
The Columbian Exposition from a Moral, Intellectual and Political Standpoint
The Edison Phonograph in Canada
The Educational Phonograph at the World's Fair
The Infringement of Editorial Rights
The Phonograph at Sea
The Phonograph Club
The Phonograph Uniting the Nations
Trade Notes
United by Common Interests
Please note, there are several magazines titled 'Phonogram'. This is the publication edited by Virginia H. McRae for the North American Phonograph Company between 1891 and 1893. A date/title index is forthcoming at the
Media History Digital Library.
Uploaded to Archive.org by the National Recording Preservation Board. Scanned from microfilm as original issues are scarce. Please excuse the quality of some images. Thanks to
Patrick Feaster for lending the films.