



This cabinet is identical, (I think) to the one pictured George's book Discovering Antique Phonographs. The difference between this one and the one in the book, (pg. 121) is this has a different wood horn. The horn has a decal that says General Phonograph Supply Co. The horn is a Eureka horn. I'm assuming that the General Phonograph Supply Co. was a "middle man" company used to distribute phonograph parts, not manufacture them? Does anyone know anything about this horn or the company that produced it?
George, do you know if these custom cabinets were available as an aftermarket upgrade? For example, could someone take a Victor phonograph they bought previously into The Douglas Phonograph Company store to have the workings of their phonograph placed into one of Douglas' custom cabinets?
Or, did The Douglas Phonograph Company manufacture the cabinets only to purchase their own Victor mechanisms so they could mate the two in order to sell the entire phonograph in the completed form? I would think with all the litigation of that time brought on by the Victor Company against just about everybody and their brother, that they would not be willing to furnish their mechanisms knowing that they would be installed in a cabinet that they did not design and manufacture themselves.
It's interesting nonetheless. I love the horn on the one pictured above. This is only the second phonograph like this that I have seen. The other is in your book. Any ideas of production numbers? Maybe an estimate?