Music Trade Review

Issue: 1902 Vol. 34 N. 25

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
32
THE mXJ&lO TRRDE REVIEW
Come Jiack, They'll Wonder Who in H—•
You Are."
Carrie West is singing "Kill llailey Won't
You I'lease Come Home."
Klizabeth Murray is singing Breen &
deary's latest coon song hit, "The Furni-
ture Man."
Will G. Williams is singing "A Little Boy
in Blue" and "She's Sleeping by the Silv'ry
Kio Grande," with great success.
Harry Sylvester, of West Minstrels, will
sing the publications of Howley, Haviland
& Dresser, with Slafer's Band at Brighton
Beach during the summer season.
Hanson & Nelson are singing "My Prin-
cess Zulu Lulu."
The World's Comedy Four are using Paul
Dresser's Latest ballad hit, "Way Down in
Old Indiana."
Murray & Alden are using a medley of
Howlev, liaviland & Dresser's latest publi-
cations.
Every or.e vho goes to see the "Chaper-
ons," comes out whistling "Blooming Lize,"
the hit of lie show.
Frances Curran is singing "Fade Away,
I'm Waitir' Fo" Mali Man."
Bijou Tiio are singing "When the Blue
Sky T u r n s to Gold" and "Little Tommy
Murphy."
Conway & Held are singing the "Pooh
Bah of Blackville Town."
Tom Moore, coon shouter, is singing
"Ain't Dat a Shame," "I Got Mine," and
"Bill Bailey Won't You Please Come Home."
Mooney & Holbein are scoring nightly
with George Evans' late waltz song "In the
Good ()ld Summer Time."
Clifford and Hall are singing a medley
composed of Howley, Haviland & Dresser's
latest publications.
NEW MUSIC.
We have received from the American
Music Co. (the original one) of 98 Third
avenue, Xew York, the following songs:
"Read Your Answer in My Eyes," by Joseph
Louis MacEvoy; "Only a Factory Girl," by
Arthur J. West; "The Song I Love to
Hear," by Harry T. Hunt, and "Life's Game
of See-Saw," by Edgar Selden and L. C.
Wedgefuth. The last mentioned is really
a pretty song. Mr. Selden is a writer of
words above the average, and the composer
has hit upon a pretty melody.
From Joseph Flanner, 211-215
avenue, Milwaukee, Wis.: "Take Me Back
to the Old Virginia Shore," by Raymond A.
Browne; "La Moscovite," Danse Russe, by
Louie Maurice.
From Louis H. Ross & Co., 178 Tremont
street, Boston, Mass.: "The Auld, Auld
I lame," Scotch song by Jas. L. Gilbert, poem
by Mrs. W. J. Park; "My Old Penobscot
Home Way Down in Maine," by W. Paul
McCormick and M. F. Kelly; "Memories
Dear," by James Ewart and Jas. L. Gilbert.
From Hamilton S. Gordon: "If All the
World Were Mine" To-day," by J. Albert
Browne; "In Old Yiginia Among the W r av-
ing Pines," by M. Dallas Calkins and Chas.
L. Riley; "Heathen Bell, Queen of the Dell,"
by Wilson M. Logan; "Springtime," by
Louis Schehlmann.
A beautiful ballad by Louis Weslyn Jones,
entitled "Since That Day," is a feature with
Miss Marie Woods on the Pacific Coast.
THE FOUR BROADWAY HITS OF THE SEASON.
" The Maiden With The Dreamy Eyes '
While The Convent Bells Were Ringing "
"Maybe."
Nobody's Looking But The Owl and The Moon
"THE HOUSE OF
HITS."
THB FOUR COON SONO SUCCBSSE5 OF THE YEAR.
' I'm Goin«j To Live Anyhow Till I Die."
" My Castle on the Nile."
JOS. W. STERN & CO.
'Didn't He Ramble."
" No Use Asking 'Cause You Know Tne Reason Why.
34 E. 21st S t . ,
THB FOUR INSTRUMENTAL FAVORITES.
NEW YORK CITY.
Gainsborough March."
\\^ d Reei ? en
", ( Xi^ a " tia) March
n
Belle
ot Grenada
Bugvil!e Brigade " Characteristic^
TWO REIGNING
Waltzes.
SONG
HITS
"THE MEANING OF U. 5. A ' ' a great descriptive Jlarch Song.
«TVE GOT MY EYES ON YOU." Novelty Waltz Song, already in its second edition.
AMERICAN ADVANCE MUSIC CO.,
Broadway, cor. 37th Street
NEW YORK
The Everlasting Flower Song
A C H A I N OK D A I S I E S "
ARTHUR LAMB & CO.,
34 Clark Street.
*
CHICAGO. ILL.
GREAT INSTRUMENTAL HIT
"Dance of the Bumblebees'* e y E. E.
GREAT SONG SUCCESS
BRENTON-BAQLEY
MUSIC PUB COMPANY
129 PEMBROKE ST.
jl Jt BOSTON jt J*
Telephone 619*3 Tremont
B
"Mary Dear I'm Called Away" By Julia smith
I
SEND FOR CATALOGUE. FULL ORCHESTRATIONS.
"EVANGELINE"
INSTRUMENTAL NOVELTY
By C. E. POMEROY.
Band and Orchestral arrangements to this number by W. Paris Chambers.
C. L. PARTEE MUSIC CO., -
George
1364 BROADWAY
NEW YORK
4 9 3 WASHINGTON STREET
BOSTON
102-194 E. MADISON ST.
CHICAGO
-
5 East N t h St. New York
HELEN HENJCHEL'S SUCCESS.
Helen Henschel, daughter of Georg Hen-
schel, who made her debut quite recently in
London, has been highly praised by the local
critics, who describe her as almost as good
a singer as her mother, who died some months
ago. Miss Henschel is not only a charming
vocalist, but an accomplished violinist.
Dr. CHURCH ENTERTAINS.
Dr. James Robb Church, the distinguished
Surgeon of the Rough Riders, now Assist-
ant Surgeon in the U. S. Army, went to Mar-
linique on the relief steamer "Dixie." Dr.
Church has unusual powers of observation
and description, and he has used them to
the best advantage in an article to appear in
the July Scribner, giving his vivid, personal
impressions of the greatest disaster of mod-
ern times. Dr. Church summarizes in this
brief article the salient features of the appal-
ling devastation and adds many personal
touches.
YOU CAN BE TOO FRANK.
You can be too frank in business; there
are times in every salesman's life when he
should use diplomacy and when it pays to
"dodge the issue," as it were. Suppose a
customer were to provoke a discussion which
would call for an acknowledgment on your
part that the store is asking an exceptionally
large profit on the particular merchandise in
which he is interested. Wouldn't you be
making a sale more difficult if you admitted
this to be a fact? On the other hand, you
should not go to the other extreme. It isn't
necessary for you to use that current phrase,
"We are selling them at cost," which unfor-
tunately, has become the slogan of so many
stores' advertising, and unconsciously has
crept into the language of so many people,
says the Furniture World. Here's an exam-
ple where the salesman can consciously
avoid being too frank by switching the con-
versation into other channels. Other oppor-
tunities of a like nature present themselves
from time to time, where your judgment
would show you the wisdom of saying little.
An old adage reads : "A closed mouth catches
no flies."
Seeker, Wills and Seeker are using "When
Mr. Shakespeare Comes to Town" and "Rill
Bailey, Won't You Please Come Home."
Larkins and l'aterson are singing "The
Furniture Man."
Mabel Leslie, with Kathryn Rober Stock
Company, is using "I's Feeling Lonely" and
"Just Plain Folks."
Fiddler—Yes, Germany has turned out a
great many musicians.
Quiz—Well, can you blame her?
FOUR BROADWAY PRODUCTIONS
ALL CONTROLLED BY ONE FIRH.
" D O L L Y VARDEN" s t a n g e & d w a r d 8
" K I N O DODO"p I x l e y !> L u d e r .
"A CHINESE HONEYMOON"
By Dance & Talbot
WATCH 'EM
"NEVER TO MEET AGAIN"
•'MY MISSISSIPPI SUE"
••SHOW ME THE WAY TO GET HOME"
"THE BROKEN VOW"
"THE CHAPERONES "
By Rankin & Wltmark
MURE
HITS
IN 1 H E POPULAR LINE THAN
EVER.
M. WITMARK A SONS,
New York
Chicago
San Francisco
London
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
33
THE 7VSUSIC TRHDE
B. CHASE PIANOS
In tone, touch, action, durability, and every requisite that goes
to make up an artistic instrument, there are none superior
PIANO STYLES DISCUSSED
By Algernon Rose, a Well-Known English Author*
ity and Writer—His Views of Some Interest
on this Side of "The Big Pond."
In the course of a contribution to the Mu-
sical
News of London, Algernon Rose
factory and Principal Office
New York Warerooms
writes:
NORWALK, OHIO
10 EAST 17th STREET
Inseparable from the consideration of the
dimensions of a piano is its look, and the
individuality of the purchaser should be re-
ORIGINAL
flected in the outward appearance as well as
L U T E effects, Violin effects, etc., are brought
the
inward tone quality. If the piano is made
into play combined with the PIANO,
purposely to suit his taste and fit his require-
making a veritable Orchestra. N o other
ments it will surely do so. The frequent
Piano Player like it or will do what the
cANGELUS can.
striving to upholster with embroidery and
flny one can Play it.
silks the piano's awkward form in an other-
Tt Plays any Piano.
wise pretty room, shows that an incongruous
Endorsed by highest musical authority.
looking piano will spoil the effect of its other-
Josef Hof mann, Marcella Sembrich, Jean de
wise harmonious surroundings. The best
Reszke, Edouard de Reszke and many others
way
to guard against such a fault is to choose
of note.
a maker who is in sympathy with one's own
artistic feelings, and by whom modifications
of his ordinary patterns will be willingly
main Office and factory:
made at a reasonable cost.
mcriden, Conn., U. $• J\.
Tastes differ in regard to the shapes of
Dew
pianos in different countries. The external
164 Tiftl)
design which will influence the sale in Amer-
ica has the reverse effect in the British mar-
Manufacturer ©I
nigh-Qrade
ket. This question of outward show has been
particularly studied by the Germans, whose
Grand and Upright
early exportations were not in accordance
Pianos
with British ideas.
for all
Having decided to buy an instrument from
Occasions
an eminent firm, many purchasers logically
contend that they can safely leave the quality
Factories : Southern Boulevard and Cypress Ave.
East 133d and 134th Streets
of a tone to the honor of the maker and suit
First Avenue and 30th Street
NEW YORK themselves as regards the color of the wood.
Warerooms: 92 Fifth Ave., bet. 14th and 15th Sts
At the time of writing, the most fashion-
Send for Catalogue, Prices and Terms.
DOLL'S COLONIAL STYLE "C»
able wood in Great Britain for pianos is the
hard and dark crimson palisander or rose-
wood, so-called because of its pungent rose-
like
odor when freshly cut. This comes from
Manufacturers of the
Brazil, or India. It takes a fine polish, and
CHASE BROS., HACKLEY
the more its surface is made to shine, the
more does it seem to be liked. In this coun-
and CARLISLE
try the blue-stained rosewood of the Conti-
MUSKEGON, MICH.
nent is not fancied.
For expensive instruments, the beautifully
Manufacturer of & J*
SOUNDING BOARDS, BARS, GUI- figured Persian walnut, of golden brown hue,
4£ TAR AND MANDOLIN TOPS AND has gone out of fashion in England since it
MILLS AND OFFICE : DOLGEVILLE, N. Y.
SOUNDING BOARD LUMBER.
has been artificially imitated in the cheapest
class of pianos. In the United States of
America, and Canada, black walnut is fav-
ored
for pianos, and in the British colonies
C R . STEVENS,*General Manager.
south of the equator, burr walnut is still
MANUFACTURERS OF
asked for.
Pianos made specially to order in mahog-
any darkened to match old Chippendale fur-
niture, are now much in request, and the
7yi OCTAVE. PIANO CASE.
term "putting one's knees under a friend's
catalogue and prices.
mahogany 1 ' has now a musical meaning. Of
MARIETTA, OHIO.
this bright chestnutty brown wood the vari-
eties most used are Honduras and "Spanish,"
Embodies the best vakie for the dealer.
p the latter coming from Cuba. For export
«jt
4*
Attractively gotten up. to tropical countries pianos are generally
made of solid mahogany, which can be
stained to imitate rosewood or ebony.
PETER DUFFY, Presi On no account, by the way, should a piano-
•••
forte be chosen for shipment to the tropics
SCHUBERT PIANO CO., 535 EAST 134th STREET, NEW YORK. which has not been specially constructed or
strengthened by the maker, and protected
ROTH
UPRIGHT
F.ENGELHARDT,
against the inroads of mice, insects, and other
_
^^
Formerly Foreman
P I A N O A C T I O N S STKIHTWAY* SOWS Action 9ert pests.
i F I ITS
Cbc ttlilcox * Ulbitc Co.
JACOB DOLL
Pianos
CHASE-HACKLEY PIANO CO.,
PIANOS
JULIUS. BREGKWOLDT
Cbc $tcpcn$ Organ and Piano Co.
Stevens Combination Reed-Pipe Organ
ROTH <& ENGELHARDT
OFFICE:
Windsor Arcade, 1 E, 47th St., IN, Y,
The Hayes Musical Co., Toledo, O., have
changed
their name to the Hayes Music Co.
St. Johnsvllle. N. Y., on N.Y. C. R. «-
FACTORIES:

Download Page 32: PDF File | Image

Download Page 33 PDF File | Image

Future scanning projects are planned by the International Arcade Museum Library (IAML).

Pro Tip: You can flip pages on the issue easily by using the left and right arrow keys on your keyboard.