Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
MAY 1, 1920
MUSIC TRADE
They are by no means on such a basis to-day,
and when there are so many publishing houses
to be considered in any agreement this new
s.tuation, if it goes into effect as now proposed,
will always be in a position to assault the
higher priced goods.
Many publishers have made an effort to con-
tinue relations with the F. W. Woblworth Co.,
and some of them looked with much displeas-
ure upon their discontinuance. However, as
one publisher recently said, there can be no
half-way measure in eliminating ten-cent cata-
logs. They should be abolished. Any effort
tending to continue relations with ten-cent syn-
dicates, in whole or in part, will only be the
means of making the permanent establishment
of thirty-cent catalogs that much harder.
REVIEW
The Song and Dance Triumph of the Country
"WOND'RING"
Vingf
SONG
"Clouds"
(That Pass in the Night)
" Tents of Arabs "
" Romance "
Head of Publishing House Back at His Desk
After Severe Illness—Staff Make His Return
the Cause of a Joyful Celebration
B. D. NICE & CO., 1 5 4 4 Broadway, NEW YORK
ployes of the home office and in addition nu-
merous messages and flowers arrived from other
sources to mark the occasion. During his sick-
ness at one period Mr. Witmark was quite low,
having a very severe case of pneumonia. While
convalescing he spent some time at Atlantic City
enjoying a real rest and the ocean breezes at
that resort.
He lost no time in attacking the accumulated
work he found upon his desk and showed that
he had lost none of his old energy. M. Wit-
mark & Sons, by the way, have had one of the
busiest seasons that they have ever enjoyed and
the- prospects are that there will be an un-
d'minished continuance of this throughout the
coming year.
TO PUBLISH IN CANTON, 0.
CANTON, O., April 26.—Karl King, well-known
composer, has opened a music publishing com-
pany here and will commercialize his talent.
King, who for several seasons was bandmaster
of the Sells Floto Circus band, and who until
last season was director of the Barnum & Bailey
Circus band, is head of the company. King
will publish his own compositions, he being the
composer of many of the popular marches now
being played by bands throughout the country.
His most popular number is "A Night in June,"
Isidore Witmark
which
was his feature number of the concert
part of which time he was confined to his home,
found that there was a celebration awaiting him. on the Barnum show. King is also director of
This was participated in by the staff and em- the Grand Army concert band of this city.
F0R5TERJ DIG 1
and
LOW
The Wonder
WaLtz
V
I
'
A Triumvirate of Triumphs
Every Ounce of Forster Energy
is being concentrated on
A
Sensation
^ THESE 3 HITS
Hundreds of
VaudeviLLe Acts
KARAVAPI
ARC SinClflO THEM
The Original, by
Wiedoeft
Thousands of Orchestras
AR? PL^yinQ THEM
FOX-TROT
SONGS THAT SELL
ISIDORE WITMARK WELL AGAIN
Isidore Witmark, president of the firm of
M. Witmark & Sons, upon the return to his
office recently after an absence of two months,
51
OLman
HARRY TIERNEY BACK FROM LONDON
Composer of "Irene" Returns From Supervising
London Opening of Show
Harry Tierney, composer of the musical show
"Irene," the song hit, "My Baby's Arms," and
other successes, returned to New York early
this week after supervising the opening of the
London production of the above show. "Irene,"
by the way, is one of the big successes of the
present New York season and its London en-
gagement bids fair to duplicate its success here.
Joseph McCarthy, author of the lyrics of the
"Irene" show and who also arrived on the same
boat, is writing lyrics for a number of musical
productions, some for English producers.
TO CULTIVATE NEGRO MUSIC
The New York Syncopated Orchestra has
been incorporated with a capital of $50,000. The
purpose of the new organization is to cultivate
negro music and the men interested in the
company and the incorporators are V. A. Flem-
ing, R. P. Lattimer and H. B. Gray, Jr., ISM
Dean street, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Leo Feist, Inc., has just appointed Floyd
Kinney manager of the Philadelphia branch of
the company, succeeding Fred Wright.
McKINLEY MUSIC CO.'S
New Hit Ballad
18 Cents
S7\
*
HITS OF THREE PRODUCTIONS
5 W « T « n o LOW in HELLO AL«/inD€R 11 A n y J 0 B B E R C A n S U P P L y
"M/UJGHTy WWLTZ" in "ZKGFCLD F0LUS5"
OR IF VOU PREFER
"KARAVan' m "PflSSIfiG SHQWorUiq"
DIRECT FROM US
WhichTHE PUBLIC has seLected!
ALREADY
TREMENDOUS
SELLERS!
HAUGHTY
II WALTZ
Son* Hit
)»ROID « FROJT
MUSIC
**
THAT
ALL T h e Phonograph Records
ano PLayer Piano RoLLs ARE. FEATURINGTHEM
FORSTER
•
ifHPfifllTITIlf
J I JUUihLU.lJU.lllU
PUBLISHER
F J.A. FORSTER PRES.
736 SOUTH MICHIGAN AVE.
INC
CHICAGO, ILL.
K HENRI KUf'KMANN
>VI\!Nli:\