Music Trade Review

Issue: 1925 Vol. 81 N. 6

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
AUGUST 8, 1925
Mail Orders!
Century's ads do not solicit mail
orders but urge millions of readers
to go to their dealer—(THAT'S
YOU!)
In spite of this we
receive quite a num-
ber of requests, but
all of them are im-
mediately s e n t t h e
CENTURY dealer.
C E N T U R Y EDITION de-
serves your hearty co-operation
because of its tremendous value,
its wholesome profit and Its
National Advertising.
Century Music Pub. Co.
235 Wtit 40th St.
New York
J. X. Hearst, of Canada,
Surrenders to Police
Head of Defunct Hearst Music Publishing Co.
Gives Himself Up to Winnipeg Authorities
MONTREAL, CAN., August 1.—Joseph Xavier
Hearst, former head of the defunct Hearst
Music Publishing Co., of Canada, surrendered
to the Winnipeg authorities on Tuesday of this
week. With a casual greeting to the chief of
police, the writer of popular songs and reputed
financial wizard introduced himself: "I under-
stand that there is a warrant out for my ar-
rest, and I am here to face any charge there
is against me." He was placed in custody and
will appear in court soon.
Hearst disappeared from Winnipeg early in
December, 1924, following an investigation into
*loue Sends a little Gift of Roses"
MUSIC TRADE
41
REVIEW
the affairs of his company. Auditing of the
firm's books revealed a complete financial col-
lapse of the corporation, involving a loss to in-
vestors approaching $750,000. Despite the con-
certed efforts of the police of this continent,
Scotland Yard and Germany, he defied appre-
hension. When action proper starts against
him, Hearst will be faced with charges of mis-
appropriation of funds, with obtaining $40,000
by false pretenses and by a civil action, with
negligence, malfeasance and breach of duty as
an officer of his company. Branch offices of
the company were formerly located at Toronto,
Vancouver, Chicago and New York.
According to a statement given out by Hearst
before he surrendered, he declared that he had
reached Winnipeg at eleven o'clock in the morn-
ing and "had attended to one or two matters
in the meantime." Following is the text of
the voluntary declaration:
"I desire to say that it is for the sake of my
wife and children that I am surrendering my-
self. No one can say that I have obtained a
cent of this cash or that I went away with any.
The situation now is that I have no money.
My family has no money. But it is my desire
to surrender to the law and straighten matters
out. If I took any money belonging to the
company or the shareholders, it will have to be
proven. The account of losses of the company,
as I have read them in the newspapers, are
greatly exaggerated and in some cases fictitious.
I will do all I can to straighten out the tangle.
I can account for every copper received by
the company and also tell where it went. It
will be difficult to find where there has been
any personal gain for Joe Hearst."
As the result of insistent demand of a num-
ber of the company's leading stockholders, the
financial collapse of the firm was aired in the
provincial Legislature during the last session.
Facts brought out showed that stock had been
sold throughout the province at a price con-
siderably above par. An official investigation
was ordered with a view to amending the sales
of shares act and preventing victimization of
the unsuspecting public.
A statement issued by the authorized ac-
countants after the crash stated that the huge
business reported as having been done by the
company was almost wholly fictitious. The
books set the 1924 business at $583,000, of which
$542,000 was declared to be bogus. The assets
of the company were placed at $30,023, with
liabilities of $46,854. Among the general cred-
itors was the Dominion Government with a
claim of $11,353.
Can't Go Wn
f FEIST;
DEAR ONE
YOU AND I
0 KATHARINA
LOVELY LADY
SONG OP LOVE
I'M SO ASHAMED
DOODLE DOO DOO
HAUNTING MELODY
HONEST AND TRULY
THE MIDNIGHT WALTZ
WHEN I THINK OF YOU
THE PAL THAT I LOVED
PAL OP MY CRADLE DAYS
ROCK-A-BYE-BYE-BABY DAYS
WILL YOU REMEMBER ME
LET IT RAIN, LET IT POUR
I'LL 8EE YOU IN MY DREAMS
NO WONDER (THAT I LOVE YOU)
HONEY, I'M IN LOVE WITH YOU
LET ME LINGER LONGER IN YOUR
ARMS
MY OAL DON'T LOVE ME ANY MORE
W H E N THE ONE YOU LOVE LOVES
YOU
1 HAD SOMEONE ELSE BEFORE I
HAD YOU
IF IT WASN'T FOR YOU I WOULDN'T
BE CRYING NOW
Write for Dealers' Prices
LEO
full orchestral score written in ink with a nom
de plume, accompanied by an envelope contain-
ing the full name and address of the composer.
No work will be eligible that has been published
or previously performed. The winning composer
will retain all rights of performance, except the
premier and such extra performances as may
be determined by the committee. In case the
winning work is performed the committee will
assume all the expenses of the copying of parts,
rehearsing and of producing.
Manuscripts of the opera must be submitted
by March 1, 1926, with a full orchestral form,
accompanied by a full pianoforte score for re-
hearsal purposes. The prize will be adjudged by
May 1. No conditions are fixed for the length
or for the number of acts, the only other stipu-
lations being that it must be of a serious musical
character and the text in English.
The symphony, or symphonic work, the
choral work and the ballet, pageant or masque
must be submitted by April 1, 1926. The win-
ners will be announced by May 15.
Philadelphia Announces
Big Composition Contest
HARMS, INC.
62W.4-5T>.ST.,N.Y.C.
AMERICAS POPULAR
BALLAD SUCCESSES
ROSES OF PICARDY
THEWDRLDISWAITING^SUNRISE
INTHE 6ARDENOFTTH10RR0W
THE SONG OF SONGS
LOVE'S FIRST KISS
SMILE THRU YOUR TEARS
IF WINTER COMES
CHAPPELL-HARMS.INC.
185 MADISON AVE
NEW YORK
Sesquicentennial Exposition Gives Contest Rules
on Opera, Symphony, Choral Work and Ballet
With Big Prizes
PHILADFXPHIA, PA., August 1.—Prizes amount-
ing to $7,500 for original musical compositions,
to have their premier performances at the Ses-
quicentennial International Exposition here next
year, have been announced by the exposition
committee, together with an invitation for com-
posers to enter the contest. The competition is
to be open to persons of all nationalities in this
and in foreign countries.
An opera, a symphony, a choral work and a
ballet, pageant or masque are desired by the
exposition officials who announced that all ex-
penses in connection with the production of the
winning pieces would be borne by the exposi-
tion.
A prize of $3,000 isoffered for the opera, one
of $2,000 for the symphony or a large orchestral
work of symphonic character; a prize of $2,000
for a ballet, pageant or masque, with full or-
chestral accompaniment, not excluding choral
episodes, and a prize of $500 for an a capella
choral suite of three or four numbers, to be.
written for six or eight voices. The text is to
be left to the composer.
All compositions are to be submitted with a
BEAUTIFUL BALLAD
ARTHUR A W .I*ENN
Writer 0/ "Smilm Through"
SOLO THREE KEYS
DUET-TWO KEYS
OCTAVO-
M.MTMARK 6 SONS NEW YORKJ
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
42
THE
v
- - — — - ^
f
FOX TROT
REVIEW
With Any FEIST' Song'
FOX TROT
f
• • ^sW ^ V
^sW ^sw •
v ^
1
I K
i
A Great FQXTRDT Ballad
Mh a Fascinating Rhythm,
-4 Popular Ballad
ISHAM^ONES
Donaldson
"Indecent Music" Now
Occupies Capitol Police
Old Ordinance Creates Controversy Over the
Way Innocent Notes on Staves Can Create
"Indecency"
WASHINGTON, D. C, August 3.—From a musty
file of police regulations some one has unearthed
an order forbidding "indecent music." Evidently
indecent music without words is meant. There
are some opposing views as to how such a reg-
ulation can be construed.
Assistant Corporation Counsel Hart holds
that words' are wholly unnecessary to make
music indecent.
"You know what I mean," he said, "that
hootchy-kootchy sort of intonation."
Mrs. Mina Van Winkle, head of the police-
women, has an entirely different definition.
"I refer," she said, "to that torn-tommy sort
of Oriental music that makes men forget home
and babies. The desert natives play that sort
for dancing, but they have self-respect enough
to dance by themselves. They would be
shocked to see the way our boys and girls hug
each other and vibrate to the tune of those
compelling pieces."
Sergeant Phillips, police psychopathic expert,
(FOXTROT)
CHESTER COHN
MARK FISHE.R..
0 MILLEt
inclines to the belief that while there is a lot of gest Fall seasons in the history of popular
"crazy" music, it would be difficult to prove that music. The song will get not only the same
any of it is "indecent."
exploitation that every other Berlin composi-
tion has received heretofore, but, coming at
such a timely moment, the officers of the com-
pany have decided to extend greatly their ef-
forts and intensively cover every channel for
the first three or four months following the re-
"Remember/' Issued Some Time This Month, lease of "Remember." The title, by the way,
Will Have Big Exploitation Campaign Be- is not hard to remember.
hind It
Irving Berlin to
Bring Out New Song
New Century Issues
Some time during this month we shall have
a new song from Irving Berlin. It is called
The Century Music Publishing Co., publish-
"Remember." It has been sung about the Ber-
er of the well-known Century Edition, has
lin quarters to a few of Berlin enthusiasts and
just added a new group of teaching pieces.
These are for the first grade and will be found
particularly useful for teachers in arranging
instruction for child beginners. The new series
is known as "Garden of Flowers." The num-
bers are by Franz Kohler and include "Morning
Glory" (melody), "Sweet Violets" (waltz),
"Clover Blossoms" (waltz), "June Roses"
(theme), "Pansy Faces" (minuetto), "Dainty
Daffodils" (mazurka), "Black-Eyed Susans"
(polka), "Spring Tulip" (randino), "Water
Lilies" (melody).
His Pride Is Justified
Jerry Vogel, manager of the sheet music de-
partment of the Plaza Music Co., prides himself
on the efficiency and alertness of the girls he
has in his department. To prove his conten-
tion he has been showing his friends a page
from a recent issue of the New York Evening
Graphic in which Miss Sophie Fink, one of his
assistants, was announced the winner of $100
palmistry prize.
AT THE HEAD OF ITS CLASS!
World Famous
McKINLEY
MUSIC
FIFTEEN CENT
GROWS and GROWS!
Mlt. DKAT.KIt: Arc You HniMlMn? the Eosy
S.lliiiK "IJiji Profit" IJnc? A Choice Stock of
Ylni AsMtrtnl Music, Vocal, Piano, Piano
DiK'ts, Violin anil Fin no, Snvonluinr and
l'i:ino, etc., Installed at Very Low Cost.
All of the Itest Krprlnts iind More Ilig
Selling Copyrights Thiin Any Other Luw-
l'riced Kdition !
Music Perfectly Fingered. Printed on the
IJest Pnppr, New Title J'nues
200% PROFIT
50 New Numbers and New
Catalogs NOW READY for 1925
Write for Samples.
McKINLEY MUSIC CO.
1501-1517 E. 55th St.
GUS KAHN
.WVLTER. DONALDSON
.Gus KabLlWalter
Liberal Sales Plan.
MNKY
KIDS ,
PARADE
^ M TIRED
OF EVERYTHING' WANT YOU New/ Li££erentl fbvdU
KNOW HOW BUT YOU*
9
[ALL
FOR.
ME
FOXTROT
A New Comedy Idea
GROWS and
AUGUST 8, 1925
'Ybti Can't Go Wrotitf
^
WOULDNT
LOVE YOU I
Benny Davis <
k Joe Burked New
Hit/
MUSIC TRADE
CHICAGO
Irving Berlin
in every instance the hearers lacked words to
express their impressions. At any rate it is a
FORT DODGE, IOWA, August 1.—Articles of incor-
new Berlin number and is going to be offered
at the opening of what will be one of the big- poration were recently filed by Karl L. King
Music Publishing Co. The capitalization is for
$25,000. The concern is authorized to do a
ROBERT TELLER SONS & DORNER
general music publishing business. The officers
of the company are Karl L. King, president;
Music Engravers and Printer*
H. B. Sellers, secretary-treasurer, and J. H.
SEND MANUSCRIPT AND IDEA OF
Remheldt. Mr. King is the director of the Fort
TITLE FOR ESTIMATE
Dodge Municipal Band.
New York City
311 W e s t 43rd Street
King Pub. Go. Chartered
RUY YOUR MUSIC FROM
BOSTON Publishers
"Weird Scenes From Nature" and "The Plot-
ting Foe" are the titles of two photoplay music
motifs by Dr. Edward Kilenyi, of the Colony
Theatre Orchestra, New York City. The num-
bers will be published by Robbins-Engel, Inc.,
Oliver Ditson Company
BOSTON
NEW YORK
Anticipate and supply Erery Requirement of Music
Dealers
White-Smith Music Pub. Co.
PUBLISHIBS, PKNTZM AND EXGIAVRI OF MUSIC
Main Offices: 40-44 Winchester St- Boston.
Branca Houses: New York and Chicago.
<^> ~ , WRITE FOR PRICES ~> ~ ~
2054W.LAKE ST. CHICAGO. ILL

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