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THE
MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
MUSIC PUBLISHERS TO MEET.
SUPREME
IN ITS FIELD ! ! !
Dealers are satisfied with Cen-
tury Edition Ten Cent Sheet
Music, because the sales tell the
story of the high esteem in which
it is held by those who buy it.
The Best—Because II I s !
Cantury Music Pub. Co.,
!
CENTURY EDITION
Mission Bells
The Latest Instrumental
Novelty
BY
MARIE LOUKA
A
Descriptive Tone Poem for Piano
A New Favorite with Teacher and Pupil
Whitney Warner Co.
131 West 41st Street
NEW YORK
THE EUROPEAN SUCCESS
MOONLIGHT
{UlRDEUINT
DANCE
& H E R M M FINCK
Played by Leading Orchestras Everywhere.
CHAPPELL & CO., Ltd.
41 East 34th St., New York.
Music Publishers' Association of the United
States to Hold Annual Convention at the
Hotel Astor on Tuesday, June 11.
The annual convention of the Music Publishers'
Association of the United States will be held at
the Hotel Astor, New York, on June 11, at 10
a. m., and there will, as usual, be a number of
matters of importance to the music publishing
fraternity discussed. Following the opening ses-
sion an informal luncheon will be held at the
hotel by the members.
The officers of the association for the present
year are: President, J. L. Tindale; vice-president,
E. S. Cragin; secretary, Walter Fischer; treas-
urer, E. T. Paull; directors, George W. Furniss,
Walter M. Bacon, Lawrence B. Ellert, T. F. De-
laney, Hamilton S. Gordon and Walter Eastman.
MREVIEWflEARS
THIS IS THE GREATEST AD EVER
WRITTEN! You can't help but
read it. You HAVE to read
it! It is the CLEVEREST ad
ever conceived, because it
catches the eye; because it
HOLDS you to the end. You
couldn't stop reading this
if you wanted to--it's too
interesting. TRY IT. There!
See you HAVE to read on.
Try to lay the paper down.
See you can't!!
That's the same way with our
latest hit song,
"YOUR DADDY DID THE SAME
THING FIFTY YEARS AGO"
Your customers CAN'T HELP
but buy it! Put it on your
counter and watch it jump
from there to your
customer's piano!
LEO. F E I S T , NEW YORK
THAT one music publisher declares that he will
become a strike-breaking waiter and get back
some of the money that he has spent in tips.
THAT he figures that working a month as
waiter will earn him enough money to take a lit-
tle jaunt to Europe.
THAT it is wonderful how the smallest of time
singing acts grow to. be big-time headliners during
the summer resting season.
THAT the helpless professional managers have
to stand for a lot of such Durham during the
hot months.
THAT "Ring Out, Wild Bells" is proving to be
one of E. T. Paull's most successful marches.
This month's new issues comprise the
THAT "The Trolley Car Swing" does not refer •»
55 latest New York craze,
to the new hobble skirt car which recently made —
1. Everybody's Cabaretlng-,
g
™
featured by
S
its appearance on Broadway.
=
MISS VAXESXA SUBATT,
S
THAT Meyer Cohen, manager for Charles K. S late star of the Red Rose Company, in her 3
5 new act now playing vaudeville, "Cabaret S
Harris, who is at present in Chicago, reports
S a la Carte."
S
2
2. In Banjo Land.
S
that business is good in that section of the West.
=
The song that Miss Fanny Brice, late fea- S
THAT the Jerome & Schwartz Publishing Co. S t.ure of the Ziegfeld's Follies of 1912 Com- S
2 pany, sang to repeated encores at the Victo- SS
is keeping a combined salesman, plugger and
•5 ria Theater, New York.
S
demonstrator on the road continuously, and he 2 LOOK PRETTY GOOD, don't they
AND 5
they are better than they look, too.
S
is getting excellent results for this time of year. 2
2 IMPORTANT NOTE, to our subscribers:
S
We will send out no new issues for the S
THAT A. A. Shiftman, the new Harris Chicago 2
2 months of June and July.
2
manager, is getting rapidly settled in his new
5
JEROME & SCHWARTZ PUB. CO. =
position, which, by the way, he held about ten 2
1 445 Broadway, New York City
2
years ago and before going with George W. 2 Ted S. Barron, Gen'l Manager. B'way Theatre Bldg. 2
Lederer.
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THAT Walter Eastman, manager of the New
York and Canadian branches of Chappell & Co.,
is a busy man these days, keeping in touch with
his multiplied duties.
THAT the reports of the discussions at the
convention of the Music Publishers' Association
By CHAS. K. HARRIS
of the United States at the Hotel Astor next
Tuesday will be awaited with interest by many
You can order it from your nearest
members of the trade.
jobber or direct from the Publisher.
THAT Johann Schmidt that he will not an-
nounce any new composers for the Whitney-
Warner edition of teaching music until the fall.
Broadway and 47th St., New York
He is too busy to settle his mind upon the sub-
MEYER COHEN, Mgr.
ject at the present time.
THAT Robert Lewis has been appointed man-
A collection of 85
ager of the new professional department of the
standard piano pieces
arranged and in some
McKinley Music Co., Chicago.
THE MOST POPULAR
instances simplified by
THAT Mr. Lewis is well known as the com-
the famous American
PIANO
PIECES
composer and musician.
poser of the "Oceana Roll" and other successful
George Rosey, intended
especially for the use
numbers.
of second and third
year piano students,
and
for the use of ama-
TO MAKE NEW EXPERIMENT.
teurs who wish to have
good piano music which
they can play without
Charles K. Harris is about to make interesting
any great degree of
technical ability. The
experiment regarding the publication of one of
contents include a .wide
variety of compositions
his new ballads, and the progress of the venture
and is of such a nature
will be watched with interest. Mr. Harris has
as to appeal to every
lover of piano music.
made arrangements with B. Feldman, the promi-
Price, 75 cents.
nent music publisher of London, who is at pres- HINDS. NOBLE * ELDREDGE. 31-3S West 15th Street. New Y*rb
ent in New York, to publish under his own name
in England Mr. Harris' new ballad, "I Care Not
ROBERT TELLER SONS & DORNER
What the World May Say," subsequently intro-
Music Engravers and Printers
ducing that number in the United States under
his own name. This is a reversal of the usual
»BND MANUSCRIPT AND IDEA OF TITL.B
process whereby American ballads are first in-
FOR ESTIMATE
troduced at home, and, if successful, taken abroad
III WOT M b STIIIT, NIW YWI CITY
a year or two later.
| FIRST ACROSS THE PLATE!
Another After The Ball Hit.
"That Swaying Harmony"
CHAS. K. HARRIS