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Music Trade Review

Issue: 1913 Vol. 56 N. 13 - Page 67

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Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
MUSIC TRADE
67
REVIEW
CARO ROMA IN RECITAL.
Reason Known!
ORDERS FOR
CENTURY EDITION
are greater each week by
many thousands than ever
before. Everybody knows
the reason.
Hows your
stock ?
Century Music Pub. Go.
1178 Broadway
New York City
That
Old Girl of Mine
Prominent Prima Donna and Composer, with
Capable Support, Presents Program of Her
Own Compositions at Aeolian Hall.
OUR NEW WALTZ BALLAD
A thoroughly interesting occasion at Aeolian
Hall was the recital given on Monday evening by
"ISLE D f AMOUR"
Caro Roma, the talented prima, donna, author and
composer, when fourteen of her own compositions
Will be introduced by
were featured in a manner that aroused the enthu-
siasm of the large audience.
Marie MacFarland
The artists assisting Mine. Roma included Miss
Elizabeth Spencer, Miss Marie Rose Kennedy (so- Headliner at the Colonial
pranos), Miss Gertrude MacKinstry (alto),
Charles P. Silver (basso), Jacques Renard ('cell- Theatre all of next week.
ist), Eugene Wyatt (organist), the Gregorian quar-
You remember "Senora" and
tet, Mme. Pilar-Morin, pantomimic actress, and
Paul Dufault (tenor).
"My Cavalier"?
Among the numbers offered were: "Decoration
Day at Sea" (organ), "Love's Yesteryear," "Think-
"ISLE D'AMOUR"
ing of Thee," "My Baby," "I Kiss the Little Flower
You Wore," "Lullaby of the Waves," "Sleep, little goes them both one better!
Sea Love" ('cello), "Bird Without My Window,"
"Sometimes" (Miss MacKinstry), "Love's Messen-
TABLOID
TRUTHS
ger," "Thy Lips Are Like Twin Roses," "Faded
Rose," "Sleeping," "Your Tender Voice," and "My
As a man thinks—he is!
Heart Will Hear." The Gregorian quartet gave
As a man is—he thinks!
beautiful renditions of "Resignation" and "In the
Garden of My Heart." Miss Spencer gave selec-
tions from Mme. Roma's sea songs, and from the L E O . F E I S T , I n c . ,
- NEW YORK
cycle entitled "Shadows" she selected "Dreaming,"
"Ghosts" and "Night." Mme. Roma's arrange-
ment of "Nearer My God to Thee" for quartet,
soprano, organ and 'cello was very effective. Mme.
Pilar-Morin aroused interest in a wordless play,
and Miss Hathaway won much praise for effective
The Season's Biggest Waltz-Song Hit
singing of "Dear Little Hands" and "Jewels." All
the numbers mentioned are published by M. Wit-
mark & Sons.
"Climb a Tree With Me"
By JONES & VAN ALSTYNE
DEATH OF WELL=KNOWN MUSICIAN.
MOID t L Of MI
i
The
BEST BET
of the season.
One of those
appealing
ballads.
Jerome H. Remick & Co.
219 W. 46th Street
68 Library Avenue
NEW YORK
DETROIT, MICH.
We are the publishers of the
following successes
"THE SUNSHINE GIRL"
Music by Paul A. Rubens
"OH! OH! DELPHINE"
Music by Ivan Caryll
"THE MAN WITH THREE
WIVES"
Music by Franz Lehar
Chappell & Co., Ltd,
41 East 34th Street
NEW YORK
Canadian Branch :
347 Yonge Street, Toronto
Joseph Clauder Was Prominent Figure in Mu-
sical Circles in Wisconsin.
(Special to The Review.)
By CHAS. K. HARRIS
You can order it from your nearest
jobber or direct from the Publisher.
CHAS. K. HARRIS
Milwaukee, Wis., March 25, 1!>1."5.
Broadway and 47th St., New York
Joseph Clauder, veteran bandmaster and orches-
MEYER COHEN, Mgr.
tra leader of this city, whose reputation as a musi-
cian was widespread, died on March 17 in Hot
Slightly more difficult
than The Most Popular
Springs, Ark., after ill health for some time. He
Violin Pieces (one of the
biggest selling v i o l i n
would have been sixty years old on April 27.
books ever published),
Mr. Clauder was credited with having arranged
this collection has been
compiled and edited by
the famous "After the Ball" for Charles K. Har-
Eugene Gruenberg, Vio-
ris, the composer and publisher.
lin Director of the New
England
Conservatory, to
"Joe" Clauder, as he was familiarly known, was
satisfy the requirements
of
teachers
and students
one of Milwaukee's best known citizens, and
deman d i n g a slightly
through his public appearance in Milwaukee for
more advanced grade of
music than is contained
years enjoyed a wide acquaintance. He was a
in The Most Popular
thirty-second degree Mason, a member of the
Violin Pieces, which is
arranged solely in the
Milwaukee Lodge of Elks, of the Milwaukee Musi-
first position.
cal Society, and of the American Federation of
The 27 numbers con-
tained
in
this
volume
range
in
difficulty
from easy first po-
Musicians.
sition to moderately difficult third position. Price, Violin
with Piano Accompaniment, 75 cents.
HAS DISCOVERED^SINQING MICE.
Harvard Professor Conducts Some Interesting
Experiments—A Mouse Quartette Would D«
Great In Vaudeville.
Last year, while working one evening in hi»
study, Dr. Charles A. Coburn, of the psychological
laboratory at Harvard University, heard a series
of sounds which seemed to come from above the
ceiling. At the time they were thought to re-
semble the soft chirp of a bird.
Shortly afterward some wild mice were needed
for breeding experiments and, by means of a trip,
two mice, a male and a female, were captured in
the room.
These animals, while being taken to the labora-
tory, produced sounds like those previously heard
in the room and they continued to do so at inter-
vals after being placed in a laboratory cage.
A few days after their capture the male escaped.
The remaining "singing" individual was, so far as
could be ascertained, a common house mouse. She
was somewhat larger than the ordinary wild fe-
male, but no o*ther external peculiarities were
noted. She was extremely active and savage and
her mate always bore the marks of her teeth.
HINDS. NOBLE « OARHKJE,
Sl-36 West 15th Street. New Y«rk
ROBERT TELLER SONS & DORNER
Music Engravers and Printers
SEND MANUSCRIPT AND IDEA OF TITLE
FOR ESTIMATE
226 West 26th Street, New YorK City
No definite time for "singing" was noted, except
three or four days before and for six or seven
days after the birth of a litter. It was observed,
also, that the individual "sang" sometimes when
frightened.
The sound is best described as a rapid whole-
toned trill involving the tones c and d.
The quality of the tone resembled somewhat that
of a fife or flute, but each tone ended with a slight
throaty click. The tones were uttered at the rate
of four or five per second in groups of varying
size. Sometimes a group occupied one second,
sometimes as long as ten seconds. As a rule, the
tones of a group were not clear and distinct, but,
instead, were uttered so rapidly as to seem con-
nected. The throaty click was more noticeable in
the case of the last tone of a group.

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