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Music Trade Review

Issue: 1914 Vol. 58 N. 17 - Page 77

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Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
"CENTURY"
The World's
Edition
of
The World's
Music
Century Music Pub. Co.
231-235 West 40th St., New York City
1 0 NEW 1914 SONG HITS
All Aboard for Dixieland.
Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm.
The Good Ship Mary Ann.
I Want to Go Back to Dixieland.
I'll Do It All Over Again.
Mary, You're a Little Bit Old-
Fashioned.
I'm in Love with the Mother of
My Best Girl.
I've Got Everything I Want but
You.
If the Sands of All the Seas Were
Peerless Pearls.
Back, Back, Back to Indiana.
Jerome H. Remick & Co.
219 W. 46th Street
68 Library Avenue
NEW YORK
DETROIT, MICH.
MRfVIEWflEARS
THAT the new Stevens bill, now before the
House of Representatives at Washington, should
prove of interest to some music publishers who
complain of price cutting, owing to the fact that
the bill provides that manufacturers may fix retail
prices for their products.
THAT it wouldn't appear to stretch the situation
much to class music publishers as "manufacturers"
under the law.
THAT one writer holds to the belief that sensible
words and not sales of hundred thousand editions
contribute most to the success of a .popular song.
THAT no matter how desirable sensible lyrics
may be, and they are certainly scarce these days,
it is the sales volume that helps to pay expenses
for publishers.
THAT a theatrical paper predicts the failure of
a half dozen of the smaller publishers during the
coming summer months.
THAT the same prediction, leaving out names, of
course, to cover wrong guesses, could be made with
safety any spring.
THAT the annual meeting of the Music Pub-
lishers' Association of the United States will be
held at the Hotel Astor, New York, on June 9,
with the usual informal luncheon dividing the ses-
sions.
THAT, as the piano manufacturers', merchants'
and travelers' associations will be holding their
conventions at the same hotel at that time, the oc-
casion should not be lacking in musical interest.
THAT motion pictures based on popular songs
of the present and the past arc the features to
be offered to the picture houses.
THAT the popular song, it is claimed, now suf-
fers in sales from the talking machine, the pianola,
the dance craze, and on top of all comes the mo-
tion picture song.
TO PRODUCE NEW MUSICAL PIECE.
Klaw & Erl'anger Announce That Musical
Comedy Based on French of "Le Fils Surnat-
ural" Will Be Presented in New York Next
Season—Music by Ivan Caryll.
Klaw & Erlanger announce that their first mu-
sical production of the coming season will be "Le
Fils Surnatural," a play by Grenet d'Arcourt and
Maurice Vaucaire, and with music by Ivan Caryll,
which achieved much success in Paris. The Eng-
lish adaptation of the book will be made by Harry
B. Smith and the piece will be presented at the
New Amsterdam Theater with a large cast and on
a spectacular scale. The music will be published
by Chappell & Co., Ltd.
Ah! That's the Question!
"WHO PAID THE RENT FOR
MRS. RIP VAN WINKLE?"
The greatest natural song
hit that ever a writer
wrote!
Sam Bernard is featuring it with Gaby Deslys in "The
Belle of Bond Street." Bernard Granville makes it the hit
of his life at the Winter Garden, and Al Jolson simply
"cleans up" with it in "The Honeymoon Express" on the
road. That's some record for a song only a few weeks old!
Yes.
You will have MANY
calls!
LEO. FEIST, Inc., - NEW YORK
MAX SCOTT BURNED TO DEATH.
Employe of Local Office of Harold Rossiter
Music Co., and a Cripple, Unable to Escape
from Blaze in Theatrical Rooming House.
Max Scott, connected with the New York office
of the Harold Rossiter Music Co., was one of the
eleven victims of a fire which destroyed a the-
atrical rooming house at 741 Eighth avenue last
week. Scott, who had a room on the top floor,
had two wooden legs and was unable to make his
way to safety and was burned to death before aid
could be rendered.
Another "BALL" Triumph
Ernest R. Ball has written many successes,
but none that will achieve a greater popu-
larity than his latest
"WHILE THE RIVERS
OF LOVE FLOW ON"
WHILE THE C[IVERS/LOVE
FLOW O N
ISSUES SEVERALJSEW NUMBERS.
Among the recent new publications of the
Maurice Richmond Music Co. are included "If I
Were the Ocean and You Were the Shore," by
Alfred Bryan and Jack Wells; "You're a Picture
No Artist Can Paint," by Paul Cunningham and
Harry Piani ; "Why Don't You Marry the Girl,"
by Lou Klein and Abner Greenberg, and "I'm
Going to Get a Girl Named Ivy." The numbers
are being strongly featured by the company.
BUY YOUR MUSIC
FROM
BOSTON
BOSTON, MASS.
Publisher of
"Kiss of Spring," "Some Day When Dreams Come True,'
And Some Others World Famous*
Mnslc Engravers and Printers
SEND MANUSCRIPT AND IDEA OF TITLE
FOR ESTIMATE
22* West 26th Street, New York City
DITSON
SLOGAN:
STOCK
UP
M. WITMARK & SONS
Witmark Bid*., 144-146 West 37th St.
NEW YORK CITY
San Francitco
London
Paris
Melbourne
THE BALLAD SUCCESS OF AMERICA
WALTER JACOBS
OLIVER
ALREADY HUN-
DREDS OF T H E
BEST SINGI NG
ACTS ARE U S I N G
IT.
Chicafo
8 Bosworth St.,
ROBERT TELLER SONS & DORNER
LYRIC BY
GEORGE GRAFF
COMPANY
BOSTON
NEW YORK
Anticipate and Supply Every Requirement of Music Dealers
WOTE-SMITH MUSIC PUB. CO.
PUBLISHERS, PRINTERS, ft ENGRAVERS OF MUSIC
Main Offices: 61-64 Stanhope St., Boston.
Branch Houses: New York and Chicago.
"Suppose I Met You
Face To Face"
By CHAS. K. HARRIS
SOLD WHEREEVER MUSIC IS SOLD
CHAS. K. HARRIS
Broadway and 47th Street
MEYER COHEN. M«r.
N e w York

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