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Music Trade Review

Issue: 1917 Vol. 65 N. 17 - Page 76

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Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
72
BEAUTIFUL LYRIC+WONDERFUL MELODY=GARDEN OF DREAMS
. .¥,• Ju),,.M Garden of Dreams
DAVID MORTON
A
Modereto
who
know?
But
in
this gar - den place
Of
•to.
knows,

wtio knows
But in this per feet place
Of peace,
of
* trgt/o
•ia
List price 60 cents.
* ta.
Introductory rates 18 cents per copy, $15.00 per hundred
HINDS, HAYDEN & ELDREDGE, Inc., Publishers,
11-15 Union Square West, New York City
appears a convenient order blank, below which
is carried a space for the name, address, etc.,
Hinds, Hayden & Eldredge to Send New Book- of the teacher. The letter to the teacher is
let to Every Registered Music Teacher in the very forceful and should do much to impress
Country—A Direct Aid to the Local Dealer upon them the value of the publications offered.
Among other things in the letter, which should
Hinds, Hayden & Eldredge, Inc., have just have especial appeal to the teacher, is the fol-
sent a letter to the trade informing them that lowing statement: "Every number in this cata-
they are ahout to send to practically every reg- log has been selected with a view of demon-
istered music teacher in the country a new strating that the best teaching music may also
thematic catalog featuring their teaching pieces. be melodious and a source of pleasure to the
Of special news to the dealer is the fact that if student."
desired Hinds, Hayden & Eldredge, Inc., will
send the catalogs out at their expense with the
SAILOR SONCHNOW ON DECK
imprint of the dealer in the locality of the
There
have been a large number of songs,
teacher and with other matters which will with-
out doubt place the business created through both patriotic and war, which have extolled the
the sending of the booklets to the teachers into virtues, etc., of the boys in khaki. Very few,
the dealer's hands. A very liberal proposition however, have praised the virtues of the sailors.
is offered the dealer through this method as it But now comes "Teddy" Morse, who has dis-
is only necessary for him to give a compara- covered a lyricist of no mean ability in the per-
son of John O'Brien, and together they have
tively small initial order.
The catalog which is being sent out carries become authors of a novelty, comedy, patriotic
a personal letter to the teacher on the title song with a -punch entitled "We'll Knock the
page below which there is a space for the deal- Heligo—Into Heligo—Out of Heligoland." The
er's imprint. The following twelve pages are number is now in press and professional copies
devoted to thematics of the numbers which are of tiie same will be ready for distribution the
featured in the offer, while on the back page early part of next week.
THEMATIC CATALOG FOR TEACHERS
OUR
SONG WRITER COMPLAINS IN VERSE
Many ambitious song writers submit their ma-
terial to publishers and almost as many have the
material returned or ignored. It is estimated
that there is only one man in every thousand
who has not at some time or other tried his
hand at song writing, which explains in part.
why so many start in the game but so few fin-
ish. Recently a New York publisher received
the following bit of verse from an ambitious
song writer. The verse seems to explain, in
part, why the song itself still awaits publication:
Dear Mr.
-: I thought I'd drop
A line to ascertain
If, for one of my lyric-crop
You'd pay my price of bane?
Just twenty-five is all I ask,
To get some needed things
Before in hell ray high hopes bask
On singed, Icarian wings.
All roads to Rome, 'tis said, do lead,
(But Rome's road is not mine)
And Fate has taught that few, indeed,
Run white to Llasa's shrine;
There is but one (and that not sure)
But the good Buddha saith:
"(>m mane padme, hum! endure,
Ye who are of the Faith."
And, so, across bleak, ice-chained mount,
And parching desert drear,
I fare to seek the healing fount,
Tho' Llasa draws not near;
Om mane padme, hum! I turn
The wheel (for life's but lust)
Yet, on the altar Hope's firea burn—
Tho' dreams do turn to dust.
FLAG LN FRANCE" POPULAR IN MILITARY CAMPS JEROME H.REMICKaCpJS
ture number at the various military camps where
Emilie Frances Bauer's new patriotic song,
"Our Flag in France," is proving a strong fea-
is has been sung, and the result is that the or-
ders are plentiful.
A band arrange-
ment of the num-
ber has just been
completed, and is
in much demand.
Miss Lois Fox
and Miss Kather-
ine Ruth Heyman
have just finished
a tour of the forts
near Boston, fea-
turing "Our Flag
in France" in all
their programs. All
the royalties ac-
cruing- • from the
sale of the song
will be turned over
by Miss Bauer to
the American Am-
bulance Hospital in
Paris.
Soldiers Listening to the Singing of "Our Flag in France"
.Sensational Son£ Hit
"FOR YOl 1 A BOSK"
"SOME Sl'NDAY MORNING"
"SO LOMJ MOTHER"
"SA1LINC, AWAY ON THE HENRY
(LAV"
"DON'T TRY TO STEAL THE SWEET-
HEART OK A SOLDIER"
"ROCK-A-BYE LAND"
"MY MOTHER'S EYES"
"SWEET I'ETOOTIE"
"WAY DOWN THERE (A DIXIE BOY 18
MISSING)"
"SOI'THERN GALS"
"MAYBE SOMETIME"
"SO THIS IS DIXIE"
"THE BRAVEST HEART OF ALL"
"WHERE
THE MORNING
GLORIES
GROW"
"LAST NIGHT"
INSTRUMENTAL
"IN THE SPOTLIGHT" (Waltz)
"CITE AND I'RETTY" (Fox Trot)
"CAMOIFLAGE" " "SMILING SAMMY" (Fox Trot)
JEROME H. REMICK & CO.

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