Cylinder Lists: Columbia Brown Wax, Columbia XP, Columbia 20th Century, and Indestructible (2000)

Record Details:

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IV THROUGH THE NEEDLE'S POINT. 3. Recitation . . A Negro Funeral Sermon. By George Graham. 4. Banjo Solo . Yankee Doodle and Variations. By the famous artist, Vess. L. Ossman. 5. Italian Solo Di Quella Pira. (The grand song from “ II Trovatore.’) By the renowned Italian tenor, Sig. F. A. Giannini. 6. Band Selection. The Stars and Stripes Forever. John Philip Sousa’s latest march. 7. Male Quartette . . . Hear Dem Bells. By the Mozart Quartette. S. Soprano Solo .... Die Nachtingale. (The Nightingale.) Sung in German by Fraulein Vroni Von Eidnbr. 9. Negro Song . . . Turkey in the Straw. By the negro delineator, Billy Golden. SECOND PART. 10. Trombone Solo The Palms. By Arthur Willard Pryor, the trombone soloist of Sousa’s Band. r> j Hiram Wilkins' Visit 11. Humorous Recitation j ^ Ngw York His trouble with the gas, the elevator, and the hotel clerk. By Russell Hunting. 12. Tyrolean Duet . The Mountain Climber. By the Graus Duo of the famous Graus Mountain Choir. c. (Intermezzo from Caval- ,3. Clarionette Solo . -j Uria nJtean*. By Sig. G. Jardella. 14. Banjo Duet .... The Virginia Bells. By Cullen and Collins, the popular banjoists of Wash* ington, D. C. 15. Comic Song . . . The Band Played On. By the greatest of all singers of comic songs, Mr. Dan. W. Quinn. 16. Orchestra Selection . The Pomone Waltz. By the Metropolitan Orchestra. 17. Tenor Solo Ben Bolt. One of the old favorites that appeals to every one, sung by Mr. E. M. Favor. 18. Brass Quartette .... Adesta Fidelia. Messrs. Pryor, Lyons, Higgins, and Pryor, of Sousa’s Band. Readers will find the numbers for each selection in the latest list of records. It is plain that for pleasure, for instruc- tion, and for general benefit the gramo- phone must soon become a real boon to millions of people whose lives are passed far from the amusements and advantages of our great cities. Its uses are numberless as well as its possibilities for general en- tertainment. The girls of a family can, in a few hours, make up a program of disks that will afford their friends far more pleasure than any ordinary party, and if they want dancing, they may dance with light hearts and heels, for the gramo- phone gives you Sousa’s band or a Hun- garian orchestra, for waltzes and two- steps, and that is better music surely than any local performer could offer. And if they wish to sing “ Auld Lang Syne ” be- fore breaking up, the gramophone will lead the singing with a good grace and play the guests out of the house with “ Home, Sweet Home.” THE GRAMOPHONE. The Illustration is of the improved $25.00 style, which is handsomely finished in oak with rich trimmings—runs by a perfectly governed clockwork motor. The National Qramopbope Company, proprietors of the Gramophone, 874 Broadway, New York, are so confident that this $25.00 style will fulfill its claims, that it is willing to guarantee perfect satisfaction to any reader who will order the Gramophone and a dozen or more of the records mentioned In the above program, paying $25.00 for the Gramophone and 50 cents each for the twelve additional records (fourteen records in ail, two being free). The distinct understanding being that if the Gramophone does not give satisfac- tion it can be returned at once and the money refunded, less the express charges. Catalogue and further particulars may be bad by addressing THE NATIONAL GRAMO- PHONE CO., 874 Broadway, New York. McClure's magazine advertiser