IF YOU ARE A LOVER OF MUSIC
———then this advertisement and special free offer are meant for you. They open to yon the opportunity to
get for your music room, absolutely free of charge and without obligation of any sort, one of the most delightful little volumes about music and musicians that you ever opened. Simply get out your shears and clip off the coupon at the foot of this page. Then fill it out and mail it.
That’s all.
It will bring to you—with no other expense than the stamp on your envelope—an eighty-page volume, which you will find to be as interesting and valuable a musical work as. you ever thumbed through. The book is one which we have gone to considerable expense to prepare, in order to make possible a really adequate description of the University Extension Correspondence Methods that are now used so successfully by many of the most eminent music teachers of the country in giving music lessons, thus making it no longer necessary for one who wants to study music under the masters to leave home, but bringing the best teaching within the reach of all, both in cost and convenience.
This book, which we offer to send free and which was designed primarily to describe this successful work, has developed into such a complete and useful volume in itself that we want every lover of music among the readers of this Magazine to possess a copy.
Of course, it is devoted largely to describing how it is possible for students to receive in the quiet of their own homes, for instance, the Normal Piano Lessons of the great Sherwood; the Harmony Lessons of Rosenbecker; the Composition Lessons of Protheroe; lessons in Public-school Music from Frances E. Clark; lessons in History, Analysis and Appreciation of Music from Glenn Dillard Gunn (Musical Editor, Chicago “Tribune”) ; lessons in Singing, given with the aid of the Phonograph, and lessons in Cornet, Violin, Mandolin, etc., under equally eminent masters.
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