Music Trade Review

Issue: 1921 Vol. 73 N. 24

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE
DECEMBER 10, 1921
153
REVIEW
CALL FOR POPULAR-STANDARD HITS
M. Witmark & Sons Report Steadily Increasing
Demand for Numbers in That Catalog
Success!
These FOUR factors are wholly responsi-
ble for the successful promotion of every busi-
ncKs.
Picking a good location.
Conducting a neat and attractive
store.
Employing clerks who are courte-
ous and Intelligent.
Handling only merchandise of de- '
pendable and known value.
"CENTURY CERTIFIED EDITION" rep-
resents the biggest value known in sheet
music.
It's equal to and in many respects supe-
rior to the best published, yet it costs your
customers but 15c and nets you 10c a copy on
every sheet sold. Besides, it's nationally ad-
vertised lor your direct benefit.
It's handling and featuring such nation-
ally known lines like "CENTURY" that makes
your road to success a sure and easy one.
Co-operation with the national advertiser
Is likewise essential.
CENTURY hook-ups
sent FREE on request.
Century Music Publishing Co.
235 West 40th Street, N. Y.
JENKINS HITS
"DangerousBlues"
The Biggest "Blues" Hit Ever Published
Everyone Is Playing It
"12th Street Rag"
Song—Piano Solo
Now at Its Height
"Kiss Me, Dear"
A Beautiful Waltz—Has the Earmarks
of a Real "Hit"
M. Witmark & Sons report ever-increasing
activity of demand for the numbers they are at
present working on in their Popular-Standard-
Pictorial catalog. As usual, the success of Jhese
songs in vaudeville is reflected not only by. the
number of acts featuring them, but by largely in-
creased sales. The dance numbers, like "Croon-
ing," "Fancies" and "Wyoming," continue to be
popular favorites, each being successful in song
as well as in dance form, and among the other
leading successes are "Stand Up and Sing for
Your Father an Old-time Tune," "Which
Hazel?", "I've Got the Red, White and Blues,"
"That's How I Believe in You," "Morning, Noon
and Night," "Kentucky Blues," "Little Crumbs
of Happiness," "There's a Down-in-Dixie Feelin'
Hangin' 'Round Me," "Why Don't You Smile?"
"Here Comes Dinah," "How Is It By You? By
Me It's Fine," "Jabberwocky," etc.
SCHUBERT STUDIOS INCORPORATE
A new entry into the ranks of the publishers
is to operate under the trade name Musical Di-
rectors' Pub. Co., with offices at 1531 Broadway,
New York City.
IttlUMIMMMMMtmiilMMM
GUARANTEED SELLERS
My Chinese Cherry Blossom
Mabel
Listening
My China Man
You Are the Rose oi My Heart
It You Only Knew
Sunshine
Only A Dream of You
:AL ROSE MUSIC PUB. CO.
"Sweet Love"
(Not Inc.)
and
"Colleen o'Mine"
EVERY ONE A SELLER
Published by
1
J. W. Jenkins Sons Music Co.
Kansas City, Mo.
selected from the
Popular Standard
Pictorial Catalog
M. Witmark & Sons
"WHEN FRANCIS DANCES WITH ME"
"TEN LITTLE FINGERS AND TEN LIT-
TLE TOES"
"GEORGIA ROSE"
"WABASH BLUES"
"NO ONE'S FOOL"
"IN THE OLD TOWN HALL"
"MELON TIME IN DIXIELAND"
"ONE KISS"
"PEGGY O'NEIL"
"CHERIE"
"I'M NOBODY'S BABY"
"MY MAN" (MON HOMME)
"WANG WANG BLUES"
"SWEETHEART"
"PULLMAN PORTER BLUES"
"WINNING WAYS"
Write for Dealers'
Prices
LEO. FEIST, Inc., FEIST Bldg., New York
OLD BALLADJ^OR FILM STORY
Edgar Selden has purchased the picture rights
to the old-time ballad hit "On the Banks of the
Wabash," by Paul Dresser, and has arranged to
develop a film story around the song. In view
of the number of old songs that have been used
for pictures recently, it would seem wise for the
publishers to dust off their old ballads for the
purpose of encouraging their further use as a
basis for pictures.
T W O SONGS JUST OFF THE PRESS
There's a Utile Lass in Scotland'
and "My Nellie Lies Sleeping"
Published by
..
FLORA ULRICH. Grand Rapids. Mich.
A WONDERFUL IRISH MELODY
"When I Dream That
Auld Erin Is Free"
Retail Price, Regular Copies 35c
i
3131 Douglas Boulevard, Chicago, 111
IMMIIMMIMIIHMIMMMIIIM
BIG SELLERS
Song'
"HAWAIIAN CHIMES"
The Schubert Studios Corp., of New York,
music publishers, was recently granted a charter
of incorporation in New York State, with a
capital of $30,000. Incorporators are: J. Ed-
munds and J. Pincus.
TWO OTHER GOOD ONES
You cant go
wrong with
any'Feisf
GOTT & HENDERSON
5444 Prairie Avenue
Chicago
BIG SELLING SONGS
WOLFE GILBERT'S' TERRIFIC HIT
DOWN YONDER
SHADOW LANE
Beautiful Waltz Song
EDITION BEAUT1FUU
No music store Is complete without
EDITION
BEAUTIFUL
1600 live dealers will testify to its
success.
It is carefully edited.
It ia the most beautiful edition pub-
lished.
The Investment is Insignificant.
The results are tremendous.
Write for particulars today.
C
C. CHURCH AND COMPANY
HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT
Hartford—New York—London—Paris—Sydney
LITTLE CRUMBS OF HAPPINESS
CROONING
THAT'S HOW I BELIEVE IN YOU
JABBERWOCKY
STAND UP AND SING FOR YOUR FATHER
AN OLD-TIME TUNE
KENTUCKY BLUES (I've Got the Blues for Old
Kentucky)
FANCIES
THERE'S A DOWN-IN-DIXIE FEELING HANG-
ING ROUND ME
ROSE OF MY SOUL
LOVE WILL RETURN IN THE SPRJNG
HOW IS IT BY YOU? BY ME IT'S FINE
WHY DON'T YOU SMILE?
WHICH HAZEL?
HEAVEN IS LIKE DIXIE, AFTER ALL
TELL ME YOUR DAY DREAMS
WHERE THERE'S A WILL THERE'S A WAY
WHERE WERE YOU?
EVERYBODY'S WELCOME IN DIXIE
Special—WYOMING
SLUMBERLAND
Fox-trot Song
MY BUDDING ROSE
A Steady Seller
IF YOU LIKE ME LIKE I
LIKE YOU
A Baby's Plea to Her Absent Daddy
ON A MOONLIGHT NIGHT
A High Class Ballad
THE LATEST SENSATIONAL HIT
STOP! REST AWHILE
BLUES NOVELTY FOX-TROT
L. WOLFE GILBERT MUSIC CORP.
167 West 47th Street
NEW YORK
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
154
THE
MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
DECEMBER 10,
1921
A DAY WITH MY FATHER
Shemanjiay & Go.
Prepared by Wm. Arthur Reilly, Son of Dr.
Reilly, of McLaughlin & Reilly, Music Pub-
lishers, Boston—A Most Mournful Tale
Lend me your ears, as the deaf man said, and
I will try to recount some of the experiences ot
a day behind the counter in my father's office.
Perhaps, if you're awake when I am through,
you'll agree that the first hundred years in busi-
ness are the hardest and that the first million
dollars are the most difficult to get. And speak-
ing of the million, I might say that if the rest
of my million comes as hard as my first five-dollar
bill came, then I think I will try selling light-
houses on the Sahara Desert, or something
equally easy.
My father and I, upon arriving at the office,
woke up the boy who was at the task of count-
ing songs into bundles of fifties. Dad went
into the front office and I saw him lift up the
receiver of the telephone to call for a number,
so I knew that he would be busy for an hour or
two trying to get the number. My job was to
take complete charge of the back office. Within
ten minutes I was convinced that glue is not
the only thing that is thick. I overheard a cus-
tomer asking the boy if we had a "Mass in A
Flat." The boy replied, "No; they have a mass
in a church." So, with a ton of ice on each
word, I ordered the boy to another task and
waited on the customer myself.
It seemed that the customer wanted some-
thing that went dum de die diddle du dum, but
was not quite sure who the author was, or who
published it or whether it was for low or high
voice. Finally, after dislodging the entire stock
of solos, she bought a ten-cent octavo chorus and
was unable to understand why she was not
entitled to a discount on it. Any outsider would
think we were in business together or something
the way we argued. It would take the lawyer
who handled Solomon's breach of promise suits
to convince her that we weren't profiteers of
the worst kind. I had more arguments that day
than there are Southerners in Georgia. I saw
a young fellow, whom I thought was from an-
other office on the floor, about to take the ele-
vator, and he was carrying on his arm a rain-
coat. Now, I had been looking all over town
for a coat like the one he had, so I hollered to
him, "Hey, where did you get the coat?" It
wasn't the fellow I thought it was and he gave me
SONGS THAT ARE SELLING
REMARKABLE FOX-TROT BALLAD
ITALY
USED BY 50 BIG-TIME ACTS
FRANCISCO
the WEST
J A d
one look, got pale and, dropping the coat, ran ask you." And the third replied, "I didn't say
down the stairs. He thought it was my coat, anything."
I guess.
After this jam got cleared up I tried to type-
Then, like a rolling stone from a clear sky, my write a little. I got along pretty well until I
doubles began. The telephone rang and as I had a word with the letter "X" in it. I'll bet I
answered it the buzzer rang, signifying that my was fifteen minutes trying to find that X. When
presence was wanted in the front office. In finally I found it I had forgotten what I was
came a flock of customers who were in a hurry, going to say, so I was obliged to give the
along with a messenger boy bearing a telegram, job up, and then and there I decided that any-
and the expressman desiring my signature. Al- body that tried to make a living in the music
together I was about as busy as a man with business would be an old man by the time he
boxing gloves on trying to pick up a common was ninety.
pin. I did not know what to do any more than
a one-armed man would if he were carrying a
RELEASE A NEW FOX-TROT
pail of water through a swamp of mosquitoes.
The party on the 'phone wanted to know if we
Van Alstyne & Curtis recently released a new
published page four of our hymn book sepa- fox-trot entitled "Stars," by John Alden, com-
rately. One of the customers began to berate me poser of "La Veeda." Other numbers being fea-
for sending a dun for a bill that had been paid tured by the company are "Kentucky Moonlight"
two months previous. Another customer wanted and the ballad success "Don't Be Cross With
to know if I could exchange thirty-seven of our Me."
worst-selling numbers which had been bought
two years ago for thirty-seven of our best-selling
composition of which we didn't have enough
Sunshine Of Your Smile
copies. A young girl wanted me to show her
some church music, and during all this time the
messenger boy was waiting, the telephone party
was waiting and the front office was waiting. It's
a wonder I didn't turn gray. Then, to top it all,
in came a salesman to add himself to the crowd.
He was offering me an automatic collar button
finder, priced as low as $17.76, with a special
discount on quantities, and desired me. to under-
stand that he made absolutely no profit'on the
article, but that he was simply helping out the
regular salesman who was home looking for his
H A R M S INC.62WEST45 T - H SLNEIVYORK
collar button.
Love Sends %
Ot Roses P
By this time the boy-came to my rescue. Now,
as luck would have it, the boy is cross-eyed, and
there were three different expressmen in there
demanding his signature. The boy said to the
first, "Where are you from?" The second an-
swered, "American X." The boy said, "I didn't
MY
HAWAIIAN MELODY I Remick Specials ;;
"BIMINI BAY'
THERE'S
"WHY DEAR"
"REMEMBER THE ROSE'
ONLY ONE PAL
"MARY O'BRIEN"
"MY DADDY"
AFTER ALL
"EMALINE"
"SATURDAY"
IT MUST BE
"TEA IEAVES"
HOME"
SOMEONE LIKE YOU "KENTUCKY
"GOLDEN SANDS OF WAIKIKI"
HARMONY
BALLAD
BY COOTS
A RINGLE
ON ALL
RECORDS
ON ALL
ROLLS
GREAT
'MOTHER"
SONG
VERY
BIG
SELLER
BY STRAIGHT AND BARGY
SUCCESSFUL FOX-TROT BALLAD
ON ALL RECORDS AND ROLLS
Chicago
McKinley Music Co.
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
"BEFORE WE SAY GOODNIGHT"
J E R O M E H. REMICK & CO.
NewYwk
STANDARD SELLERS
Anyel'0 Prayer, Reverie Weary, Ballad Fox Trot
Our Boys and Girls, March
Dream ot the Rose, -Walts
That's What God Made Mothers For (song:)
Somebody Stole My Gal (sonar)
Love's Mafic Spell (sons or Inst.)
DENTON AND HASKINS MUSIC CO.
1531 Broadway
New York
'• DETROIT
NEW YORK
CHICAGO '• •
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • M M * '
ROBERT TELLER SONS & DORNER
Music Engravers and Printer*
SEND MANUSCRIPT AND IDEA OF
TITLE FOR ESTIMATE
311 West 43d Street
New York City
BUY YOUR MUSIC FROM
BOSTON
Publishers
WALTER JACOBS BSSTOITAASV
"PeterGink"fcfc["Arabella" t**
OJiver Ditson Company
BOSTON
NEW YORK
Anticipate and supply Every Requirement of Music
Dealers
White-Smith Music Pub. Co.
PUBLISHERS, PRINTERS AND ENGRAVERS OF MUSIC
Main Offices: 40-44 Winchester St., Boston.
Branch Houses: New York and Chicago

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