Music Trade Review

Issue: 1924 Vol. 79 N. 18

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
NOVEMBER 1,
1924
53
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
IN THE WORLD OF MUSIC PUBLISHING
Conducted By V. D. Walsh
The Sheet Music Trade in Tucson, El Paso,
San Antonio, Texas, and Kansas City, Mo.
Maurice Richmond, of the Richmond Musical Supply Corp., New York, Sums Up Conditions in
These Cities Written Exclusively for the Music Trade Review
r-pUCSON, ARIZ., October 18.—Tucson is a
1 peaceful city of about 30,000 inhabitants,
about one-third Mexicans, who are musical from
birth, and which helps to make the city quite
a musical center. Not
far off is the famous
Apache Trail we hear
so much about. Its
principal
industries
are cotton, cattle and
considerable
copper
mining.
It is the
home of many winter
tourists on account of
its balmy climate and
its turquoise sky.
The Fisher Music
Maurice Richmond
Co., headed by Geo.
T. Fisher, who, while a native of the north, has
been here twenty-five years. He features in
pianos the Steinway line for the State of Ariz-
ona. He specializes in the Victor in phono-
graphs. His sheet music department, while it
receives some of his personal attention, is man-
aged by Mrs. Meta Rea and carries a full line
of the Schirmer library, as well as other stand-
ard editions, the better type of songs, and all
the late hits, together with a complete line of
musical instruments and small goods. I spent
a very pleasant morning with Mr. Fisher, who
impressed me as a stable business man, with
splendid and impressive principles, doing his
best to please the public. As Sears-Roebuck &
Co. say: "We can supply the musical taste of
all the family."
This is the home of the University of Arizona
where music is a big feature. The local public
schools throughout the State have adopted mu-
sic as one of the necessary studies.
Tucson is northern terminus of the Southern
Pacific Railroad of Mexico. Shortly the main
line to Mexico City will be opened.
The R. H. Nielsen Music Co. from all appear-
ances is a real live wire organization, catering
to the wants of the musical people of this
vicinity from every angle. It occupies a spa-
cious institution with a liberal frontage on the
main thoroughfare. Its slogan reads: " T h e
Musicians' Headquarters—Music for the Artist,
Teacher and Student." All the principal stand-
ard lines of music are carried in stock, which
makes the department complete, together with
an up-to-date line of popular music. Mr. Niel-
sen is much on the job in his shirt sleeves
which is usually the business man's attire in
THEWALTZBALLADBEAUTIFUL
these parts, and that is the way they distinguish
the native from the "tenderfoot." It is really
a complete music store. A representative stock
of musical instruments, musical merchandise,
pianos, Brunswick phonographs and records is
carried.
El Paso
The name was taken from the old Mexican
"El Paso Del Norte" meaning "pass of the
north," for it is the gateway to Mexico City.
Its history goes back to 1598. It is a progres-
sive community with beautiful buildings. Min-
ing, agriculture, live stock and cotton are its
principal industries and it is also a winter resort.
Once in a while you run across a music man
who takes enough time to show one around,
meaning the stranger, and makes you feel per-
fectly at home. One such is Walter T. Black-
well, the president of the Tri-State Talking
Machine Co. I had never met this man before.
I noticed he gave me the once over; that day
I happened to wear a button in my lapel desig-
nating that I belonged to a dry crowd of the
Ancient and Arabic Order of the Mystic Shrine.
After that Mr. Blackwell and I became real
friends. His company is the only retail Victor
dealer in the city. He also handles the Conn
band line, and Gibson and Ludwig lines. He
has ten nicely appointed showrooms, finished
in cream color, and a music department con-
taining Schirmer, Fischer and other standard
lines, looked after by C. T. Bates, who is also
manager of the musical goods. The popular
music counter is handled by Miss Jewell
Warren.
Fort Bliss with 3,000 troops is one of the
most important posts of the country, which, of
course, helps the local community.
The W. G. Walz Co. is the Victor wholesale
distributor located in this city and its business
extends through southwest Texas, Arizona and
New Mexico and other centers.
The Austin Music Shop, Mrs. H. W. Austin,
proprietor, is a small, exclusive music store lo-
cated in a good neighborhood. This concern
carries principally popular music, "Century" edi-
tion and some semi-classic. Mrs. Austin is a
fine musician and knows how to inject her per-
sonality into her sales. She reports business
has not as yet taken hold in full for this season.
I also met Mr. Austin, a pleasant kind of a
person. He stated that Mrs. Austin was the
boss and that he placed a great deal of con-
fidence in her. They sure appear a happy
couple.
• In a few minutes spent with Mr. Dunn, of
the Dunn's Music House, who appeared ex-
tremely busy, he stated that business with him
had been way off for nearly three years but
he can see a marked improvement for this sea-
son. He has been in business twenty-seven
years in El Paso, handles the Knabe and Am-
pico, a full line of musical instruments and the
largest stock of sheet music in southwest
Texas.
Just so as to put my foot on real Mexican
soil, Mr. Blackwell, of the Tri-State Talking
Machine Co., of El Paso, and myself went over
to Juarez, pronounced War-ez—it is really a
good name for that old and tumbled down Mex-
ican village. . The very atmosphere is full of a
war of many types. "Barbary Coast" of old
fame in "Frisco," had nothing on this filthy
and unsanitary hamlet. It is a great place for
SONGS THAT SELL
All Alone (New) by Irving Berlin
What'll 1 Do?
Charley, My Boy
Driftwood
When I Was the Dandy and You Were
the Belle
Red Hot Mamma
Lazy
I Can't Get the One I Want
Oh, Baby (Don't Say No—Say Maybe)
She's Everybody's Sweetheart
Old Familiar Faces
Nobody Loves You Like 1 Do


Nobody's Child
Main Street Wasn't Big Enough for Mary
Indiana Moon
Morning (Won't You Ever Come'Round)
(New)
No One Knows What It's All About
(New)
Come Back to Me (When They Throw
You Down) (New)
Superstitious Blues (New)
Dance Folio No. 8
X Universal
Special 1925 Edition
Peterson's Ukulele Method
World's Favorite Songs
Lundin's Tenor Banjo Method

Song Gems from Irving Berlin's Third Annual
MUSIC BOX REVUE
An Orange Grove in California
The Waltz of Long Ago
Little Butterfly
Learn to Do the Strut
Outstanding Song Hits from
TOPSY and EVA
Rememb' ring
I Never Had a Mammy
IRVING BERLIN, Inc.
1607 Broadway, New York
night life, the gambler and many other vices
that are too numerous to mention. Hygiene
and sanitation they know nothing about. The
place that attracted my attention was a Mexi-
can cafe, fairly respectable, a rendezvous for
Americans and tourists—the kind that P. T.
Barnum spoke about. Yes, and many of the
music boys have been victims in this burg, ac-
cording to the story told me by one of the
local music dealers. Of course, you can't blame
them, as there is a redeeming feature in this
one particular cafe, the fact that it serves real
good beer and wines to the thirsty traveller, it
is some incentive. Its famous drink "Tequela"
is some peppy fluid. One drink and you imme-
diately become prosperous. I certainly was
very thankful for having returned safe to the
land of U. S. A. that same afternoon. I sure
did shake hands with Uncle Sam. In thanks
to Mr. Blackwell, I promised him a trip to
Coney Island and a visit to the Golden Dome
of the Woolworth Building in New York. I
hope he comes.
(Continued on page 54)
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
54
THE
*YOU
MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
NOVEMBER 1, 1924
CAiST
WITH
LIZA'
A tune that 11 surprise ya /
tJhejQ FoxTfot Hit
y GIS KAHNWTED FIORITO
and it's C-dQutte-0-D"OOOP/
JIM NIGHT Dost Blame MAYTIMf
ftiUOnMe'
(GWE ME A JUNE NIGHT .
THE MOONLIGHT AND W U )
A "beautiful Melody Vill* ai\j
irresistible R»trot rhythm
Jeddu AJo/ses latest
and G/eatest SOM(4
£tcoY&ldi\ Immediate Success/
A FOX TROT BALLAD
HONEST
" d TRULY 1
t> 1924
L«k Fnit,ln
ANY
Predicted as biii a
hit as linger Awhile'
and by the same writer
VINCENT ROSE
• I 111
^SOMEWHERE iwthc WORLD•jfflrWAITlLYDl SEE MY GAlT
The Sheet Music Trade—(Continued from page 53)
A Western music dealer told me the other
day that he comes to New York quite often. I
won't mention names, but when he does come,
he always takes in the new "Ziegfeld Follies"
of which he is very fond. Of course, he goes
there because he likes to hear the new music.
I just received a letter from Harry Engel of
Robbins-Engel Co., New York, in which he tells
me about an unusually pleasant evening he
spent with some nice, lovely boys, men of
"note"—they read "notes" and they take them
too. Here is the song Harry is singing now:
"Cock-aTdoodle do, I lost a buck or two, but
when they put in loaded dice, I lost my stick-
pin too."
The Western music dealer is really a great
philosopher—the majority of them live in the
belief: "the greater the obstacle, the more glory
in the overcoming it."
San Antonio
It was Thomas "Tom" Goggan who put the
"Tone" in San Antone.
In an interview with him he gave me some
very interesting data. The business is in ex-
cellent shape and has been right straight along.
He is a strong believer in paying a great deal
of attention in carrying live merchandise, watch-
ing the turnover like the physician is ever
Of Interest toMcKinley Dealers!
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, > Mori 1 for Saxophone Mini Piano.
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McKINLEY MUSIC CO.
1501-1517 East 55th Street - CHICAGO
watchful of the temperature of his patients Mr.
Goggan's thermometer is watching the per-
centage of cost in each department. At the
present time they are rather handicapped for
space, but I received the good news that on or
about March 1, 1925, they hope t o be located
in their own new building four stories high, of
Italian architecture, mission style with an elab-
orate mezzanine floor. Their new building is
now being erected on corner of Broadway and
Travis street at an expense of $300,000.
Thomas Goggan & Bros, use this slogan:
''Everything in Music since 1866." They feature
the Steinway Duo Art, Victor and Brunswick
phonographs and records. A large supply of
musical instruments and everything in music.
Thomas F. Logan, the general manager, is very
optimistic about their business. He stated that
their increase over last year was about 40 per
cent.
The manager of the music department is F.
A. Brinkman, whom I understand is the man
who discovered the "Rhine" not in Germany. It
is a place which many years ago was well known
near Cincinnati and what wonderful beer they
did serve. Every time "Brinky" thinks about
it he smacks his lips. He is a strong advocate
of good sensible wine and beer and hopes to
live long enough when we can get it once more
without being obliged to hide in the cellar. H e
is very proud of his music department and dis-
closed the fact that their retail business is in
splendid condition and they have a very large
and growing mail order business. He is really
a credit to the House of Goggan. While nearly
sixty he didn't admit it—he certainly steps
lively and is in possession of a lot of "Texas
Pep."
Mrs. June Foster, in charge of the popular mu-
sic department, gave me the following list of
the ten best sellers on their counter at this time.
They are "June Night," "Charley, My Boy,"
"Sweet Little You," "Mandalay," "It Had To
Be You," "Jealous," "Hard Hearted Hannah,"
'"Doodle Doo Doo," "I Can't Get the One I
Want" and "If You Do What You Do."
While walking on Houston street, the main
thoroughfare of the city, my attention was called
to a lady in an automobile making a speech in
which she stated she was not going to vote for
the "Joke Candidate for President." A curious
individual asked her who that was and she said
it was "Laughalotte."
Part of the desert I've just traveled through
has been so dry that I've had to pin the postage
stamps on my letters.
Marvin Lee, the cyclone salesman of Chicago,
told me a good one the other day and I must
tell it. His trip to the coast has been so costly
that he has decided to cut out sleeping in
hotels. He intends raising a beard like the
"Smith Brothers," you know the "cough drop
twins," and will use it as a mattress.
The other music house in this city is the
Walthall Co. which recently moved into new
quarters. It appears to be a busy institution
and hopes to show a splendid increase in its
business throughout in having made this
change.
San Antonio is really a very delightful city.
The Chamber of Commerce has undertaken a
gigantic campaign in boosting it. It has many
attractions. They boast about their Alamo, the
City of Missions, beautiful parks, where the
grass is always green, and a very delightful
climate the year around. It does get hot in the
summer, but their winter season attracts the
better type of tourist and health seekers from
all over. San Antonio also claims to have orig-
inated the idea of using school boys for traffic
police to guard the streets through school
hours. The population is about 200,000, about
40 per cent Mexican. From all indications the
Mexican spends his money the same as any
other individual which, after all, is all that mat-
ters. Most business men here say "Business is
good, what are you worrying about?"
Kansas City
Kansas City boasts of two "stars"; one—its
leading newspaper "The Kansas City Star,"—
the other the well-known music house of J. W.
Jenkins Sons' Music Co.; the largest and most
complete music house in the Southwest and
which ranks among the first and foremost in
North America.
The music department, consisting of a large
wholesale, mail order and retail business, is
splendidly managed by the well-known Grant
Ege, a man of sound judgment, progressive, and
well liked in the industry.
Grant Ege has the honor of being president
of the National Association of Sheet Music
Dealers. The boys who have sat in the meet-
ings with him say he swings a mean gavel.
Mr. Jenkins displayed much wisdom in having
discovered Mr. Ege. The story goes something
like this:
It was a dark and stormy night in Kansas
City, Kansas, so Mr. Ege decided to walk over
to Kansas City, Mo. This happened during the
(Continued on page 55)
BROKEN
DREAMS
THE
WALTZ BALLAD
OF ENCHANTING
BEAUTY AND CHARM
HEARST MUSIC PUBLISHERS.
OF CANADA LIMITED

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