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Show NEW RECOBOS FOB ' IB TALIS MACHINE Irving Berlin, America's rag-time king, has joined the array. Naturally, the first thing he did was to write a song about it. The next, was to make that song the big hit of a musical comedy which" his camp mates produced, pro-duced, and which played to "standing room only" audiences in New York and elsewhere. "Yip, Yip, Yaphank" is famous already and Berlin's greatest great-est song hit, "How I Hate To Get Up in the Morning." Is the thing that puts It over. It's the best camp song yot you can get It now on a Columbia Record, one of tho now November j numbers just out, sung by Arthur Fields, who's been in camp himself, and knows what it is to hear the bugle call at 5 a. m. Now and then comes a song which has just that rare combination of words and melody that makes it famous fa-mous overnight Who can say what subtle thing it is? "Smiles" is such a song tho sweetest melody, tho most exquisite harmony, the richest, rarest, lilting refrain you've heard in many a long year. It Js exquisite. On a Columbia 'Record by Campbell and Burr it is one of the phonograph sensations sen-sations of the season. Hear it at your dealer's and join the millions who arc enjoying its captivating harmony. Columbia has become famous for its sparkling dance records partly because of the peculiar adaptability of Columbia Colum-bia tone for dance music, but chiefly because Columbia has picked tho most ( famous dance music makers to mako records. This month comes another corking dance record by the widely popular Wilbur Sweatman's Original Jazz Band. It's entitled, "Indianola" with "Oh! Lou La! La!" on the back. Roses of Picardy."as s ung for Columbia by Charles Harrison this month, is a song, of tonder beauty a song that has a tear drop very, near its haunting lines. It 13 a famous "heart - - - --'- 1 song" sung by a tenor famous for his sympathetic voice. On the back is "My Little Gypsy Wanda," by Lewis James. These are but a few of the wonderful wonder-ful group that Columbia dealers aro now playing for their patrons. But they are indicative of the rest. Give yourself a treat by hearing them. |