The Edison phonograph monthly (Jan-Dec 1909)

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Two-Page Advertisement of Edison Gf <©£ EDISON PHONOGRAPH pfpffv \~ TTj ^l^t" : J W«A Useful AW Imagine an entertainment where every performer is a star and every number a selection of your own THAT describes the entertainment of an Edison Phonograph. You need not dress for it, go out after it, arrange your time for it or pay for admission to it. It takes place in your home, at your convenience, as often as you like. You listen — that is the extent of your effort. You hear Manuel Romain sing just as you would if he stood before you. You hear Maurice Levi's Band play under his spirited direction and forget the medium by which his artistic efforts are brought to you. Or you enjoy the talents of such clever entertainers as Ada Jones, Cal Stewart, Byron G. Harlan, Billy Murray and Steve Porter. Do you doubt this excellence in the Edison Phonograph? Then hear it. Go to an Edison store; select the Record of a singer you have heard and a song you know. This test has placed the Edison Phonograph in a million homes. Ask particularly to hear an Amberol Record, Mr. Edison's latest contribution to Phonographic entertainment; a record that preserves the sweet, clear tones of the Standard Edison Records, yet plays or sings twice as long and costs but a trifle more. Edison Phonographs are sold at the same prices everywhere in the United States, $12.50 to $125.00. Amberol Records, 50c; regular Edison Records, 35c; Grand Opera Records, 75c One of the greatest pleasures which the Edison Phonograph affords is making records at home. This can be done only with the Edison. NATIONAL PHONOGRAPH COMPANY, 24 Lakeside Avenue, Orange, N. J. Our advertising is intended to help yo Just how much it helps de