Motion Picture Magazine, July 1914 (1914)

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MOTION PICTURE MAGAZINE 155 YY THEN we first began releasing multiple-reel W films every Friday, we promised that they would far excel the ordinary run of so-called fea- tures. The continued success of these multiples proves beyond question that we have kept faith. ^ Such films as "The Southerners" and "The Man in the Street," three-reel adaptations from the novels by Cyrus Townsend Brady and Mary Imlay Taylor, respectively, are masterpieces that rival many films of far greater length. The popu- larity of these, and similar, films has encouraged us to plan the release of big five- and six-reel features. They will be superior, worth-while subjects—the works of well-known authors, adaptations of great stage successes, dramas that feel the pulse of life, full of the laughter and tears of life. ^ Wherever you see one of these features ad- vertised, you can be sure of seeing only the best. a&^THOMAS A. EDISON, Inc., 144 LAKESIDE AVE, ORANGE, N. J. When answering advertisements kindly mention MOTION PICTURE MAGAZINE.