Moving Picture News (1911) . anton, who is manager of the CentralSquare Theater of Lynn, IMass. While waiting for the thea-ter to open for the day, Colonel Stanton ushered me into hisspacious private office and spoke enthusiastically but mod-estly of the success he had attained in the motion picturefield, and of his admiration for the Independent pictures,which were being received with such marked approval by hislarge audiences. Why, said the Colonel, it is a regularoccurrence now for the patrons to applaud the pictures andit leaves no doubt in my mind that the class of subjects whichthe Indep


Moving Picture News (1911) . anton, who is manager of the CentralSquare Theater of Lynn, IMass. While waiting for the thea-ter to open for the day, Colonel Stanton ushered me into hisspacious private office and spoke enthusiastically but mod-estly of the success he had attained in the motion picturefield, and of his admiration for the Independent pictures,which were being received with such marked approval by hislarge audiences. Why, said the Colonel, it is a regularoccurrence now for the patrons to applaud the pictures andit leaves no doubt in my mind that the class of subjects whichthe Independent forces are giving us is proving a winner forthem and makes me more than satisfied with the results Iam getting. The W. E. Greene Film Exchange, Inc., ofBoston, is furnishing the Central Square with its following article appeared in a recent booklet of thebusiness enterprises of the City of Lynn: Lynns most modern and recently erected house of amuse-ment, the Central Square Theater, was opened to the public. COL. WILLARD G. STANTON on December 19th last. Springing into immediate popular-ity, its history since that date can be summed up in a fewwords: Unbounded success, limited only by the fact thatthe auditorium, spacious as it is, is often inadequate to holdthe many seeking admission. To describe this beautifulrecreation resort would be only to tell what all the amuse-ment seekers of our city well know. Artistic in decorations,complete in every modern equipment both front and back ofstage, and particularly comfortable in its 1,500 seating privi-leges, the Central Square is decidedly a model theater of itsclass and metropolitan in every feature. Likewise, also, critical and discriminate patrons of thetheater in our city are well aware of the character of theentertainments daily provided here—first-class in all respects,the very best obtainable, regardless of expense. Vaudevilleas seen in leading Boston and New York houses, movingpictures of foremost American


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectmotionpictures, booky