AMUSEMENTS.
o HIS MAJESTY’S THEATRE. To-night a completely now programme, details of which will be found in the advertisement, will lie submitted at His Majesty's Theatre, some of the dramatic films promising to be of more than ordinary merit. r J bo now projecting machine, recently purchased by Madame Bernard, was not ready in time for use on Saturday evening, but was given a trial last night, when it was found to work excellently. It will be used to..night, and the management state that in future the pictures at the tueatro will Co produced absolutely without a suggestion of a flicker. west’sTictuhes. On Wednesday evening next at 8 o’clock, West’s will screen another change of programme at the Town Hall, when productions of dramatic stories, scenic, industrial, comic, and topical events will be given. ROYAL AND BIOGRAPH PICTURES. The perfection to which every phase of life and every aspect of nature can now lie faithfully ana attractively illustrated by the medium of tho cinematograph lias made moving pictures tho most popular, the most entertaining, the most varied, and the most instructive, and, at tho same time, the cheapest form of amusement that science has yet accomplished. The picture show is an entertainment for all classes, and consequently it has become a necessary adjunct to the overy-day life of every city and town where the advances of civilisation have left their imprint. Messrs cylinders and Crust, proprietors, respectively, of tho two above-men-tioned well-known picture entertainments, ary again to visit Stratford tomorrow night with complete change of programme, and a picture to lie screen ed which undoubtedly will appeal to a big proportion of the"community is the funeral of the late Cardinal Moran. 1 he picture starts wttli a magnificent photograph of tho late Cardinal. The ceremonies at Manly are next depict - ed, followed by scenes in the Sydney Cathedral. These are all of an intensely interesting nature, and the pictures of the precession show that all Sydney participated in intense grief at tho loss of tho head of the Roman Catholic Church in Australia. The crowds were immense—in fact, it is said that never in Sydney have larger crowds assembled.
Permanent link to this item
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/STEP19110904.2.23
Bibliographic details
Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXI, Issue 16, 4 September 1911, Page 5
Word Count
359AMUSEMENTS. Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXI, Issue 16, 4 September 1911, Page 5
Using This Item
Copyright undetermined – untraced rights owner. For advice on reproduction of material from this newspaper, please refer to the Copyright guide.