AMUSEMENTS.
HIS MAJESTY’S THEATRE. The attraction above all attractions at His Majesty’s Theatre to-night is undoubtedly the Balkan War film. Previous pictures have served' to stimulate an interest in the series, but the film to he screened to-night differs from its predecessors in that it shows the actual warfare in all its grim reality. The pictures are mostly taken from the Montenegrin lines. This tine film is supported by numerous good pictures, chief among which is a splendid industrial, showing the manufacture of glass bottles, a good scenic, with Bruges as its subject, and a Civil War drama, “Under the Flag of Truce.” “The reformation of Kid Hogan” is a drama that should not fail to interest. Kid Hogan, a claimant for the light weight championship, is Hushed with success. His sweetheart, a factory girl, bogs him to give up the fight and settle down in some steady business, but be indignantly refuses. On the night of his big fight Ids sweetheart’s mother is taken ill and when the kid arrives to tell the news of his success ho hursts into the room where ins sweetheart is weeping over her dead mother’s body. He is ord( "- cd from the room and in hie mis; starts on a career of dissipation, and bis sweetheart joins the Salvation Army. See the film for the adeedi .1 finish of the reformation of Kid Hogan.
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Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXV, Issue 47, 24 February 1913, Page 7
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231AMUSEMENTS. Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXV, Issue 47, 24 February 1913, Page 7
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