MOUNT ALBERT THEATRE
OPENING TO-NIGHT In the fever-haunted swamps of the Brazilian penal colony, along the Amazon, quinine is the greatest boon. Nothing can take its place, and no dope victim ever craved a drug more than does the man whose pulses are heating in the mad tumult of swamp sickness. This fact is brought out forcibly in “Framed,” Milton Sills’s newest First National starring picture, which will be presented at the opening of the Mount Albert Theatre tonight. Sills is sent to the penal colony for a crime of which he is innocent. There I 1 he meets the man responsible for his downfall, and the latter is dying of fever. Sills lias I the only available quinine, and gives ! it to him. But he dies in spite of tht drug, which has come too late to sav< 1 him. Contrite, he confesses all, anc i sills is freed. Charles Gerrard plays the part of the villain with con sum- | mate skill. Natalie Kingston is th< i leading woman of the story.
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Sun (Auckland), Volume I, Issue 203, 16 November 1927, Page 15
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173MOUNT ALBERT THEATRE Sun (Auckland), Volume I, Issue 203, 16 November 1927, Page 15
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