STRAND THEATRE.
" Tol'able David," which is now showing at the Strand Theatre, features the hero of "Way Down East" in the role of David Kinimon, who comes of a stock which is short on college education but long on family ties. David, a* driver and guardian of the Government mail, finds himself face to face with three outlaws. David keeps' his trust, and when the long afternoon is over he has avenged his family of an injury, and wiped out for ever the brand that the village had put upon him. The other star picture, "Lend Me Your Name," stars Harold Lockwood, and is taken from the novel by Francis Perry Elliott. Rather than live with his domineering wife, who is coming from England to join him, Lord Gillegh, a henpecked dyspeptic, finds a man in his rooms who closely resembles him. He proposes that they should change places, and, ignorant of Sophronia, the intruder accepts the proposition. Complications follow in quick succession, and become more perplexing when the Earl and Ellis, his double, meet the same girl. "Hard Locks and Love Taps," Mack Sennett's latest comedy, is being screened, as well as the final and most exciting episode of "The Lure of the Circus," and the latest gazette.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CIII, Issue 141, 17 June 1922, Page 9
Word Count
209STRAND THEATRE. Evening Post, Volume CIII, Issue 141, 17 June 1922, Page 9
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