QUEEN'S THEATRE.
, "The Gold Rush," the great Chaplin production, is showing for its third week at the Queen's Theatre, and continues to draw large attendances. Charlie Chap'in is introduced complete with bag-gy, trousers, extensive footwear, and the inevitable cane, plodding across the snow in a dangerous pass which lead* to the little .man's land of hope—the Alaskan goldfields. A warm welcome awaits Charlie in a cabin where he is forced by the blizzard to seek shelter. He does not appreciate it, however, for at the first sound the owner has retired to a corner of the hut and aimed a business-like rifle at the opening door: The situation is relieved when ''Big Jim," a burly friend-in-need,, is literally; blown into the cabin. As a, multi-miljionaire Charlie wins the prettiest girl in Alaska for his wife.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CXI, Issue 34, 9 February 1926, Page 2
Word Count
135QUEEN'S THEATRE. Evening Post, Volume CXI, Issue 34, 9 February 1926, Page 2
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