“THE WHITE DOVE.”
‘".The White DoSre,” the Robertson-Cole special production, in which Jtl. B. Warner will be seen at the Everybody’s and King Edward Theatres to-day teaches in most convincing fashion that the older a man grows,' the more inclined he is to excuse the shortcomings of humanity, and to look ior its good rather than for its bad. This is shown through two leading characters, one of whom is a man of 60 or more, and the other his son of half his age. The eon (played by H. B. Warner) in most dramatic fashion, is shocked by the revelation that his late wife was untrue to him. Thereupon his faith in all humanity -becomes shaken, and he leaves his home with the fear that his little daughter is not his own, and that tho woman he is growing to love probably would turn out to be the same sort as his own wife. The supporting programme is of unique interest, and includes the latest Co-operative Weekly, the latest Pathc Review, “All in a Day,” a Roland Pathe comedy, and tho second chapter of the ’’Silent Avenger” serial.
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Bibliographic details
Otago Daily Times, Issue 18319, 9 August 1921, Page 6
Word Count
189“THE WHITE DOVE.” Otago Daily Times, Issue 18319, 9 August 1921, Page 6
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