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AMUSEMENTS.

McLEAN’S PICTURES.

•WHERE THE PAA’EALENT ENDS” - Fill DAY. lie sweats he will have her for his own, this lithe, fresh, beautiful girl. He knows that the caressing breezes must he whispering love dreams to lonely Matilda, daughter of a South Seas .Missionary. And his will he the advantage. What matter than he already had a native wife Things happen in the South Seas! AYhat matter that his rum shop has earned the enmity of .Matilda’s father 1- To have this girl, he woidd seal the doors of his den of vice, he would do anything. To Gregson, the trader, the way seems clear, hut is ii The answer is in " Where the Pavement Ends,” the latest Rex Ingram production for Aletro at the Princess Theatre on Friday evening. Locked in furious battle, they spin from side to side in the dawn-touched room—the man she loves and the treacherous trader who swore he would have her for his own. AlaLilda, daughter of a missionary, almost frantic from her night-long experience in a tropical storm, is stunned into immobility as she watches the struggle between these two men of the South Seas, fighting silently, with passionate hate, for life and love. Chairs are smashed, a table tips over, a gun flashes in the half light of early morning. Her lover or his enemy? A two-reel Alack Sonnet comedy, an American Oaotte, and travelogue will support this magnificent star. Saturday.—Harry Carey in "Desert Driven.” It’s a whopper of a picture.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HOG19250701.2.8

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Hokitika Guardian, 1 July 1925, Page 1

Word count
Tapeke kupu
248

AMUSEMENTS. Hokitika Guardian, 1 July 1925, Page 1

AMUSEMENTS. Hokitika Guardian, 1 July 1925, Page 1

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