CAPITOL PICTURES.
NGATEA, TO-NIGHT. THE SILVER HORDE. Way up in the frozen stretches of Alaska, nine-tenths of a man’s law rest in the barrel of a gun, and the flinty hardness of bare fists. Men are made or unmade in a clash of fists — a sudden “draw” of irons. Cunning and trickery to them is the weapon of the snake—and answered only by the vehement spit of a well-aimed shot. ■ So wßen. Marsh with his Eastern polish and Wall Street millions hit the Kalvik train to gain control of the great salmon traps, he found his cunning pitted against the might and courage of the Great North. And the struggle that followed resounded with the crash of mighty fists —vibrated with the unleashed passions of strong men fighting for fortune and the love of a woman. Such is the theme of Rex. Beach’s famous story, “The Silver Horde,” which is to be screened at Ngatea this evening.
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Hauraki Plains Gazette, Volume XXXIV, Issue 4532, 26 February 1923, Page 2
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157CAPITOL PICTURES. Hauraki Plains Gazette, Volume XXXIV, Issue 4532, 26 February 1923, Page 2
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