“STEP ON IT!” ON SATURDAY.
Vic Collins was a typical rancher, and hated horse thieves as bad as any. However, he fell in love with “Miss Hamilton of Kansas City,” a newcomer in the Western community, and stayed in love with her in spite cf pretty strong convictions that she was the head of a “rustlin’ gang” stealing hundreds of his cattle. He just naturally couldn’t believe the evidence of his eyes, even when she hit him over the head with a gunbutt while he was battling with a man he knew to be a cattle stealer. He depended a lot on Lafe Brownell, ! horse thief catcher from Texas, to'
round up the gang, and Brownell told him Miss Hamilton was implicated. Catching a thief making love to the girl, seeing her with the gang several times, and then facing her and seeing her Smile as he was marked ‘‘next to be shot” TTy The gang, were some of the ways in which his faith was tested, and make the Universal release “Step On It” a top-notch thriller. At the Maoriland on Saturday. HOLIDAY PICTURES. The enterprising management has arranged for a special holiday programme for next week. On Monday a thrilling drama, “The Kentuckians,”
will head the bill. There are many powerful incidents in this story, which tells of a long and bitter struggle of politics and romance in America. On Tuesday night a sterling superfeature Fox programme will be screened at ordinary prices.
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Shannon News, 29 December 1922, Page 3
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245“STEP ON IT!” ON SATURDAY. Shannon News, 29 December 1922, Page 3
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