MAORILAND THEATRE.
BUCK JONES IN A THRILLER.
Just what freaks a cowboy who goes to the citv indulges himself in is shown in “A Man Four-Square,” latest Buck Jones picture due in Shannon on Saturday. . ■ Jones has a marvellous party m ms Chicago apartment, in which a living, room is changed into a Hawaiian beach scene with sand, palms, Hawaiian musicians, hula girls, and everything that could be found on "he beach, except water. After years in the “great open spaces, ’ ’ Jones decides to have a change. After all the hubbub, excitement and play are over he finds out that his heart is really in the West and that that is where he really belongs, where his true friends are. It is then, that he bids adieu to the East, if Chicago can truly be called “East,” and treks back to the broad-rolling and wide-stretching West. “THE DEMON.” Big, brawny, handsome ana young was Dane Gordon, the mysterious rescuer of one of “Bat” Jackson’s henchmen. Dane joined the gang of ruffians who swept down on defenceless ranchers in Slocum Valley, burning their property and wasting their fields, hopeful of buying it up at their own price. They believed him to be an escaped convict. He did his work well and no one questioned him about his past. But one day one of the “big bosses” heard something about their new mar. who worked with such fury his buddies called him “The Demon.” They planted dynamite in a narrow mountain pass to get rid of him. Down the mountainside came Dane, heading the sheriff’s posse! A woman’s shadow suddenly hung over the path. A rifle shot rang out —' and deatli was momentarily forestalled, for one of the'greatest battles of the range country then resulted. And one of the finest romances, too. It’s all in Jack Hoxie’s big Blue Streak Western, “The Demon,” and it ccmes to the Maoriland Tiieatre on Monday.
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Shannon News, 11 February 1927, Page 3
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320MAORILAND THEATRE. Shannon News, 11 February 1927, Page 3
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