The Moving Picture Weekly (1919-1922)

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38 The Moving Picture Weekly May 27, 1922 Make Up Your Own Ads for Vic Collins Hated Cattle Thieves as He Hated Rattlesnakes, But He Happened to Fall in Love With the Prettiest Thief in the Game! See Hoot Gibson and Barbara Bedford in "Step On It!" His Eyes and His Ears Gave Him Evidence That She Wasn't Anything But a Petty Cattle Thief, But His Heart Said the Evidence Was N. G. It's Hoot Gibson in "Step on It!" With Barbara Bedford Opposite Him. if ere 's An Idea for Movie Fans — " STEP ON IT! " Hoot Gibson .n 'Step On It' A UNIVERSAL ATTRACTION He Had Loved Her When the Whole World Said She Was No Good, a Cattle Thief ! She Had Hit Him Over the Head with a Gun When He Was Fighting Another Man. .But Still He Came On His Knees With the Old Words, "I Love YouP' See Hoot Gibson in "Step On It!" — and Barbara Bedford With Him. IDEAL THEATRE ALL NEXT WEEK (Specimen ad composed of 2-column cut and advertising display line) Trying Single-Handed to Protect His Great Herds from Cattle Thieves, Vic Collins Came to Close Quarters With Two of Them, a Man and a Woman. He Thought the Woman Was Somebody He Knew — But When She Cracked Him Over the Head With a Gun Butt He Wasn't Sure About It! "Step On It!" Is a Universal Action Drama X If the World Says a Woman Is No Good, It Sometimes Makes a Man Love Her All the More Madly, as Vic Collins Does in "Step On It!" -a? The Master of Broad Acres and Great Herds, Vic Collins Was in the Hands of the Cattle Thieves He Had Tried to Catch. The Man He Had Thought Was His Friend Was Their Leader and the Woman He Loved Spoke from Their Midst: "Better Take Him. Into the Burning Barn — That's Better Than Shooting Him." See Hoot Gibson in the Most Amazing Picture of His Career, "Step On ItF' FOR THE HERALD VIC COLLINS had lost a thousand cattle. They had been rustled mysteriously in the night to the edge of a deep sluiceway — and there the trail ended Lafe Brownell led the posse that searched for the thieves. He told Vic Collins that "Miss Hamilton of Kansas City," the telegraph operator at Barr's Crossing, was implicated. Vic didn't want to believe that and didn't. Two days later he stood at dawn in a canyon. He had been captured, beaten by the gang of stealers. As they stood around him his anger knew no bounds when he saw that Lafe Brownell was their leader. At the same time he felt a keen pain at the sight of Miss Hamilton among them. But not all was peaceful among the gang. "What's your game?" snarled Lafe Brownell at the girl. "Can't you see?" she asked demurely, slipping into the arms of the Beau Brummell of the gang, who held her close with a proud air. As this bitter blow struck home to Vic Collins' heart, he was surprised to see Lafe Brownell half-doubting the girl. Who, in all this crooked mess, was the thief, and who was honest? The girl might be Find out in Hoot Gibson's Universal starring vehicle, "Step On It!" at this theatre next .