Exhibitors Herald (Apr-Jun 1922)

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Released December 4, 1922 rHE greatest South Sea story ever written 1 and Robert Louis Stevenson's last work, (ere is a property that is one of the most valuple in all fiction, and ideally suited for motion Ictures. |eprge Melford will put into it all the splendor tat characterized his "Sheik". The cast is a )mplete roster of great names headed by Li la ee; James Kirkwood, whose work in George itzmaurice's "The Man from Home" has estab>hed him as a greater favorite than ever; eorge Fawcett and Raymond Hatton. he story deals with three men, a drifter, a aster mariner and a shady London clerk who nd on a mysterious island where they find a hite man and his daughter. The three form a •nspiracy of villainy but the hero is finally won \KT from "the ebb tide in man's affairs" by his lal love for the beautiful girl. is a story of splendid emotional dramatic ■id romantic value and a real special in everv ayAdaptation by LORN A MOOS JES: L LAS kY PRESENTS A production George Melford Robert Louis Stevenson's 1 *6bb Tide" \ith Lila Lee, James Kirkwood, Raymond Hatton, George Fawcett