A strongly dramatic picture, breathing the rugged, semi-savage spirit of the plains, the Indians and the cowboys. There is a fight with Indians, resulting in several deaths, protection by a friendly Indian, and toward the last a battle on horseback with bowie knives, between the friendly Indian and a rough, unreasonable cowboy. The white man falls dead, and the Indian dies soon afterward. The strength of the picture lies in its dramatic situations and its graphic representation of the wild, unrestrained life of the open plains. Like others of Selig's Western dramas, it is lifelike, and suggestive in its general effects. Photographically the picture is clear and the acting is convincing. - The Moving Picture World, January 8, 1910
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