"The Lizard", a camp loafer, learns about this and informs Black Dan Bryce, who decides to rob Philip with his gang.
Unable to find any trace of his wife, Philip thinks she has left him, so he sells his property and goes abroad with Edna.
He and Edna visit the school and are reunited with Sylvia[6][7][8] The film was shot in and around Sydney[10] using many of the cast who had appeared in Longford's earlier movies.
The acting and mountings show an improvement on the previous pictures; plainly the Spencer co. means to hold its own with Yankee and European.
The principal sensations are the blasting explosion, the hero being gradually drowned by the rising tide, and a big fire scene.
"[16] However the critic from the Perth Sunday Times thought the movie should have ended where the hero was rescued from the flood: Instead of which, probably having a lot more inoffensive celluloid left, Spencer extended the drama to maudlin limits and completely spoiled the story.
It seems to this print as if the original photographer had grown weary of his work and had gone home and left his understudy to do the fag end of the fake.