Unfinished: Harold Lloyd, worst to best
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- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe Daniels
- DirectorVincent BryanHal RoachStarsHarold LloydBebe Daniels'Snub' PollardHarold is a penniless youth who picks up a wealthy and intoxicated friend. They do the city cabarets together, and Harold abstracts most of his friend's money, only to lose it later.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold LloydBebe Daniels'Snub' PollardHarold and his boss get in a lively rivalry over the new stenographer.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsOur hero visits the opera, is mistaken for the manager and is treated like royalty until the deception is uncovered.
- StarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsThe adventures of a penniless young man, who finds himself in a house full of crooks.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsA young man's dreams are shaken by his father's insistence that he get a job and go to work. He becomes a waiter in a restaurant, and has some funny adventures.
- DirectorAlfred J. GouldingStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsHarold appears at the farm looking for work and afraid he will find it. He does, and finally out-wits a pair of burglars who are trying to rob the safe, and as his reward he gets the girl.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsHarold and Snub take a trip on a runaway airplane and drop off on a native island. Here they have some amusing adventures with the fierce men and beautiful women of the place.
- DirectorAlfred J. GouldingStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsHarold is a henpecked husband who suddenly makes a change of front and asserts himself, much to his wife's astonishment.
- DirectorAlfred J. GouldingStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsOur hero is a barber in a small Mexican town, wooing a local senorita, against the wishes of her mother.
- DirectorGilbert PrattStarsHarold LloydBebe DanielsSammy BrooksHarold must have $5,000 to win the girl and manages to get it out of her father in a novel way.
- StarsHarold LloydBebe Daniels'Snub' PollardHarold appears as an active young man who gets a job as waiter in a restaurant. Disaster overtakes him and he is hurried off to jail at the close.
- DirectorGilbert PrattStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsHarold is employed in a millinery shop.
- DirectorGilbert PrattStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsRoomers in a boarding house break the rules and are caught cooking if their room. A frantic run-in with the landlady ensues.
- DirectorAlfred J. GouldingStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsOur hero has a dream, while in the trenches at the front, that he is in Berlin rescuing a Red Cross nurse from the hands of the Kaiser and his henchmen.
- DirectorGilbert PrattStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsAt a masquerade ball, our hero, in a tramp costume, is arrested when they think he is a real hobo. In the meantime, an actual hobo, at the party, is treated like a guest.
- DirectorAlfred J. GouldingStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsHarold has trouble with his father and is ordered out of the house. He then becomes a waiter and pulls off some highly amusing stunts at a swell dinner party. He performs a "Julian Eltinge," and appears as a buxom, blithe and debonair young woman. The comedy woven about the new role is sidesplitting, especially when the "he-hussy" is being wooed by the father of his sweetheart.
- DirectorAlfred J. GouldingStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsOur hero is a janitor in a old age rest home who actually runs the place.
- DirectorAlfred J. GouldingStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsHarold runs the soft-drink counter at a seaside resort.
- DirectorGilbert PrattStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe Daniels
- DirectorGilbert PrattStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsThis film is considered lost, therefore the plot is unknown.
- DirectorBilly GilbertGilbert PrattStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsA wonderful burlesque of the various crystal gazers, fortune tellers, and other fakers in whom some people repose such confidence. Farina, the crystal gazer, tells Harold he is going to meet a beautiful blonde, a millionairess. He proceeds from then on to have one adventure after another.
- StarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsLuke, running a chili parlor, inherits a million dollars and joins high society.
- StarsHarold LloydBebe Daniels'Snub' PollardLuke operates a sanatarium, which he has naturally staffed with a bevy of attractive nurses.
- StarsHarold LloydBebe Daniels'Snub' PollardLuke is an inept detective who follows the wrong man to a seaside hotel.
- StarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsAn Englishman and his valet tour the American West.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsShipwrecked sailors make their way to land and throw the Sultan's harem into all sorts of confusion.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsWith only a hammer Luke can soon take the mote out of any motor, and as the handy man around a garage he shows himself to be some fixer, while Snub has to have a lot of tools to do his work too. We have with us also Miss Speedboy, played by Bebe Daniels, and Bud Jamison as the garage owner adds the finishing touch. The climax comes when the garage catches on fire, and Luke puts it out by pouring all over it the gasoline which he sells at $1 a drop. "It is better to fight fire with than water itself," says he.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold LloydBebe Daniels'Snub' Pollard
- StarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsAn Englishman and his valet have adventures in the American West.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe Daniels
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold LloydBebe Daniels'Snub' Pollard
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold LloydBebe Daniels'Snub' PollardLuke and his pal find existence in prison so amusing that they depart with regrets.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold LloydBebe Daniels'Snub' PollardAudiences may think Luke with his St. Vitus movement never sleeps, but they are dead wrong. Like Bill Shakespeare Luke "blesses the man who first invented sleep." After a screamingly comical search for slumber he finally hits the hay and sleeps without moving to Brooklyn.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold LloydBebe Daniels'Snub' PollardAs a detective, Luke is after a gang of crooks who are robbing party guests of their jewels.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold LloydBebe Daniels'Snub' PollardLuke, working in a fireworks factory.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold LloydBebe Daniels'Snub' PollardLuke crashes a society affair, thereby livening things up.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold LloydBebe Daniels'Snub' Pollard
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold LloydBebe Daniels'Snub' Pollard
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold LloydBebe Daniels'Snub' PollardWhen a doctor is forced, because of a lack of patients, to dismiss his pretty nurse, Luke comes to the rescue and uses his flivver to supply a ready supply of accident cases.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold LloydBebe Daniels'Snub' Pollard
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsLuke begins his preparedness campaign with musical notes deliberately unfriendly, and as "Colonel Earache," acoustic rebel, he will raise a continual bombardment of laughs.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold LloydBebe Daniels'Snub' Pollard
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold LloydBebe Daniels'Snub' Pollard
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold LloydBebe Daniels'Snub' PollardLuke and his sidekick steal a trolley car and create havoc for passengers.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsLuke is the guardian of the taximeter. Seated on his benzine buggy's throne he "rips her into high" and describes some geometrical figures not recognized by Newton in his laws of gravitation.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold LloydBebe Daniels'Snub' PollardLuke and Snub become deep-dyed race track villains and try to brace up "Little Eva," a sagging specimen of horse flesh whose future is all behind her.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsLuke, a mechanic, stands in for a famous violinist. At first, his bad manners and rough behavior are accepted as the eccentricities of genius. Then matters get out of hand.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsLuke and friends are crowded into his two-seater, out for a ride in the country. Hayhem ensues when his party of fifteen encounters some 'fashionable folk.'
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsUnhappy in his job as a butler (although he likes wearing a dress suit), Luke gets involved with burglars and the law.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsLuke runs a beanery, in which the bad service, terrible food and filthy conditions lead to hi-jinx.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsLuke is trapped and bound by a group of terrorists.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsLuke is a movie actor who falls asleep and dreams that he and his fellow actors are school children again.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold LloydBebe Daniels'Snub' PollardLuke dreams that he has a double. One 'Luke' gets in all kinds of trouble, while the other pays the consequences.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsLuke opens a circus, but when local officials discover that his side-show attractions are fakes, trouble ensues.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsLuke runs a bunco booking agency.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardEarl MohanBlacksmith Luke and his boss pursue their rival who has taken away the girl. Antics in a mud puddle follow.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardGene MarshLuke's courting of Maizie Nut is interrupted by a villain.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold LloydBebe Daniels'Snub' PollardHi-jinx at a fire in a Chinese laundry.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsOut west, Luke changes clothes with an outlaw and proceeds into town. Of course, he is mistaken for the wanted man and a chase ensues.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsLuke happens into a spiritualist's shop where he is smitten by her daughter. He decides to stick around and take a job there.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsA day at the seaside chasing a lost child.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsLonesome Luke at the San Diego Exposition.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold LloydBebe Daniels'Snub' Pollard
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold LloydBebe Daniels'Snub' PollardLuke is a bellboy at a fancy club.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold LloydBebe Daniels'Snub' PollardLuke is a pickpocket, hiding out from the cops in a dive in the slum part of town. He later winds up in a boxing match which again brings the law on his tail.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardGene MarshThis offering tells the tale of one, Oscar Weeban, a fellow deeply in love with a certain Maisie. He has promised to take her to the Garbage Gentlemen's Rally, that annual society event of the small town in which it is their fortune to reside, and she sends him a note to this effect. He is a rank outsider, but manages to inject himself into the spirit of the affair and enters into the sport of the occasion with a vim. It is at this event that the ashes throwing contest is held every year, and garbage men from all sections, trained to the minute, flock to the party to compete. The contest is at its height and one of the experts is trying for a world's record when Oscar crosses the range. Of course, he and Maisie manage to get in the way of the winning throw and spoil the record which is about to be made. But what cares he? Despite the boob he made of himself at this elite affair, Maisie falls for him hard, after he has written some poetry for her, and the picture winds up with Oscar in the charming role of bridegroom.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardGene MarshLuke lifts a wallet from a golfer and thereby gains entry to a golf course. Mayhem ensues.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardGene MarshLucas and Larkin, his running mate, after looking for a job for some time, finally land one in a photographer's shop and immediately start to take possession of the place. They rule supreme in their own inimitable way until a bespectacled college graduate arrives to have his diploma, and incidentally himself, photographed. He looks rather harmless with his bone-rimmed goggles, but when Lucas and Larkin attempt to take his feet off the table where he has placed them for safekeeping, he shows them a few new ones in the manly art of self-defense. Then Harry Hardguy makes his appearance. He looks more dangerous than the college boy, and makes outlaw the rule that looks are deceiving. He literally cleans out the place, and the last we see of Lucas and Larkin is when they are both making a bee-line for the street and safety.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold LloydGene Marsh'Snub' PollardLuke lives the life of a millionaire until it is discovered that a mistake has been made and his inheritance belongs to someone else.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsSourball Joe gets the "can" for sassing the tenants, and Easy Otis supplants him. But the latter does not know an awful lot of the art of "janitoring" and soon gets into many and various jams with the people upstairs. Multifarious are the tasks assigned to him and he knows naught of any of them. Then, to cap the climax, the janitor who received his passports comes back to start something. He figures that to change the gas and water pipes would be a good stunt and he does it. Upstairs, a fair dame wants her gas stove fixed, but when she turns it on, out come many streams of water. A love-sick lad across the hall contemplates suicide by gas, but he too, gets water instead. And so it goes until the whole place is in an uproar. Then they start for Otis, but he believes discretion is the better part of valor and takes it on the run.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsLonesome Luke and his accessory, Moke Morpheus, are discovered in bellhop uniform, blissfully dozing on a bench in the lobby of the Bughouse Hotel. Comes a guest, and the desk clerk rings a bellhop. But, in the words of Aristotle, or Ted or someone, "you can ring and you can ring, but the house is boarded up." The clink of a few pieces of silver seems to touch some dormant chord in the boys' subconscious minds, and they immediately get on the job. Moke, after seeing the guest to his room, tries, of course, to hide the fact that a tip would be in order, and because of his modesty flies quickly from the room with the kindly aid of the roomer's leather encased pedal extremities. Luke escorts a girl guest to her room, and is starting quite a flirtation with her, when Moke, whose motto is "pass nothing up" approaches them and tells Luke that there is a tall tip awaiting him in the new guest's room. Luke goes, and the guest learns how foolish and wasteful it is to break a perfectly good water pitcher on a bellhop's head. Luke then staggers back to Moke, and sends him with neatness and dispatch through a door and into the lap of a retiring guest. With the arrival of a roughneck bouncer and his pretty wife, a fascinating free-for-all is started, in which Luke, with a fire hose, gallantly stands off the concerted attack of the whole household.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsLuke, working in a shoe store, has diffuculty keeping his mind on business whenever a pretty girl is on the scene.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold LloydGene MarshJack SpinksFarm youth goes to college, pursues the pretty co-eds and joins a fraternity.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold LloydGene MarshJack SpinksLuke has had a hard time. Try as he may, he cannot land a job. But there is one more place in the building where he might get something to do and he goes there. The owner of the place hires him, on the spot, for there's a reason. He has a big date with Florrie for that afternoon and he has just received a letter from his college chum asking that he meet his young daughter at the station at noon, just in time to spoil his party. He passes the buck to Luke and orders him to get on the job. The sole way Luke has of identifying the child is by means of "W.M." on her suitcase. He goes to the station, but the only person with such initials on her bag is a "dream." He reconnoiters around for a bit, but finally braces up and asks if she is the girl. She is, and Luke thinks of the time he can have on the expense money which has been given him. They have soda water, a wild boat ride, and do all the amusements in the vicinity before they get back to the office. Meanwhile, the employer has been spending money hand over fist and ends up by "falling" for an expensive hat which Florrie admires. Then he returns to his office and makes out his expense account and finds, when Luke returns, that the latter's account is much smaller and that he had had the better looking lady.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold LloydGene MarshJack SpinksMaisie Orpe is a dispenser of victuals in a second rate "beanery," and is the light of the lives of several of the town "swells. But Luke de Fluke, an all-round gay lad, and Shorty Magee, the local tough nut, seem to lead the field in Maisie's blue orbs. This finally causes strained diplomatic relations between the pair, and a duel to the death is arranged. Each contestant writes to the object of his attentions that if she wants to see his rival she must be on hand at dawn the next day. Then both choose the same second. The dawn of the next day sees the two rivals at the appointed place with the one second to attend to both. The duel starts as per schedule, but while they are fighting their hardest they look up and see Maisie going off with the second. This, of course, causes a cessation of hostilities and both look longingly in the direction of the loving couple. Then Luke's sword catches in the ground and he has to resort to his feet to gain the decision. This gives Shorty the chance he has been looking for and he hurls a bomb at his adversary and blows him up. Luke comes down after a while, however, and they, too, call off the contest through mutual sympathy over the loss of Maisie, who has gone with the second. But later on Shorty lands the "bird," and the way he does it and the anguish of Luke are a fitting climax to this comedy.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsLuke, stranded on a desert island, becomes chief of the natives. When he pursues the affections of a pretty white girl, he runs afoul of her sweetheart and has to swim back home.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsAs a baggage handler at a terminal, Luke is led on a merry chase by a billy goat.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsLuke attempts to sell books to a businessman and his wife.
- DirectorHal RoachJ. Farrell MacDonaldStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsLuke, a street tramp, is taken to a dance contest by a pretty millionairess, but when he is ejected, he returns with a gun and wreaks havoc.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold Lloyd'Snub' PollardBebe DanielsWorking as a pastry chef, Luke steals a watch from a customer, which results in a wild police chase throughout the store.
- DirectorGilbert P. HamiltonLorimer JohnstonStarsJ. Warren KerriganVera SissonGeorge PeriolatO'Rourke, soldier of fortune and hero of many wars, finds himself in Paris without funds. In a spirit of recklessness, he pawns a valuable watch given him by a grateful republic for services rendered. With the proceeds he enters a prominent Parisian restaurant to dine. There he attracts the attention of the Princess de Grandlieu, her husband, the Prince, and her legal advisor, M. Adolph Chambret. While there an incident occurs which earns the hatred of her advisor, who is in love with her. Later O'Rourke repairs to a gambling house, adjacent to the restaurant. The Princess and party go to a ball at the Hotel Ritz. As usual, the young adventurer attempts to increase his fortune and, as usual, he loses all. Meantime, the Princess receives a note, by messenger, from her brother, telling her that he is in danger of being killed in the desert of Sahara, where he is attempting to establish an Empire against the Princess' wishes. The note also informs her that the Prince, her husband, is at the bottom of it all, as his fortune will revert to her at his death and thus the Prince will gain control of more money. Out of loyalty to her brother, the Princess plans a rescue party which she hopes to have O'Rourke lead. Her adviser is ordered to search him out and bring him to her. Chambret finds O'Rourke in the gambling house, broke. He insults him by referring to a rose received from the Princess. O'Rourke, not waiting for explanations, knocks Chambret down and speeds away. The Princess, on her way home, is insulted by the Prince, who endeavors to learn the contents of the note she has received. Rourke hears her scream for help; he pursues in a taxicab, effects a rescue and takes the Princess home. There he is told of the mission which she wants him to undertake. Of course the adventurer agrees to her wish much to the discomfiture of the Prince and Chambret.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold LloydJames T. KelleyGene MarshPete is a discontented hostler. Hostlers are always discontented but Pete is a little more so. In fact, he is so sick and tired of his job as the mule's chambermaid that he is fast becoming desperate. He gives Maud her morning "Massage" and is interrupted by his "steady," a queen of the avenue, and a movie fan. She "coaches" and "wheedles" him in the naturally gentle, persuasive way of her class, in this wise: "Aw, loosen up. Separate. Give yourself another frisk," etc. As Pete finds himself unable to supply his "best" with the wherewithal to attend a movie, his discouragement becomes despair. He sees a way out when a hostler to humans, namely a bootblack, asks him to take care of his stand for a while. A rush of business causes Pete to do unaccountable, ludicrous things, one of which is to put a fat lady's shoe into a box of flowers taken by a dandy to his best girl. When Pete discovers his awful mistake it is too late to remedy it. He he thinks he can get away with it. The lady's stocking is white so he decides to blacken it and so cover her foot and his terrible blunder. He gets tripped up by the foot of the law and has a hard time explaining between the wrath of the triple Venus and the expostulations of the slim dude. However, his dark cloud has a "silver" lining in the form of the bootblack's till, which lining he "borrows" to satisfy his charmer's desire for the movies. His tale of woe, accompanied by a symphony of clicking silver, finds in her a ready and even eager listener and their troubles slip gently from them as they head at last for the movies.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold LloydTony, a little newsboy, witnesses the advent of a dainty Miss, who disturbs his otherwise carefree and happy-go-lucky existence. Falling asleep on his pile of newspapers, he dreams that the little Miss breaks down the barrier of wealth and gives him a hearty welcome. She invites him for a ride in her large touring car and his happiness is supreme. Driving to the seashore, they soon get into mischief. Tony, after plaguing one of the life-guards, becomes greatly aggravated when he sees that the saver of human lives has become his rival. He soon eliminates his massive rival, however, who seeks solace from another bathing nymph. Miss Ann Teak also hies herself to the "briny," and decides to go in for a swim. The two mischievous little imps cause Miss Ann Teak great embarrassment by taking her clothes and transferring them to another bath house. In the meantime, they re-enter the touring machine and are driven back to the little girl's home, where Tony is separated from her by the stern governess who drives him away. He is tormented by a gang of young rowdies, and in the excitement of his dream he awakes and realizes that the awakening has been a cruel one.
- DirectorHal RoachStarsHarold LloydJames T. KelleyGene MarshPunctual Pete prepares the "Shaved in Silence" shop for the day's business. He is as handy as a man with five thumbs. Gertie, almost a soubrette, looking for a job, decides that she is willing to try anything once. Seeing a sign in the barber shop window advertising for a lady barber she beats it home and brushes up on the tonsorial art. Hastening back to the shop, she passes herself off as an experienced lady barber and lands the job. With fifteen minutes' experience she is ready to meet all comers. Pat Rooney, a son of the Emerald Isle, decided to be "duded up." Gertie tackles him and gets the decision. Josh, the farmer, with a beard like a mattress, is the next victim. He also "gets his." A good slogan for this barber shop would be, "All hope abandon ye who enter here." The patrons generally make their exit much quicker than their entrance. Gertie, chancing to get a flash at the bank-roll of a "live one," grabs the roll and beats for a healthier territory.
- StarsJ. Warren KerriganVera SissonGeorge PeriolatDave and Phillip Hull, twins, are totally different in character. Dave is steady, slow to hate and true in love. Phillip, the gay and popular gambler, is perhaps more lovable on the surface, but shifty and flare-tempered underneath. Dave loves little Meg, daughter of Hardy, a cattle rustler. Dave does not know that the father is a cattle rustler, however. Phillip shoots a gambler in a quarrel and makes his escape to his brother's ranch. Here, he meets Meg and immediately begins courting her. She yields to him and he promises to marry her. Meanwhile the gambler dies and the sheriff and posse search for Phillip. Dave has learned of his brother's refusal to marry Meg. Determined that right shall be done, Dave goes for the minister. The father too has learned of the case, but thinks Dave the man. He decides to kill him and starts for the ranch. Dave returns to his home, only to find the posse on his brother's trail. He offers to exchange clothes with Phillip and submit to arrest in his brother's place, providing the guilty man will marry the girl. Phillip agrees. Dave, dressed as his brother, slips from the window to draw pursuit. Meg's father approaches and shoots to kill through the open window at Phillip, whom he supposes is Dave. Dave is brought back and the tangle is straightened out with the sad wedding of Meg and the true-hearted Dave.
- StarsJ. Warren KerriganCleo MadisonWilliam WorthingtonCrooknose is a child of the slums. The slums his mother, dark alleys his father and his family is composed of the crook, the gambler, the demi-monde and the policeman. But despite these family connections Crooknose is organically a decent fellow. He believes in a "square deal." He insists on a "square deal" and as a result he commands the respect, which comes of fear of the gamblers with whom he associates. One day while Crooknose is a party in a quiet game of poker another incident of importance to this story is taking place in a nearby crockery store. Katie, a young saleswoman, and Crooknose's idol, sells a vase to a customer. The buyer of the merchandise asserts that she gave the saleswoman $50 bill. Katie says no and she is discharged. While seeking employment Katie falls into the hands of a procuress who offers her the position of housekeeper for two girl artists. Unsuspecting of the nature of the employment. Katie accepts the offer. The procuress leads Katie to her establishment. The innocent girl only too soon discovers the danger which threatens her. When she attempts to leave the infamous dive she finds that she is a prisoner and that a common person is her jailer. In the meantime Crooknose catches one of the players cheating. He draws his revolver, pockets the money on the table, which is rightfully his, and retreats from the room, holding the other gamblers at bay with his firearm. The proprietor of the house telephones to a number of confederates downstairs and instructs them to rob Crooknose of his winnings. Crooknose is "wise" to their game and he leaves the building by way of the roof. A hot chase over the tops of buildings ensues. In looking for an opportunity to reach the street Crooknose peers through a skylight and sees Katie, the object of his secret love, struggling with the pander. He jumps through the skylight and goes to her rescue. The gamblers follow and a one-sided battle begins. Crooknose is all but vanquished when Bullneck Gannon, a policeman and an old acquaintance of Crooknose, and an admirer of Katie, breaks into the room and turns tide of battle against the gamblers. There is a little scene in the hospital that night, when Katie visits Crooknose and the policeman, which suggests a future romance between Crooknose and the girl.
- DirectorJ. Farrell MacDonaldStarsJ. Warren KerriganWilliam WaltersEdith BostwickAt Burke's death, the bulk of his fortune goes to his only son, baby Rory, who goes into the keeping of his uncle, Sir Everett, who has a son Rory's age. That his own son might inherit the fortune Everett causes Rory to be kidnapped. Twenty years later show Sir Everett's son grown up to be a cad of dissolute habits, but wealthy as a result of the stolen inheritance. Rory has grown to manhood in the home of a poor widow and her daughter Eileen and is in love with peasant girl Kathleen. Sir Everett's son wrongs Rory's foster sister. She dies and Rory swears vengeance upon the wrongdoer. However, vengeance is taken out of his hands. The kidnapper gets into an altercation with the son and kills him. Rory finds the body, is accused of the murder and is convicted and condemned to die. The conscience-stricken kidnapper confesses to a priest--a good friend of Rory's. The priest cannot dishonor the sanctity of the confessional by making the confession public, so he goes to Rory's cell and changes clothes with the young man. Rory escapes, but is speedily recaptured. The time for his execution arrives. The death-bell tolls out mournfully. It arouses the conscience-stricken kidnapper to action. He rushes to the gallows and arrives an instant before Rory is to be hanged. He confesses that the crime was his. Rory is liberated. The tolling of the death-bell also arouses the conscience of Sir Everett. He confesses the kidnapping and restores Rory to his inheritance.
- DirectorHenry LehrmanStarsFred MaceNick CogleyDot FarleyAlgie secures a job on the force. A new chief of police is appointed, who wears a soft hat and a frock coat. A woman reports the theft of her watch by a thief with a soft hat and a frock coat and Algie goes out looking for the thief. He meets the chief of police and arrests him after a chase and a fight, and handcuffs his prisoner to a telegraph pole while he goes for assistance. The Captain's consternation can be imagined when he arrives with his men and finds his chief a prisoner. Algie gets bounced,
- DirectorMack SennettStarsFord SterlingMabel NormandRube MillerSmith's chum is a very poor Baron. Smith and the Baron are invited to a ball, and the Baron, not having evening clothes of his own, "borrows" Smith's dress suit. He is having the time of his life when Smith arrives, thoroughly angry, and taking the Baron in a room takes the clothes away from him. The Baron is in a terrible predicament, dodging around from room to room, as people intrude upon his hiding places. He tries to hide his face with a handkerchief, and a lady catches a glimpse of him as he dives under a bed. She screams in terror, thinking he is a mad man, and then the poor Baron is chased all over the house. Someone telephones for the police and they assist in the capture and lead him away,
- DirectorHenry LehrmanStarsFred MaceJewel CarmenCharles AveryHarold is in love with Ethel Parks, but finds scant favor with her father; Parks always manages to get his daughter away from her admirer. One day Harold makes bold to call at the house, but the reception he receives shows him plainly that he will never win the old man's favor. Harold goes to see his friend the dentist. While there, Parks comes in, suffering with an aching tooth and accompanied by Ethel. Harold jams him down into the chair and applies the gas and soon Parks is in slumberland. Harold persuades the dentist to take Ethel to the minister's house and await him there. On the way the dentist, himself a suitor, convinces Ethel that she should marry him and the knot is tied. When Harold rushes up he is coldly met by the couple, who inform him that they are married, and Harold vents his spleen on the little dentist.
- DirectorJ. Searle DawleyStarsBen F. WilsonLaura SawyerJessie McAllisterA Dutch romance. Hulda and Heintz are bashful, giggling lovers, hut their spooning opportunities are few, as well as being forbidden. One day they get a chance to spoon, but the village gossip sees them and hastens to Hulda's mother, exaggerating what she saw. Hulda gets a curtain lecture, but pleads for Heintz. Heintz is then allowed to call. The lovers become engaged. As the wedding day approaches Hulda dons her wedding dress and goes to show it to her lame grandmother, who cannot be present at the ceremony. The village gossip's husband is a dike-tender. A great storm is raging while he lies drunk. The land is in danger of flood. Hulda disappears and the village gossip starts another scandal about her eloping with a minister. When the wedding hour arrives Hulda is missing. After a search she is found, bedraggled and covered with mud. While the dike-tender lay drunk she had been stopping a hole in the dike with her hare hands and thereby saves the country.