Descriptive Catalogue of Pathescope De Luxe Special Features (1922)

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REEL NO. TITLE PRODUCER tracted to Miss Petticoats, takes her about, and thereby makes Mrs. Worth Courtleigh more jealous. She spread a false report of the girl's parentage and her relations with Guy, the result being that Miss Petticoats is snubbed by the women and is distressed. Mrs. Worth Courtleigh gets Guy to take her to a questionable place, and then leads the public to believe Miss Petticoats was with him. Her aged grandfather learns of the news through an anonymous letter and the shock kills him. Mrs. Copeland and Miss Petticoats, shunned by villagers, go to France, where Miss Petticoats finds her paternal grandfather and is acknowledged by him just before his death. She comes into a title and a fortune and, returning, becomes a queen of society. Harding, a young minister, had been in love with her since childhood and had always bitterly resented slurs cast upon her. He had preached the sermon that drove Guy and Mrs. Worth Courtleigh from the village and afterwards resigned his pulpit to devote himself to social welfare work. Before her death, Mrs. Worth Courtleigh confesses her part in injuring Miss Petticoats and in demoralizing Guy. The latter tries in vain to renew his friendship with Miss Petticoats, but is scorned, and she takes Harding "for better or worse." Rental, $10.00 per night. DA-1014-23 "Tinsel" World Featuring Kitty Gordon and Muriel Ostriche The plot has to do with Princess Sylvia Carzoni, divorced wife of Richard Carmichael, who prefers a gay social life to the quiet, prosaic existence her husband has chosen. Their daughter Ruth has been brought up by her father in ignorance of her mother's existence and with the idea that the latter divorced Carmichael to marry another man. Sylvia's only real interest in life is her daughter and, after repeated requests, Carmichael grants Sylvia the permission to have her daughter with her. Ruth's mother's idea is that her daughter should not be brought up in a conservatory but that she should learn the ways of the world and thus be enabled to take care of herself. In her new environment, under the careful guidance of her mother, Ruth is given opportunity to meet various types of men, and although she unwittingly gets herself into rather a serious predicament, Sylvia comes to the rescue in the nick of time. When the day comes to return to her father, Ruth decides she can not leave her mother. She recalls, however, her mother having told her that Carmichael was the only man she ever truly loved, and with this in mind the daughter proceeds to reunite her parents. Ruth then turns to Bobby Woodward, her childhood sweetheart with whom she is really in love. Rental, $10.00 per night. [28]