Descriptive Catalogue of Kodascope Library 16mm Motion Pictures: Sixth Edition (1936)

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CLASS 8— Dramas 167 steal the furs. The Fox shoots Gabrielie, but the latter rolls down a snow bank and crawls away badly wounded while the Fox is hiding the furs. In the follow^ing blizzard he is found by wolves who are about to tear him to pieces when Rin-tin-tin, the wolf-dog, arrives and fights the pack leader for the prey. He kills the wolf and then starts for Gabrielie, who, weak from his wound, fights feebly and falls in a faint. The dog leaps upon him, but suddenly instinct — the inborn instinct of his ancestors — tells him that this is Man, his friend. And so instead of hurting him he stays near to guard him. Later the Fox returns to make sure that Gabrielie is dead and seeing him alive shoots at him again. He is about to finish him with a knife when the dog leaps to the attack and almost kills him before the Fox succeeds in making his escape. How Gabrielie finally succeeds in making his way back to the post; how Galloway again attempts to injure him; how the dog and the Fox again meet in deadly encounter; how the net of justice gradually tightens about Galloway; how the dog finally kills the Fox and brings about the capture of Galloway and the happy union of Gabrielie and Felice, will have to be seen to be appreciated. It's the greatest dog story ever written, the hero is a magnificent animal with almost human intelligence. And the ending — another surprise — will also delight you. A clean, fine, thrilling and satisfying picture that will delight every audience. 2316 feet — on 6 reels Rental $4.50 8042 Code SAGI The Little Church Around the Corner Warner Bros. Featuring Claire Windsor, Pauline Starke, Kenneth Harlan, Hobert Bosworth, Alec Francis, Winter Hall and Walter Long A Screen Classic showing the triumph of supreme Christian Faith. David Graham, whose father was killed in the great coal mine, is a boy of deep religious feeling to which he gives expression in Sunday meetings of the children who listen spellbound to his boyish sermons until a bad boy shatters their faith because David cannot perform the miracle of making a deaf and dumb girl talk through the faith he expounds. He is educated by the mine owner and accepts the pastorate of a fashionable church in the city. He is deeply in love with the mine owner's daughter who reciprocates his affection, but his conscience continually urges him to go back to his people of the mines. The miners feel that proper precautions are not being taken for their safety and send a delegation which interrupts a reception being given in the city by the mine owner. David, who is a guest, takes the part of the miner delegation in an effort to persuade the owner to improve the conditions in his mine. Unsuccessful in this, he leaves the city and goes back to take his place among the miners just as a cave-in at the mine occurs. Then follows a long series of tremendously dramatic scenes in the mine, showing those imprisoned gradually succumbing to the lack of air and the frantic efforts of the rescuers extending over many hours of time to release them. No stronger sustained suspense can be imagined than is portrayed during this trying ordeal. Its effect upon the families of the miners, upon the officers and owmer of the mine and upon the workers, is heart-gripping to every spectator. The final rescue finds hardly a dry eye in the audience. The supreme thrill comes when the miners move in force to attack the office and the owner. David Graham pleads from the doorway for peaceful methods Take regular weekly service