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205 CLASS 8— Dramas
REEL NO. TITLE
nipped by her father (Edeson), who operates a salmon cannery, sending her East and to Europe.
Braveheart is selected by the tribe to be educated in the East in order to present their case for legal redress, since they have been driven away from their salmon fishing by the cannery people. At college, he becomes the star football hero and when Lillian returns to the college town, their attachment is renewed, but bitterly resented by her rascally brother (Housman), who sells the signals of the football team to their rivals and accuses Braveheart of the treachery. Expelled from college on suspicion, he is judged guilty by his home tribe, branded and cast out, but continues to fight through the courts for the rights of his tribe and finally wins their case before the Supreme Court after an impassioned appeal.
Coincident with the verdict, a treacherous section of the tribe nearly undoes the good work by kidnapping Edeson and his daughter. Troops are ordered to the reservation and a bloody fight is only averted by Braveheart's quick resourcefulness in intercepting the cavalry and later rescuing Edeson and his daughter from the Indians. Braveheart returns to his tribe as a hero, vindicated by the confession of Lillian's brother, and the play ends in the only way it could.
4946 feet standard length — on 5 reels Rental $7.50
8173 Code SENO The Yankee Clipper DeMille
Featuring William Boyd, Elinor Faire, John Miljan, Walter Long and Junior Coghlan
An epic of 1850, graphically portraying an incident in the friendly rivalry between England and the United States for the maritime supremacy of the seas and control of the important Chinese tea trade.
The captains of the rival sailing ships, "Lord of the Isles," and "Yankee Clipper," meet in a Chinese port and, each with a cargo of tea, set sail simultaneously to race to Boston. By a strange chance, Elinor, daughter of the English skipper, and Miljan, her fiance, are on the American ship when the starting signal is given and are obliged to sail with the vessel. On the way, as well as before leaving China, the despicable character of Miljan becomes more and more apparent, as does the love of Boyd, the Yankee captain, for Elinor.
The rival vessels become separated and the "Lord of the Isles" escapes a fierce typhoon which nearly wrecks the "Yankee Clipper." The storm scenes are terrific and will hold any audience spellbound. During the storm, the main water tank springs a leak, losing most of its contents. As a result, the men are put on short rations of water and after a few days mutiny develops, which is quelled by the ship's officers with great difficulty. Miljan is caught after stealing some of the precious supply of water and is summarily dealt with by the crew.
Carrying all possible sail, even to the crew's blankets, the "Yankee
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