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1-34 of 34
- A cartoon version of the Little Tramp character gets thrown off the boxcar in a cow town. He seeks employment as a farm hand, but is disappointed to learn that hard work is involved.
- This is a combination of Hy Mayer cartoons and travel pictures which go to make up a travel comedy. Architecture typical of China is shown, a pagoda, a street scene, with soldiers marching through an arch. Cartoons show how Europe taught China to hold the gun, and how China learned to drive the white man out of his country with the European gun. Cartoons caricaturing the fashions follow. The jinrikisha is contrasted with the auto. The children are shown with their living toys, birds, fish, etc. A cartoon shows that a very good boy may someday have a rhinoceros. Market scenes and restaurants in the open air follow. Trades, the shoemaker and barber, are illustrated, with comic comments in the form of cartoons. Chinese theater scenes come next. The interiors of the theaters are shown and the strange antics of the country traveling troupes. The music reminds Mayer of his janitor turning on the steam. The first Chinese skyscraper is shown. When the Chinese cut off their queues they freed themselves from backwardness and bigotry. A smiling Chinese face closes the picture.
- Charlie Chaplin, in animated cartoon form, visits the beach, has some fun at the expense of a female bather and gets into trouble with Mike the candy cane-loving cop.
- Wandering figure of Charlie (known from the Chaplin films). After visiting a second-hand bookshop, Charlie dreams that he has kidnapped the Queen of Sheba. Yet there is no beautiful woman behind the veil of this Turkish lady.
- Hy Mayer takes us to the top of the world and shows us how the people there resemble the animals of their own country. Wonderful views of the ice fields, of the snowy ranges, and of the herds of reindeer, of which the Alaskan Eskimos are learning from our government, to take proper care, are interspersed with amusing drawings in Hy Mayer's well-known style. At the end some remarkable effects of silhouette drawings which dissolve into the real landscape, and vice versa, keep up wondering how these almost magic effects are obtained.
- This is a combination of a cartoon by Hy Mayer and a travel picture in Palestine. There are various scenes and at times the moving picture is stopped and a cartoon by Mr. Mayer faded in. The famous Wall of Walls is shown, the different types of people, a Mohamedan maiden with her veil, a sacred parade, the well into which Joseph was cast by his brethren and the place of Christ's nativity.
- The climate of Colombo, in Ceylon, is very hot, and the costumes of the natives suit it. Lace makers use the same patterns that their ancestors used. We see a Buddhist procession with its dancers in their strange headdresses. Hy Mayer then suggests in a cartoon that this more picturesque headgear should be adopted on Broadway. The foliage of Ceylon is wonderful, and the variety of trees immense. We see the elephants' bathroom, and then Hy Mayer suggests the use of an elephant as a shower bath. Native dancing to the sound of a tom-tom is the suggestion for other cartoons.
- Zippy buys a hen, thinking that he will have fresh eggs every day. He does everything that he can think of, but she refuses to lay an egg. Six months later a professor sees the hen, which has grown fat under Zippy's treatment. He recognizes it as a rare specimen of an almost extinct breed. He wishes to buy it and will give $1,000. Zippy meets him and invites him to dinner. This is a fine time to get the worth of the hen, he thinks. It is killed and served for dinner. When he hears that he has lost the thousand he has a fit.