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- We unhesitatingly offer this as the greatest marine picture ever made. It was secured by special concessions, on September 6th, 1902, and shows the fastest steam yacht in the world, Charles R. Flint's "Arrow" making a world's record one-mile run on the Hudson River, near Irvington. The yacht was photographed during her entire run over the mile course. She first appears as a small speck on the horizon, but quickly grows to a full sized craft, plowing through the water at the rate of nearly a mile a minute.
- An outlaw is in love with a Mexican planter's daughter. Young Deer. the Chief of an Indian tribe is also in love with her. While going to the stream for water the girl is followed by the outlaw. The Indian fills her pail. On her way home she is accosted by the outlaw. Her scream brings the Indian to the spat. He fights the outlaw and the latter swears revenge. Determined to marry the girl, he kidnaps her and brings her to a lonely hut. She crawls to the roof, and sends a message wound around an arrow into the camp, and the Indian comes at once to liberate her. He attacks the outlaw, and a fierce fight ensues, out of which the Indian comes victorious. He places the girl upon a fast horse and brings her safely home to her parents. The happy father offers money to the Indian which he proudly refuses, and asks for the girl's hand. Moved by the pleadings of his daughter the planter gives his consent to the marriage.
- When Slim, a cowboy, defends White Swan, an Indian girl, from Red, another cowboy, and takes her away, he gains Red's dislike. They reach the Indian camp and are told what has happened. Slim pacifies them and leaves. Gray Wolf, who is in love with White Swan, becomes jealous and is ordered from the camp by the girl's father. Red and Gray Wolf get together and their combined confidences make them enemies to Slim. Red shows papers to Gray Wolf, which tell that money is to be gained if the Indian chief could be induced to sell his land, and that Slim must be disposed of. The chief is brought to the woods by Wolf, where they sit and drink, the squaw watching them. Red, Wolf and the chief enter a tavern, where papers are read, and interpreted incorrectly by Gray Wolf to the chief. When the time to sign comes, Slim rushes in and tears the papers to pieces. He then clears the tavern and sits alone to think. Red is about to shoot him, when he himself is shot. Slim is trying to figure out who did it, when the squaw says she did. Slim kisses her, when he realizes it was for his safety she did it, and she leaves the tavern. Gray Wolf recuses Slim of the deed, but no proof can be established. Gray Wolf manages to get possession of the papers Red had, and offers them to the squaw as a bribe to come to him, when revealing that he knows she killed Red. After White Swan goes with him, he takes the papers away, and leaves her alone. She tries to escape, and finding it impossible, ties a message to an arrow and shoots it into midair. It happens to fall at Slim's feet, when he is leaving town, and he goes to her rescue. Wolf returns, end a fight follows. Slim is victorious in every way, and Gray Wolf's duplicity made known when White Swan shows papers hidden in his bosom.
- Sir Daniel Brackley attempts to force his ward, Joanna, to marry Lord Shoreby, but receiving news of an impending battle, is obliged to hurry to the front. To prevent Joanna's escaping him, he takes her with him, disguised as a boy. Young Dick Shelton (Sir Daniel's nephew) brings reinforcements to Sir Daniel, and thinking Joanna a boy, assists her to escape. Joanna and Dick reach home, closely followed by Sir Daniel, who, becoming suspicious of Dick, plans to have him killed. This plan is overheard by Joanna, who warns Dick of his danger. In the excitement Dick discovers that his supposed boy friend is none other than Joanna, a childhood playmate. They renew their former friendship, which now develops into mutual love, but are rudely interrupted by the approach of Sir Daniel's hired assassins. Dick escapes and hastens to the woods, where he joins the "Black Arrows," a band of outlaws, deadly enemies of Sir Daniel. Choosing Will Lawless, one of their number as companion, they start out to rescue Joanna, disguised as monks. Dick and Lawless, through the help of Joanna's companion, manage to enter the palace unnoticed, and for a brief moment Dick and Joanna are clasped in loving embrace, only to lose each other when she is led to the hall for the marriage with Lord Shoreby. But Lawless saves the day by piercing Lord Shoreby with a black arrow as the ceremony is about to begin. Dick escapes and manages to save the Duke of Gloucester from an attack of Sir Daniel's soldiers. Gloucester thanks Dick warmly and by Dick's advice attacks Shoreby town. Dick is given charge of the main position and manages to hold it against the terrific attacks of the Lancaster army. For his gallant conduct Dick is knighted. Dick and Lawless learn that Sir Daniel and his household have fled and thus escaped the terrible carnage. They soon overtake them and make short work of his remaining soldiers. Sir Daniel begs Dick's forgiveness, which he readily grants, but when his back is turned Sir Daniel attempts to kill him, only to be pierced by the last black arrow let fly by Will Lawless. Joanna and Dick, now Sir Richard, are happily married with the blessing of the Duke of Gloucester, who resumes his march amid the cheers of the wedding party.
- There is no documentation that any film bearing this title was either produced or distributed by Biograph or General or directed by D.W. Griffith at this time. Production may have been suspended before completion or else the film may have been released under a different title. An entirely different film, The Flaming Arrows, was, however released by Pathe in 1911 (q.v.).
- There is a plot between some white men and a renegade Indian to steal certain Indian lands. This plot is foiled by a cowpuncher, who thus incurs the enmity of the plotters. One of them attempts to assassinate him, but the would-be assassin is shot by an Indian maid just in the nick of time. She escapes and the cowpuncher is held for murder. The little redskin is hiding in a cave by one of her tribe, who wants to see the cowpuncher hung. She writes a message, however, on a portion of her clothing, ties it to an arrow and shoots the arrow into space. This is found and leads to the ultimate release of the unfortunate cowpuncher.
- An escaped convict saves a girl from tramps. Her father poses as a highwayman to save him from recapture.
- In the army post the soldiers are all being vaccinated. Over behind one of the tents the sergeant's little son has a little Indian girl in tow, and opening his daddy's kit, he extracts an arrow from it and proceeds to vaccinate the little Indian girl, much to her discomfort. Nothing much is thought of the incident when discovered, until the next day, when the Indian girl dies, the arrow being poisoned at the end. The little Indian victim is buried on the edge of a grove not far from the army post. The next day the little chap who has caused the trouble is playing near the scene of the burial with his little sister. The mother of the Indian child visits her baby's grave. She steals the little girl, and running to the Indian camp, claims a life for a life. The little white girl is about to be burned to death when the soldiers, summoned from the post by the little boy, arrive and rescue her.
- Polly visits a ranch in the west and the cowboys all fall in love with her, one in particular, but he is too bashful to tell her so. On the day she departs for her home in the east they are attacked by Indians on the way to the station and a great fight ensues, in which the bashful cowboy proves a hero. All finishes in the way most people like to have a story finish, with everybody happy.
- Dan Cupid, the playful elf, has been caught napping and his arrows stolen by an evil spirit. With the change in ownership, many amusing situations arise, for young and old succumb to the baleful influence of the demon until Cupid awakens and succeeds in righting the mischief which has been wrought.
- The Indians take to the war path, and a scout, learning of the fact, warns all the settlers in the region, who immediately go to the stockade. A note is sent to the Indians, demanding that they return to their reservation, but the chief's reply to this communication is an arrow, which means, in the language of the primitive men, defiance. A fight ensues at the stockade, but ultimately the settlers win, and a little orphan Indian boy, who appears throughout the film, is adopted by the settlers.
- This story is one of the picturesque and ever-sad Indian legends that survive, even at this date, in the valley of Yosemite. Yosemite, the valley in which the young brave Kos-Su-Kah and his beautiful sweetheart, Tee-Hee-Nay, met their strange fate, and straightaway became part of the appealing mythology of that wonderful valley. The Indians of Yosemite believe that the spirits of this couple still wander over the meadows of the "Lost Arrow." Upon their betrothal day, Kos-Su-Kah resolved to go hunting on the heights nearby, in order to supply game for the wedding feast. The young brave promised his wife to be that he would shoot an arrow from the cliff as a token of his success with the deer hunt, a feather was to be bound to the arrow for each buck that he had brought down. But in shooting the arrow Kos-Su-Kah's foot slipped on the ledge and he was dashed to the ledge far below. Tee-Hee-Nay, becoming impatient, climbed up, and discovering his body, summoned his young companions and had them lower her by means of a rope of tamarack boughs to the body of her loved one. She was able to bring the body to the top, but when she saw that her lover was dead she threw herself weeping upon his breast and died. The awestruck Indians, realizing the great love and perfect one between the two, made them honored among memories.
- Bailey, the squaw man, is panning gold on his claim, watched by White Eagle, his half-breed son, and Chief Black Eagle, who is attached to both father and son. Flying Bird, the mother of White Eagle, has dinner ready and comes out to call the men in. The chief goes unwillingly. The Apaches declare war upon Black Eagle and his tribe, by sending a bundle of arrows, tied with a snake skin, to Black Eagle. The latter defies him by breaking one of the arrows and returning it to the Apache chief. Black Eagle plans an ambush for the Apaches. He takes Bailey with him, and Flying Bird and the boy. White Eagle, are sent to the chief's camp, where they are welcomed. The Apaches fall into the ambush and are routed, but Bailey is killed. Flying Bird is inconsolable and when she is able to get away she goes to Bailey's last resting place and kills herself. Chief Black Eagle sends White Eagle to college. On his return White Eagle again adopts the costume and the customs of the tribe. A new frontier post is established in the desert. It excites the anger of the Indians. The colonel of the fort has his daughter, Dorothy, with him. She is sought in marriage by one Smalley, but she has no love for him. He is revengeful and allies himself to Pasedo, a Mexican. Dorothy goes riding. Her horse gets away from her, and White Eagle, who is out in the open, reading, sees her and assists her back to the fort. Later White Eagle, who has been appointed a chief, invites the garrison to attend their games. While the Indians and soldiers are engaged in the sport of the games, Smalley and Pasedo sneak off and, desiring to create trouble, shoot an Indian. The Indian is found and brought on, and White Eagle, with Indian cunning, compares the mud on the Indian's feet to that on the feet of the men present. He fastens the crime on Smalley, who is put under guard. The next day the colonel receives a message asking that a detachment of cavalry be sent to protect a gold train. Several squads ride out. With the assistance of Pasedo, Smalley escapes. The two get whiskey and take it to the Indians, who go on the warpath. Black Eagle and White Eagle are disgusted and go and warn the fort. The colonel sees the gravity of the situation and sends an orderly to overtake the cavalry and bring them back. The orderly finally reaches them and they turn back. Smalley abducts Dorothy and rides away to the Indian camp with her. They meet Moon Face, the hostile chief, and Dorothy convinces him that it was Smalley who killed the Indian. They make short work of Smalley, but send Dorothy to the Indian camp. The colonel finds a small handkerchief outside the fort and identifies it as his daughter's. He is in despair. White Eagle offers to go and rescue her, and tells them a flaming arrow shall be the signal of success. White Eagle rescues Dorothy, but is overtaken and they take refuge in a hut, where they hold the redskins at bay until their ammunition gives out. The cavalry, on their way back to the fort, see the Indians attacking the hut and, scenting trouble, rout them and take White Eagle and Dorothy back with them. Moon Face, unaware of the rescue of Dorothy, goes to the fort and demands surrender. He threatens that otherwise he will burn the white girl. The distracted colonel has but one course. He refuses and the battle starts. In the midst of it a flaming arrow is seen in the air, and the colonel knows that Dorothy is safe and on her way. The fort is hard pressed, but the returning cavalry gives relief and Dorothy is restored to her father's arms, and White Eagle receives the congratulations of everyone.
- Rushing Wind, a prehistoric warrior, is strong and skilled in every accomplishment the Indian prizes except archery. He grieves because he cannot compete with the other young braves in forwarding the winged shaft, for this one weakness makes him the laughing stock in his village. Break of Day, who loves him devotedly, persuades him to invoke the aid of the Medicine Man, her father, to eliminate his one weakness. The magician gives Rushing Wind a charmed arrow that never misses its mark, but which will, if lost, bring misfortune. Having made the conquest complete through this medium, Rushing Wind takes the maiden to wife. In time, he grows suspicious, observing her embroidering, in secret, an elaborate leathern shirt. She intends to surprise her husband with this gift, but he misconstrues the secrecy, believing she has a lover. One day as she is drifting alone in her canoe, he shoots her with the charmed arrow. The little boat hearing the body of Break of Day, pierced by the arrow, floats down the river to the sea and is cast on the shore. Returning to his wigwam, Rushing Wind finds the shirt, and observing it closely, sees that it is embroidered with his own totem. Then great grief strikes him for her fidelity and he sets out to find the body of his lost one. He dies in the quest, but his soul goes on, continues the search through the centuries. This is characterized by a series of remarkable dissolves showing the building of a mission, the immigrant train, and then the view of a modern city. In later life, the reincarnated Rushing Wind finds the modern Break of Day alone upon the beach where the canoe was cast up by the sea. She picks up from the sands the charmed arrow of the lost centuries and thus the pair are reunited.
- The bright spring sun fluttered on the silvery hair of an old man as he slowly plodded along in the wake of his plow. Suddenly his plow struck an obstacle. He stopped to remove it. It was a human skull. Brushing aside the surrounding soil he brought to light other human bones. Embedded in them was an Indian arrowhead. Memories of a half century back were awakened and the hands of time reversed. From out of the past came the hordes of ruthless redskins and the never ending stream of home-seekers from the east. And in his reverie was reenacted the legend of the "Arrow's Tongue." Here is the legend: The fame of Sacashu, the daughter of the Dacotab's, had spread far beyond the confines of her own nation. The Indian maiden had pledged her love to Wa-hu-ha. But on an evil day her happiness was turned into despair. For a jug of rum her father, Thief Black Horse, tore her from the arms of Wa-hu-ha and sold her to a cruel and heartless whiskey runner. Fifteen years elapsed. Sacashu had led a hard life. A son has been born to her. He was now fourteen years of age. At this time the old Chief Black Horse died and the silent, grim-visaged Wa-hu-ha was elected head of his people. He led his braves to take revenge on the white race. Wa-hu-ha determined that the man who had stolen his betrothed should be his first sacrifice. He approached the cabin, and with a fiendish yell his braves burst into it. The whiskey runner fell a victim to the tomahawk. Sacashu grasped a gun to continue the battle when she recognized Wa-hu-ha. He clapped her to his breast. The half-breed boy who was in the attic where the whiskey was stored hearing the struggles below, in his fright accidentally smashed a jug of whiskey. The yellow fluid trickled down between the chinks in the boards of the ceiling. A drop fell down upon the hand of Wa-hu-ha; it was whiskey. He darted up the ladder followed by the rest. The Indians abandoned themselves to a drunken orgy. The boy crawled through the roof window and leaping from it, jumped upon his father's white pony and started off. Quick as a flash an arrow from Wa-hu-ha's bow flew through the air, struck the boy and buried its tip deep in his back. On dashed the frenzied steel, his dying rider clinging desperately, the fatal arrow waving its warning. Wa-hu-ha, his savage nature thoroughly aroused by rum, set the cabin on fire and carried Sacashu away. She, thinking her boy still in the burning cabin pleaded with the chief to save him, but he was deaf to her appeal. The Indians in their blood lust attacked with fury a wagon train. Sacashu, escaping from the Indians, seized a war club, mounted a horse and returned to her old home, now in ashes. Believing that her boy had perished in the flames, she swore vengeance on her former lover. Mounting the top of the hill, overlooking the circle of death surrounding the settlers, she sighted Wa-hu-ha. She crept stealthily up behind him, and with a stunning blow she wreaked a mother's vengeance. Sacashu then darted for the ranks of the white men for protection. Mistaking her for an enemy they shot her. On the top of a knoll a government scout saw a flying boy mounted on a white horse and knew too well what it meant. Turning about he galloped to the fort. The troops were called to arms and dashed across the plain to the scene of the battle. The settlers fought with the fury of despair, but the savages were steadily circling closer. The white men were preparing to die when over the crest of a little hill the Stars and Stripes appeared. The battle raged between the soldiers and the Indians. The Redskins leaving the prairie strewn with their dead, retreated precipitately. But far away the white horse sped onward, the dying boy and the fateful arrow spreading with silent eloquence their dread message. At last the rider fell lifeless to the ground. The Arrow's Tongue had spoken, as it spoke fifty years later to the old farmer whose plow turned it up with the whitened bones of Sacashu's son.
- Gray Feather, daughter of the Blind Arrow Maker, is in love with White Arrow, son of the Sioux war chief. Gray Feather visits "The Gray Woman of Many Sorrows," the fortune teller of the Sioux, and is warned by a premonition of danger, and tries to persuade her lover not to go on the usual hunt. White Arrow is wounded and Little Elk, believing that White Arrow would die before aid could reach him from his people, determines to apply to a passing wagon train for assistance. The settlers, fearing to gain the enmity of the Sioux, determine to delay the train until White Arrow can be restored to his people. Little Elk, who carried White Arrow to the wagon train, sees an approaching band of Crow hostiles. He tells the settlers to park the wagon train until he can come to their aid with his own people. A fierce fight follows in and around the wagon train, in which the Crows are practically all killed. It is with much gratitude that the settlers bid farewell to their red men friends while White Arrow and Little Elk return to their own people.
- Lo has forgotten the days of his forefathers. But time was when love was a thing to place on one's altars besides the gods of harvest and rain and all-life, when it was a thing to be purchased with "being," not "having," as to-day. So Hemanova, purifying himself with a seven days' fast, sees a vision of the One Woman and goes in search of her. He finds her, Waupena. daughter of the arrow-maker. Sakuruta also loves the girl and asks for her hand. Meanwhile Hemanova ties wampum to his horse and drives him out into the wilderness, trusting that the gods will guide the animal to the girl. Waupena finds the horse and her heart tells her that she loves the unknown one. Hemanova arrives in the village, but the old arrowmaker cannot choose between the two suitors for his daughter's hand. He decides on the arrow test. From a high peak he shoots an arrow into the valley below and the lovers hunt for it. Sakuruta, who has duplicated the arrow, manages to get the girl. A year passes. Hemanova, still faithful, searches for the lost arrow. His sweetheart's horse finds the arrow in a sandbank and brings the arrow to her. She knows the deceit of her husband and goes to the mountaintop. There she meets Hemanova. Sakuruta finds them together the two men fight. Sakuruta is thrown over the cliff and the picture fades with the heroine in her lover's arms.
- An Indian warrior is revived from a spell cast upon him by a medicine man, and he takes his revenge on other Indians who thought he was dead.
- After many years of peace, the Indians become restless and decide to make war upon the white man. Black Partridge, the chief, goes to Fort Dearborn, to return to the Commandant the symbol of peace which has passed between them, saying that the Indians are crying for white blood. The Commandant makes light of the warning, and Rawlins, a black sheep among the officers, even attacks Singing Bird, the daughter of Black Partridge, on one of her visits to the fort. The members of the tribe, who are against the whites, stir the feelings of the others by impassioned oratory, and scouts are sent to encircle the fort and watch the movements of the inhabitants. They report that no notice has been taken of the warning, and that the soldiers are not preparing. So they gather their forces and fall upon the whites. Singing Bird rushes ahead of them to warn the whites that the Indians are upon them. The cunning savages offer safe conduct to the soldiers, who accept it. As they march out of the fort on their way to Fort Wayne in accordance with the orders of their superior officer, the Indians fall upon them. Nearly all are killed, but Singing Bird shows a way to escape to her favorite among the officers and his wife. She assists them to the river, where they take to a canoe. The remnant of the survivors is finally rescued by soldiers from Fort Wayne, but Singing Bird is fatally wounded in a last encounter with her people. She willingly gives her life for the officer whom she loves, but who has a white wife.
- A young woman tries to find out the reason behind why all of her female ancestors have been killed before they reach their 21st birthday.
- While attending Columbia University in New York, a young Sioux Indian named Sky Fire falls in love with Martha Randolph, a pretty young white girl. Things take a turn for the worse when a rejected suitor tells Martha's father that Sky Fire is an Indian, and the father promptly refuses Martha permission to bet married. Sky Fire returns to the west, but his troubles follow him--the man who revealed his identity follows him and murders Martha's guardian, leading to Martha's seeking Sky Fire's protection and a shocking conclusion for all concerned..
- In France, an inspector solves the poisoning of his rich aunt.
- Oswald is leading a wagons train across the plains when it is attacked by a war party of Indians in this excellent Oswald the Lucky Rabbit cartoon.
- It's the Florida party season for heiresses, with both Oklahoma oil heiress Hortense Burke-Meyers and New York face cream heiress Daisy Appleby in the state. And where the single American heiresses are, the European bachelor set wanting their hand in marriage are close at hand. While nouveau riche, uncouth Hortense courts the attention, the excitement and the European bachelors clamoring after her, Daisy is more reclusive, wanting to stay out of the party scene and limelight by hiding aboard her yacht. Daisy desperately wants to marry for love, and not marry because it makes good print (and thus sell more face cream for her father), especially as she knows those European men are only after her money. So Daisy offers a proposition to Johnny Jones, a Florida Star newspaper reporter she befriends: marry her out of convenience. What she wants is that marriage license to dissuade all those European suitors while she quietly searches for that true love, a man with simple, American values. In turn, she knows that Johnny doesn't want her money or a society life, all he wanting is a quiet place to write his novel and a small stipend equal to his meager newspaper wage just to live on his own terms. In entering into this agreement, Daisy doesn't count on her father's PR man Jorgenson trying to make Johnny into a society man he doesn't want to be. Daisy is also hiding two secrets from Johnny, one of those secrets being that she has found the man she truly loves: him. She is afraid that if she reveals the other bigger secret, she may never get the opportunity to make him fall in love with her.
- The king tries to marry off his daughter for money, but Robin Hood has other plans.
- Pete Smith produces an affidavit on the main title that all of Howard Hill's archery shots were performed with out camera tricks. Hill's archery feats in this short include a contest in skeet-shooting against a shot-gun expert, and Hill shatters the flying targets before his competitor can fire his gun. Another trick Hill performs is shooting any arrow high in the arrow that arches down and hits a bulls-eye on a target lying flat on the ground on the ground several hundred yards away. For those not interested in archery, Smith has some shapely starlets in bathing suits watching the exhibition, while the camera watches them.
- If the murderer of wealthy widow Mme.Harlowe (Louise Hampton) had not relied on information obtained from a book in her library, the old lady might have lived for years, as chronic invalids often do. The killer relied on the false information that surare, the deadly native poison, leaves no traces after death. And so, Inspector Hanaud, the eminent Paris detective, arrived in Dijon to solve the mystery of the Maison Grenelle. He finds Betty Harlowe (Diana Churchill), the victim's niece, suspected by the police, and Ann Upcott (Belle Chrystall), the dead woman's companion, in a state of semi-hysteria. And there is also an anonymous letter writer known as The Scourge. For his clues, Hanaud has a scrap of charred paper, an anonymous letter and a pen-holder that is not a pen-holder at all. From these, he builds a case against the guilty one, until he is certain enough to risk the life of Betty to make the killer confess.
- Buck Sherman and Jake Jackson, a couple of evil carpetbaggers, illegally enter a Navajo reservation to prospect for gold and end up killing Aranho, the Navajos chief. Black Arrow, presumed Aranho's son, refuses to kill the Indian agent, Tom Whitney, in revenge, as demanded by Navajo law. Then, he is driven off the reservation for his reluctance to kill Whitney and decides to join forces with Pancho, Mary Brent and the agent to go in search of the men who killed the chief.
- Young nobleman Richard Shelton returns from the War of the Roses to find his father murdered, a fugitive family friend blamed, and his uncle occupying his estates.
- Comedy bits from a cast of regulars and guest stars filled this half hour, which was emceed by Phil Silvers for all but a month of its one-season run. In April 1949, Hank Ladd took over as host.
- Casper keeps an Indian boy from hunting animals & Casper is visited by a young Martian.
- Tom Jeffords tries to make peace between settlers and Apaches in Arizona territory.
- Dardo, a Robin Hood-like figure, and his loyal followers use a Roman ruin in Medieval Lombardy as their headquarters as they conduct an insurgency against their Hessian conquerors.
- Rodeo riders Gene Autry (Gene Autry) and Patrick Smith (Pat Buttram) discover a dead man pierced with a silver arrow in his chest. This leads Gene to a miner framed in order to get his silver mine.
- A partnership between four ranchers looks like being dissolved when two end up dead ,one .Mel Bard,fears for his life and the other,Dick's uncle Charley Melton,a suspect.However Bard and his cook ,Spud,are not what they seem.
- Two episodes of the TV series "Wild Bill Hickok" edited together and released as a feature.
- Captain John Smith overcomes the treachery of some of his men and resentment of the local Native Americans to establish the colony of Jamestown.
- The remnants of a massacred cavalry troop and ragtag group of stagecoach passengers fight for survival against fierce Comanches at a desert ruin.