Documentaries and minor subjects of the Thanhouser Company

[2] The film was advertised in numerous states, including theaters in Indiana,[3] Kansas,[4][5] and New York,[6] The second release was another short filler comedy, Sand Man's Cure is equally obscure.

How a suffering hubby tried to get rid of the cigars his better half bought him, and the mess his efforts got him into, is the story the picture tells."

A review of the subject states that the scenario begins with a wife who purchases some bargain-priced cigars for her husband.

[8] Advertisements show the film paired with She Wanted to Marry a Hero in Texas and Kansas.

The synopsis of the film was published in The Moving Picture World and it states, "John Boden, a young businessman, has a very jealous wife.

He is particularly upset when his wife discharges his British stenographer and hires a woman who is principally remarkable for her homeliness.

On several occasions, Boden proves that he is of the stuff of which heroes are made, but each time his jealous wife spoils things for him.

So much water was released when the dam failed on Sept. 30, 1911 that it destroyed the town of Austin, Pennsylvania, population 2,000, and took the lives of at least 78 people.

The extant footage survives at the Library of Congress and is scheduled for release on DVD and online streaming in October 2020.

The New York Clipper announced that the staff had prepared to capture former president Theodore Roosevelt's return to America.

Parade of the Volunteer Firemen of Westchester County and Vicinity is a documentary film produced by the Thanhouser Company.

[22] The Life of a Fireman was shown at Germania Hall on October 27 and 28, 1910, along with Parade of the Volunteer Firemen of Westchester County and Vicinity.

"[25] Nature's Celebrities is a short subject of unknown length and origin that focuses on the African chameleon and the Indian cobra.

Q. David Bowers writes, "This film may have been related to the efforts of Dr. Raymond Ditmars, of the nearby New York Zoological Gardens (Bronx Zoo), who was the subject of many trade paper articles for his pioneering films of snakes, lizards, turtles, and other herpetological subjects.

"[26] In November 1914, it was announced that Thanhouser would be releasing a series of six one-reel scenic films of Yellowstone Park.

[28] Though Universal's Joker Comedies brand would also apparently include a scenic film titled "Views of Yellowstone Park", approximately 500 feet in length, released in December 1914.

A January 8, 1915, advertisement called for children to see Yellowstone Park, a work deemed to be thirty minutes long, roughly three reels in length.

[31] Big Gun Making is a 430-foot-long educational documentary made from footage taken by Lawrence Williams under the direction of George Foster Platt at the United States Arsenal at Watervliet, New York.

[32] Jungle Life in South America is a short subject that was added to the end of Falstaff's Maud Muller Modernized.

The Falstaff brand was part of Thanhouser and focused exclusively on producing comedies, but this scenic addition is of unknown origin or length.

The Bioscope reviewer stated the content of the film included: "Interesting studies of the pelican, white ibis, gallinule, etc.

The Bioscope reviewer summed up the film briefly, "Ex-President Roosevelt amongst the birds of Louisiana sea islands.