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  • Over the Hill (1917)
  • 50 min | Drama
Over the Hill (1917)
50 min | Drama

Amos Winthrop, owner of the Winthrop newspaper syndicate of "yellow" journals, delights in posing as the patron of ambitious youth, and he appoints Allan Stone as business manager of the "Daily Pioneer" at Columbia. The Rev. Timothy Neal, ...See moreAmos Winthrop, owner of the Winthrop newspaper syndicate of "yellow" journals, delights in posing as the patron of ambitious youth, and he appoints Allan Stone as business manager of the "Daily Pioneer" at Columbia. The Rev. Timothy Neal, compelled to resign his pastorate because of advancing years, arrives with his granddaughter Esther in Columbia, where the minister hopes to make a living selling books. The one failure in Amos Winthrop's life is his pampered son Roy; he sends him to Columbia to work as a reporter on the "Daily Pioneer" staff. Rev. Neal takes many and varied lessons in the gentle art of book-agenting but success does not come to him and Esther is at her wits' end trying to instruct her grandfather how to approach strangers. Their little store of savings dwindles. Jim Barnes is editor of the "Daily Pioneer" and he delights in applying big-city methods to a small-town paper. He prints sensational stories and is supported in his methods by young Winthrop. Stone, on the other hand, asserts that scandal about people kills advertising prospects. The owner of Columbia's largest department store is Henry Lawlor, and the Daily Pioneer advertising staff longs to secure Lawlor to an advertising contract. Pneumonia attacks Rev. Neal and he passes away, leaving Esther alone in the world. She has met both Allan Stone and Roy Winthrop. The time comes when the only hope of the "Daily Pioneer" is the Lawlor advertising contract. There is an agreement that if the paper fails to make a stipulated showing before a specified date, Allan Stone and Jim Barnes shall forfeit all claim to their respective shares of stock in said paper. Young Winthrop antagonizes Lawlor and it seems that the contract is lost. He prepares a story dealing with the purported elopement of Lawlor's daughter and the same is set in type. Esther, considering it a "spite story," burns the entire edition of the "Daily Pioneer," thus preventing the story from being read; she thus earns the gratitude of Lawlor, who gives the paper the advertising patronage. Amos Winthrop, summoned to Columbia, appreciates his son's foolishness and orders him to leave Columbia and return home where the father can keep an eye on the boy. Stone wins an allotment of stock in the "Daily Pioneer" and wins Esther for his bride. Written by Moving Picture World synopsis See less
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Director
Writer
Lois Zellner (screenplay) (story)
Cinematographer
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Status
Edit Released
Updated Dec 30, 1917

Release date
Dec 30, 1917 (United States)

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Cast

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12 cast members
Name Known for
J.H. Gilmour
Amos Winthrop Amos Winthrop   See fewer
Dan Mason
Reverend Timothy Neal Reverend Timothy Neal   See fewer
William Parke Jr.
Roy Winthrop Roy Winthrop   See fewer
Chester Barnett
Allen Stone Allen Stone   See fewer
Richard Thornton
Jim Barnes Jim Barnes   See fewer
Joyce Fair
Rose Lawlor Rose Lawlor   See fewer
Paul Clerget
Mr. Lawlor Mr. Lawlor   See fewer
Tula Belle
Rose's Sister Rose's Sister   See fewer
Inda Palmer
Mrs. Finn Mrs. Finn   See fewer
John Carr
Mike (as Johnny Carr) Mike (as Johnny Carr)   See fewer
Billy Sullivan
King Arthur (as William Sullivan) King Arthur (as William Sullivan)   See fewer
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