The opening paragraph grants a prior request by noting the instruction to a representative "to deliver the negatives of the 122 short-subjects listed below . . . " so this is only a partial list from the relevant first page.
Here's the full list from the page we see:
DAVIDSONS
1927-28
[What] Every Iceman Knows
Call of the Cukoo [sic]
Love Em and Feed Em
Fighting Fathers
Pass the Gravy
Dumb Daddies
Came the Dawn
Blow by Blow
Tell It to [the] Judge
Should Women Drive
ALL STARS
1927-28
Sugar Daddies
Second Hundred [sic] Years
Hats Off
Putting Pants on Philip
[The] Battle of the Century
Leave Em Laughing
The Finishing Touch
From Soup to Nuts
You're Darn Tootin
Their Purple Moment
1928-29
That Night
Do Gentlemen Snore
The Boyfriend [sic]
Feed Em and Weep
Going Ga Ga
[A] Pair of Tights
When Money Comes
Why Is a Plumber
[The] Unkissed Man
Thundering Toupees
1929-30
Hurdy Gurdy
Madame "Q"
Dads [sic] Day
Thanks for that.
Interesting:
Sugar Daddies
Second Hundred [sic] Years
Hats OffPutting Pants on Philip
[The] Battle of the CenturyLeave Em Laughing
The Finishing Touch
From Soup to Nuts
You're Darn Tootin
Their Purple Moment
Rhetorical: Why did they all survive except BATTLE (100% complete) and HATS OFF?
Here's almost every Blackhawk catalog:
https://hmharchive.com/blackhawk-films-catalogs/Before they sold films, they rented them out. You can see by the late 50s that they were already selling L&H silent shorts. So HATS OFF being fully decomposed shortly after 1945 starts to seem very likely. But remember, that's the original camera negative (OCN) we're talking about. Off-hand, I'm not sure how many OCNs from that list still survive, but we do know that Michael Agee claimed he had to throw some away -- but that wasn't until around the 80s. You will also note that starting around 1982/83. not long before they stopped issuing films, Blackhawk released DUCK SOUP, which was considered lost until 1974, when it was found in a European archive, with French and Dutch titles. So that was 50 years ago. What lost L&H films have been found since then? Answer: Most of BATTLE, clips from THE ROGUE SONG, a promo short that no one knew even existed, parts of NOW I'LL TELL ONE (no one knew they were even in that either), and the Victor disc for UNACCUSTOMED AS WE ARE. I think that's it.
The Pathe-released L&H silents were available for home use via Kodascope in 16mm, much, much earlier. Perhaps as early as the 30s, but not the M-G-Ms. I'm not sure if any of the M-G-Ms were offered for home use before Blackhawk issued them. And as I said, Film Classics ignored the silents without Victor discs for their theatrical re-issues in the 40s.
Just from the list above, we see that HATS OFF wasn't treated as a standalone, but as part of a group. I wonder if anyone knows how many more of that list of 122 films are now lost? My question is that since they were all stored together, in the same archive, under the same conditions, why would some survive and not others? Were they all stored together, in the same archive, under the same conditions, before 1945? If not, maybe HATS OFF was already in bad shape by 1945. Then there's always the possibility, that I've been alluding to, that HATS OFF was not delivered per the letter, even though it is specified. How thoroughly would someone check in 1945, given that silents were already being treated as relics of a bygone age by then?
It might have been mentioned in that long Dick Bann article, but I've read that once L&H were becoming very popular, someone at the studio, perhaps Bert Jordan, made dupe copies of all the L&H negatives for safe-keeping.
I am trying to find out who, if anyone, made prints of the truly silent (no Victor disc) L&H shorts after their initial release, and before Blackhawk started to issue them. What about outside the Western Hemisphere, where the copyrights were held by different entities?
With the burst of popularity of the internet that happened more than 25 years ago (though the internet itself has been around much longer), with each passing year, the probability of finding HATS OFF decreases in my mind, simply because we have been able to have conversations like this very easily, for a very long time, yet nothing has turned up yet.
I'm also not sure how hard HATS OFF is being looked for. I certainly don't have access to all the film archives around the world. I've assumed that people like Dick Bann and Jeff Joseph have done their share of looking, since both of them led the charge of the fairly recent restorations of L&H films for DVD and blu-ray, although not for the silents. Perhaps Serge Bromberg of Lobster Films will uncover it. In some cases they've unearthed better copies of Buster Keaton films, so lets hope they put the same effort into L&H, which I believe they are doing based on their work on the lastest "Year One" release. Also working on the latest silemnt releases are Randy Skretvedt and Richard W. Bann, among others. That's the L&H restoration dream team right there! I'm afraid if they don't find it, then it's truly lost.
Another puzzle: Robert Youngson passed away in 1974. Why didn't he tell anyone he had all of reel 2 of BATTLE? People were already looking for it by then. And why did it take over 40 years to realize his film collection included it? I've heard that people assumed it was just the edited pie fight -- but we all know what happens when you assume!
(I bought a "lot" of 8mm silent films last year on eBay. One box and reel was labeled as a Harry Langdon short (PICKING PEACHES), but when I projected it, it turned out to be an old b&w, silent, XXX-rated cartoon!)