Mara
La vida de una mujer casada se convierte en una pesadilla cuando un hombre con el que se acuesta durante una noche de pasión se obsesiona con ella y comienza a perseguirla.
Theatre Play
Los hermanos Jim y Walter son dos marinos de la Marina de los Estados Unidos. Walter le dice a Jim que tan pronto como llegue a casa le va a pedir matrimonio a la bella Nancy Larkin, pero Jim también está enamorado de Nancy por lo que pide a la fea hermana de Nancy, Letty, que le ayude a que Walter y Nancy rompan. Letty está de acuerdo, pero con una condición, que Jim la ayude a conquistar a Walter.
Theatre Play
After many outrageous moments, a young girl marries her former acquaintance, not with her fiancee.
Songs
When a Catholic and a Jew wed they find themselves disowned by both of their families.
Theatre Play
When a Catholic and a Jew wed they find themselves disowned by both of their families.
Theatre Play
A romance about a dancer seeking love and fame from Paris cabarets to New York society.
Nell's Mother
Nell, an independent and somewhat obstinate girl, receives an invitation to attend a dance. She asks her mother for money to buy a new dress. Her mother, a hard working woman, who has to toil from morn to night, feels that her request involves an unnecessary extravagance and she denies it. Nell answers her sharply and leaves in a sullen mood. While working in the hot, broiling sun, the mother is overcome with the heat.
Rose Leigh
After graduating from an Indian school where he has acquired an education and schooling in the ways of the white man. Ta-wa-wa, a young Indian, returns to his native territory and far western home. On the way to the tribe's encampment he stops at Vail's ranch, meets Kawista, his boyhood sweetheart, who greets him cordially and with a frank admiration for his gentlemanly appearance. While they are exchanging greetings the postman enters and hands a letter to Mr. Vail from Col. Leigh, an Englishman, stating that he will visit the ranch with Lord Wyndham, an English lord who expresses a desire to see a real Indian powwow.
Willis Johnson
The West Texas Borax Company is practically insolvent. John Graham, the president, has been unable to find the white mineral in sufficient quantities to satisfy the eastern stockholders, and a letter from his partner arrives which brings the disagreeable news that their backers are about to back out, unless, in the language of Missouri, they "are shown" something. Graham is in a quandary, and appeals to his stenographer for advice. That young woman has had so little to do in, the office that she is overcome with surprise and confusion. The postman enters and hands Graham a letter and a package. Listlessly the president opens them, but his manner changes and he leaps to his feet with a whoop of joy. There is a chance of saving the company.
Mrs. Benson
When our picture opens, Joe Flynn, a rider in the service of the government, has been shot from ambush by a masked man and is dying. Grouped at his bedside are his son Jack, a sturdy young man, the local doctor and the county sheriff. The old man dies and a week later we see Jack delivering the mail. The sheriff has inserted the description of the murderer in the Yuma Gulch Herald, and the country is being scoured to find him. Jack has a long and perilous ride between the two points of his route and is frequently beset with danger. Steve Benson, a desperado, who has killed old man Flynn, is living unhappily with his wife in hourly fear of having his crime discovered.