When her father goes broke in the stock market, Jane Lee is forced to leave her prestigious boarding school. Glad-handing John Brock, an old friend of Jane's father, arranges for the girl to be hired as his stenographer. But Brock's lecherous ulterior motives become obvious when he locks Jane in the office and tries to rape her. When she manages to escape his advances, Brock vengefully frames the girl on a robbery charge.
After divorcing her husband Kent, actress Anne Wetherall returns to the stage. Upon receiving a plea...
Penny arrives in the West by aeroplane. She is considered a suspicious character and thrown into jai...
A father-and-son team of cons gamble their firm’s assets. The son is caught investing money that doe...
Professor Duane, an ethnologist, and his assistant, Roscoe Harding, plan a journey into the wilds of...
When young Eva Stanley comes home from college, she finds that her mother is deeply involved in the ...
John Morning, rich, without family, dreams of things that might have been. He discovers a poverty-st...
This part-talkie (17 minutes of dialogue in its 83-minute running time) tells the tale of Christina,...
Very wealthy Bettina is also very reluctant to get married. She changes her mind in a hurry when she...
Wealthy Jack Stimson (Jay Belasco) falls in love with Broadway diva Velma Vrooman (Gretchen Lederer)...
Gabrielle Picard (Elda Hall) and Pierre Dupont (Rupert Julian) are lovers in a small French village ...
Diminutive heroine Ella Hall dreams that she's Cinderella, and that a wealthy gentleman of her acqua...
Paris vamp Ernestine Bergot, posing as wealthy Englishwoman Sarah Brandon, goes to work on aging Cou...
Olaf writes his memoirs, before his execution. He tells of his life as a struggling farmer when Reni...
Though a spendthrift and a layabout, Lord Arthur Waring (J. Warren Kerrigan) is universally loved by...
Upon hearing about a woman dubbed The Huntress because of her wild attention craving ways, Fleming H...
Love Never Dies was set in France, and convincingly so (which was not often the case in American-mad...