As described in a film magazine review,[2] Bill Scott has a ticket for a steamer headed to Alaska, but sells it for $1,000 so that he can fund the education for a small girl named Sue that he has befriended at an orphanage. He gives the money to John Jerome, who is a crooked lawyer. Bill then ships out working as a stoker on the steamer, and strikes it rich during the Nome Gold Rush, and continues to send money during the next 12 years to Jerome for the education of the girl. However, Jerome is using the money to pay his own daughter's education and to finance Satan Town, a series of shacks devoted to gambling, dance halls, and other vices. Bill returns to the town a millionaire, but still dressed in his western garb, he starts to make things hum for the crooked lawyer who had deceived him. In Satan Town, Bill befriends a young woman working at The Salvation Army who he later discovers is Sue, the little orphan girl he once knew. Meanwhile, the lawyer is properly punished for all his villainy when he discovers that his own daughter has become a victim of the vice of the city of evil he has been promoting.
^"Satan Town". The Film Daily. 37 (38). New York City: Wid's Films and Film Folks, Inc.: 8 August 15, 1926. Retrieved November 20, 2023. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.