As described in a film magazine,[3] Johnny McKinney is a rising, young prize-fighter whose aim is to become the middle-weight championship of the world. Jimmie, his manager, takes him to Chicago to arrange a championship fight when Johnny falls in love with Betty, a glove clerk in a department store and marries her. Her father and brother move in with them and live off the money which Johnny earns. Betty, with more money than she has ever had as a clerk, spends it lavishly and soon gets her husband into debt. In a charity bout, Johnny breaks a bone in his hand and has to lay off fighting. At the same time, Betty’s brother asks her for $7,000 to cover a gambling debt. Betty refuses and, when Johnny finds her in tears, he is told by the brother that she is expecting a little stranger and needs the money for hospital bills. Johnny rushes to Jimmie asking to borrow $7,000 but refuses to say what it is for. The manager refuses him, saying he will not be made a leech of by Betty’s family. The fighter breaks with him and challenges the champion in order to get the money. Arthur, the brother, manages him. Johnny loses the fight as he is unable to use his right hand and Jimmie, sitting in the audience, cannot watch Johnny's punishment or the mistakes of Arthur who is in Johnny’s corner. He throws in a towel as an admission of defeat. The fighter, broken physically and mentally, will not see his wife as he realizes that her family have brought him to his present position. Jimmie, who has been most bitter against them, brings about a reconciliation between the fighter and his wife, and the brother and father are ordered from the house.
^"Universal Synopses: The Count of Ten". Universal Weekly. 27 (18). New York City: Motion Picture Weekly Publishing Company: 30. June 9, 1928. Retrieved February 21, 2024. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.