When a minister dies from alcoholism, his daughter Briar Rose (Love), also called "Nettles", is unofficially adopted by a team of lumberjacks, including the rough-and-tumble 'Hell-to-Pay' Austin (Lucas). Nettles is so touched by the logging camp's tribute to her father, organized by Austin, that she chooses him to be her foster father. Her innocence and purity eventually transform Austin into an upstanding Christian.
One day, an elegant woman (Alden) stumbles into the logging camp. The lumberjacks and Nettles help her, and she invites Briar Rose to visit her in New York someday. Years later, Nettles goes away to boarding school in New York. When taunted by her fellow students, Nettles leaves the school to stay with the woman she had met previously. Austin comes to New York to rescue Nettles, and, reunited, they discover that their guardian/ward relationship has evolved into one of true love and they marry.[2][3][4][8][9]
It was accompanied by the Charles Chaplin short comedy One A.M. in some theaters during its initial theatrical release[5] and by the Fay Tincher short Skirts in some others.[9]
^Paietta, Ann Catherine (2005). Saints, Clergy, and Other Religious Figures on Film and Television, 1895โ2003. McFarland & Company. p. 70. ISBN978-0-7864-2186-2.
^ ab"Advertisement". The Seattle Star. August 19, 1916. p. 3 – via Library of Congress: Chronicling America.