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- Our picture opens with a beautiful mountain scene and Cora, the belle of a mountain tribe, decking herself with garlands of roses. In the evening Lord Martagne, in disguise, appears at the cave of the mountain tribe and is fascinated by Cora's weird dance. They become lovers, but Lord Martagne soon wearies of the mountain girl and discards her. She calls at his home but is repulsed. She enters secretly at a masked ball in fancy costume to kill her unfaithful lover, but is foiled by his having left the city on urgent business. Lord Martagne goes on important business of a diplomatic character, and becomes a guest at the home of Irma, an attractive young woman who is engaged to be married. Irma is fascinated by Lord Martagne. Cora, the mountain girl, starts out in search of her unfaithful lover. She discovers him seated in a box at the theater with Irma. She leaves the theater when he does and follows him to his home. On account of financial difficulties Lord Martagne writes a letter to Irma, whose father has recently died, leaving her a fortune. He leaves the letter on his desk and Cora, who enters the house, finds it. The note asks Irma to meet him on St. Martin's Bridge the next night and loan him $5,000. Cora meets Lord Martagne on the bridge and forces him to fight a pistol duel with her. She kills him and he falls from the bridge into the river below. Irma comes to keep the appointment and looking over the rail of the bridge sees the body of her lover below. Then she finds the pistol lying on the bridge and her mind gives way. She is crazed and in her delirium she imagines that she committed the murder. At her home. Albert Norton, her fiancé, listens to her story, which is overheard by a maid. He advises her to leave and escape punishment. The maid informs the police and Irma and Norton are arrested. Then Irma recovers her mind and tries to prove her innocence, but fails. She and Norton are condemned to death. In the meantime, Cora has become a famous dancer. She learns of the conviction of Norton and Irma. It worries her greatly and on account of her high strung nerves, she falls into the fire while executing a wild fire dance and is terribly burned. When lying in bed she reads that the execution is about to take place and she confesses and insists on being taken to the scene of the execution in an automobile. She arrives just in time to prevent the double execution, and after telling her story, dies of excitement and exhaustion.
- Emma Vallona, an oriental dancer, is suffocated by the debts of her wasteful life; in order to appease her creditors, she does not hesitate to have a promissory note endorsed by the minister d'Angy, who is thus swept up in the scandal and sees his political career destroyed. In the meantime, Emma has moved to Spain under the false name of Madame d'Ambois: she continues to frequent the high society, where her attractiveness puts her at the center of the attention.
- Judith, daughter of a criminal, has been placed by her grandmother, a nurse, in the cradle of Edna, the little Duchess of Burville. The real heiress is brought up as a singing girl at a rough inn, kept by the old evil-faced nurse, Roxana. In the twenty-five years that pass, the false Duchess manifests the strength of heredity, her father's evil tendencies coming to the front. Judith falls in love with Lord Norman, a poet, and in his honor gives a ball at the magnificent Burville Castle. The poet, however, does not reciprocate her affections. Later he bears Edna, the singing girl, on the street. He is startled at the resemblance between Edna and the Duchess of Burville. Enchanted by her singing, he trails Edna to her home and then starts wooing, which is even carried to the point where the poet dons the clothes of a workman in order to be near his sweet singing girl. Roxana is pressed for money by a confederate, and Roxana in desperation goes to the false Duchess and explains to her the secret of her birth, and demands money as a price of silence. Judith tells her to come later. In the evening the confederate grows more furious in his demands, and not trusting Roxana out of his sight, he insists upon Edna being sent to the castle for the hush money. Edna received by the false Duchess, who decoys her which she falls into the absence, the grandmother into an altercation. There is a fight and the lamp is upset, and the house is set on fire. Lord Norman, seeking Edna, comes in and finds the café smothered in smoke. Going upstairs into the flames he encounters a form upon the floor, and thinking it to be Edna, he struggle down the stairs with it. It is Roxana, who, dying, confesses that Edna is the real Duchess, and that she had been sent to the castle. Hurrying away to the castle, Lord Norman demands to see Edna. Judith's actions convinces him that she has been put out of the way. He accuses her of the crime. Under his fiery denunciations, Judith shows him where Edna had been dropped into the sewers underneath the house, and down into their murky depths goes the lover. He finds Edna stunned, but otherwise unhurt by the fall. They make their way to freedom. Meanwhile, in the castle, Judith, overcome by remorse, has ended her wicked life. Edna is restored to her rightful position, there to enjoy the love of he who had loved her as a humble street singer.
- In Bombay, Count Adolphe elopes with Vasca, although engaged to a lady in Rome. In that city two years later the Roman lady's father hears of Adolphe's wife and child. He sets the Black League to work. As a result, the young wife is met by death. The baby daughter is abandoned. The deed is committed by Michael, a confidential servant of the Roman lady. Adolphe eventually marries the Roman lady and Michael becomes their butler. Twenty years later Adolphe, now the Duke of Torini, for the first time receives news of his daughter. He sends his secretary to Bombay to fetch her. The young couple falls in love. The mind of Michael is unhinged by the sight of the young lady, and in his temporary insanity he tells the Duke where the proofs of his crime are to be found. The Duke finds the papers, sends them to his secretary, Genovo, makes his will in favor of his daughter, Zania, and dies of heart disease. Michael, having no knowledge of what he said or did in his delirium, thinks the proofs have been taken by Zania. The father of the duchess is compromised by the missing papers, so Michael confides in her. They seek the help of the Black League. Zania cannot give up the papers she has not got. She is kidnapped and taken to the Tower of Terror. Then next morning Genovo, her lover, sets out to rescue her. He discovers where she is and has a terrific fight with her jailer. In the struggle a lantern is upset, and the place set on fire, and the jailer meets his death. Genovo reaches his sweetheart, but escape is cut off by the fire. They get free by climbing down a tower over 200 feet high, the most sensational feat ever shown in a film. The Duchess and Michael arrive at the Tower of Terror just as the fire reaches some powder barrels, and the guilty couple are blown to bits.
- The widowed mother of a young circus performer lies critically ill. A physician prescribes for the patient, and the son, without the necessary funds, starts out with a mandolin, intending to earn the money required to purchase the remedy. He stops at a resort, renders a song, and then passes his hat. The contributions were liberal and he could have started away at once, but the pretty eyes of a young woman detained him. When, later, he did go, the woman followed and intercepted him. His moral caliber weak, he forgets his suffering mother and spends his time and money in carousal. When at last his physical senses reel and he goes into a drunken stupor, he is relieved of what money he has and left to his fate. The next day he awakens and staggers home scarcely realizing what he has done. At home the mother succumbed to her illness for want of proper treatment and heartache because of the negligence of her son. Too late he came to his senses, and with a consciousness that his neglect has brought about his own sorrow, his grief is the more bitter. The series closes with the young fellow picking his way out to the cemetery, where he prostrates himself in grief over his mother's grave.
- A group of adults have gathered around a sick child in a bed.
- The opening scene is laid outside an humble cottage in the Balkans and shows a father and daughter bidding good bye to the son, who has been called to defend the fatherland. Other peasant soldiers and their sweethearts take leave of one another. The soldiers are then seen about to depart for the frontier-the seat of war-taking oath of allegiance before a priest of the Greek church. The soldiers arrive at the boundary line-a splendid pictorial scene, with distant panoramic view of the snow capped Alps. The pickets are posted and the brother is placed to guard the approach to a bridge. The scene shifts back to the old homestead. The father lies dying, and expresses a last wish to see his son. The sister starts off in search of him, finds him and offers to substitute for him while he returns home. The change of costume is quickly made. The brother hurries across the country and arrives in time to bid his father a last good bye. Meanwhile, a scouting party of the enemy gives chase to a woman and her child. They arrive at the bridge where the sister stands guard. She is quick with her rifle and shoots down the scouting party, but in so doing, is wounded. She is carried into camp where, someone seeing her long hair accuses her of being a woman and the truth is told. The arrest of the brother, for deserting, next follows. He is tried before a military court, but when the full story is told, the brother is forgiven and the sister is awarded a medal of honor.
- A woman, who is arrested for her activity in revolutionary fighting, is placed under arrest. The daughter of the prisoner appeals to the governor on her parent's behalf, but the officer refuses to listen to her. The governor's daughter learning this, has no difficulty in passing the guard to reach the prisoner. She changes clothes with her and the mother escapes while the governor's daughter remains in her stead. The governor later orders his prisoner to be shot. Not until the sentence is carried out does the governor realize that is was his own daughter who had paid the penalty.