- Peggy Admaston and her husband are socialites whose happy marriage quickly deteriorates as Admaston neglects his young wife for business matters, and is unaware of her loneliness and vulnerability. When Peggy is wooed by Admaston's friend Collingwood, who acts on his feelings without regard to consequences, she grows fond of him, but remains faithful to Admaston. After socialite Lady Attwill causes Admaston to doubt his wife's fidelity, his suspicions are furthered when a fire erupts one evening at the theater, and Admaston returns home unexpectedly to find that Peggy, who refused to accompany him because she said that she did not feel well, entertained a male visitor that evening. Admaston arranges to trap Peggy and Collingwood together at a country roadhouse, and begins divorce proceedings based on the resulting strong circumstantial evidence. Later, Lady Attwill convinces Admaston that Peggy's friendship with Collingwood was innocent and the couple is reunited.—Pamela Short
- Peggy Admaston and her husband are rich and should be happy, but after the honeymoon Admaston neglects his young wife for the cares of his business. The result is that Peggy lends a willing ear to the love pleadings of Collingwood, a friend of her husband. Nevertheless, Peggy remains loyal to her husband. But both are present at a theatre when it catches fire and so Admaston's doubts of her fidelity are aroused. Subsequently when Admaston discovers Peggy and Collingwood together at a country roadhouse under what appears to him to be suspicious circumstances, he resolves to divorce his wife, and does so. After the divorce, a friend of the Admastons, Mrs. Attwill, who had sown the seeds of strife between husband and wife, establishes Peggy's innocence to the satisfaction of her husband, and the young couple are reunited and made happy.—Moving Picture World synopsis
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