Pete Robbins, on his way to the Green Lizzard Bar, whither he is going for a last drink before the saloon closes in compliance with the new State law, comes upon a child bending over the body of an elderly man. He takes the boy with him and everyone at the saloon fall in love with the child. Ginger, one of the entertainers, is particularly fond of him, because, though at the time she does not know it, he is her son. The dead man was her father, who was bringing the boy to her. Later, her husband, who had deserted her and afterward was sent to prison, gets his release and goes in search of his wife and child. He needs money and comes upon the girl alone in her little cabin home. Pete has just left for the gold regions, where he had a mine and promised Ginger he would return to help her care for the boy. Slick Crandall, the husband, comes in and takes Ginger's savings. He is about to escape when he is caught by Pete, who returned to the house for something. Pete turns Slick over to the sheriff, but he breaks away and dashes himself to death over a steep cliff. Pete and Ginger decide, now that she is free to marry, to care for her son together.
—Universal Weekly, September 6, 1924