

She stole from thieves and built a new life—until her past came knocking in 11 silent minutes.
Bess abhors the sinfulness of her brothers, who are crooks of the worst kind, so one day, while they are planning some villainy, she takes some money which one of the brothers had placed on the table, leaves the house and disappears as if the earth had engulfed her. Bess goes to a distant part of the city, and rents a furnished room from a kindly-faced old lady, resolved to start life anew in a different environment. She secures employment in a large shirt factory and by diligent attention to work, becomes forelady and assistant to Williams, the owner of the factory. Jack, the weakling, completely worn out by the life he has led, is in the last stages of tuberculosis, when he accidentally meets Bess, and through helping him, her other brother, Frank, finds out where she is employed, and going to Williams, her employer, plays the "worried brother" part and tells him how Bess took the money and ran away from home.
Acting
Ruth Stonehouse's expressive eyes carry entire plot beats.
Production
Authentic shirt factory setting, rare working-class detail.
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Director 'Unknown' was common in 1914—many Essanay Studios films lacked credited directors, with stars like Stonehouse often directing themselves uncredited.
The 'factory girl makes good' narrative peaked in 1910s cinema, reflecting Progressive Era anxieties about urbanization and women's economic independence.