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1-7 of 7
- The life of an overweight, unhappy cook is changed after a kind, beautiful college drop-out comes to work as a waitress at his and his mother's road-side restaurant.
- A father and son go on a hunting trip one fateful day and accidentally discover the horrors of the human spirit in the heart of the wilderness. Hunters become the prey in these woods. Justice is the game.
- Faith, a young woman who was raised by deaf mute parents in an isolated country district and has never heard the sound of a human voice, travels to New York and meets a sympathetic writer. Through her loving relationship with the writer, Faith emerges from her shell and undergoes a significant transformation.
- Short
- Zaphrone, a self-proclaimed wannabe serial killer, wants nothing more than to get his very first kill and become as feared as the notorious Broad Street Butcher.
- Night Wind, so named by the Indians, has been brought up by a Siwash and is considered as a half-breed. She is taken in by the mother of the foreman of a big lumber camp and assists the old lady in housework. The foreman, John Daly, is in love with her, but keeps this a secret. Walter Sandry, a new owner of the lumber camp, appears unexpectedly to run things himself. The rough men of the camp look upon him as an eastern tenderfoot. He does this by licking the camp bully. But he had plenty of grit and makes up his mind to win their respect. He wins the love of Night Wind by giving her his beautiful horse to ride. One day, in a tempestuous fit of emotion, he kisses her. This is constituted among the Indians equivalent to a betrothal of marriage. From then on Night Wind looks upon him as "her man." A New York society girl, Dolly Ordway, an artist, comes to the lumber camp in search of local color. She is given quarters by Walter Sandry. Dolly also falls in love with Walter. Night Wind suspects this and her semi-savage jealousy is difficult to restrain. Dolly tries to win Walter to a declaration of marriage. Several times he is on the point of succumbing when the thought of the simple but beautiful child of nature obtrudes itself. There is a rival lumber company in the neighborhood. The owner falls violently in love with Dolly. He discovers that she is in love with Walter, although she has likewise been flirting with him. He is furiously jealous and determines to ruin his rival. He blows up a raft of lumber with dynamite. Walter is on the raft; he is seriously injured. He is carried to the camp unconscious and both Night Wind and Dolly vie with each other to nurse him. Dolly takes a mean advantage of the situation by declaring that Walter is her affianced husband. This enrages Night Wind. However, the foreman's mother decides that Dolly is entitled to nurse him. Walter recovers and is angry at hearing that he is supposed to be engaged to Dolly. He denies that it is so. This so enrages Dolly that she determines to ruin him. About this time Walter has taken an order for a large shipment of logs. To fail to fulfill this order means the loss of a large guarantee which he has put up, in other words, ruin. Knowing this, the jealous rival visits the men working for Walter and prevails upon them to strike. Walter is in a desperate position. Night Wind appreciates the situation and without saying anything to her "man," she travels through the forest on foot to the Indians' camp. They know and love her as one of their own and have a great deal of respect for what she says. To the chief Night Wind puts her case; she tells him of the strike and asks him to send his braves to handle the logs and thereby save her lover. The chief consents; he calls his braves together and leads them over the hills to the lumber camp. They are working the logs when Walter discovers their presence. The rival lumber man tries to bribe the Indians to quit with money and whiskey. The chief is about to give way to the temptation of whiskey when Night Wind appears beside him. The work is continued. The great dam is lifted and the logs, sufficient to fill the order, rush down the flume. Night Wind finds her reward in the faithful love of Walter.