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When a fire breaks out in an orphanage on
the East Side of New York, little Timothy Patrick Aloysius Michael Kelly
runs away wearing only his nightclothes. Chased by a policeman,
Tim takes refuge in the junk wagon of Max Ginsberg. The next
morning, the lonely old man is impressed by Tim's honesty for returning
his coin purse, which had fallen onto the street, and offers him a
five-cent reward, but Tim declines, asking for a job instead. Max
at first refuses, but takes pity on the boy, who soon becomes his
constant, loving companion and a partner in Max's rag and bottle
business.
One day, Max relates the story of what
happened to him fifteen years before: working as a sewing machine
operator in Greenberg's factory, Max impresses his boss with a new
invention. Following his boss's advice to see a lawyer and obtain
a patent, Max signs papers drawn up by unscrupulous lawyers Bernard and
Winkler, who cheat him out of his invention and force him into poverty
while they become millionaires.
For years, honest attorney Richard L. Scott
has been trying to help Max, but lack of written proof of Max's claim
has thwarted him. Max sadly admits to Tim that he does not even
know where Bernard and Winkler are. Unknown to Max, Winkler has
died, but Bernard is still alive and lives in a posh New York
neighborhood.
One day, when Max's rheumatism prevents him
from taking his cart out to collect junk, Tim convinces him to let him
do the work. At Bernard's house, his wife and the maid are so
enamored of little Tim that Mrs. Bernard gives the boy some of her
husband's old clothes, unaware that one jacket contains a 1910 letter
written to Bernard by Winkler. In the letter, Winkler reveals that
he is dying and feels guilty over what they have done to Max and
implores his former partner to make amends. Not understanding the
significance of the letter, Tim uses it to plug a hole in their horse
Dynamite's feedbag.
Later, Scott comes to visit and explains
that he has learned that Bernard is living somewhere in New York under
the name Bishop. Overhearing some of the details of Bernard and
Winkler's fraud, Tim realizes that the letter is proof of Max's claim
but, when he goes to get it, the feedbag only contains blackened scraps.
Without saying anything to Max, Tim goes to
the home where he had received the coat and asks to see "Mr. Bernard."
Ashamed, Mrs. Bernard says nothing and shows Tim in to see her husband.
Bernard is unmoved by Tim's pleas and tells him that he has no legal
proof of the claim after Tim reveals that Winkler's letter has been
destroyed. Because he has failed to help his beloved Max, Tim
sadly goes home and removes the name "Kelly" from the "Ginzberg and
Kelly" sign on the wagon.
Although not explaining why, Tim then tells
Max that he has to go back to the orphanage. Max is
broken-hearted, and begs him to stay, but Tim insists he must leave.
Just then, Bernard arrives. Following Max's strong rebukes,
Bernard says that he wants to make amends and plans to give him $200,000
for the invention because Tim made him realize that he has been wrong.
When Tim says that Bernard also owes interest, they laugh, and Bernard
promises to return the next day with the money and the interest.
Tim, who has just discovered that the letter was not destroyed after
all, is about to tear it up but secretly decides to keep it in a safe
place, just in case. Tim and Max joyfully embrace after Bernard
leaves, and Max agrees to let their partnership be changed from
"Ginsberg and Kelly" to "Kelly and Ginsberg." Some time later, Max
and Tim have become the largest antiques dealers in New York and enjoy
playing golf at a swank country club. |