This film was produced in Cleveland in 1920 by Robert H. McLaughlin and Samuel R. Brodsky (as Samuel R. Bradley) for the Cleveland Community Chest charity.
This film is thought to be lost, but a print of it was aired on WKYC in Cleveland on October 11, 1963 as part of a United Appeal broadcast.
90 children from orphanages, hospitals, and the "tenement districts" of Cleveland appeared in this film. They would benefit from the funds that it would raise for the Cleveland Community Chest charity. According to The Plain Dealer on October 31, 1920, during the production of the film, the children began saying they were hungry. William Desmond called for filming to be stopped and treated the children to a feast of "candy, peanuts, popcorn, oranges and apples."