A picture whose scenario ought to have made a first class farce. The idea is fresh, and at the same time is preposterous enough to be funny, and yet it is also human. The trouble with it seems to be that its leading man failed to get in his acting just the quality needed to make an audience sympathetic with the situation. There is some good acting, some fine pictures of both interiors and exteriors, and a good deal of likability in the situation. Arthur Johnson is the producer and takes the lead as the insurance agent. Lottie Briscoe plays the girl. Mrs. Daily, Charles Brandt and Howard Mitchell have important parts. - The Moving Picture World, February 8, 1913
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