There is a good deal of prettiness in this picture and the story, though not strong, is pleasingly fanciful. It is a sort of fairy story without the miraculous, and its heroine is a little girl of New Amsterdam, heiress to a great fortune in Holland, who has been kidnapped by a freebooter, claiming to be her father for the fortune's sake. She has been left in charge of a brutal innkeeper's wife and has a hard time, but makes friends and at length comes into her own. The especially noticeable figures in it are the benevolent-looking highwayman (Richard Neill), the heroine (Helen Coughlin), and Hans, the gooseherd (Bessie Learn). The script is by Richard Ridgely. The photography is only fair. - The Moving Picture World, July 26, 1913
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