Not often is a picture put on the screen as bald in its exhibition of facts as this one. Often enough it has been hinted that a girl has loved, not wisely, but too well, but this is the first time the visible result of such loving has appeared to the responsible man at his wedding to another. This is an intensely dramatic scene, and so out of the ordinary that it will attract, perhaps, more than the due share of attention. The bride-to-be, naturally, departs, and the man, suddenly confronted with unmistakable evidence of his perfidy, has a revulsion of feeling and marries the unfortunate girl. Perhaps the fact that in modern parlance, a spade is called by its name. is sufficient justification for this presentation of this subject in this way, but undoubtedly many will look askance at the picture and express their doubts of the advisability of presenting such unpleasant truths in such an altogether vigorous manner. Deftly portrayed, it is another Biograph Sermon on the screen. - The Moving Picture World, February 4, 1911