In this picture, Mr. Kerrigan is a sturdy, curly-headed young blacksmith, newly married. Miss Pauline Bush plays his wife. Mr. Richardson is the perfume salesman who comes to town just when the young wife, a city woman, begins to be bored with the country. The young smith in his fury heats a branding iron and, finding the salesman in his home, presses it against his face. It is so well acted and so effectively produced that the impression that it leaves is very deep. It is a very vivid, real picture. The situation isn't pleasant, of course, but it is an extremely competent, praiseworthy picture. The camera work is fine. - The Moving Picture World, June 8, 1912
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