| Louise Glaum | ... | Golden Rule Kate | |
| William Conklin | ... | Rev. Gavin McGregor | |
| Jack Richardson | ... | 'Slick' Barney | |
| Mildred Harris | ... | Olive - Kate's sister | |
| John Gilbert | ... | The Heller | |
| rest of cast listed alphabetically: | |||
| Gertrude Claire | ... | Mrs. McGregor (uncredited) | |
| Josephine Headley | ... | Vegas Kate (uncredited) | |
| J.P. Lockney | ... | 'Nose Paint' Jonas (uncredited) | |
| Milton Ross | ... | Jim Preston (uncredited) | |
Directed by | |||
| Reginald Barker | |||
Writing credits | ||
| Monte M. Katterjohn | ||
Cinematography by | |||
| Joseph H. August | |||
| Robert Newhard | |||
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| Carmen of the Klondike | The Eternal Struggle | His Squaw | The Gun Fighter | The Man from Funeral Range |
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| Full cast and crew | Company credits | External reviews |
| IMDb Western section | IMDb USA section |
This is an interesting and atypical short for Triangle. First, Louise Glaum, who was one of the leading vamps of the 1910s -- she usually played the bad girl in William S. Hart westerns -- stars here as the heroine, an atypical good girl role, and she is excellent at it. Second, it is an early leading role for John Gilbert, and he lights up the screen. Why did it take ten years before he became a star? Third, the director is Reginald Barker, now sadly forgotten, but a fine story-telling director until the mid-thirties -- his best known movie was Ince's production of CIVILIZATION the previous year. and he tell his story with with interesting shots -- the intercutting between the preacher giving his Sunday sermon and the fourpiece band playing at the dance hall across the street is quick, funny and eloquent.
In short, this is a fine serious movie. Take a look at it if you get the chance.