This three-reel production is, as far as scenic environments and photographic excellence are concerned, a high-class photoplay. The acting is up to the standard also. The plot is conventional and fails to convince in several scenes, but the superior direction eliminates many faults and makes the spectator forget discrepancies. It is padded generously through the three reels and the same story could have been elucidated on half the film. It involves love, greed, dishonesty, and several inconsistencies, if one stops to think. The redeeming feature is the fact that the "Money Shark" came to grief in the finale. It is gripping and will interest the average audience. - The Moving Picture World, March 14, 1914