The child is omnipresent. Even magnates with their millions are not proof against them, and while this film is in no sense a true story, it represents what happens when children undertake to set crooked things straight. These two little ones insist upon seeing the president of the trust that ruined their father. The loss of the money was not what worried them, but they couldn't quite understand why their father was so indifferent to them. So when they found out they decided to take matters into their own hands and settle them, which they did in satisfactory fashion. Usually the child wins, and in this instance, while it may seem much overdrawn, it is merely another graphic illustration of the fact which everyone understands is true. When they bear home the letter from the trust president the consternation may be imagined. It is useless to undertake to describe anything like this. The heart interest is all through the film, and in these times anything, even a child, that gets the better of a trust, is a hero. - The Moving Picture World, September 24, 1910
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