A comedy that makes use of an old situation. It is well acted and has some good photographs of interesting backgrounds. There is freshness in its incidents and in the way the story is worked out. The young son of the idle rich undertakes to earn his bread for thirty days by the sweat of his brow. It is to win a girl and is a condition imposed by her father, a self-made man. At first the young man attacks the problem in the simplest way, gets a job, several, in fact, at day labor. He finds that it doesn't go, souses his wits and lands a soft snap as halberdier in a German restaurant in New York. At about a half hour before his time is up, the girl comes to the Reinschloss Restaurant. The self-made man recognizes the youth, but he quickly pulls down his visor and the girl doesn't see him. It's a good light comedy, a good program filler. - The Moving Picture World, January 20, 1912