There is probably not a moving picture film in existence which covers the subject of warfare more thoroughly than this three-reel offering. It is almost a complete exposition of the actual fighting, the movement of troops and all the attendant features of warfare. A few years ago it would have been a revelation, but its weakness for present-day picturegoers will be its very slight plot. True, it follows the fortunes of a girl and her brother and lover, who are on opposing sides, but there are no complications, except for the dramatic scene in the hospital in the last reel. But as a big, sweeping incarnation of "war's rude alarms'' this offering is worthy of high commendation. - The Moving Picture World, April 26, 1913