The Biograph (July 3-10, 1915)

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THE BIOGRAPH Eleven The Claim of Honor THE prince regent of a foreign principality entertains an American girl, and is displeased by the attentions which the young Count Armand pays the fair visitor. In his cups, he offers a toast: “To the American lady’s lips, which I — ’’ He goes no farther, for Armand dashes a glass of wine in his face. The insult is one which, according to tradition, calls for atonement by suicide. Armand is saved from Directed by GEORGE E. REEHMS DRAMA THE CAST The prince resent Walter Woodin The American girl Augusta Anderson The count Wm. J. Butler A rmand Charles Perley The American tourist Robert Nolan shooting himself by an American tourist, who urges him to leave the country. In the United States, a year later, he meets the girl and is about to elope with her when his father sends him word that he has been pardoned. At the club he runs across his tourist friend and accompanies him home, where he sees a portrait of the girl. “That is my wife,” his host says proudly. On the table lies her note of farewell to her husband. Armand contrives to abstract it, and, going to the rendezvous, tells the girl that he knows all. His honor is at stake, and she must go back to her husband.