

The Spell of the Yukon
1916 Directed by Burton L. KingHaving forced Jim Carson to leave town in order to avoid a trumped-up embezzling charge, now Albert Temple is rid of his only serious rival for Helen, whom he soon marries. Jim goes to Alaska, where he adopts Bob Adams, the son of a murdered friend, and then makes a fortune in a gold strike. After eighteen years in the Yukon, Jim returns to his hometown with Bob, who falls in love with Helen and Albert's daughter Dorothy. Because he so hates Albert, however, Jim refuses to consent to a marriage between Bob and Dorothy until Helen tells him that Albert is not the young woman's father. In reality, Dorothy is Jim's own daughter, and when he learns this, Jim quickly changes his mind about the marriage.

Edmund Breese
....................................................Jim Carson

Arthur Hoops
....................................................Albert Temple

Christine Mayo
....................................................Helen Temple

William Sherwood
....................................................Bob Adams

Evelyn Brent
....................................................Dorothy Temple

Lorna Volare
....................................................Bob Adams as a Baby
Frank McArthur
....................................................Megar
Director
...........................................................Burton L. King
Assistant Director
...........................................................Dale Hanshaw
Scenario Writer
...........................................................Wallace Clifton
Story
...........................................................Aaron Hoffman
Poem
...........................................................Robert W. Service
Cinematography
...........................................................Leo Bergman
Production Companies
...................................................Popular Plays and Players Inc.
Production Countries
........................................................United States of America
Spoken Languages
....................................................No Language
Genres
....................................................Drama
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