- Two attractive female song-pluggers decide to become gold-diggers, with comic results.
- Broadway song-pluggers Flo and Dot, besieged with admirers, are fired; disgusted with men, they decide to become gold-diggers. After a first success in "taking" fashion retailer LeMaire, they try the millionaires' playground of Havana, where mistaken identities bring their schemes to comic confusion.—Rod Crawford <puffinus@u.washington.edu>
- Flo and Dot, song pluggers and clerks in a New York music shop, are exact opposites: the latter, beautiful and reserved, and the former, a typical gold digger. Foster, their employer, blames them for poor business and Le Maire, an excitable Frenchman courting their favor, wrecks the shop when asked to leave. Consequently, the girls are fired and take work in Le Maire's modiste shop. After being offered finery for a party, the girls take the clothes and depart for Havana--Dot having been sold on professional gold digging. There, Flo learns that Smith, a soft drink millionaire, is staying in their hotel but mistakes a Colonel Joy as their game; but as the wedding is set for Dot, she learns that Jerry Smith, with whom she is in love, is the actual millionaire. Le Maire arrives and exposes their plotting, but Jerry pays for their trouble and wins Dot as his wife.
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