- Alice plays a blacksmith's daughter. She falls in love with a "city feller" and bursts into high society after marrying him. The action is of the burlesque, knockabout type.
- Euphemia was the daughter of the village blacksmith, who owed a bill for "dry goods" to Jake Jagg, the proprietor of the Soul Kiss Saloon. The blacksmith was financially embarrassed, so he tried to persuade Euphemia to marry Jake. But Euphemia had more romantic ideals, and eloped with Willie Wishbone, the son of a millionaire soap manufacturer. When Willis brought his wife home, his parents, displeased that their son should marry the daughter of a blacksmith, disowned him and ordered him from their house. After shooting the chutes of misfortune until they landed in poverty, Willie and Euphemia, now proud parents, return to old Wishbone's house when the old man's auto crashes into Euphemia's baby carriage on the street and demolishes it without injury to the baby. The blacksmith and his pal, Jake, read in the paper that Euphemia has returned to the home of her father-in-law, and they decide to burglarize the house. Euphemia, who has again come into disfavor with Willie's parents through her lack of society manners, becomes the heroine of the occasion when she captures the two burglars and save old Wishbone's bankroll.—Copyright Description from Library of Congress
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