Both husband and wife are afflicted with the same malady. They suffer from "flirting aloud," a very dangerous disease. While the wife is yodling her tea with the butler, the husband is whispering sweet nothings in the ear of the fair maid,...See moreBoth husband and wife are afflicted with the same malady. They suffer from "flirting aloud," a very dangerous disease. While the wife is yodling her tea with the butler, the husband is whispering sweet nothings in the ear of the fair maid, but they catch each other when least expected, and the contribution to the happiness of the other is discharged. Without each other's knowledge they to the park to air their emotions, but when the servants reach the park they determine to get the "goods" on their employers; so Bill, the husband, is photographed kissing the maid, while Gale, the wife, is photographed by the maid kissing the butler. With the films developed the two servants go to the house and demand their jobs back again. The evidence is enough, and they are successful, but there seems no way of getting the photographs destroyed, and when, after a great deal of searching the husband discovers the wife's photograph and the wife discovers the husband's photograph they realize that the servants are a couple of blackmailers, and oust them from the house, hiring a large colored lady as maid and an old Chinaman as valet, and the enmity existing between these two servants is sufficient proof that the domestic harmony of Bill and Gale will never again be marred by the servant problem. Written by
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