TURN HIM OUT
Adapted from the Early London Farce Comedy Success of the Same Name
Written by THOMAS H. WILLIAM. Produced by CHARLES H. PRANCE
NICODEMUS NOBBS, a toy vender, is recognized by Susan, the bonny servant of Mrs. Mackintosh Moke, through the window of the house as she is leaning out discussing the weather with
the painter. Just at the moment Mrs. Moke, newly-wed and timerous, comes hurrying, terror-
stricken up the street pursued by Eglantine Roseleaf, a dandified "masher." Although the door is
slammed in the face of this perapatetic nuisance, he lingers lovingly about and finally spies the ladder
of the painter and climbs it. Susan meets the bold invader, but succumbing to a bribe, hides him in a
closet. She then cleverly and bravely locks him in and reports to her mistress. She calls in Nobbs and
tells him he must do some fighting for her. At that juncture Moke, the master of the house, happens
home unexpectedly and is promptly "fired" by the belligerent Nobbs before he has time to make any
explanations. While Nobbs is telling his adventure, the imprisoned Roseleaf manages to pick the lock
and gets out just as the dilapidated Moke gets back in his own house. As neither knows the other it
starts a new lot of comedy complications and eventually Moke is again cast out of house and home.
He tries the original method of getting sent home in a trunk; but Nobbs
is on the job and he gets a horrible jolting and is carried away again
in the trunk and thrown in the river. It furnishes a series of laughter-
producing complications until matters are righted and the Roseleaf is
properly chastised. On same reel with
I -/^Q It PEKIN CHINA
HI °ne of the oldest and most interesting cities of the world, a fine educational subject.
Lyllian
Leighton
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