Mason and Keeler

The scene is laid in the room of a hotel. As the curtain rises someone with a dark lantern enters the room and shows that he means business when he takes all available articles and slips them into a bag. Just then a young woman enters. She has been a victim of aphasia and is just coming out of her abnormal condition. The crook hides in the bathroom and then a key is inserted in the door and a man in evening clothes who shows the effects of intoxication enters. He tries to recall where he has spent the last two days, when he suddenly sees the young woman, who has retired, and is laying on the bed. He quickly takes it for granted that he has gotten married during his carousal and after taking a look at the girl he seems to be satisfied that he has made an admirable selection. Hijinks and comedy ensue.

Eva Fay

“She appeared twice on the bill, first in a series of cabinet feats such as spiritualists are wont to perform in darkened rooms, but this time on a brilliantly lighted stage, after a committee from the audience had securely bound and bandaged her to a chair attached to a pole in the center of the cabinet.”

Eva Tanguay

“A change of costume brought her back in her familiar blue tasselated dress with which went the number ‘I’m Just Wild About That Kind of Love.’ A coat of orange and black over a white suit was the dressing for a characteristic Tanguay song called ‘Personality,’ wherein the singer explained to the audience that she possessed that quality along with Roosevelt and a few of the other world’s bright lights.”