Neely may marry Betty if he has an office full of patients at two o'clock when her father calls. What could be more simple? The highways and byways are scoured by friends picking up people to go to the office with the promise of a ...See moreNeely may marry Betty if he has an office full of patients at two o'clock when her father calls. What could be more simple? The highways and byways are scoured by friends picking up people to go to the office with the promise of a two-dollar bill if they put in an appearance. The denomination seemingly has lost its sinister significance, for the office is crowded by, among others, six girls in a beauty contest who proceed to put on bathing suits for the doctor's inspection, thinking he is the judge of the contest. Another caller is a cramp-suffering clergyman. The latter's call is most opportune because he can and does marry the lovers. Written by
Motion Picture News, September 11, 1926
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