An irate father forbids his daughter to marry until she has received three proposals. The daughter and her lover scheme to supply the additional suitors very shortly. They accumulate a cabaret habitué and a nervous individual with large spectacles who is already engaged. The cabaret hound braves the old man in his den with the result that he is summarily dismissed after a succession of acrobatics. The bespectacled youth is not easy to persuade, but at length is led to try his luck. At this juncture Father discovers the scheme and at revolver-point forces his daughter to marry the wrong man, taking care that he gets an actor to portray the clergyman so the contract will not be binding. The lover attempts to break up the ceremony, first disguised as a cop, then in widow's weeds.
—Wid's, May 15, 1921