Charlie Murray, an apothecary who devotes most of his time to developing films for amateur photographers, develops some films taken by Kalla Pasha at a country resort where Charlie's wife has been spending a delightful vacation. One of the negatives shows his wife standing with Pasha in an attitude denoting affection. A jealous scene follows when ends in a quarrel and Hurray files suit for divorce. At the trial Murray learns that his grandfather has left him a fortune because he is happily married. Murray and his wife are reconciled and quit the court room. They go to a beach hotel and obtain rooms. To the same hotel come Pasha and his wife, and by an error of the clerk, Pasha's wife is sent to Murray's room and Murray's wife to Pasha's. A house detective gets busy and mixes matters up until at last he is thrown out of a window. In the mix-up, Murray's uncle who had announced the inheritance and mistaking Pasha's wife for Murray;s wife, conducts himself in a manner that inspires popular belief that he is a, gay Don Juan. In a chase that ensues many new and startling effects are introduced, and it finally ends when the pursuers and perused fall off a roof and tumble through a glass roof into the lobby of the hotel. A general reconciliation follows when matters are explained.
—Copyright Description from Library of Congress