This is an especially well acted farce in which the popular Pathe comedian, Max Linder, appears in a characteristic part. A young woman courted by several young men rejects all of them, declaring that she will marry only a man who can accomplish some such feat as might have been performed by Arsene Lupin. Max accepts the challenge, proposing to treat the entire party to a fine dinner without paying a cent for it. All repair to a cafe, where dinner is served and eaten. When it comes to paying Max proposes that the waiter be blindfolded and that the one he catches shall settle. The waiter agrees and is blindfolded, whereupon the diners escape out of a window and the waiter catches the proprietor, who is, of course, the one "stung." - The New York Dramatic Mirror, May 14, 1910
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