The Unmarried Look - Production & Contact Info (original) (raw)

In spite of all the troubles (and successes) which the "unmarried look" causes Henry, he finally rises to the "very crown" of the hat business. For be it known Henry is a seller of Cupid hats, and is called upon to flaunt his graces before...See moreIn spite of all the troubles (and successes) which the "unmarried look" causes Henry, he finally rises to the "very crown" of the hat business. For be it known Henry is a seller of Cupid hats, and is called upon to flaunt his graces before the feminine sex with whom he has become very popular, even to the near disruption of his domestic happiness. One day when Mr. Henry left the house in an unusually buoyant spirit, Mrs. Henry's suspicions caused her a very bad half hour, at the end of which she decides to call at the Cupid Hat Palace and investigate matters for herself. Here she finds hubby busy with a fair customer, and be it said to Henry's credit that his interest in the fair sex other than his wife is merely a matter of business. The final straw falls when at home once again Mrs. Henry is obliged to take a phone message from one of these fair customers with whom hubby has made a lunch engagement, and is under the painful necessity of informing her that she is Mr. Henry's wife and not his mother. A tempest in a teapot ensues in the Henry household upon which the curtain is wisely drawn. We are then led over a skip of several years, when we find Henry a happy father. He has now climbed to the "very crown" of the hat business, as before stated, and has become an absolute nuisance by way of his pride in his possession of a son. For even should he forget to state that he has a wife, he never forgets to acclaim the fact that he is the possessor of a baby son. Written by Moving Picture World, January 5, 1918 See less