Bertie writes an article called "What the Well-Dressed Man is Wearing" for his Aunt Dahlia's magazine, Milady's Boudoir.
Jeeves approves of the article, except he disagrees with Bertie's assertion that silk shirts are worn with evening dress.
Bingo appears the next morning, and tells Bertie and Jeeves that Rosie is writing an embarrassing article about their married life, "How I Keep the Love of My Husband-Baby", for Milady's Boudoir.
As a substitute plan, Bingo persuades Bertie to sneak in and steal the cylinder from Rosie's dictating machine.
Later, Bertie sneakily enters Bingo's house, but, startled by a Pekingese dog, makes a lot of noise.
Jeeves advises Bertie to join his Uncle George at Harrogate, to avoid more of Bingo's schemes.
Bertie frequently uses two or three alternative words together to describe the same thing, such as in "Clustering Round Young Bingo", when he uses three equivalent terms when describing a maid's clumsiness: "The one now in office apparently runs through the objets d'art like a typhoon, simoom, or sirocco".
[3] "Clustering Round Young Bingo" is one of the stories in which Jeeves keeps some of his actions and motives secret from Bertie, according to Kristin Thompson.
At the end of the story, Jeeves tells Bertie about how he solved the various servant problems, and about the money he was rewarded with from the householders involved.
[5] The story was illustrated by H. J. Mowat in the Saturday Evening Post and by A. Wallis Mills in the Strand.