His Trysting Place

[1][2] Charlie and his friend Ambrose meet in a restaurant and accidentally leave with each other's coats.

Charlie was going to pick up a baby bottle and Ambrose was going to mail a love letter that was in his coat pocket.

It is resolved at the end, but Charlie sparks another fight between the other couple by showing his friend's wife the love letter that was in his pocket.

Louis Reeves Harrison of the Montgomery Journal wrote this positive review about His Trysting Place: "The comic spirit is entirely too deep and subtle for me to define.

He leans back and puts one foot on the stove, upsetting the boiling kettle, when a flame leaps up and burns his leg, then trouble begins."