is a 1917 American two-reel silent comedy film directed by and starring Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle and featuring Buster Keaton.
[2] Young Dr. Holepoke (Arbuckle) arrives at the horse-racing with his teenage son (Keaton) and his wife.
He stabs his son in the knee with a pin so that his wife swaps seats and he ends up next to the girl.
A tipster Snapper whispers to the girl to bet all on "Lightning" and the doctor eavesdrops.
He goes to his study and reads a letter from the funeral home, M. Balm Moribund, asking for a list of his critically ill patients.
Meanwhile the tipster is in his own home talking to the girl and finds the doctor's calling card.
They decide to lure him to their house and she calls him on the telephone and says she has accidentally drunk a bottle of shoe polish.
Snapper gets home and gives the girl a necklace he stole from Mrs Holepoke.
The wife enters and the two women start to fight, Snapper comes out of the cupboard and gets knocked out by them.
The Chicago Board of Censors required a cut of the scene where a man is pulling a women's skirt up to her knees.