Mr. Parsley loves the widow Mrs. Brown. His little boy visits her little girl and they mix a jar of mustard with the pumpkin pie ingredients. A tramp steals the pies and it is blamed upon the children. The widower prepares some flowers for...See moreMr. Parsley loves the widow Mrs. Brown. His little boy visits her little girl and they mix a jar of mustard with the pumpkin pie ingredients. A tramp steals the pies and it is blamed upon the children. The widower prepares some flowers for the widow and the children sprinkle red pepper upon them. They are sent to the widow and she is indignant when she gets the full effect of the pepper. The tramp tries one of the pies and suffers from the mustard and leaves the other pie at the widower's with a note saying it came from the widow Brown. The widower eats it and jumps around wildly from the effect of the mustard in the pie. He goes to the widow Brown's house where she abuses him on account of the pepper in the roses and, with much ginger, throws him out of the house where he collides with an officer who arrests him. He is brought before the old judge and all the court get the sneezing habit. This angers the judge and he has Mr. Parsley locked up. The widow hears of this and, going to court, she explains all and Mr. Parsley is released. Written by
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