In this subject the Biograph presents another episode in the Wright family. Harry gets in bad for a time, but he wriggles out like a trout off a hook and comes up with that perennial grin or "the smile that won't come off." Harry is starting on a business trip and Bessie is sad, but he makes the big promise, showing her a photo of herself in his bill case, which shall ever be before him. As he turns to fasten his grip, wifey extracts the photo, handing him the closed case, with the expression, "We shall see." Putting the case in his pocket, he departs. Next we find him at the hotel of another town, enjoying, with convivial society, a little game of draw. Ah, he must not forget a letter to wifey. He tells her how lonesome he feels, that her picture is now before him. When Bessie reads this, she storms, "What a fib. I thought so." She writes him of the trap she set, and when he looks at the case now for the first time, he is flabbergasted. "Now I'm in for it. Ah, an idea." He telegraphs to his mother to send him at once the photo she has of Bessie. The photo arrives and he starts for home. Of course, you may imagine the reception, but when he shows himself possessed of her photo, Bessie pleads for forgiveness for having doubted him. Another victory for Harry.
—Moving Picture World synopsis