Tontolini and Lea have some merry pranks. As two children with spades and buckets, they are digging sand when a family consisting of a very stout gentleman, his wife and children enter a bathing machine. Lea puts a rope across the entrance...See moreTontolini and Lea have some merry pranks. As two children with spades and buckets, they are digging sand when a family consisting of a very stout gentleman, his wife and children enter a bathing machine. Lea puts a rope across the entrance, and as the party come out they each trip over the rope and fall in a heap on the sand. A mad chase on the sea-shore then ensues, the two mischief-makers in front, and the whole family in bathing costume in pursuit. They upset everybody on the shore, and finally all dash into the sea. All give up the chase except the stout gentleman, who follows Lea and Tontolini home, where the ladies are so disgusted they get their servants to expel him, while the cause of the uproar remain behind to laugh at the result of their mischievousness. Written by
Kinematograph Weekly - October 27, 1910
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