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1-50 of 66
- The day's takings from a shop are stolen and an employee gives chase to catch the crooks.
- Charlie relates his harrowing vacation to his co-workers, including his encounter with two confused, derby-hatted hitchikers.
- A feature-length documentary devoted to the great clowns of silent comedy.
- Charley, hoping to find cultured people in his ancestry in order to be suitable to Muriel's family, is tricked by his rival Ronnie into believing himself a descendant of Tarzan. Conked on the head, Charley suddenly believes he IS Tarzan.
- An inventor adds new innovations to Baker Airplane Company's planes, inventions coveted by the owners of a rival company. The masked and mysterious airman, known only as Pilot X, makes plans to steal the inventions for his own purposes. The perils are fast and furious as the owner of the airplane company, aided by his aviatrix fiancee, find themselves in constant danger, both on land and in the air.
- Charley is hired to haunt a house.
- Charley goes into hysterics whenever his fiancée touches him.
- Thelma invites Charley to play golf at her father's exclusive country club.
- The subject opens with some culinary trickery of an amusing sort, and a clash between a pet cat and the dog. Next comes the news that Hughie has been left a legacy of $100,000.00 conditional upon his maintaining the pets left by his dying Uncle. The family start out in their "Fierce-Arrow" to claim the pets and the legacy. To their horror the Express Agent delivers two full grown elephants as the pets. At once it is evident that the legacy is not an unmixed blessing. On the way home the elephants become somewhat obstreperous and clean out a fruit stand, etc. Exhausted with his efforts in getting the pets home, Hughie falls into an uneasy slumber in which he has a vivid nightmare of oriental splendor which the audience enjoys with him. While engaged in a terrific struggle with a leopard he awakens to find that he is shaking his wife, who is protesting in kind. Then come some perfectly hilarious scenes of the elephants entering and taking possession of a hotel, where they proceed to traverse the corridors, enter the sleeping and bath rooms and even crash through the walls, thus producing a series of extremely funny situations among the panic-stricken guests.
- Charley hires three "party girls" to help him land a business deal.
- An estranged couple visit their old apartment, which is now occupied by Charley and his wife. Charley's wife, however, misunderstands the purpose of their visit.
- A socially inept radio star causes chaos while trying to fit in at a high society dinner party.
- For Charlie, a doughboy in France, war is another opportunity to sing in a quartet. He falls for local barmaid Antoinette, who likes him too. She encourages him to study, so he does and becomes a sergeant. But his love life and musical career are interrupted by shooting, trench warfare, and his continual run-ins with a cranky lieutenant. A crisis befalls him when the quartet's tenor is shot in the throat: Charlie hears a German soldier singing like an angel, so he hatches an elaborate plan to bring the soldier across no-man's-land. Can Charlie pull it all off, including winning Antoinette's hand?
- When Charley can't pay his bill at a restaurant, he is forced to become a waiter.
- A man attempts to repulse a blind date, not realizing that she is a knockout.
- Charley, representing a manufacturer of musical instruments, is sent to investigate why certain mail orders have not been settled. Charley, carrying multiple bulky instruments, boards a train and gives the conductor, the porter, and the passengers a terrible night as he tries to settle into his upper berth. Arriving at his rural destination of Beaver Dam, Charley masquerades as a hillbilly to track down the missing instruments. At the barn dance, he sings "Handsome Jim."
- Charley falls for both a mother and her daughter.
- Charley goes out for an evening on the town without his wife.
- Charley and Thelma are millionaires, each trying to elude suitors who are trying to marry them for their money.
- Charley falls in love with Thelma, but his attack of hay fever alienates her father.
- Charley poses as a hillbilly in his pursuit of a country girl.
- Charley intervenes in a fight between Eddie and Thelma inside her small car. Cop Kennedy misinterprets things, and Charley hides in the theatre Thelma is rehearsing in. Charley replaces Eddie as Thelma's partner in an artistic dance act, and makes a fiasco of it.
- Charley is an efficiency expert trying to teach a millionaire's daughter the value of money.
- A bandleader ignores a pretty dancer who fancies him in order to chase after a beautiful, snooty high-society dame.