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- A slapstick comedy in which Jimmy Jump demonstrates that a day can be entirely taken up with accidents of a ludicrous nature.
- It's Prohibition, and the boys wind up behind bars after Stan sells some of their home-brew beer to a policeman. In prison, Stan's loose tooth keeps getting him in trouble, because it sounds like he's giving everybody a rasp- berry. But it earns him the respect of The Tiger, a rough prisoner, and the boys manage to slip away during The Tiger's escape attempt. They disguise themselves in blackface and hide on a cotton plantation, but are recaptured when the warden happens by. Back in the big house, they find themselves in a hail of bullets, caught between the state militia and gun-toting prisoners, when The Tiger tries another escape.
- Snitch steals Ginger's baseball tickets and takes Ginger's girl to the game. Finding himself without tickets, Ginger dresses as a baseball player and wins the game.
- Our hero is a police officer who gets involved in a crap game, flirting with a nurse and other amusements.
- Constance Bennett demonstrates her morning skin-care and make-up regimen.
- After finding a note in a floating bottle, our hero is off to resue the heroine. He runs into a tribe of cannibals.
- Harold Lloyd plays a troublemaker who messes up with strangers and cops along the way. During the confusion he takes a trolley to escape, falling in love with a female collector who doesn't care much about him and he also annoys the trolley conductor. But it seems that odds and luck will be on his favor.
- A mild-mannered young man has left home, and is now playing the piano in a bar in the west. The dangerous criminal Dagger-Tooth Dan enters the bar where the young man is playing. Soon afterwards, the local sheriff also arrives, with some letters that he has received. Dan notices the letters, and he switches the information in them to make the sheriff think that the piano player is the dangerous one.
- The rarest of Laurel and Hardy films side of The Rogue Song (1930), That's That is a gag reel made up of alternate takes and bloopers said to have been compiled by film editor Bert Jordan as a present for Stan Laurel's birthday in 1938.
- Harold decides to crash a fireman's ball just to see the girl he loves. However, their parents decided she would marry the fire department chief and Harold is out of consideration. But when the fire alarm rings at the same time the 2nd man in position quits his job, the inept Harold takes a chance to become a firefighter and become worthy of getting the girl.
- At the Killjoy Cafe, "everything is first class except the food and the service."
- Harold and Bebe are newly weds. When setting off towards their honeymoon Harold is mistakenly left behind. But when he catches up with her at the ship, he is soon put to work as a engine room worker. Will he ever see his new bride again?
- A salesman takes a job at a department store to impress a girl and winds up stopping a kidnapping.
- A clerk in a failing antiques store gets a big idea on how to move the merchandise so that he can save the store and possibly win the girl.
- Suburban neighbors (Lloyd and Pollard) join together to build a garden shed, but through carelessness, wind up ruining the garden, as well as the laundry, which is drying in the yard. Further mayhem ensues when chickens are set loose.
- A nervy young man follows a pretty lady into a diner to flirt with her, but winds up getting stuck with the tab.
- A rich man's daughter has more suitors than she's interested in, and he's going to marry her off -- even if she's doesn't know about it.
- A man delivering a pair of trousers loses his own pants, setting off a chaotic sequence of events.
- A man lives in a tent aboard a raft with his wife and in-laws. What could possibly go wrong?
- Abbreviated nine-minute segment excerpted from the feature film Our Relations (1936), and released to the 16mm home movie market in the pre-VCR days.
- Abbreviated nine-minute segment excerpted from the feature film Kelly the Second (1936) q.v., and released to the 16mm home movie market in the pre-VCR days.
- An American, separated from his troop, protects a helpless Russian girl from marauding Bolsheviks.
- While on the job, delivering a message, Luke finds himself in a girl's seminary.
- Harold is a bookkeeper who works in an office but can't keep his mind on his job -- the spring weather is too nice to stay indoors. After escaping from his office he romps in the park instead.
- A man who goes by the name The Sport decides where he wants to spend his last twenty-five cents. He chases the girl he's infatuated with, and encounters colorful characters along the way.
- In order to claim his inheritance, our hero must first produce a wife and family.
- While running away from his girl's father, their car breaks down in front of a dance hall run by crooks. Harold has to not only stay one step ahead of the girl's father, but also those trying to rob them of everything they have.
- Our hero saves a man from drowning, only to find that it is the wrong man.
- Boy trying to impress girl, gets chased by her father and the police right into an ongoing marathon.
- A man tries to sneak into a motion picture studio to give back the letter of the beautiful woman who dropped it at a sidewalk.
- Our hero has a dream, while in the trenches at the front, that he is in Berlin rescuing a Red Cross nurse from the hands of the Kaiser and his henchmen.
- The gang runs away from home, but meet up with a kindly old couple.
- Spanky and Alfalfa fake a tooth-ache to get out of school.
- Harold and Snub, traveling on a tandem bicycle, encounter wading women in distress, bank robbers, and police who believe them to be the robbers.
- When Darla shows up with a new beau, Alfalfa is bereft. Unable to compete with Waldo's wealth, he decides to compete with skill. Waldo has a miniature speedboat. Alfalfa and the gang build their own "speedboat," powered by ducks, and challenge Waldo to a race for the hand of Darla.
- Harold is a chef with certain devices for labor saving.
- Harold plays the role of a millionaire kid who goes to the Canadian wilds to hunt. Bears follow him, but he fails to see them and wanders along looking always into the beyond for something his imagination has painted. His valet, an eccentric figure, meets with a wild animal who devours the contents of his lunch basket, while he makes his getaway. A tussle with one of the bears which follows the young millionaire to the cabin, affords some amusing scenes.
- A photo studio operator seems only interested in flirting with women. After slapping at his advance, a women phones her husband to come kill him. Unsure what to do, Harold randomly enters the studio and is offered to 'manage' the store.
- A clueless man finds a bomb on the street and keeps throwing it to the crowd around him. The sketch then moves with the clueless nerd getting involved in all sorts of troubles until he accidentally gets into a hideout from a terrorist group that will complicate things for him more than he ever hoped.
- A man takes a job in a café, hoping to get to know the pretty waitress working there.
- Harold invades the "Gilded Guzzle" café, where he appropriates a lady's roll of money, hides under a table and impersonates a cigar store Indian.
- The gang promises to keep away from girls on St. Valentine's Day, but Alfalfa can't resist Darla.
- Stan is held by a hostile tribe in the desert. He saves his head by agreeing to wed a foreign princess without beauty as an asset. But after various escapes he flees with a beautiful tourist, aided by a rather temperamental camel.
- Roomers in a boarding house break the rules and are caught cooking if their room. A frantic run-in with the landlady ensues.
- Harold must have $5,000 to win the girl and manages to get it out of her father in a novel way.
- Detective Alfalfa and his assistants Buckwheat and Porky try to solve a missing-candy case but find themselves in an amusement park haunted house.
- Harold is a penniless youth who picks up a wealthy and intoxicated friend. They do the city cabarets together, and Harold abstracts most of his friend's money, only to lose it later.