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1-13 of 13
- A man buys his first car and celebrates by taking his family and the neighbors to the country for a camping trip. In hindsight, this was a terrible idea.
- In 1830, a train known as the Iron Mule is loaded with passengers, and starts off on its trip. Along the way, the train faces numerous obstacles and delays. The engineer is prepared for most of them, but the real challenges come when the train is ambushed by Indians.
- Al, married to Doris, gets a letter from his uncle saying that he will inherit a million dollars if he is still single. Instead of simply posing as unmarried, St. John and John Sinclair, his best man, decide to win George Davis' (Uncle George) sympathy for marriage. St. John poses as insane, his wife becomes his nurse, a friend is the keeper and the best man is the doctor. Uncle George is told that St. John's inability to marry because of the coming inheritance has driven him mad. Each time that love is mentioned St. John raises the roof. Then Uncle George capitulates and is told St. John has been married. The million dollar check is handed over. A stranger appears and takes "Uncle George" away, revealing the fact that he isn't Uncle George, but a lunatic escaped from a nearby asylum.
- A man is offered a great job, but with two drawbacks: it's on the other side of the country, and he has to be there by a certain date--and he's broke. He sets out anyway, and along the way gets tangled up with escaped convicts and long-distance runners.
- A man, working hard to avoid work, but keeping from the local Bastille by hiring out as a furniture mover, puts over several exciting moments in guiding a grand piano to a lofty apartment.
- When Buttonshoe Bill steals some papers from Buckwheat Ben, and kidnaps Ben's daughter, Rodney Hemingway comes to the rescue.
- A handy man about a rural hotel does everything from bell-hopping to mowing the lawn.
- Al appears as a henpecked husband who, left alone in the park, tries to flirt with a blind girl and then with a married woman, resulting in getting a black eye from her husband. He ingeniously explains it to his wife by telling a wild yarn in which he appears as the hero, but a camera record of the affair shown in a movie house which they attend results in his getting in wrong with his wife and also the woman's husband, who occupies an adjoining seat, so he lands in a hospital resolved never to flirt again until he gets better.
- As the new property man of a country theater where a traveling troupe of vaudeville performers are striving to please, Poodles manages to do the wrong thing invariably and besides becomes the chief entertainer in every act, though entirely unaware of the hit he is making. To add to the excitement there is a thieving manager who steals the box-office receipts and is brought to justice at the finish by Poodles.
- Al wants to elope with his girlfriend, but her dog Pete disrupts the plan.
- Poodles, as the Sheriff, is decidedly in favor of the opposite sex, and particularly the new school teacher, who is abducted and secreted in a hut by several of the town ruffians. Strapped to a post she is to be the victim of a pistol attached to the clock within ten minutes. Poodles' dog has trailed the abductors and sensed the situation. He rushes to his master and brings the necessary relief in the nick of time.
- Dr. Harry has a terrible dream after eating lobster. He dreamed he killed Ned, and Ned dreamed he was killed. Only the wife sleeps peacefully. The moral is: Trust your wife, but Dr. Harry locks cousin's door.