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- While on the job, delivering a message, Luke finds himself in a girl's seminary.
- A tipsy doctor encounters his patient sleepwalking on a building ledge, high above the street.
- A man hits the streets with a scheme to keep his fiancé from losing her job, however, things quickly go from bad to worse.
- Blase eastern boy is shipped off to a ranch in the 'wild west ' by his father.
- After numerous failed attempts to commit suicide, our hero (Lloyd) runs into a lawyer who is looking for a stooge to stand in as a groom in order to secure an inheritance for his client (Davis). The inheritance is a house, which her scheming uncle "haunts" so that he can scare them off and claim the property.
- Comic adventures of newlyweds and children.
- An American book salesman (Lloyd) is persuaded to go to the kingdom of Thermosa to impersonate the Prince. He is greeted by a peasants' revolt before the real prince shows up to claim his throne and princess. The revolution succeeds and the American is elected president of the new republic.
- Young playwright spends his last cent to pay the rent of struggling actress in a theatrical boarding house. Pursuing her, he winds up at a gambling club, where he wins big, just before a police raid.
- A penniless young man tries to save an heiress from kidnappers and help her secure her inheritance.
- Beatrice is a boarding house damsel who takes the place of a stolen statue at an exhibition given by a sculptor.
- 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.
- An ambitious coat-room checker impersonates an English nobleman.
- Our hero saves a man from drowning, only to find that it is the wrong man.
- The comic adventures of a new car owner.
- While at an amusement park, two men try to win the heart of a young lady. They compete with each other while attempting to find her runaway dog, and they race to ask her mother's permission to take her up in a hot air balloon.
- After missing his train, Stan Laurel meets a Good Samaritan who invites him back to his home for rest and relaxation. It proves a most arduous vacation but even amidst the angry suffragettes and demanding hosts, Laurel hazards into love.
- Boy trying to impress girl, gets chased by her father and the police right into an ongoing marathon.
- 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 gets a job at a hotel in the country and proceeds to introduce some changes, installing gadgets and time-saving devices.
- 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.
- 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.
- Lonesome Luke has a movie theater and also works the box office and as an usher. He has to put up with, among other things, an incompetent projectionist who falls asleep all the time. Complications ensue.
- Harold visits the Ozarks, where he has some funny experiences with a mountain girl and her eccentric family.
- Lonesome Luke and his accessory, Moke Morpheus, are discovered in bellhop uniform, blissfully dozing on a bench in the lobby of the Bughouse Hotel. Comes a guest, and the desk clerk rings a bellhop. But, in the words of Aristotle, or Ted or someone, "you can ring and you can ring, but the house is boarded up." The clink of a few pieces of silver seems to touch some dormant chord in the boys' subconscious minds, and they immediately get on the job. Moke, after seeing the guest to his room, tries, of course, to hide the fact that a tip would be in order, and because of his modesty flies quickly from the room with the kindly aid of the roomer's leather encased pedal extremities. Luke escorts a girl guest to her room, and is starting quite a flirtation with her, when Moke, whose motto is "pass nothing up" approaches them and tells Luke that there is a tall tip awaiting him in the new guest's room. Luke goes, and the guest learns how foolish and wasteful it is to break a perfectly good water pitcher on a bellhop's head. Luke then staggers back to Moke, and sends him with neatness and dispatch through a door and into the lap of a retiring guest. With the arrival of a roughneck bouncer and his pretty wife, a fascinating free-for-all is started, in which Luke, with a fire hose, gallantly stands off the concerted attack of the whole household.
- The young couple have decided to marry and it is time to ask the father for the hand of his daughter. Problem is, the father does not want to give the daughter away. So every time he goes to the office to ask the father, he is tossed out. He is ejected over and over, by different methods, while the girl waits and waits.
- A salesman takes a job at a department store to impress a girl and winds up stopping a kidnapping.
- After a wild bachelor party, our hero finds himself aboard a sailing vessel where he encounters numerous adventures. In a dream sequence, he fantasizes that the ship is seized by a band of female pirates.
- Billy Blazes confronts Crooked Charley, who has been ruling the town of Peaceful Vale through fear and violence.
- A young man, unaccustomed to children, must accompany a young girl on a train trip.
- 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.
- Harold has trouble with his father and is ordered out of the house. He then becomes a waiter and pulls off some highly amusing stunts at a swell dinner party. He performs a "Julian Eltinge," and appears as a buxom, blithe and debonair young woman. The comedy woven about the new role is sidesplitting, especially when the "he-hussy" is being wooed by the father of his sweetheart.
- Con artists Harold and Snub attempt to outwit phony psychic Miss Goulash and her "professor" father.
- A young man promises his girl that he will get Spitball Sadie, a renowned female pitcher, for her all-girl baseball team. When he is unable to get Sadie to come, he dresses up as her and takes her place on the team.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- A man takes a job in a café, hoping to get to know the pretty waitress working there.
- Harold and Snub, traveling on a tandem bicycle, encounter wading women in distress, bank robbers, and police who believe them to be the robbers.
- Lonesome Luke at the San Diego Exposition.
- Our newlywed hero is about to embark on his honeymoon when he realizes that he has lost the train tickets. In a mad scramble to find them, his bride is led to believe that she has been deserted.
- In pre-historic times (dream sequence), our hero, in a loin cloth, battles other cavemen over the opposite sex.
- Our hero, a professor in Turkey, challenges a Sultan for the affections of a girl.
- Bebe is surrounded by suitors, but her father wants her to marry Professor M. T. Noodle. Harold makes his move by impersonating the professor.
- 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.
- 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.
- An American, separated from his troop, protects a helpless Russian girl from marauding Bolsheviks.