Advanced search
- TITLES
- NAMES
- COLLABORATIONS
Search filters
Enter full date
to
or just enter yyyy, or yyyy-mm below
to
to
to
Exclude
Only includes titles with the selected topics
to
In minutes
to
1-50 of 587
- Dorothy is a film fan from the middle west, who arrives in Los Angeles to visit relatives. Neal, a cashier of a local bank, is her fiance. She shows such interest in motion picture comedians that he impersonates Charlie Chaplin and visits her at the home of her relatives, wrecking the place and stealing her gems. He is arrested and sent to jail for thirty days, during which time she is cured of her infatuation. When released he returns without the disguise and is accepted on the old footing.
- Johnny gets drunk at his bachelor party. He intends to "sleep it off" in the apartment of his best man, but mistakenly goes to the apartment of two women instead.
- An overambitious ringmaster is deviously plotting to have his circus' owner done away with in a lion cage so he can take over the whole show. However, World War I intervenes and he eventually aids the Allied cause by joining the German army.
- Charley Wyckham and Jack Chesney pressure fellow student Fancourt Babberly to pose as Charley's Brazilian Aunt Donna Lucia. Their purpose is to have a chaperone for their amorous visits with Amy and Kitty, niece and ward of crusty Stephen Spettigue. Complications begin when Fancourt, in drag, becomes the love object of old Spettigue and Sir Francis Chesney.
- Helen and Nita work in a department store to make ends meet while they search for millionaire husbands. They meet Bill and Hank, who make them reconsider whether they really need millionaires to be happy.
- A snooping reporter at a college newspaper angers a rival sorority, so they steal a statue before its unveiling to get revenge, leading to a sorority vs. sorority brawl. Co-eds end up tearing each other's clothes off.
- Roommates panic and plan when they hear a radio report of a murderer loose in their neighborhood.
- Bobby's marriage to his employer's pretty daughter depends on the successful demonstration of his ability to handle plumbing, which he knows nothing about.
- Newlywed Neal is expecting his wife, who is visiting her mother. Betty wants to bring Mother home with her so she can meet her son-in-law, but Neal objects and Betty returns alone. This causes the newlyweds' first quarrel. Betty's friend Ethel succeeds in getting Neal to allow mother-in-law to come, but he escapes under the cover of an urgent business trip. Stella, although young in years, is an old-fashioned and quiet lady. Betty and Ethel decide to make her over, and after a steam bath and pretty clothes, mother was rejuvenated and looks 20 years younger. The two girls then decide to take mother out to a café, and they tell her that if she wants to have some fun she must flirt a little. Neal comes back from his trip and, finding his home empty, goes to the same café. Betty and Ethel have met some friends and leave mother alone. Neal sits at a table next to Stella and is attracted by her good looks. They flirt and pretty soon Neal comes, sits at the same table and buys drinks. He even kisses Stella. A picture of Betty in Neal's watch attracts Stella's attention and she realizes that Neal is her son-in-law. She enjoys the situation and promises Neal that she will see him again. Neal goes home. Betty takes Ethel home after leaving mother at the door of their house. Neal sees Stella enter the apartment and is puzzled. He insists that she leave, saying that he is a married man, and nearly faints when Stella tells him that she intends to spend the night there. Betty comes back and Neal hears her opening the door. Afraid to be caught with another woman, he pushes Stella into the bedroom and tries in vain to keep Betty away from said room. When Betty comes out of the bedroom and asks why he has hidden mother there, Neal nearly collapses, but recovering, says, "Oh, just a little joke; mother and I are great friends." Betty is delighted, but mother and Neal decide that the wisest thing to do is to keep mum.
- Charley Wyckham and Jack Chesney pressure fellow student Fancourt Babberly to pose as Charley's Brazilian Aunt Donna Lucia. Their purpose is to have a chaperone for their amorous visits with Amy and Kitty, niece and ward of crusty Stephen Spettigue. Complications begin when Fancourt, in drag, becomes the love object of old Spettigue and Sir Francis Chesney.
- Neal was a dentist and had rented offices with his friend Eddie, a surgeon. It was a matter of very little importance to Neal how much pain he inflicted on his patients. Among Neal's patients was Betty, the wife of jealous Mr. Morton. Neal loved the ladies, and Mr. Morton was not entirely wrong when he didn't trust him very much. Forgetting his patients to flirt with their wives was a habit with Neal, and besides he had methods of his own, and used freely laughing gas. As George, one of his patients, left the office still under the influence of the gas, Betty entered. Neal looked at her teeth. But with pretty women Neal forgot that he was a professional man, and flirting was his main occupation. Mr. Morton went to the office and found his wife flirting with Neal. Betty was dragged home. But she had a will of her own, and after Mr. Morton had left her home, she went back to see Neal. Our dentist, however, had his troubles with George, who could not get over the influence of the laughing gas, and who had been taken back to his office by his wife. Mr. Morton was still suspicious and called up his home from his office only to find that his wife was out. Enraged he took a gun and went to Neal's headquarters, where he found Neal in the act of kissing his wife. Neal rushed out through the hall, pursued by Mr. Morton and Betty. After having upset the surgeon's operating table, Neal took to the roofs, where a wild chase went on until finally he got into his office again, where Mr. Morton caught him. Neal is put under the influence of the laughing gas, which at the same time affected jealous Mr. Morton, and thanks to that gas, Neal's life was saved.
- Nan is the soda fountain queen in Dead Dog. She is in love with Billy, but she got a letter from a New York lawyer saying that she and her cousin, Hezekiah, a New England school teacher, would have to marry in order to share a bequest of some thousands of dollars. Hezekiah was on his way west and because Nan would lose the money if she turned him down, she conceived the idea of rejuvenating the wildness of Dead Dog to frighten poor Hezey out of marrying her. With the scene all set and Hezekiah duly shocked, Nan made her entry, riding her horse up the steps and into the bar. In spite of his terror, Hezekiah was willing to go on with the ceremony, and just as Nan and he were about to say "I do," Billy made his entry and began to shoot up the place. This was too much for Hezekiah, and he started running, caught the observation platform of a train starting for the east.
- Glenn (Glenn Tryon), is trying to get into a secret fraternity in order to impress his girlfriend, Fanny (Helen Mann). But his rival is the president of the fraternity and has some very special plans for Glenn. The latter soon finds himself crooning a love song to two tough policeman. and being instructed to convince his blond sweet patootie, Fanny, that he prefers a brunette sweet patootie.
- When her newspaper reporter brother is taken ill, a young woman takes over his job. Before she knows it, she's involved up to her neck in a plot involving stolen jewelry and a very agile monkey.
- Andy Wilson (Andy Clyde), a millionaire pig farmer from Kansas, comes to Chicago (unless New York has a stock yard district)looking for his girl friend, Natalie (Dorothy Christy) who had left the Sunflower state as she did not care much for the company of pigs and/or pig handlers, although Andy wasn't rich when she left, else she would have most likely been a bit more tolerant. Andy runs into his old friend Jake (Billy Bevan), who has been married for about a year to another belle from Kansas, that Andy hasn't met. He invites Andy out to the house and, of course, he is called away on business and asks Andy to stay and entertain his bride Betty (Ethyl Sykes, which is how she spelled it until some researcher changed it to Ethel), who Andy still hasn't met, although she did dain to stick a hand out of her bedroom door for Andy to shake, as she too has an aversion to pig farmers, even rich ones like Andy who was also the Pig-Calling Champion of Kansas three years running. Betty calls a friend over to take her place. The friend---what a coincidence---is Andy's old girl friend, and she peeks out and recognizes Andy and also a million reasons why she now likes him better than she did. She invites him into the bedroom where she is spread out, wearing silk pajamas, on the chaise lounge and, like Cleopatra, is not prone to argue. Andy, of course, thinks his old girl friend is now his friend's wife. Will Andy yield to temptation despite his fondness for his old friend?
- After George bests a rival suitor for the fire chief's daughter, the rival tries revenge by attempting to burning down their house. Meanwhile, the fire department has been taken over by a gang of bathing beauty chorines.
- A company of barnstormers goes on strike in the middle of a performance and a number of local amateurs are prevailed upon to furnish the show, which they do in more ways than one.
- Rich young bachelor Neal leaves home one night for a wonderful time. Jane, a down-and-out poor widow, is walking the streets with her baby in her arms and notices Neal coming out of his house; his kind face inspires her to leave her baby in his care. He arrives home about 1AM and finds the baby on his steps. He takes it inside and tucks it into his own bed. The next morning, the effects of wine gone, he is dumbfounded to find the baby in his bed. While he's discussing this with his valet, his fiancée Ethel phones him. The baby starts to cry; hearing the noise, Ethel asks about it. Neal starts to say that he has a baby and Ethel becomes angry and hangs up without letting him explain. He rushes to her home, but she will listen to nothing and even breaks their engagement. Neal and his valet attempt to take care of the baby, but it is a difficult job. Neal decides to get married. After an attempt with Clarice has failed, he realizes that under the circumstances, he must use diplomacy to win a wife. Sitting in the park with Baby, Neal sees a peach coming towards him and he pretends to cry. The peach proves to be kind-hearted, beautiful Betty. She looks at Neal in sympathy, approaches him, and speaks to him. Neal explains that the baby's mother has gone. Betty assumes that Neal is a widower and his baby needs a mother. They soon become interested in each other and in a short while Betty agrees to marry him. They go to Neal's home and call a minister. Meanwhile, however, Jane has won $500 in a lottery and she makes a wild dash to Neal's to claim her baby. At first poor Betty is all upset, but she listens to Neal's explanations and forgives his deception. Ethel happens to see Jane and Baby coming out of Neal's; when Jane tells the story, Ethel decides to ask forgiveness of Neal, but it's too late: Betty has supplanted her for all time.
- Professor Bugg is a "nut" on antiques, but his wife, Ethel, is not so keen about them, and when he orders two mummies sent to their house it is the last straw. Mrs. Morton, an old friend of Ethel's just come to town, finds her crying and they decide the Professor needs a lesson. The mummies are brought while Bugg is out, so Mr. and Mrs. Morton, in Egyptian costume and cerements, get in the mummy cases. Bugg opens Mrs. Morton's case first. She tells him she was his sweetheart in a former incarnation, and they are getting along finely when the other case opens and cut steps "Karnak," his hated rival of earlier days. Karnak bears a gleaming scimitar, with which he chases Bugg and gives him such a fright that he is glad to yield to Ethel's entreaty that he get rid of, not only the mummies, but the rest of the junk as well.
- A young girl goes off to an all-girl boarding school. Her boyfriend, who can't bear being away from her, disguises himself as a girl and goes with her to the school.
- Neal sees in a newspaper a picture of several girls in uncensored one-piece bathing suits, and a caption telling at which beach they disport themselves. Neal and his wife, Betty, go there for a trip. On the boardwalk Neal sees an East Indian who claims to have found the secret of youth. He gives Neal a "shot," and age drops from him and he is a boy again. Back at the hotel the "old woman" is dressing and does not recognize Neal. She indignantly ejects him, so Neal seeks the mermaids. Finding them, he makes a hit and is having the time of his life on the sands. Meantime. Betty has meet the Yogi who gives the treatment. But Neal has seen her go in and come out, young and beautiful. He accosts her, but she does not know him. The "Baron" sees her and takes her for a ride in a rolling chair. While the "Baron" goes to buy her candy, Neal jumps in the chair and drives off. The chair runs into several men, and these with the "Baron" throw Neal in the ocean. The "Baron" proposes and Betty, feeling the surge of youth, accepts, so they go to the minister. Neal follows and resolves to save his wife from bigamy. He rushes in and gives battle. The "Baron" is getting the best of him and shaking him vigorously, when it is not the "Baron" at all, but his old wife saying, "Come to bed, my feet are cold."
- A stubborn carburetor brings Neal to the aid of Betty, and the attraction is mutual from the start. Meanwhile, their fathers meet elsewhere and find that they are old friends. Without consulting the young people, the fathers lay plans to have them marry. So fathers and children come to cross-purposes as always happens when a parent tries to guide or restrain young love. Neal wishes to "queer" himself with the girl his father has picked out, so writes her a fresh note asking her to meet him in the park. She accepts and takes her cook as a substitute. But Neal has taken Prof. Mixer as his substitute, and the professor gets fresh with Betty, while the cook tries to make love to Neal. This of course, does not better the situation. Betty goes home and reports that she has been insulted by "Neal," so her father says he will punish him. To get ready to do so, father calls in Prof, Mixer to give him boxing lessons. All this time the cook is pursuing Neal. Betty comes in, sees the professor and says that he is the one who got fresh. Just about this time the cook drags in Neal as per her instructions, with Neal's father close behind. "There's the man I want to marry," says Betty. "That's the man I picked for you," her father replies, and it takes only a minute for Neal and Hetty to "get together," while father smiles wisely.
- Neal, a love-proof youth, goes to extremes to save his father from a supposed siren.
- Neal hates to give up his evenings with the boys, even for his wife, Betty. She gets a burglar scare and insists on his staying home. However, he wants to go to a mask ball, so he gives her a powder, telling her it will make her sleep soundly. She slips the powder into his favorite decanter, hides his costume, and then retires. In the kitchen, the cook gives a policeman some of the doped whiskey. Neal takes the cop's coat, hat and stick and starts for the ball. On the way he is called on to restrain a wife-beating husband. He gets a black eye, so decides to go home. Meanwhile the cook has tried to waken the real policeman. A burglar enters, drinks from the decanter, and rolls under the table, asleep. The officer wakes up, upsetting his chair, so that Betty is awakened. Taking a gun, she looks for the trouble, and shoots at the officer in the kitchen, which awakens the burglar. Running into the dining room, Betty tries to capture the burglar, but he is getting the best of her, when Neal rescues her. The officer makes the arrest, while Neal promises to stray no more.
- Ann is one tough cowgirl. After she beats up Hank, her parents send her East to college, hoping she'll come back a lady.
- A burlesque of the old standard dramatic plot in which daughter, returning from the big city with unexpected wealth, arrives just in the nick of time to defeat the cruel, cruel landlord, save the old homestead from a tragic foreclosure, and keep the aged folks from being driven out into the blinding snowstorm.
- College--the joys of hazing freshmen, sexually harassing co-eds and dirty tricks. Those were the days. Class struggle was not limited to Bolshevik doctrine, it is played out at this college between the freshman and sophomore classes.
- Young struggling lawyer has to haul a doctor into court with a summons by 3 P. M. or lose his job. Gets thrown out of the hospital in a dozen different ways and finally chloroforms the doctor.
- Privacy Robson is a downtrodden husband who takes advice from his friend Florian Slappey. He eventually gets the upper hand after starting divorce proceedings, pretending to have a new girlfriend and refusing to eat anything she cooks him.
- Anne's father arrives at the bank too late to deposit $5,000 in cash which he has just received. He is being followed by Billy, a pickpocket, and is nervous about the money. When he arrives home he hides it in a sofa pillow, but the pickpocket sees where he puts it and determines to get the money. Anne is preparing gifts for a charity bazaar and unwittingly gives the collectors the pillow in which the money is hidden. The maid discovers that the missing pillow contains a huge sum and tells her sweetie, the iceman. He also sets out to get the money. Father then learns of his loss and starts for the bazaar. The iceman and the pickpocket also race for the place and there is a fight to buy the pillows. All four buy pillows, each thinking he has the right one, only to discover that the money is in none of them. Finally Anne learns that the pillow has been sold to her Jimmie, who has given it to his aunt. The four of them dash to the aunt's house where they find that the pillow has been sent to the cleaners and then they stage a sprint for the cleaning establishment. Every pillow in the place is torn to pieces, With the feathers flying everywhere. Father falls into a starch tank and the feathers settle on him until he looks like a huge chicken. But he recovers the money and is chased out of the place, taking refuge on an ostrich farm where he is rescued by Anne from the birds who are picking him to pieces. Then Anne decides to take the money and spend it on her honeymoon.
- Dorothy, given five hundred dollars to buy her engagement ring, loses the money in a black and white taxi. Seeing a baby show at which a first prize of five hundred dollars is offered, she steals her janitor's baby and wins the money. How she then tries to return the baby without being seen and caught, finally falling into the taxi her sweetheart is returning home in, and discovers it is the taxi in which she left the money, forms the action.
- Fay agrees to pose as her mistress so that her mistress can marry the man of her choice.
- The trials and tribulations of a young couple determined to elope are complicated by the fact that the girl's father is the town judge and decidedly opposed to the young man. Inadvertently he comes into possession of the marriage license, the thousand dollar bank roll and the steamer tickets. The ingenious daughter conceives the idea of recovering them from the courtroom and to do so it becomes necessary to start a fire scare. A mad dash to the steamer via of a motorcycle with bathtub attachment and then the fact is revealed that they have forgotten the necessary detail of being married. Another dash back to an irate traffic cop who is persuaded to be witness to the marriage, and all ends happily.
- "Decidedly no, I won't be married on Friday the 13th," says Nolan as he is looking at the calendar the morning of his wedding day, and off he goes to notify Billie, his fiancée. Billie has her own ideas: she loves Nolan, Fridays, 13s, and other unlucky things; and after arguing, Nolan must capitulate. Then things started. A black cat crosses Nolan's path; a minister who later proves to be of the absent-minded kind, agrees to perform the marriage ceremony; a careless driver nearly runs over our hero; and to make things look even darker, a picture falls from the wall as he enters his apartment. At the time set for the wedding ceremony approaches, his best man Nolan comes in and finds his friend in the throes of anxiety. As he tries to cheer him up, the long-expected package from the tailor arrives. Instead of the wedding suit Nolan finds someone else's tweed suit. Harry runs to the tailor shop, only to find it closed. While thinking of a place to find a full dress suit for his friend, he happens to see in an alley a waiter enjoying a smoke. A fair compensation could not induce the waiter to part with his suit, so Harry resolves to secure the suit at any price, and after a short struggle the waiter was hiding in a barrel and Harry ran away with the coveted clothes, which, however, had sustained a considerable amount of damage. Arriving at Nolan's room, Harry mends the rent to the trousers and Nolan manages to get into the clothes and passes inspection with strict instructions not to stoop. At Billie's home, anxiety prevailed. The minister, who had mislaid the address, was late; the bridegroom and the best man failed to appear, and Billie was thinking of Friday the 13th. But finally the minister came, followed by Nolan and Harry. Everything went right at first, but Nolan dropped his gloves and forgot Harry's advice. He stooped and ripped his trousers. He rushes with Billie into the next room, and behind a screen takes his pants off and asks Billie to repair them. Some of the guests in the confusion following the accident enter the room where our hero was standing in his B.V.D.'s. To avoid detection he backs through a door into the reception hall, where he creates a sensation. After a chase all over the house Nolan finally lands into a bedroom, followed by Billie, who hands him his trousers, the cause of such a disturbance. As they come into the reception hall everybody laughs and Billie swears that she will never get married on a Friday again.
- Henry Williams, out in Arizona looking for a cure for his imaginary ills, stops at the ranch of Jud Morgan, and decides to stay. Jud's daughter, Sally, attracts his attention, although she is engaged to be married to Sheriff Bob Wells. Henry rides with her to town, where she wants to go shopping for her wedding clothes, but they run out of gas. No, problem' Henry holds up a passing motorist, with a monkey-wrench, and takes gasoline out of his car. They stop at a ranch where the foreman makes them become the cook and dishwasher. Then Jerome Underwood and his daughter, Harriet, arrive and they recognize Henry and Sally as the ones who held them up for gas. The jealous sheriff adds to the complications.
- Mr. Henry and his daughter Billie are summering at the seashore. To Father's dislike, Billie has fallen in love with Harry, who is spending his vacation at the same beach with his mother, Mrs. Stella. One day ,while Father is sleeping on the porch, Billie sneaks away and joins her sweetheart. She tells him that her father thinks that he is a mama's boy and couldn't earn a cent if he tried. A few minutes later, Harry and Billie, in bathing suits, are enjoying a little chat under the shade of an umbrella. But Father's butler Gussie, always on the lookout to bring somebody into trouble, and seeing Billie and Harry together, rushes homo to notify Mr. Henry--who, meanwhile, has missed her and goes out searching for her. He meets Gussie who tells him where to find his daughter. But Ethel, Billie's friend, overhears the conversation and runs to notify Billie of her father's approach. The two lovers are nearly caught, but quick-witted Billie tells Ethel to act as Harry's sweetheart, while she is hiding behind the umbrella. Father is fooled and coming home, Gussie pays dearly for his supposed mistake. Nolan is Ethel's sweetheart and chances to meet Billie and Harry as they are coming out of the bath house. A ride on the roller coaster appeals to the young folks. But again Gussie happens to see them and rushes with the news to Mr. Henry. Father takes another chance and after an exciting chase on the rollercoaster he catches Billie and Harry. An explanation made by Mrs. Stella, who happens to pass before the rollercoaster at the time Mr. Henry is scolding his daughter for going out with Harry, fails to give any satisfaction and Billie is taken home by her father. Aided by Ethel, Nolan, and Mrs. Stella, the two lovers decide to play a joke on Father. Mr. Henry and his daughter are to go bathing that afternoon. It is an easy thing to bribe the bathhouse attendant. While Father is out in the ocean Mrs. Stella sneaks into his dressing room and starts to pull her hair down. When Father returns to his room, Mrs. Stella starts to cry for help. Nolan is at hand disguised as a detective. Ethel and the bathhouse attendant are witnesses, and when Father is threatened with a 5-year sentence, he loses his head and gives his consent to the marriage of the two young people.
- Rastus Jones and Swanee Sam are rivals for the hand of Mandy. It is decided that the first suitor back with a parson from the neighboring riverboat landing will be the winner. (All performers are in black face.)
- Billy gets caught flirting with his wife's school chum, and his wife and her friend hatch a plot to cure him.
- Billie and Ethel happen to read that a girl disguised as a boy worked two years in the mines. This starts an argument. Ethel saying it can't be done. Billie says that not only can it be done, but that she can do it and is willing to bet that she can. Ethel takes her on and Billie looks around for her opportunity. She dresses as a boy and gets a job as bell boy in a large hotel. After some complications in the locker room, Billie gets by with her job, while Ethel is on her trail. But with the entrance of Nolan, a traveling salesman, Billie's fate is foreshadowed when he sees a girl's ring on her finger and is set to wondering. Her concealed sex gets her into some predicaments, but she always escapes with her secret. However, Nolan knows Ethel and brings her to the hotel to dinner. Billie, bringing Nolan a telegram, is recognized by Ethel, but she has to keep still. Nolan has become much attached to the bright little "Bellhop" and decides to take "him" to a show. He gets Billie's address from the captain and goes to the house. Ethel is there with Billie. Billie comes down, as herself, and Nolan, not recognizing her, asks for the bellboy. "That is my brother," says Billie, "but he's out tonight." Having the tickets, Nolan asks Billie to go in place of her "brother," and she accepts and goes to dress. Ethel now breaks the faith and tells Nolan. He finds proof when Billie comes down, in the same ring he saw at the hotel, and the whole thing comes out. Billie pays the bet, but Nolan declares that he is the real winner by Billie's little escapade.
- A baby is dumped on a couple's doorstep, neither knows how to take care of the child, and funny situations arise. But things get more complicated when the husband receives a letter informing him that his mother is sick.
- Bobby is asked by a stranger to start his car. Bobby accommodates the gentleman, realizing too late that he is a master automobile thief. The latter spots the police and makes a safe getaway, while Bobby is chased. He finds his way into the home of a friend who masquerades him as his wife. Enter his father and sweetheart and the trouble starts anew with the police hot on his trail. The father welcomes "the wife" and invites her to a cruise, where the officers are still in hot pursuit. Escape seems impossible and his friend is hopeless "in wrong" with his sweetheart, who believes she has been jilted. Bobby detects the thief and makes a dive for him, thrashes him severely and everything clears up satisfactorily happy for everybody concerned.
- Hazel, from Iowa, searches for fame in Hollywood. She starts out as a waitress, waiting on the stars, but accidentally becomes a star herself.
- Walter wants to marry Nancy, but her father, "High Goatee Of The Ancient Order Of The Goat", wants him to pass the test of riding the goat. His rival organizes a false Ancient Order Of The Goat to fool him and have the girl.
- Mabel catches her husband buying lingerie, and he won't explain who it's for. She divorces him, but later learns he was buying her an anniversary gift. She becomes determined to win him back.
- Robert Gardner and Billy Noble become interested in a machine capable--according to the inventor, Trueman--of producing artificial rubber. A trust is formed, circulars are sent out, and a demonstration is requested. When Billy discovers that the invention is fraudulent and refuses to demonstrate it, the trust lawyer becomes suspicious and notifies postal authorities. Robert feigns insanity, and Trueman accepts an offer of $1 million for the formula, which experts later discover produces an indestructible paving block.
- A magician is to give an exhibition of his art to the villagers. He selects Bobby and his girl for his assistants. Of course, Bobby can't do anything correctly.
- Bobby brings his roommate, Jimmy, home to meet his family. Jimmy is smitten with Bobby's sister, but she is much more interested in wild men than college boys. The roommates come up with a plan--with hilarious results.
- The doctor prescribes fresh air for a man with a bad cold. His wife is determined to comply with the doctor's orders even if it kills him.