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1-8 of 8
- Stan Laurel plays a book salesman who has a series of encounters, mostly revolving around a young woman who might be evicted by her lecherous landlord. Along the way, Stan dresses up as a dog, gets chased down Sunset Blvd circa 1922, and keeps running into an annoying woman who gives this short film its title.
- Rhubarb Vaseline lives in a small village, when he and his friend, Sapo, enter a bullfighting contest, Sapo dies, but Rhubarb kills three bulls and becomes a local hero earning money. Two years later, he is living in Madrid as a national hero, when he becomes involved with Filet de Sol, and his lover finds out, he must fight the deadliest in Spain, in the last bullfight of the season.
- Stan plays a mischievous and clumsy worker in a lumber factory.
- A young man in financial difficulties persuades his wife to help him blackmail a supposedly wealthy man. While waiting she reads a magazine story telling how Mr. and Mrs. Crafton - set out to extort money from DeCourcey. Mr. Crafton leaving the room, Mrs. Crafton saying she is in financial difficulties, tries to borrow money. DeCourcey refuses. Mrs. Crafton then makes a scene, her husband enters, she accuses DeCourcey of seeking to attack her. DeCourcey, who has remained smoking, shows the ashes remaining on his cigar, to the hotel detective, as evidence that there has been no struggle. The detective believes his accusation of blackmail against the pair and they are arrested. After reading the story the young wife leaves a note saying she has gone back to her home in the country. The intended victim arrives and turns out to be a detective. After reading the note, he takes the penitent young husband to the railroad station and sends him back to his wife.
- A disloyal wife abandons her husband and child to become a cabaret dancer. Her lover goes to jail to protect her. In his absence she marries an artist whom she deserts when her lover is released from prison. Aware of the futility of awaiting her return, the second husband returns to his birthplace, Martinique, and to his childhood sweetheart.
- Bill Hinchley, an outlaw since the coming of the railroad and the theft of his father's land, still has the faith and love of his wife, Mary, who prays for his reformation. He is sent to prison for something of which he is innocent, and Mary becomes a school-teacher, of necessity concealing from the school trustees that she is the wife of a convict. Sneaky Pete, Bill's cell-mate, steals a letter from Mary to Bill, and, his term expired, follows Mary and blackmails her, by threatening to cause her to lose her job by revealing her secret. Bill, attempting to escape, gives up his freedom to rescue the warden's children - and is later pardoned, coming home to wreak vengeance on Sneaky Pete, and justify Mary's faith in him.
- Mrs. Ann Barton, a former small-time criminal, has reformed in order to bring up her son as a fine, honest boy. Her husband, however, is persuaded by "The Weasel" to remain on the crooked path. The two men set off to rob slum doctor LeRoy Clifford's wife of her jewels, but at the doctor's home the two see Barton's boy critically injured after an automobile accident. Jim Barton decides then that he will go straight if the boy lives. His son recovers, and he and his wife reunite with the prospect of an honest life before them.