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1-126 of 126
- Worried that Roberta is comprising Vern's time and health, Margie furtively arranges a cocktail party with an actor Roberta admires and a producer hoping Roberta transfers her affections to the actor.
- To breakup Margie and Freddie, Vern sets up Freddie up on a date with Mr. Honeywell blonde niece, but when Margie finds out she becomes the blonde other woman to test Freddie loyalty.
- Margie is careless with her personal items and money so Vern tries to teach her lesson by hiding money she has deposited from Roberta charity drive, but the plan backfires for all involved.
- Margie and Honeywell use the attendance of a rival for Roberta's affections at a masquerade ball to coerce Vern to go he event which he shuns but is important to the business. Meanwhile, a burglar has read the newspaper list of invitees.
- To show Vern Freddie is not so objectionable, Margie pretends to fall for a person more objectionable than Freddie to Vern, Honeywell's efficiency minded nephew. The plan backfires when Margie is headed for a quick and efficient marriage.
- At a spa, Margie changes identity with a friend to be endowed with a trust fund so her friend can test whether a male spa employee is interested in her wealth only. The couple get arrested so Vern and Honeywell think Margie is misbehaving.
- Freddie brings a boxing kangaroo to the Albrights which Margie insists he get rid of. Vern arrives while they're out and is punched out by the 'roo. Roberta's visiting father thinks he's drunk and no onde can then locate the marsupial creating confusion.
- Margie and boyfriend Freddie try to find out who is in the apartment closet.
- Margie's friend, Ginny has plans and can't meet up with an old friend of the family, an opera singer. She asks Margie to fill-in. Margie agrees and schemes to have a party in his honor so she can help her father impress a reluctant client.
- Margie tries to help the daughter of Vern's new client who does not know his daughter is married and has a baby, so Margie has to pretend that the baby is hers.
- Margie attempts to help out a perfume manufacturer without realizing that the perfume is moonshine.
- Margie forces Vern to eat "Boomies" cereal so the next-door-neighbor boy can win a prize. Vern is concerned because his company represents a rival product. The situation comes to a head just before Margie and Vern are scheduled to appear on a live children's program sponsored by "Boomies" cereal.
- When Margie receives a mink instead of what she really ordered, she decides to make her father think it a man gave it to her so she could teach him a lesson. But her plan soon backfires when the Mink's foreign owner shows up and announces he wants to marry Margie!
- To help her father Vern with a client Margie agrees to date his son who she thinks is a boy. Margie dresses as an eleven year old but the son Wesley is an adult so Margie also pretends to be her own older sister.
- Margie takes a modeling job, and she tries to keep it a secret from her father. She develops a crush on the photographer, but he doesn't even know her name.
- When Margie goes to her father for investment advice and he doesn't give her the answer she wants, she decides to look for another investor who will. But when Margie finds that she bought a wrestler, her father hits the rood - and sets out to teach her a lesson. But Margie is determined to show her father she knew what she was doing.
- Margie becomes convinced that she has witnessed a murder, while peering through binoculars from her Bermuda hotel room window into another widow of the hotel.
- Margie writes a fake letter saying there is uranium on some property Freddie has inherited so Vern will give him a job. Vern finds out and turns the tables by making Margie think there is uranium behind their apartment building
- Father Vern and his grown daughter Margie can't resist meddling in each other's affairs. In the pilot episode, Vern and Margie both try to use reverse psychology to bring the other around to approving of their respective paramours.
- Margie wants Vern to take her to London. When he refuses, she hires a man to pretend they are going to elope as soon as Vern leaves for London.
- Margie and her father both have two dates for the same evening.
- Odetts and Margie concoct a charade in which Margie pretends to be a Russian spy, so Margie gets noticed by an FBI agent who has caught her attention. Vern and the agent plot to make Margie think she has stumbled upon actual espionage.
- A newlywed couple moves in next door to Margie. Margie drops by to greet them and give them advice for a happy marriage. Pandemonium ensues.
- Margie hears of a job with one of Vern's clients for which she encourages Freddie to apply. The company wants only married men, so she pretends to Freddie's expectant wife. Later Margie believes that this is true of Vern and Roberta.
- Vern wagers his future with the company against Mr. Honeywell's job as president, in a competition to sign an important client.
- Margie's dad comes home from a trip, and he's carrying extra baggage - a fiancé.
- Vern's boss wont let him take Margie to Hawaii with on business trip to win a new client who's a semi-retired movie star who's vain about her age and prefers younger men. Vern's boss gets him to dye his hair and pretend to be younger. Vern had told Margie she could go on this trip and he had already acquired the tickets he had to tell her his plans had changed and he was going to Alaska and she could cash in the tickets and use the money for any thing she wanted. Margie and Roberta decide to use the tickets to go to Hawaii instead of cashing them in. Once in Hawaii the competition for the client starts and running into his full grown daughter could put a crimp in his youth based attempt at landing this new client.
- Vern and Margie get a free trip to Bermuda from Mr. Honeywell, but end up in Palm Beach to help rescue Freddie from a crazy television scheme.
- When Margie's father agrees to babysit a client's grandson, Margie warns him he's asking for trouble. But trouble is only starting. Before the night is over, the whole town seems to be upset.
- Despite Vern's objections, Margie is determined to meet Vern's old fraternity brother, the Shah of Zena...even if it means sneaking into his hotel room.
- Margie want to meet a private detective so Margie and Mrs. Odetts fake a case of a missing diamond , but the detective is actually working on a case of a missing diamond known as the Star of Khyber which causes a series of mix-up for both.
- Margie and Verne become trapped in their own apartment by two very unexpected guests.
- Margie and Freddie track a murderer to a mysterious mansion. Two things Margie doesn't know: The man is a client of her father, and he's never murdered anyone.
- In order to get a hillbilly family to sell the stock they have, Margie gets the idea for her and her father to dress up like hillbillies. But when they learn the trade off is to shoot to kill the enemy, they aren't so sure their plan will work.
- Margie fools Vern into thinking that morning is night to keep him from encountering landlord Patterson who will tell Vern of all the chaos Margie has caused so Vern does not cancel her Sun Valley trip because of her behavior.
- After another incident due to Margie's obstinacy, Vern and Mr. Honeywell reminisce. They recall when Vern first courted his wife and his trouble with his mother-in-law, whose traits her granddaughter inherited.
- A chimp named Mr. Murphy takes over the Albright household.
- Freddie keeps Margie past her curfew which angers her father. Vern promises her a convertible if she will temporarily not see Freddie and she agrees. But Freddie soon shows up and then must hide in unusual places to avoid detection.
- Margie and Vern take a brief vacation with Margie becoming excited by local gossip concerning hidden robbery loot. She proceeds to dig up up the yard unaware that the bank bandits are keeping an eye on whether she finds anything.
- Vern wants to marry his young new girlfriend, but Margie strongly suspects she's a gold digger. Margie and Roberta plot to disrupt the lovebirds' harmony.
- A horse wearing a party hat moves in with the Albrights.
- Margie tried to meet the author of a book on yoga by telling some fibs that keep growing
- Vern's worry over Margie keeps him from working so he and Mr. Honeywell concoct a fake romance to distract her. But crossed wires make her believe their client Bill Davenport is the one sending flowers causing even more complications.
- Mrs. Odetts has difficulty getting her trust money from her banker to buy a roadster. She says it's to help a troubled friend and prevails upon Margie to help out. But things get complicated when he tries to reform the "wayward" woman.
- Vern takes Margie to Las Vegas to meet with a potential client, a casino owner.
- Honeywell arranges for an important special client to take the apartment above the Albrights. Unaware that the man above them is an important prospective client, the Albrights engage in a feud with the man over his noisy behavior.
- Freddie has a prospective job selling pots and pans which also involves fixing a meal for the customer. But when Albright brings a client home it's turns out he owns the primary competition of Freddie's employer.
- Margie tries to help Vern when she thinks he is going to be replaced by a man who reads murder mysteries,
- Margie falls under the impression that her father has lost all of his money in the stock market. She suspects the worst, when he pays a visit to his life insurance agent.
- When Odetts, Roberta and Margie scheme to provide therapy to an indecisive Honeywell Todd client so he will commit to an Hawaiian trip, Margie becomes the mental patient.
- Vern calls in sick so he can take a day off and go to the beach with Margie at her suggestion. Trouble begins when he runs into a client with work ethics and without realizing who she is, brags about being irresponsible.
- Margie wants to buy a new dress for the cotillion but is broke and asks Vern for a loan but he refuses unless she agreed to go out with the son of a client Margie believes is homely like his father and disguises herself as a chubby girl.
- Margie accompanies her dad Vern and his boss Honeywell to a convention. Mr. Honeywell hopes to be elected an officer and Margie in an attempt to help derails the effort. She then tries to fix the situation to save her father's job.
- Margie new lawyer boyfriend convinces Margie that her father Vern has no legal right to treat her as child
- Honeywell () plans to go on a fishing trip with Vern (), but Vern tells him that he promised to take Margie () to Honolulu. They decide to trick her and invite her to go camping with them, saying that if she "roughs it" in the Canadian wildness for a week, they will spend the following week in Hawaii. The men highly doubt that she will make it, but Margie agrees to the deal, encouraged by Mrs. Odetts' comments about the eligible, outdoorsy men that she might find. Once there, at the trading post, they meet trappers Henderson and Steve (), who both raise Margie's interest, although matters are complicated when she is given a very heavy pack to carry. Vern and Honeywell are pleased, thinking she will soon give up, but she schemes with Steve and he gives her an empty pack for the walk to the campsite, and the men are soon winded as she strolls along comfortably. At the end of the journey, Steve sneaks her real bag back to her. Margie then attempts to put up her tent, but fails and ends up sleeping on the ground. In the morning, Vern and Honeywell head off to fish, and when they leave, Steve arrives again and helps her. Two of his friends, Tom and Dick, soon appear, and they offer their services as well, providing Margie with rustic furniture. Vern and Honeywell return with some unimpressive catches and are stunned to see the elaborately furnished campsite, believing that Margie did it all herself. The men provide Margie with food as well, including a blueberry pie and meat, and Vern and Honeywell are shocked that she managed to shoot and skin a deer by herself. She claims she shot it in "self-defense," and they ask her to prove her marksmanship, and she does--with a little help from Steve, crouching behind her with another gun. Later, Margie's new friends invite her to a dance at the trading post, and she happily accepts. Stumped, Vern and Honeywell plan to scare Margie off with some intimidating moose sounds, but when they sneak into the woods to imitate the calls, she is already off at the dance, causing them to think that she fled into the night in fear. They hurry to the trading post to enlist the other men to help find her, but instead find Margie emerging from the dance with her suitors and realize that she tricked them. Vern accuses Margie of breaking their deal, but she claims that she found a loophole and threatens to tell the trappers about the illegal-sized fish that Vern and Honeywell caught, and the men are forced to give in. They soon head off for Hawaii, and Margie is soon thrilled by the arrival on the beach of her new camping friends.
- Margie, Vern, Freddie and Mr. Honeywell dressed as hillbillies to help homesick hillbilly baseball player Ozark Hoskins out of a slump, meanwhile Vern tries to secure a contract with the baseball owner.
- Freddie has a new job selling lipstick. When Margie messes up a demonstration Freddie was giving to Vern new client, she must correct the problem she has caused.
- Vern gets mad at Freddy and tells Margie to find a he-man boyfriend. Margie creates a plot to change her father's mind.
- A prominent actor to make his girlfriend jealous creates a magazine campaign to find his dream girl. Fitting the attributes of the described dream girl, Margie decides to try to be the actor's girl which vexes Vern and Freddie.
- Honeywell sends Vern on a fishing trip to sign a simple man who accidentally became rich due to a uranium strike, but Vern mistakes another man for his potential client while forming an adversarial relationship with the real man.
- Margie asks Vern for a job at Honeywell and Todd, but Vern says no. When Margie's look alike cousin arrive, Vern thinks it Margie in disguise and decides to get even.
- Margie uses subliminal messaging in her latest scheme to get her dad to take her on a vacation to Havana.
- Margie tries to convince Vern to be more aggressive with Mr. Honeywell by taking him to a phony seance with Miss Odetts pretending to be a spirit giving advice.
- Margie lets a group of circus performers stays at her apartment, unaware that Vern has arranged to be interviewed there for a live television broadcast.
- Margie tries to prove to Vern that she is not spoiled by doing a good deed, but ends up getting involved in a secret Air Force mission.
- An English gentleman of whom Margie is fond must sell one of his castles to solve a cash shortfall. Margie goes into action and finds an eccentric rich woman who will by a castle on condition it has a ghost so a ghost must be provided.
- Margie wants to spend some time with her boyfriend Ted, so she convinces Vern that his prospective client, Mr. Briggs, is vacationing at the lodge enjoying his favorite hobby, catching butterflies. In order to keep Vern busy, she gets the lodge's janitor to pretend to be Mr. Briggs. It seems to be a foolproof scheme--until the actual Mr. Briggs shows up.
- Margie gets a chance to audition for a part in a science fiction TV show with a help of her neighbor. But her father forbids her from acting so she and the crew members play a trick on her dad and Mr. Honeywell.
- Margie draws the attention of the matriarch of a proper old Bostonian family to be courted by her awkward grandson when Margie dresses dowdy per Vern's request but the grandson sadly falls for worldly Margie in a chance encounter.
- When Vern refuses to take Margie along on his trip to Mexico, she retaliates by making him think she is dating a Texas playboy oil tycoon.
- Margie tries to sell Freddie's play,
- In this episode, Margie (Gale Storm) tells Mrs. Odetts (Gertrude Hoffman) all about her plans to tag along on Vern's business trip to Hollywood in order to be discovered, and the older woman is enchanted by her fantasy and decides to come along as well. At first Vern (Charles Farrell) refuses to take Margie along, saying she will get into trouble with one of her "wild kicks," but she convinces him that she just wants to take in the culture and tricks him into "getting" the idea for her to go with him accompanied by a chaperon, Mrs. Odetts. Once there, Vern pairs the women up with Jack Winslow (Larry Carr), who gives them a studio tour. When Margie learns that famed director Andre DuPrez (Fritz Feld) still needs a leading lady for his current picture, she disposes of Jack using a trick chair in a haunted house set and she and Mrs. Odetts dress in costumes and sneak onto the set. DuPrez, believing they are part of the movie, orders them to their places, but a trampoline soon leads to trouble and Margie and Mrs. Odetts have to make a quick escape. They make it back to the office just in time to meet Vern, and Jack, when he returns, does not rat them out. Later the night, he calls Margie and reveals that he lost his job because of the kerfuffle, but enjoyed his time with her anyway. She guiltily confesses her hi-jinks to Vern and begs him to get Jack's job back for him, and Vern, appreciating her honesty, arranges for him to be rehired. Vern and Jack ponder what to do about Margie, and decide to have her discovered after all, engaging DuPrez in the prank. The director pretends to fire his leading lady and casts Margie on the spot, promising to make her a star. He then cajoles her into a number of nerve-wracking scenarios, including a scene involving a gun and a nearsighted marksman and a dramatic confrontation in which she receives number of pastries to the face. When DuPrez tries to talk her into doing a trapeze scene--with no net, for authenticity--she realizes what he and Vern are up to and turns the tables on her father, fooling him into sitting in the fake chair and falling into a water tank. Jack, however, then does the same to her, and Mrs. Odetts gives Jack his comeuppance as well. Back at home, Margie swears to turn over a new leaf and keep out of trouble, but Vern has his doubts.
- Margie is persuaded to dress unattractivly when a client's son is town but Joe turns out to be handsome. She invents a pretty "cousin" Caroline butt then Joe finds a date for the original Margie. Freddie is blackmailed into helping her out.
- When a client's grandson falls ill Vern call off a little Paris trip disappointing Margie and Mrs. Odetts. Margie hatches a scheme meeting grandson William in the park and thinks the trip is back on. But it backfires on her as he's fallen for her.
- Margie takes a job as a singer at a seedy nightclub run by gangsters. Her father Vern objects and comes up with a scheme to hire an actor to pretend he is a gangster to frighten Margie into quitting. Things go wrong.
- Margie gets a speeding ticket from a motorcycle cop who wants to date her, even though she and neighbor Mrs. Odetts plan to prove Margie innocence.
- Vern hires an actor to pose as a client that he wants Margie to avoid, the real client overhears Margie telling the fake client she can shows him real indians , the real client pose as an indian to find out the reason for the deception.
- Margie and Vern are forced to take jobs as a maid and butler to have a place to sleep when their hotel reservations are canceled
- A couple of Vern's old friends from Vaudeville collude with him in a scheme to dissuade Freddie's parents from approving of his relationship with Vern's daughter, Margie.
- Vern is feeling like a failure after a class reunion where seemingly all his old classmates are company presidents. Margie schemes to get Vern promoted at his company but her plan quickly backfires leaving Vern unemployed.
- Vern is feeling his age so Margie sets him up with a dye job and convinces her young beautiful friend to fall all over him.
- Freddie invents a new hair dye, but a disaster prevents him from making a fortune.
- A phony duel is staged to prove Verne's love, but he turns the tables when he finds out.
- Margie wants to help her dad Vern at work by fixing up Mr. Honeywell. Introducing him to Miss Gilmore, Margie learns too late she's planning on taking him for his money with help from her paramour Kent. Margie has to remedy the situation.