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- After graduating from barber college, Gene gets a shop on an aeroplane as his first field of labor. His first customer is a fruit dealer, J. Buckley Russell, also suitor for the hand of Sally Phipps, the girl in question. What Gene does to his rival once the latter is seated in his barber chair and, for that matter, to other succeeding customers, would undoubtedly be bad enough at best. Add to his natural nervousness a plane doing tail spins and nose dives and you feel that the villain is justified in chasing the hero out on the wings and causing his fall countless miles to the terrain beneath.
- Once the start has been made for the seashore, justification is provided by the insane things the kids do. Not that the start was entirely without its share of trouble because the youngster whose mother had locked him out on the fire escape until her return looked as though he would be out of it. But a resourceful juvenile neighbor solved it by utilizing a clothes line from which the kid makes a perfect circus drop into the automobile in which the trip to the sea was to be made. There things start - and continue. The finish comes when the youngster of the fire escape goes up in the air carried by a bunch of toy balloons. They have all the sense of direction of a plane or a dirigible and deposit him on the same spot where his mother had placed him before she started her shopping expedition.
- The boys have lost their month's pay shooting craps. While they are trying to graft a meal two strangers cop their horses so they are money-less, horse-less and meal-less. In this dire position they try to rob a hen-coop, but without success. Even when fortune seems to smile on them and they are about to eat some pie at the home of a fair friend the constable enters to interfere. But justice triumphs in the end. Dirtyshirt and Magpie capture the stage-coach robber and rescue Susie, who is being forced at the point of a gun to feed him. Thus, at one fell stroke, they secure a monetary reward far greater than the money lost at craps and the food they have been seeking.
- The family go Christmas shopping. Snookums, whether through hereditary influence or not, is a kleptomaniac. He takes unto himself a train of cars without the formality of paying for the same. Father makes two attempts to bring home a Christmas tree. The first is denuded going through the crowd. The second picks up from other shoppers various articles so that when it arrives at the Newlyweds' domicile it is already decorated. Enter the burglar. After him the pursuing policeman. Lest the baby's illusion be destroyed the burglar is made up as a Santa Claus and entertains the baby.
- Arthur agrees to take the place of his boss in the latter's bed and thus cover up the poker-player's absence. That would have been perfectly alright if Elsie's female cousins had not dropped in to spend the night and the necessity arises for the spare room being given over to them. That caused the discovery of the husband's duplicity and Arthur's arrest as a burglar while trying to get out of the second-story window. It put the poker party out of commission and did not help hubby's status at home. However, it was all patched up somehow and the long suffering Arthur is bailed out, probably vowing never again to attempt to help his boss out of any such predicament.