Mrs. Foster
During World War II, a young boy and girl, living with their respective families in an apartment house that had restrictions against pets, adopt a lost dog and hide it in a vacant apartment, which may have been the only vacant apartment in the United States at the time this movie was being filmed. A burglar breaks in and the apartment is damaged when the dog and crook have a tussle. This blows the dog's cover, but the kids enlist him in the K-9 Corps, and the dog distinguishes himself in the WWII Italian campaign
Matron (uncredited)
As bare-knuckled boxing enters the modern era, brash extrovert Jim Corbett uses new rules and dazzlingly innovative footwork to rise to the top of the boxing world.
Ella Hodges (uncredited)
Episodic look at the life of a minister and his family as they move from one parish to another.
Party Guest (uncredited)
A young man asks a hat check girl to pose as his fiancée in order to make his dying father's last moments happy. However, the old man's health takes a turn for the better and now his son doesn't know how to break the news that he's engaged to someone else, especially since his father is so taken with the impostor.
Bit Role (uncredited)
A young woman marries a man who turns out to be a bank robber.
Fat Woman
In this musical comedy, a motley band of musicians have only their extreme poverty in common. They end up writing a hit and getting a recording contract. The trouble is, the composer's works are never played without another band member doctoring them up to make them swingier. Fortunately, the composer isn't too averse to the changes as he has just won the heart of the beauty who sings his revamped songs. Songs include: "Where Did You Get That Girl?" (Harry Puck, Bert Kalmar, sung by Helen Parrish), "Sergeant Swing," "Rug-Cuttin' Romeo" (Milton Rosen, Everett Carter).
Clara Drake
Marital comedy in which a department store mannequin is mistaken for "the other woman".
Woman in Book Store
A best-selling author of women's issues and a medical academic find it is to their mutual advantage to falsely claim that they are married.
Mrs. Errol
Professor Leon Errol, an authority on how to be charming, has a few too many drinks at the Ocean View Hotel and forgets all he knows on the subject. Among those he doesn't charm are his wife, his lawyer and his lawyer's wife, a blonde cutie he thinks he has bigamously married.
Companion Woman (uncredited)
A happily married woman lets her catty friends talk her into divorce when her husband strays.
Beulah
A fussy shopkeeper's life drastically changes when his wife takes in two homeless boys.
Party Guest
A sports store clerk poses as a famous jockey as an advertising stunt, but gets more than he bargained for.
Mrs. Jefferson
A woman is forced to keep her marriage and past indiscretions a secret from those she loves.
Mrs. Bannister
Police set up a dragnet to trap an outlaw's wife whom they believe to be his accomplice.
Polly Parker
In this comedy, a wealthy sheik kidnaps and falls for a snobby socialite.
Woman with Poodle (Uncredited)
Mobster "Baby Face" Martin returns home to visit the New York neighborhood where he grew up, dropping in on his mother, who rejects him because of his gangster lifestyle, and his old girlfriend, Francey, now a syphilitic prostitute. Martin also crosses paths with Dave, a childhood friend struggling to make it as an architect, and the Dead End Kids, a gang of young boys roaming the streets of the city's East Side slums.
Martha Abbott
Night riders are terrorizing homesteaders, and the town doctor tries to keep the locals from forming a vigilante group. After more towns people are killed, however, the rest of the town makes the doctor the town sheriff and tells him to clean up the gang.