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Breaking Even (1932)
Character: N/A
Vaudeville comic Tom Howard meets a man about to shoot himself and takes him into his store to try and talk him out of it. But Tom may prove to be crazier than the guy he's trying to help.
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The Acid Test (1932)
Character: N/A
George Shelton asks Tom Howard to help him impress his girl as a he-man. Howard is to insult him, and then Shelton comes up and punches out Howard. The gag works, so Howard tries to use the same gag, recruiting Donald MacBride as his foil.
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Two A.M. (1931)
Character: N/A
A bumbling burglar's assistant botches a job for his boss.
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Via Express (1931)
Character: N/A
A one-reel comedy short starring Tom Howard as a janitor who has to pick up a vase and not break it,
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Aces Wild (1933)
Character: N/A
Tom Howard gets into a poker game on the train with some guys who make up their own rules.
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The Big Meow (1934)
Character: N/A
When the story begins, Harry the Heaver calls a judge and threatens him. The police, however, have no idea where the crook is...so he hires two idiots to follow Harry's girlfriend so that they can lead them to his hideout. Unfortunately, since they are pretty dim, they end up following the judge's wife instead!
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Second Hand Husband (1934)
Character: Tom
Tom Howard has married a widow. She keeps comparing him to her first husband, to Howard's cost. To make himself seem nobler, he has pal George Shelton burgle the place. However, another burglar is also trying to break in, to general confusion.
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The Wrong Bottle (1934)
Character: Tom
In "The Wrong Bottle", Tom is annoyed since his freeloading brother-in-law lives with them and he's quite thoughtless. After some arguing, the brother-in-law informs Tom that his insurance policy has lapsed....and soon after this Tom thinks he's accidentally drank poison. However, when he heads to the store to buy some antidote, he's frustrated by a dopey druggist and other store employees....and there's more craziness after this.
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The Magic Word (1935)
Character: Tom
A couple of hecklers ruin a magician's act when the magician asks for an audience volunteer.
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Get That Venus (1933)
Character: Joe Smiley
A fast-talking philanderer and sometime reporter gets caught up in an octogenarian antiquarian's scheme to steal a classical masterwork, the famous Venus of Asterville.
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Rain or Shine (1930)
Character: Amos K. Shrewsberry
Young Mary Rainey takes the reins of her deceased father's failing circus. With the help of the Inimitable Smiley Johnson, she hopes to bring fortune back to her ragtag band of ragged shoeleather performers.
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