Dagwood notices that it is Tuesday when he eats his sandwich. Meatless Tuesday was a campaign that returned with the onset of World War II, calling upon women on the home front to play a role in supporting the war effort. During this time, meat was being rationed, along with other commodities like sugar and gasoline. This was similar to Meatless Monday during World War I.
Last film in the series for Irving Bacon as the Bumstead's hapless mailman who delivered mail to the house under a variety of names. He would be replaced by Eddie Acuff, who had appeared earlier in the series in a variety of nondescript roles.
This would be the last film in the "Blondie" series for producer/director Frank R. Strayer. His uncredited assistant director, Abby Berlin, would take over as the director with the next entry.
The fourteenth of twenty-eight Blondie movies starring Penny Singleton as Blondie Bumstead and Arthur Lake as Dagwood Bumstead.
Along with It's a Great Life (1943), this is one of only two films in the "Blondie" series not to feature Blondie's name in the title.