In a Bogart-era comedy, our hero (possibly Humprey Bogart) vies for the attention of a young woman. She is about to embark from some East Coast American city, probably New York(?). Another man volunteers to carry her baggage. He says he can handle it because he's a tobacco farmer from Virginia. Our hero says that the Virginian got his muscles from lifting bales of money. The Virginian guffaws and our hero replies, "It's not that funny." After she has got on board, the young lady stands on deck, leaning against the rail, facing the crowd on the dock. You can't tell who she's smiling at. Two (or possibly more) men suddenly realize that they all have come there for the same woman. So they start socking each other in the jaw, swinging roundhouse punches. I suspect that our hero---as cool as Bogart, even if not played by him---does not participate in the fistfight.

Does anybody know what movie this is? I do not think it is "Sabrina."