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- Tony, the beloved of Wanda, starts things off hilariously by providing his mother-in-law to be with the first thrill she has had in thirty years by taking her home in a motorcycle side-car. Narrow escapes galore and finally a wreck. Then the engagement party of her daughter. The villain, a bigamist for whom the police are looking, has ambitions of adding Jane to the collection of wives. He is in a fair way to do so until Tony discovers from a newspaper story that the chap who is wrecking the engagement party, his happiness and his face is the man wanted. He gets him by bringing in a bunch of kids who have been subsidized with a nickel bribe to claim the impostor as their father, Tony, with dress and veil, pretending to be one of the deserted wives.
- William McKee gets a position on the sheriff's staff. His first assignment is to get a ''bad man" who is terrorizing the countryside. He buckles on his belt with the regulation six-shooters, but is saved the dangers of the expedition because Charles Puffy gets the job to make good in the eyes of the store-keeper's daughter, Elsie Tarron. To save going for him, Kalla Pasha, the bad man comes into the store and the sheriff's office adjoining and kidnaps a dummy figure which he mistakes for Elsie. Then Puffy starts in pursuit, also in ignorance of the fact that the villain is stealing a dummy. He catches up with him and through a combination of happy circumstances captures the outlaw and wins the girl.
- Young lovers are up against the parental barrier even though the wedding ring has already been secured and presented to the bride-to-be. Father throws his would-be son-in-law out of the house, but retribution follows fast behind in the shape of an electric iron in which is a note for the expelled lover. This hits father and temporarily floors him. Then follow innumerable suitcases which are caught with the skill and precision of a college football player handling a forward pass. The would-be elopers discover that young brother has stolen the automobile in which they were to elope. To cross a stream to the minister's, they take refuge in a boat. Father and mother pursue. Father lands in the water and young brother throws a life line to the lovers, who are thus pulled ashore. The life line holds; so does the kid's mistaken sense of humor, for he does not unfasten the tow line, but hauls his sister and her beau through the streets of Hollywood until they alight at the church and are married. Their wedding journey consists of a ride in the same boat which is opportunely brought down the street by the prankish youngster on his return trip.