The three fat boys decide that the world needs to be shaken up a bit, so they take a buggy ride through the country roads. The poor horses soon become exhausted and bump the boys off very unceremoniously. But this is not so unfortunate as it seems, for it affords the boys the opportunity to meet Lois, who has been toying with the trick dog and goat. The dog is evidently sorely puzzled by the bucking of the goat, and scratches his head to induce thought and thus finds the solution. But the goat has no respect for thought, and pushes him off the pedestal. The boys then arrive on the scene and are invited to stay for supper, provided, of course, that they catch their own fish. Thereupon, there follows a battle royal between the fish and the hook, one saying "No", and the other, "Yes". The boys are very unsuccessful when compared to an invading bear, who catches a fish by jumping in the pond. Soon Dad comes along and demands that the boys work for their grub. He probably regrets his order, for one of the boys falls down the well, one attempts to milk a bull, and the third spends most of his time evading a goat. Lois invited the boys to come to the barn dance--in a big barn---and there a two-hundred pounder enters into competition with Lois in a Charleston. One of the boys thinks this so funny that he slaps an old-maid spectator on the back, causing her teeth to do an impromptu dance on the floor. Dad brings out his newly invented vacuum, and when the no-control switch is set, the entire party is swept away in a great gale.
—Copyright Description from Library of Congress