Pee Wee, a chubby midget, is in love with Alice, the daughter of Lady Petite. Although Alice is twice as tall as her mother, she stands greatly in awe of her Lilliputian parent. A diminutive duke holds the mortgage on Lady Petite's home. His Grace is Pee Wee's rival for the hand of the stately Alice. Villainous out of all proportion to his stature, the Duke threatens to foreclose unless Lady Petite persuades her daughter to become his bride. Alice, however, defies both suitor and parent. She is locked in her room and sentenced to hard labor by Lady Petite. Alice manages to smuggle out a note to Pee Wee by the giant policeman of Pygmyville. Pee Wee and Uncle Tiny Mite, disguised in Oom Paul whiskers, rush to the rescue with Shetland pony and rig and a ladder. While Uncle Tiny Mite engages the mother in polite conversation in the drawing room, Pee Wee ascends to the fair captive's room. Alice however, fails to recognize her sweetheart in his beard, and her shrieks for help call Lady Petite and her guest to the scene of abduction. But Alice, soon discovering her blunder, gracefully permits Uncle Tiny Mite and Pee Wee to carry her off behind the Shetland pony. Lady Petite, tucked under the arm of the giant policeman, gives pursuit. The runaways are captured. Meanwhile the duke has ordered the Petite mansion sold at sheriff's auction. The kidnappers of Alice have been dismissed by the Pygmyville judge, and they hurry to the rescue of the distraught Lilliputian Lady's property. Uncle Tiny Mite presents Lady Petite with the bill of sale. The little virago embraces Pee Wee, and the affair ends in a double wedding.
—Moving Picture World synopsis