Frank Gannucci
01-19-2018, 08:49 AM
Honeymooners Episode Reviews: "Young At Heart" & "A Dog's Life":
Episode #129 (Syndicated episode #20)
TV: Half-hour.
VCR: Attached to "'Twas The Night Before Christmas." On some tapes, it’s attached to “Ralph Kramden Inc.” & “A Dog’s Life.” On some tapes, it’s attached to “The Golfer”, “TV or Not TV”, “Better Living Through TV” & “Oh My Aching Back.”
Laserdisc: Attached to “A Dog’s Life”, “Here Comes The Bride”, “Mama Loves Mambo”, “Please Leave The Premises”, “House Beautiful” (aka “Pardon My Glove”), Young Man With A Horn”, “Head of The House” (aka “Ralph’s Big Mouth”), “The Worry Wart”, Ralph Kramden, Hero At Large” (aka “Trapped”), “The Loudspeaker”, “On Stage”, “Opportunity Knocks, But” & “Unconventional Behavior.”
DVD: Attached to episodes #16 - #24 of the Classic 39. On Fan Favorites: Best of The Honeymooners, it is attached to “TV or Not TV”, “Funny Money”, “The Golfer”, “The Sleepwalker”, “Better Living Through TV”, “The Man From Space” & “$99,000 Answer.” The HD Blu-Ray set has the exact same episodes (including two versions of the following: "The $99,000 Answer", "A Dog's Life" & "Here Comes The Bride" (in which one has the original ads) 60 Minutes Interview & outtakes (in which Jack talks about outtakes).
Air Date: Sat. 2/11/56
To see the finished script, click here: http://www.springfieldspringfield.co.uk/view_episode_scripts.php?tv-show=the-honeymooners-1955&episode=s04e20 ;
For this episode, I think you can tell that there are a lot of young people in the studio audience.
A young girl named "Judy Conners comes up to visit Alice. Judy Conners looks like she is in her teens. She has a boyfriend named Wallace, who she calls Atomic Passion. She asks if Wallace can come up here so she can visit him and go out on a date. He hasn't met her dad and she doesn't want to take any chances. On their date, they are going to Coney Island and go to places like The Crazy House and The Tunnel of Love, go dancing, and go roller skating. Judy says this about a past boyfriend of hers. Judy: "Freddie was so 'icky.' He was a termite strictly out of the woods." Alice complies with her request. Judy leaves. Ralph comes home and Alice and he talk about him and her doing the same thing everyday. She wants to go roller skating. Ralph complies, but realizes what she asked. Alice says she wants to do the things that young people do. Alice: "That is what keeps you young." Ralph: "My youth has passed. The Golden Years are gone. We have hit the second plateau" Alice still wants to do the things that young people do. Alice: "How can you be so 'icky'? You are a termite Ralph. Strictly out of the woods." Judy said almost the same thing about a past boyfriend of hers named Freddie, I think when she talked to Alice. Alice goes into the bedroom. Ed Norton comes in. Ralph talks to him about the places that Alice wants to visit, namely the Tunnel of Love at Coney Island. Ed says that that place is terrible because he had to fix a leak under there. Ha! Wallace comes in. I think the guy that played him is George Burns' son, Ronald John Burns. He gets an ovation from the studio audience. The clothing that he is wearing for going out is SO outdated now. If a person his age were to walk in to high school wearing those pieces of clothing, he would probably get laughed at. Wallace: "I'm here to pick up Angel Cake (Judy)." Wallace tries to talk to Ralph & Ed. He says: "I got a frantic hot rod that is ready to percolate" Ralph: "Frantic hot rod that's ready to percolate" Wallace: "Aren't you hip? Don't you dig?" Ed: "I'm the one who digs. I work in the sewer." Alice hears him and tries to bring up Judy. Alice explains to Ralph about the situation while Wallace does the "Apple" dance. Judy comes up and the date for them is on. They leave. Ed talks about him being young. Ed: "As time wore on, I grew older and matured." Ralph: "Yeah, now you are a full-grown nut." Ralph then talks about all the young things that Alice wants to do and makes fun of her because she is so old. Alice gets the message and says she will never talk about it again in a very stern voice. Ralph is remorseful and says to Ed that from now on, he will do the things young people do. He says that from now on, he will say things that young people say. The things that he says are SO outdated. Ed: "How could anybody so round, be so square?"
The next day, Ed shows up with a phonograph and Ralph comes out with a costume that is crazy. The costume is funny. Anybody should look at it and when they do, they might get a chuckle. Ed: "Let me some time to drink this whole thing in. It's like seeing Boulder Dam for the first time." The first record they put on is "The Hucklebuck." Ed plays it and starts to dance. The lyrics go something like: "Here's a dance you should love..." The original version of this song was actually sung by Chubby Checker. Ralph complains that he can't do those dance moves. Ed: "Get in that move and be gay (happy)." They put on the record again and Ralph dances. This is so funny. They rehearse the dance more and more. Alice comes in. Cue Ralph stopping in mid-dance when he sees Alice now. Ralph: "You wanted me to become a dancer so I was brushing up. This isn't a crazy costume. This is what all of us cats wear. I got it! I got it! I'm hip! Ready to go! I'm gone!" Alice: "You're gone all right." Ralph says that he will take her dancing and roller skating. He gives her his pin (like Wallace gave to Judy to mean that they are a couple). Alice is delighted. They rehearse some more.
At the roller skating rink, Ralph is a nervous wreck. He doesn't want to fall down and hurt himself. The roller skating rink actually has a bar on the right of it. Ed notices Ralph being nervous and the fact that he s having a tough time roller skating. Ralph: "If I keep this up, I will lose my old age." Alice asks Ralph to go give her and Trixie some coffee at the bar. The girls know that Ralph is having a tough time roller skating but that doesn't bother them apparently Ralph reluctantly complies. When he gets the coffee, you can hear a girl in the audience saying: "Steady, steady now!" When he delivers the coffee to them, Trixie notices that he is having hard time but doesn't even help him. Ralph sneezes and the coffee spills. Ralph wants to go home, but he slips and falls on the ground. Everyone tries to help him out but to no avail. When Ed helps, he even loses his hat. This moment is funny. I wonder how much fun it was for them to try and do this moment.
At home, Ralph is the one who is hurt the most. He complains about doing the things that young people do and blames Alice for it. Ralph says it was humiliating for him to fall down at the rink and not being able to get up. Everyone laughs and Ralph laughs along. Ralph remembers going out with Alice when they were young. He then says something like thinking young and being young. Everyone agrees and the episode ends.
Because of the talk of youth in this episode, you can hear a lot of young people in the audience. I think some of the young people were actually kids and the only reason they were let in because of the talk of youth.
Episode #130 (Syndicated episode #21)
TV: Half-hour.
VCR: Attached to "House Beautiful" (aka "Pardon My Glove.") On some tapes, it’s attached to “Ralph Kramden Inc.” & “Young At Heart.” On some tapes, it’s attached to “Opportunity Knocks, But”, “Brother Ralph” & “The Safety Award.”
Laserdisc: Attached to “Young At Heart”, “Here Comes The Bride”, “Mama Loves Mambo”, “Please Leave The Premises”, “House Beautiful” (aka “Pardon My Glove”), Young Man With A Horn”, “Head of The House” (aka “Ralph’s Big Mouth”), “The Worry Wart”, Ralph Kramden, Hero At Large” (aka “Trapped”), “The Loudspeaker”, “On Stage”, “Opportunity Knocks, But” & “Unconventional Behavior.”
DVD: Attached to episodes #16 - #24 of the Classic 39. On Fan Favorites: Best of The Honeymooners, it is attached to “TV or Not TV”, “Funny Money”, “The Golfer”, “The Sleepwalker”, “Better Living Through TV”, “The Man From Space” & “$99,000 Answer.” The HD Blu-Ray set has the exact same episodes (including two versions of the following: "The $99,000 Answer" & "Here Comes The Bride" (in which one has the original ads) 60 Minutes Interview & outtakes (in which Jack talks about outtakes).
Air Date: Sat. 2/18/56
To see the finished script, click here: http://www.springfieldspringfield.co.uk/view_episode_scripts.php?tv-show=the-honeymooners-1955&episode=s04e21
WPIX Program Director Julie O'Neil found the original master film of the 1970 fireplace of the Yule Log special in WPIX's film archives in Fort Lee, New Jersey. The master film was misfiled in a Honeymooners film can marked with the episode title “A Dog’s Life,” which led to the title of a 2006 40th anniversary special about the Log called A Log’s Life.
Alice wants to have a young puppy but she knows that Ralph won't allow it. That doesn't stop her though. She gets dog food for the dog. Ralph comes home and says he has another emergency lodge meeting tonight. Alice: "Do you realize that the Raccoons have more emergency meetings than the U.N.?" Ralph: "It turns out that we have more emergencies than the U.N." Sure. Ed comes in and says that they have another emergency meeting tonight. Alice: "I'm beginning to think that all those emergency meetings are nothing more than a poker game." Ed disagrees. Ed: "An executive meeting, that's a poker game." Gee, what executive meetings huh? Alice leaves, while Ed eats the bowl of dog food that is on the table. Ed doesn't notice that it is dog food. Ralph comes out and says something about his weight. Ralph: "Have you seen me when I weighed 165?" Ed: "No, Ralph I never did see your baby pictures." Ha! Ed raves more and more about the food and lets Ralph taste it. Ed says that Alice cooked it and everything Trixie makes comes out of a can. Ralph is convinced that he has found his latest million dollar idea. Uh oh! He will market that food in cans and he will get his boss to help him sell it. Ralph and Ed think of the name. It's called: Kran-Mar's Delicious Mystery Appetizer. Ed thinks that this idea will take the cake. Ralph: "It just goes to show what I have always said: ' Every dog has his day!'"
At the office, Ralph tells his boss, Mr. Marshall, that in his lunch box, he has a million dollars. Mr. Marshall: "Then you must have had a good day on the bus." Ha! Ralph brings out the food. Ralph: "This food will go great with O' Doofers (Hor D' Ourves mispronounced.) Mr. Marshall: "Hor D' Ourves!" Ralph: "They will go great with that too." Mr. Marshall tries it and likes it. He brings out his co-workers. One of them says: "There's something about the aroma that I recognize." Uh oh! Man: "Hey, this is dog food." Ha ha ha. Ralph says that he is nuts so they bring in Charlie (he raises dogs.) Charlie agrees. Ralph faints.
At home, Alice is holding the puppy that she just got. The puppy is cute. Trixie adores the puppy to (which is a he.) Trixie says that she would get a puppy just like him, if it wasn't for the fact that Ed is allergic to dogs. Wait a minute. In the episode titled: "The Sleepwalker", didn't Ed get a dog? He wasn't allergic to them then so why is he allergic to them now considering that that episode was shown three months ago? Trixie leaves as Alice puts the puppy in his box in the bedroom. Ed comes in and when he starts sneezing, Alice says that she just got a dog and she doesn't want Ralph to know now. Ed says that despite the allergy, he will hold the dog for a while before he gets dinner in his box. Ed: "Food in bed huh? Boy, talk about a dog's life." Alice leaves. Ed puts the food in the puppy's box but of course, Ed gets some of the food too. Ralph comes home in a rage and explains what happened to him at the office. Ralph: "How would you like it if you gave your boss dog food to eat?" Ed: "Terrible, unless he was a cocker spaniel." Ralph: "It was a miracle I wasn't fired." Ralph thinks that it was Alice's mother's fault for all of this but then realizes that Alice has a dog. Ralph: "That mutt is leaving." Ralph says that Alice can't have a dog because of the fact that Ralph will have to do all the dog-related work for it. One of the things he complains about is the fact that he thinks that he was to take him for a walk just before he goes to bed. Ralph takes the box along with the puppy in it to the dog pound. He leaves as Ed continues his feast of the dog food.
At the dog pound, Ralph surrenders the dog. He takes the puppy out and gives a speech about a nice owner will come along and take him to a better home etc. That's almost the same exact speech that he gave to the "baby" in "The Adoption." The puppy gets taken away. Ralph says to one of the people who work there (played by George Petrie.) He asks him if the dog he surrendered will get a new home. Man: "I hope so because after some dogs can stay for a certain number of days without being picked up and that's it. We already have some that are over the limit." Ralph: "What will happen if no one picks him up in those certain number of days?" Man: "Then they will be killed." I wonder if that really happens. We now learn that Ralph loves the dog after all. Ralph: "You mean to tell me that my dog is going to be killed?" Ralph charges into the room where his dog was placed in. Ralph (yells): "WAIT A MINUTE!" Alice comes in. She learned of Ralph surrendering the puppy and she wants to bring him back home again. Ralph comes out with not only her puppy but with all of the dogs that are over the limit. Ralph: "I fell in love with your puppy." They leave with the dogs in tow. But, the dogs aren't seen again for the rest of the series, much like some of the other things that the Kramdens got, like TVs for instance.
During the curtain call on the sponsor materials version on the Blu Ray, Jack plugs Buick.
Credit I think goes to (the original) Bill's 'Mooners Archives, eBay.com, tv.com, Honeymooners Lost Episodes Book, tvguide.com, honeymooners.net, Honeymooners Lost Episodes DVD booklet, Wikipedia.org, Yahoo Groups You're A Riot! & Amazon.com.
Episode #129 (Syndicated episode #20)
TV: Half-hour.
VCR: Attached to "'Twas The Night Before Christmas." On some tapes, it’s attached to “Ralph Kramden Inc.” & “A Dog’s Life.” On some tapes, it’s attached to “The Golfer”, “TV or Not TV”, “Better Living Through TV” & “Oh My Aching Back.”
Laserdisc: Attached to “A Dog’s Life”, “Here Comes The Bride”, “Mama Loves Mambo”, “Please Leave The Premises”, “House Beautiful” (aka “Pardon My Glove”), Young Man With A Horn”, “Head of The House” (aka “Ralph’s Big Mouth”), “The Worry Wart”, Ralph Kramden, Hero At Large” (aka “Trapped”), “The Loudspeaker”, “On Stage”, “Opportunity Knocks, But” & “Unconventional Behavior.”
DVD: Attached to episodes #16 - #24 of the Classic 39. On Fan Favorites: Best of The Honeymooners, it is attached to “TV or Not TV”, “Funny Money”, “The Golfer”, “The Sleepwalker”, “Better Living Through TV”, “The Man From Space” & “$99,000 Answer.” The HD Blu-Ray set has the exact same episodes (including two versions of the following: "The $99,000 Answer", "A Dog's Life" & "Here Comes The Bride" (in which one has the original ads) 60 Minutes Interview & outtakes (in which Jack talks about outtakes).
Air Date: Sat. 2/11/56
To see the finished script, click here: http://www.springfieldspringfield.co.uk/view_episode_scripts.php?tv-show=the-honeymooners-1955&episode=s04e20 ;
For this episode, I think you can tell that there are a lot of young people in the studio audience.
A young girl named "Judy Conners comes up to visit Alice. Judy Conners looks like she is in her teens. She has a boyfriend named Wallace, who she calls Atomic Passion. She asks if Wallace can come up here so she can visit him and go out on a date. He hasn't met her dad and she doesn't want to take any chances. On their date, they are going to Coney Island and go to places like The Crazy House and The Tunnel of Love, go dancing, and go roller skating. Judy says this about a past boyfriend of hers. Judy: "Freddie was so 'icky.' He was a termite strictly out of the woods." Alice complies with her request. Judy leaves. Ralph comes home and Alice and he talk about him and her doing the same thing everyday. She wants to go roller skating. Ralph complies, but realizes what she asked. Alice says she wants to do the things that young people do. Alice: "That is what keeps you young." Ralph: "My youth has passed. The Golden Years are gone. We have hit the second plateau" Alice still wants to do the things that young people do. Alice: "How can you be so 'icky'? You are a termite Ralph. Strictly out of the woods." Judy said almost the same thing about a past boyfriend of hers named Freddie, I think when she talked to Alice. Alice goes into the bedroom. Ed Norton comes in. Ralph talks to him about the places that Alice wants to visit, namely the Tunnel of Love at Coney Island. Ed says that that place is terrible because he had to fix a leak under there. Ha! Wallace comes in. I think the guy that played him is George Burns' son, Ronald John Burns. He gets an ovation from the studio audience. The clothing that he is wearing for going out is SO outdated now. If a person his age were to walk in to high school wearing those pieces of clothing, he would probably get laughed at. Wallace: "I'm here to pick up Angel Cake (Judy)." Wallace tries to talk to Ralph & Ed. He says: "I got a frantic hot rod that is ready to percolate" Ralph: "Frantic hot rod that's ready to percolate" Wallace: "Aren't you hip? Don't you dig?" Ed: "I'm the one who digs. I work in the sewer." Alice hears him and tries to bring up Judy. Alice explains to Ralph about the situation while Wallace does the "Apple" dance. Judy comes up and the date for them is on. They leave. Ed talks about him being young. Ed: "As time wore on, I grew older and matured." Ralph: "Yeah, now you are a full-grown nut." Ralph then talks about all the young things that Alice wants to do and makes fun of her because she is so old. Alice gets the message and says she will never talk about it again in a very stern voice. Ralph is remorseful and says to Ed that from now on, he will do the things young people do. He says that from now on, he will say things that young people say. The things that he says are SO outdated. Ed: "How could anybody so round, be so square?"
The next day, Ed shows up with a phonograph and Ralph comes out with a costume that is crazy. The costume is funny. Anybody should look at it and when they do, they might get a chuckle. Ed: "Let me some time to drink this whole thing in. It's like seeing Boulder Dam for the first time." The first record they put on is "The Hucklebuck." Ed plays it and starts to dance. The lyrics go something like: "Here's a dance you should love..." The original version of this song was actually sung by Chubby Checker. Ralph complains that he can't do those dance moves. Ed: "Get in that move and be gay (happy)." They put on the record again and Ralph dances. This is so funny. They rehearse the dance more and more. Alice comes in. Cue Ralph stopping in mid-dance when he sees Alice now. Ralph: "You wanted me to become a dancer so I was brushing up. This isn't a crazy costume. This is what all of us cats wear. I got it! I got it! I'm hip! Ready to go! I'm gone!" Alice: "You're gone all right." Ralph says that he will take her dancing and roller skating. He gives her his pin (like Wallace gave to Judy to mean that they are a couple). Alice is delighted. They rehearse some more.
At the roller skating rink, Ralph is a nervous wreck. He doesn't want to fall down and hurt himself. The roller skating rink actually has a bar on the right of it. Ed notices Ralph being nervous and the fact that he s having a tough time roller skating. Ralph: "If I keep this up, I will lose my old age." Alice asks Ralph to go give her and Trixie some coffee at the bar. The girls know that Ralph is having a tough time roller skating but that doesn't bother them apparently Ralph reluctantly complies. When he gets the coffee, you can hear a girl in the audience saying: "Steady, steady now!" When he delivers the coffee to them, Trixie notices that he is having hard time but doesn't even help him. Ralph sneezes and the coffee spills. Ralph wants to go home, but he slips and falls on the ground. Everyone tries to help him out but to no avail. When Ed helps, he even loses his hat. This moment is funny. I wonder how much fun it was for them to try and do this moment.
At home, Ralph is the one who is hurt the most. He complains about doing the things that young people do and blames Alice for it. Ralph says it was humiliating for him to fall down at the rink and not being able to get up. Everyone laughs and Ralph laughs along. Ralph remembers going out with Alice when they were young. He then says something like thinking young and being young. Everyone agrees and the episode ends.
Because of the talk of youth in this episode, you can hear a lot of young people in the audience. I think some of the young people were actually kids and the only reason they were let in because of the talk of youth.
Episode #130 (Syndicated episode #21)
TV: Half-hour.
VCR: Attached to "House Beautiful" (aka "Pardon My Glove.") On some tapes, it’s attached to “Ralph Kramden Inc.” & “Young At Heart.” On some tapes, it’s attached to “Opportunity Knocks, But”, “Brother Ralph” & “The Safety Award.”
Laserdisc: Attached to “Young At Heart”, “Here Comes The Bride”, “Mama Loves Mambo”, “Please Leave The Premises”, “House Beautiful” (aka “Pardon My Glove”), Young Man With A Horn”, “Head of The House” (aka “Ralph’s Big Mouth”), “The Worry Wart”, Ralph Kramden, Hero At Large” (aka “Trapped”), “The Loudspeaker”, “On Stage”, “Opportunity Knocks, But” & “Unconventional Behavior.”
DVD: Attached to episodes #16 - #24 of the Classic 39. On Fan Favorites: Best of The Honeymooners, it is attached to “TV or Not TV”, “Funny Money”, “The Golfer”, “The Sleepwalker”, “Better Living Through TV”, “The Man From Space” & “$99,000 Answer.” The HD Blu-Ray set has the exact same episodes (including two versions of the following: "The $99,000 Answer" & "Here Comes The Bride" (in which one has the original ads) 60 Minutes Interview & outtakes (in which Jack talks about outtakes).
Air Date: Sat. 2/18/56
To see the finished script, click here: http://www.springfieldspringfield.co.uk/view_episode_scripts.php?tv-show=the-honeymooners-1955&episode=s04e21
WPIX Program Director Julie O'Neil found the original master film of the 1970 fireplace of the Yule Log special in WPIX's film archives in Fort Lee, New Jersey. The master film was misfiled in a Honeymooners film can marked with the episode title “A Dog’s Life,” which led to the title of a 2006 40th anniversary special about the Log called A Log’s Life.
Alice wants to have a young puppy but she knows that Ralph won't allow it. That doesn't stop her though. She gets dog food for the dog. Ralph comes home and says he has another emergency lodge meeting tonight. Alice: "Do you realize that the Raccoons have more emergency meetings than the U.N.?" Ralph: "It turns out that we have more emergencies than the U.N." Sure. Ed comes in and says that they have another emergency meeting tonight. Alice: "I'm beginning to think that all those emergency meetings are nothing more than a poker game." Ed disagrees. Ed: "An executive meeting, that's a poker game." Gee, what executive meetings huh? Alice leaves, while Ed eats the bowl of dog food that is on the table. Ed doesn't notice that it is dog food. Ralph comes out and says something about his weight. Ralph: "Have you seen me when I weighed 165?" Ed: "No, Ralph I never did see your baby pictures." Ha! Ed raves more and more about the food and lets Ralph taste it. Ed says that Alice cooked it and everything Trixie makes comes out of a can. Ralph is convinced that he has found his latest million dollar idea. Uh oh! He will market that food in cans and he will get his boss to help him sell it. Ralph and Ed think of the name. It's called: Kran-Mar's Delicious Mystery Appetizer. Ed thinks that this idea will take the cake. Ralph: "It just goes to show what I have always said: ' Every dog has his day!'"
At the office, Ralph tells his boss, Mr. Marshall, that in his lunch box, he has a million dollars. Mr. Marshall: "Then you must have had a good day on the bus." Ha! Ralph brings out the food. Ralph: "This food will go great with O' Doofers (Hor D' Ourves mispronounced.) Mr. Marshall: "Hor D' Ourves!" Ralph: "They will go great with that too." Mr. Marshall tries it and likes it. He brings out his co-workers. One of them says: "There's something about the aroma that I recognize." Uh oh! Man: "Hey, this is dog food." Ha ha ha. Ralph says that he is nuts so they bring in Charlie (he raises dogs.) Charlie agrees. Ralph faints.
At home, Alice is holding the puppy that she just got. The puppy is cute. Trixie adores the puppy to (which is a he.) Trixie says that she would get a puppy just like him, if it wasn't for the fact that Ed is allergic to dogs. Wait a minute. In the episode titled: "The Sleepwalker", didn't Ed get a dog? He wasn't allergic to them then so why is he allergic to them now considering that that episode was shown three months ago? Trixie leaves as Alice puts the puppy in his box in the bedroom. Ed comes in and when he starts sneezing, Alice says that she just got a dog and she doesn't want Ralph to know now. Ed says that despite the allergy, he will hold the dog for a while before he gets dinner in his box. Ed: "Food in bed huh? Boy, talk about a dog's life." Alice leaves. Ed puts the food in the puppy's box but of course, Ed gets some of the food too. Ralph comes home in a rage and explains what happened to him at the office. Ralph: "How would you like it if you gave your boss dog food to eat?" Ed: "Terrible, unless he was a cocker spaniel." Ralph: "It was a miracle I wasn't fired." Ralph thinks that it was Alice's mother's fault for all of this but then realizes that Alice has a dog. Ralph: "That mutt is leaving." Ralph says that Alice can't have a dog because of the fact that Ralph will have to do all the dog-related work for it. One of the things he complains about is the fact that he thinks that he was to take him for a walk just before he goes to bed. Ralph takes the box along with the puppy in it to the dog pound. He leaves as Ed continues his feast of the dog food.
At the dog pound, Ralph surrenders the dog. He takes the puppy out and gives a speech about a nice owner will come along and take him to a better home etc. That's almost the same exact speech that he gave to the "baby" in "The Adoption." The puppy gets taken away. Ralph says to one of the people who work there (played by George Petrie.) He asks him if the dog he surrendered will get a new home. Man: "I hope so because after some dogs can stay for a certain number of days without being picked up and that's it. We already have some that are over the limit." Ralph: "What will happen if no one picks him up in those certain number of days?" Man: "Then they will be killed." I wonder if that really happens. We now learn that Ralph loves the dog after all. Ralph: "You mean to tell me that my dog is going to be killed?" Ralph charges into the room where his dog was placed in. Ralph (yells): "WAIT A MINUTE!" Alice comes in. She learned of Ralph surrendering the puppy and she wants to bring him back home again. Ralph comes out with not only her puppy but with all of the dogs that are over the limit. Ralph: "I fell in love with your puppy." They leave with the dogs in tow. But, the dogs aren't seen again for the rest of the series, much like some of the other things that the Kramdens got, like TVs for instance.
During the curtain call on the sponsor materials version on the Blu Ray, Jack plugs Buick.
Credit I think goes to (the original) Bill's 'Mooners Archives, eBay.com, tv.com, Honeymooners Lost Episodes Book, tvguide.com, honeymooners.net, Honeymooners Lost Episodes DVD booklet, Wikipedia.org, Yahoo Groups You're A Riot! & Amazon.com.