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词条 List of Dennis the Menace (1959 TV series) episodes
释义

  1. Series overview

  2. Episodes

     Season 1 (1959–60)  Season 2 (1960–61)  Season 3 (1961–62)  Season 4 (1962–63) 

  3. References

  4. External links

{{ref improve|date=June 2012}}{{DISPLAYTITLE:List of Dennis the Menace (1959 TV series) episodes}}

This is a list of episodes from the 1959–1963 United States television series Dennis the Menace. The series is based on the Hank Ketcham comic strip of the same name.

The series ran for four seasons for a total of 146 episodes from {{start date|1959|10|4}} to {{end date|1963|7|7}}.

Series overview

{{Series overview


| color1 = #8EE48E
| link1 = List of Dennis the Menace (1959 TV series) episodes#Season 1 (1959–60)
| episodes1 = 32
| start1 = {{Start date|1959|10|4}}
| end1 = {{End date|1960|6|6}}
| color2 = #78A8F0
| link2 = List of Dennis the Menace (1959 TV series) episodes#Season 2 (1960–61)
| episodes2 = 38
| start2 = {{Start date|1960|10|2}}
| end2 = {{End date|1961|6|25}}
| color3 = #EDCC5B
| link3 = List of Dennis the Menace (1959 TV series) episodes#Season 3 (1961–62)
| episodes3 = 38
| start3 = {{Start date|1961|10|1}}
| end3 = {{End date|1962|7|1}}
| color4 = #E9AFAF
| link4 = List of Dennis the Menace (1959 TV series) episodes#Season 4 (1962–63)
| episodes4 = 38
| start4 = {{Start date|1962|9|30}}
| end4 = {{End date|1963|7|7}}

}}

Episodes

Season 1 (1959–60)

{{Episode table |background=#8EE48E|overall=4 |season=4 |title=19 |director=15 |writer=20 |airdate=14 |episodes={{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=1
|EpisodeNumber2=1
|Title=Dennis Goes to the Movies
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=William Cowley & Peggy Chantler
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1959|10|4}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis successfully eludes a babysitter (whom he has never met) and sneaks out of the house and goes to a cowboy movie that his parents also go to while Joey is left with the babysitter, pretending to be Dennis. (This pilot was made late in 1958. Mrs. Wilson does not appear. Also, due to editing issues, the final two-minute scene was shot in August 1959, when Dennis obviously had a different hairstyle and sounded more polished than during the rest of the episode.)
|LineColor=8EE48E
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=2
|EpisodeNumber2=2
|Title=Dennis and the Signpost
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=William Cowley & Peggy Chantler
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1959|10|11}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis and Tommy fix a fallen street signpost but fail to notice they've put it up with the street names facing in the wrong direction. (This is the first appearance of Martha Wilson, Tommy Anderson, Margaret Wade and Lucy Elkins as well as the first of six appearances in the first season by Ron Howard as Dennis' friend, Stewart. Mrs. Wilson, played by Sylvia Field, appeared in several episodes that were made before but aired after this one. While this was the eighth episode made in the summer of 1959, it was the second episode to air.)
|LineColor=8EE48E
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=3
|EpisodeNumber2=3
|Title=The Fishing Trip
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=William Cowley & Peggy Chantler
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1959|10|18}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson and Dennis' father plan a secret early-morning fishing trip without Dennis, but he suspects something is afoot due to various clues they leave. Their sleep the night before is disrupted by Dennis' restless curiosity. (This was the second episode made but held back in order to air a more recent episode where the cast is more established.)
|LineColor=8EE48E
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=4
|EpisodeNumber2=4
|Title=Grandpa and Miss Cathcart
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=William Cowley & Peggy Chantler
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1959|10|25}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis tries to fix up his Grandpa Perkins with Miss Cathcart and other ladies in the neighborhood. (Miss Cathcart's first appearance. Mr. and Mrs. Wilson do not appear in this episode.)
|LineColor=8EE48E
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=5
|EpisodeNumber2=5
|Title=Innocents in Space
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=George Tibbles
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1959|11|1}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson thinks he has discovered a space satellite when in reality it is Dennis shooting glow-in-the-dark ping-pong balls out of his blaster(gun).
|LineColor=8EE48E
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=6
|EpisodeNumber2=6
|Title=Dennis' Garden
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=Hannibal Coons & Milton Pascal & George Tibbles
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1959|11|8}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis mistakes Mr. Wilson's dahlia bulbs for sweet potatoes, and, after his bedtime, he switches the sweet potatoes for dahlia bulbs.
|LineColor=8EE48E
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=7
|EpisodeNumber2=7
|Title=The New Neighbors
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=William Cowley & Peggy Chantler
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1959|11|15}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis helps Mr. Wilson sell a neighbor's house. (This was the first of only two appearances in the series for Tommy's often-mentioned mother, Mrs. Anderson, played by character actress Jean Howell. The other was in the second season episode "Dennis and the Saxophone.")
|LineColor=8EE48E
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=8
|EpisodeNumber2=8
|Title=Tenting Tonight
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=William Cowley & Peggy Chantler
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1959|11|22}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson returns from a camping trip, inspiring Dennis and Tommy to camp out in the backyard. That night, Mr. Wilson mistakenly thinks the circus train has crashed and the animals have escaped, but the noises are only the Mitchells' neighbors playing a sound-effects record for Henry and Alice.
|LineColor=8EE48E
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=9
|EpisodeNumber2=9
|Title=Dennis Sells Bottles
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=William Cowley & Peggy Chantler & Clifford Goldsmith
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1959|11|29}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis thinks his father is broke, so he sells bottles in an attempt to make some extra money while informing the neighborhood of the Mitchells' dire straits. (Mr. and Mrs. Wilson do not appear in this episode.)
|LineColor=8EE48E
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=10
|EpisodeNumber2=10
|Title=Mr. Wilson's Award
|DirectedBy=Don Taylor
|WrittenBy=William Cowley & Peggy Chantler
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1959|12|6}}
|ShortSummary=Henry tells Dennis that he and the family are moving to New York in order to keep Mr. Wilson in town for an award he is to receive. Dennis then informs the neighborhood of their supposed move.
|LineColor=8EE48E
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=11
|EpisodeNumber2=11
|Title=The Christmas Story
|AltTitle=Dennis & Christmas
|DirectedBy=Don Taylor
|WrittenBy=William Cowley & Peggy Chantler
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1959|12|20}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis is going crazy trying to find his gifts including a new sled.
|LineColor=8EE48E
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=12
|EpisodeNumber2=12
|Title=Dennis and the Cowboy
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=William Cowley & Peggy Chantler
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1959|12|27}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis meets Whip Crawford, his cowboy idol, after Mrs. Webster tells Dennis that Whip will be in the community pageant. The role of Crawford is played by Brad Johnson (1924–1981), who had been the deputy Lofty Craig on the syndicated western series Annie Oakley. This was the third episode made and held to show more recently made episodes. It also is the first episode to include Dennis' rival Johnny Brady, played by Gregory Irvin. (Mr. and Mrs. Wilson do not appear in this episode.)[1]
|LineColor=8EE48E
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=13
|EpisodeNumber2=13
|Title=Dennis Haunts a House
|DirectedBy=Charles Barton
|WrittenBy=George Tibbles
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1960|1|3}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson becomes suspicious when he hears noises caused by Dennis and his friends, who have set up their clubhouse in a crawl space underneath his house.
|LineColor=8EE48E
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=14
|EpisodeNumber2=14
|Title=Dennis' Tree House
|DirectedBy=Charles Barton
|WrittenBy=William Cowley & Peggy Chantler & Hannibal Coons
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1960|1|10}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson attempts to teach Dennis about bird watching. Dennis takes care of a sick bird, which proves to be the first of its species ever found in their region, prompting a visit by an excited bird club official. (This is the first of only two appearances in the series of Tommy's father, Mr. Anderson, although he is mentioned in many episodes spanning the show's entire run. Mr. Anderson, who is played by Lee Millar, also appeared in the third-season episode, "Dennis and the Pee Wee League.")
|LineColor=8EE48E
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=15
|EpisodeNumber2=15
|Title=Dennis and the Rare Coin
|DirectedBy=Don Taylor
|WrittenBy=William Cowley & Peggy Chantler & Louella McFarlane
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1960|1|17}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson purchases a rare coin for $250, but Mrs. Wilson, without realizing what it is, lets Dennis take it to use in a wishing well, which was the town fountain. Also while at the police station, Dennis mentions on his last visit he was given ice cream. He was referring to an early episode that already had been made, but was not aired until later the first season, called "Dennis Runs Away."
|LineColor=8EE48E
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=16
|EpisodeNumber2=16
|Title=Dennis and the Bike
|DirectedBy=Charles Barton
|WrittenBy=William Cowley & Peggy Chantler
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1960|1|24}}
|ShortSummary=When his parents won't buy him his own bicycle, Dennis attempts various ways to get one on his own, including getting engaged to Margaret.
|LineColor=8EE48E
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=17
|EpisodeNumber2=17
|Title=Dennis and the Open House
|DirectedBy=Don Taylor
|WrittenBy=Teleplay by: George Tibbles
Story by: Cally Curtis
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1960|2|7}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis' house is mistaken for a nearby open house that is up for sale, thus attracting a crowd of strangers into what the Mitchells had intended as a small party for friends. (This was the fifth episode made and Margaret Wade's first episode, although several later episodes with her appearance airs prior to this one.)
|LineColor=8EE48E
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=18
|EpisodeNumber2=18
|Title=Dennis and the Duck
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=William Cowley & Peggy Chantler
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1960|2|14}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis gets a pet duck that causes havoc in the neighborhood. (This was the sixth episode made.)
|LineColor=8EE48E
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=19
|EpisodeNumber2=19
|Title=Dennis and the Swing
|DirectedBy=Charles Barton
|WrittenBy=George Tibbles & Paul West & David Schwartz
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1960|2|21}}
|ShortSummary=Henry tries to take Alice out for their anniversary. Meanwhile, Dennis tries to build a swing in his yard and ends up chasing a cat up a tree in the process. When an ice-cream vendor is enlisted to climb the tree, all the ice cream in his truck starts melting.
|LineColor=8EE48E
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=20
|EpisodeNumber2=20
|Title=Dennis and the Dog
|DirectedBy=Charles Barton
|WrittenBy=Phil Leslie
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1960|2|28}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis cares for a dog named Charlie who wins a prize from the art club for his painting.
|LineColor=8EE48E
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=21
|EpisodeNumber2=21
|Title=Mr. Wilson's Sister
|DirectedBy=Charles Barton
|WrittenBy=William Cowley & Peggy Chantler
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1960|3|6}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis meets Mr. Wilson's sister, Helen. Helen brings George a book he had as a child, Treasure Island. She reads the book to Dennis and Tommy, and they become fascinated with buried treasure. Mr. Wilson draws a treasure map to trick the boys into tilling his garden plot.
|LineColor=8EE48E
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=22
|EpisodeNumber2=22
|Title=Dennis and the TV Set
|DirectedBy=Charles Barton
|WrittenBy=William Cowley & Peggy Chantler
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1960|3|13}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis hears about Mr. Wilson getting a remote control for his television set and is fascinated. He uses his friend's remote to operate Mr. Wilson's television from Dennis' bedroom window, and Mr. Wilson can't understand what's happening.
|LineColor=8EE48E
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=23
|EpisodeNumber2=23
|Title=Dennis Creates a Hero
|DirectedBy=Charles Barton
|WrittenBy=William Cowley & Peggy Chantler
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1960|3|20}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis asks a reporter to write a story about his dad with hopes of getting his picture in the paper.
|LineColor=8EE48E
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=24
|EpisodeNumber2=24
|Title=Dennis' Paper Drive
|DirectedBy=Charles Barton
|WrittenBy=Teleplay by: William Cowley & Peggy Chantler
Story by: William Cowley & Peggy Chantler & Arthur Marx and Mannie Manheim
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1960|4|10}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis and Tommy collect newspapers for a paper drive that will reward the boy who collects the most with a silver dollar. (Nancy Evans appears in this and the next episode as June Wilson, George's sister, who visits while Martha is out of town visiting her mother. This was the first of seven consecutive episodes in which Sylvia Field does not appear, and eight out of nine to end the first season. The only exception, "Dennis Runs Away," was filmed early in the first season but held because of editing issues.)
|LineColor=8EE48E
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=25
|EpisodeNumber2=25
|Title=Dennis and the Bees
|DirectedBy=Charles Barton
|WrittenBy=Phil Leslie
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1960|4|17}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis and Tommy learn that local handyman Opie Swanson (Dub Taylor) might have to move because his bees can't find honey. The boys move Mr. Wilson's indoor flowers outside to attract the bees, and Dennis sprays them with perfume, causing great confusion.
|LineColor=8EE48E
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=26
|EpisodeNumber2=26
|Title=Alice's Birthday
|DirectedBy=Charles Barton
|WrittenBy=George Tibbles
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1960|4|24}}
|ShortSummary=Henry will be out of town for Alice's birthday, so he gives Dennis some money to buy her a present. Dennis's antics cause mayhem and damage in the variety store.
|LineColor=8EE48E
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=27
|EpisodeNumber2=27
|Title=Dennis Becomes a Baby Sitter
|DirectedBy=Charles Barton
|WrittenBy=Teleplay by: Hannibal Coons & Dick Wesson & William Cowley & Peggy Chantler
Story by: Hannibal Coons & Dick Wesson
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1960|5|1}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis winds up babysitting a little boy who is a guest of the Wilsons after his father and Mr. Wilson mistakenly both cancel their respective sitters. (This was the seventh episode made, but was held for later airing because of editing issues.)
|LineColor=8EE48E
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=28
|EpisodeNumber2=28
|Title=Dennis and the Starlings
|DirectedBy=Charles Barton
|WrittenBy=William Cowley & Peggy Chantler
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1960|5|8}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson has a bunch of starlings in his tree and wants to get rid of them. Dennis eventually gets rid of the starlings by putting liver in Mr. Wilson's tree, which attracts a lot of cats to climb the tree.
|LineColor=8EE48E
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=29
|EpisodeNumber2=29
|Title=The Party Line
|DirectedBy=Charles Barton
|WrittenBy=William Cowley & Peggy Chantler & George Tibbles
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1960|5|15}}
|ShortSummary=The Driscolls are new neighbors, but problems arise as their phone is on a shared line with the Mitchells. Henry gets angry at Mr. Driscoll for monopolizing the line, not realizing that Dennis and his friends actually were the ones using it, and furthermore that Mr. Driscoll is a valued client of Henry's company. (Mr. and Mrs. Wilson do not appear in this episode. This is the last episode until "The Big Basketball Game" in season 4 that does not include either a Mr. or Mrs. Wilson character.)
|LineColor=8EE48E
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=30
|EpisodeNumber2=30
|Title=Dennis by Proxy
|DirectedBy=Charles Barton
|WrittenBy=George Tibbles
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1960|5|22}}
|ShortSummary=After hearing that the city is tearing down Mr. Dorfman's "Postman's Rest" bench in favor of a parking lot, Dennis and Tommy offer him use of their private bench they plan to build.
|LineColor=8EE48E
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=31
|EpisodeNumber2=31
|Title=Dennis Runs Away
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=William Cowley & Peggy Chantler
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1960|5|29}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis has nobody to play with after Joey goes home. Since nobody can drive him, he decides to walk to his grandfather's house but is stopped by the police. At the police station, he refuses to tell his name, is given ice cream, and causes further havoc including putting cement in Mr. Wilson's bowling ball and accidentally handcuffing an officer. (This was the fourth episode made, but was held for later airing because of editing issues. Billy Booth appeared but was not called "Tommy" even though the character of Tommy Anderson already was established. This is the final appearance in the series of Joey McDonald, who was played by Gil Smith, although he occasionally was mentioned in the second season and as late as the fourth-season episode "First Editions.")
|LineColor=8EE48E
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=32
|EpisodeNumber2=32
|Title=Miss Cathcart's Sunsuit
|DirectedBy=Norman Abbott
|WrittenBy=William Cowley & Peggy Chantler
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1960|6|12}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis and Tommy try to sell Valentine's Day cards in July to buy swim fins.
|LineColor=8EE48E
}}
}}

Season 2 (1960–61)

{{Episode table |background=#AAC8F4|overall=4 |season=4 |title=19 |director=15 |writer=20 |airdate=14 |episodes={{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=33
|EpisodeNumber2=1
|Title=Out of Retirement
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=William Cowley & Peggy Chantler
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1960|10|2}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson gets a visit from his former boss from Pittsburgh who offers Mr. Wilson back his old job, giving him a chance to move far away from Dennis.
|LineColor=AAC8F4
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=34
|EpisodeNumber2=2
|Title=Dennis and the Wedding
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=Louella MacFarlane
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1960|10|9}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson's niece is getting married and asks Dennis to be the ring bearer. Elinor Donahue appears as Mr. Wilson's niece. (Despite the appearances of two of Mr. Wilson's sisters and mentions of Mrs. Wilson's mother and at least two sisters in the first season, as well as the existence of George Wilson's brother John, Mr. Wilson refers to he and Martha being "the only family (his niece) has left" as the reason why they are hosting the wedding.)
|LineColor=AAC8F4
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=35
|EpisodeNumber2=3
|Title=Dennis and the Radio Set
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=James Fonda
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1960|10|16}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson gives Dennis an old radio set that he accidentally bid on at an auction, and turns out to have cash hidden inside. Numerous people then appear, each of them claiming to be the rightful owner.
|LineColor=AAC8F4
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=36
|EpisodeNumber2=4
|Title=Dennis and the Ham-pher
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=Phil Leslie
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1960|10|23}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis gets what he thinks is a hamster, but it turns out to be a gopher that escapes from its cage and almost ruins Mr. Wilson's yard.
|LineColor=AAC8F4
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=37
|EpisodeNumber2=5
|Title=The Stock Certificate
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=Phil Leslie
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1960|10|30}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson has a stock certificate worth $500 and safeguards it inside his phone book, which is then accidentally given away for disposal with thousands of identical books. After the warehouse is carefully searched in vain, it is discovered Dennis had removed the certificate earlier to decorate his treehouse.
|LineColor=AAC8F4
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=38
|EpisodeNumber2=6
|Title=Man of the House
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=Louella MacFarlane
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1960|11|6}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis tries to take care of his sick mother while his father is out of town. (Note: Sylvia Field does not appear in this episode.)
|LineColor=AAC8F4
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=39
|EpisodeNumber2=7
|Title=The Rock Collection
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=William Cowley & Peggy Chantler
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1960|11|13}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis starts a rock collection and ends up finding what he thinks is real gold on Mr. Wilson's lot. An interested couple then try to buy the lot.
|LineColor=AAC8F4
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=40
|EpisodeNumber2=8
|Title=Henry and Togetherness
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=William Cowley & Peggy Chantler
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1960|11|20}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson tricks Henry out of playing golf so that he'll spend more time with Dennis, and Dennis won't bother Mr. Wilson. Meanwhile, Dennis and Tommy try to deal with a hole Dennis put in the fish tank.
|LineColor=AAC8F4
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=41
|EpisodeNumber2=9
|Title=Paint-up, Clean-up Week
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=Dick Conway & Roland McLane
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1960|11|27}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis wants to help out during Paint-up, Clean-up Week, so Mr. Wilson gives Dennis a bucket of red paint for his wagon. Dennis, however, also decides to paint the street corner by Mr. Wilson's house, and Mr. Wilson gets blamed for it. This episode along with two others, "Mr. Wilson's Uncle" and "Community Picnic" was transcribed by Hank Ketcham into a special edition comic book called "Dennis the Menace Television Special".
|LineColor=AAC8F4
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=42
|EpisodeNumber2=10
|Title=Dennis Learns to Whistle
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=Teleplay by: Phil Leslie
Story by: James Fonda
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1960|12|4}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis is very upset because he doesn't know how to whistle, so he spends all day trying to learn. (This episode marks Robert John Pittman's first appearance in the series, though he was not yet credited as Seymour. He appeared as Harold's little brother in "Dennis' Allowance" and Rikki in "Dennis Goes to Camp" and did not play Seymour until "The Fortune Cookie.")
|LineColor=AAC8F4
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=43
|EpisodeNumber2=11
|Title=The Raffle Ticket
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=Hannibal Coons & James Fonda
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1960|12|18}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson is conducting a car raffle for his lodge, and Dennis wants to win the car for his mother. Through a mixup, Mrs. Wilson gives Dennis a winning ticket which had originally been bought by her husband.
|LineColor=AAC8F4
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=44
|EpisodeNumber2=12
|Title=The Christmas Horse
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=William Cowley & Peggy Chantler
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1960|12|25}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis wants a horse for Christmas and gets a record player instead. So, on Christmas Day, he goes around the neighborhood trying to find what he thinks is his horse.
|LineColor=AAC8F4
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=45
|EpisodeNumber2=13
|Title=Dennis' Allowance
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=Budd Grossman
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1961|1|1}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis asks his father for an allowance of $0.25 per week. Henry says he'll give it to him with the condition that he learns the value of money first by earning it himself.
|LineColor=AAC8F4
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=46
|EpisodeNumber2=14
|Title=Dennis' Penny Collection
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=Hannibal Coons
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1961|1|8}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson helps Dennis start a penny collection, hoping it will preoccupy him quietly indoors. However, Dennis pesters the nearby grocer repeatedly for rolls of coins, spills them on the floor of the store, and causes Mr. Wilson to get arrested.
|LineColor=AAC8F4
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=47
|EpisodeNumber2=15
|Title=Dennis, the Campaign Manager
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=Louella MacFarlane
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1961|1|15}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis convinces Mr. Wilson to run for park commissioner so that he'll open the park all week long instead of just the weekend. Just as a TV camera crew arrives at the Wilsons' home, angry neighbors burst in, complaining of Dennis's campaign signs.
|LineColor=AAC8F4
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=48
|EpisodeNumber2=16
|Title=Miss Cathcart's Friend
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=Arnold Peyser & Lois Peyser
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1961|1|22}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis wants to find Miss Cathcart a best friend, so he gets her a dog from the pound. However, the dog's owner is looking for him and ends up showing up at Miss Cathcart's house before Dennis brings the dog over to her. She mistakenly thinks that the guy is the friend instead of the dog. Mel Blanc of cartoon fame has a major role as the dog pound owner.
|LineColor=AAC8F4
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=49
|EpisodeNumber2=17
|Title=Pythias Was a Piker
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=Phil Leslie
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1961|1|29}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis is to write a composition for school about his best friend, and he chooses Mr. Wilson.
|LineColor=AAC8F4
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=50
|EpisodeNumber2=18
|Title=Dennis and the Saxophone
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=William Cowley & Peggy Chantler
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1961|2|5}}
|ShortSummary=Tommy has a saxophone that he doesn't want, so Dennis wants to buy it from Tommy's mother. When Mr. Wilson learns that Dennis is going to ask Henry to buy it for him, Mr. Wilson tries to talk Henry out of it.
|LineColor=AAC8F4
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=51
|EpisodeNumber2=19
|Title=Wilson Sleeps Over
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=Budd Grossman
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1961|2|12}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis accidentally knocks over a bottle which fumigates the Wilsons' house, so the Wilsons stay at the Mitchells' for the night, Mr. Wilson sharing a bed with Dennis. Mr. Wilson walks in his sleep.
|LineColor=AAC8F4
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=52
|EpisodeNumber2=20
|Title=Dennis' Birthday
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=Louella MacFarlane
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1961|2|19}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson puts on a magic show for Dennis' birthday and asks Spring Byington (who at the time was starring on December Bride) to be his assistant.
|LineColor=AAC8F4
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=53
|EpisodeNumber2=21
|Title=Dennis Goes to Camp
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=Phil Leslie
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1961|2|26}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson takes Dennis and several friends to a camp open house, and they exhaust him with a day of long hikes and activity. As they prepare to return home, they are told they will be stranded there for a week because a storm has taken out a bridge.
|LineColor=AAC8F4
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=54
|EpisodeNumber2=22
|Title=Dennis' Tool Chest
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=Teleplay by: William Conley
Story by: Hannibal Coons
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1961|3|5}}
|ShortSummary=Miss Cathcart's cat is accidentally locked in the trunk of Mr. Wilson's car.
|LineColor=AAC8F4
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=55
|EpisodeNumber2=23
|Title=The Going Away Gift
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=Phil Leslie
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1961|3|12}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis gets his mother a going-away present and hides it on Mr. Wilson's closet shelf. Mrs. Wilson finds it and thinks it is a gift for her from Mr. Wilson. (Within the show's canon, Alice Mitchell was leaving on an extended trip to help her father mend from surgery. In real life, Gloria Henry left for nine episodes to go on maternity leave although she filmed a few short segments to be shown while she was gone. Grandma Mitchell, Henry's mother who was played by Kathleen Mulqueen, stayed with the Mitchells for the next several weeks.)
|LineColor=AAC8F4
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=56
|EpisodeNumber2=24
|Title=Dennis and the Fishing Rod
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=Mort R. Lewis
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1961|3|19}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis wants to buy a fishing rod for his father and tries to purchase it with a $50.00 Confederate bill.
|LineColor=AAC8F4
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=57
|EpisodeNumber2=25
|Title=Dennis and the Good Example
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=Louella MacFarlane
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1961|3|26}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis decides he wants a bird, but he knows that once his dad sees his report card, he won't get it. So his dad does agree to reward Dennis if he brings home a better report card next term.
|LineColor=AAC8F4
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=58
|EpisodeNumber2=26
|Title=Dennis' Obligation
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=Arnold Peyser & Lois Peyser
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1961|4|2}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis brings home chicken eggs to take care of for a school project but ends up taking them over to the Wilsons' house because of a power outage at the Mitchells'.
|LineColor=AAC8F4
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=59
|EpisodeNumber2=27
|Title=The Dog Trainer
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=Budd Grossman
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1961|4|9}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis trains Mr. Wilson's dog, Fremont, but the training backfires when Fremont will only listen to Dennis and ignores Mr. Wilson.
|LineColor=AAC8F4
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=60
|EpisodeNumber2=28
|Title=Woodman, Spare That Tree
|DirectedBy=Charles Barton
|WrittenBy=Phil Leslie
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1961|4|16}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson drops a hundred-dollar bill, and a crow picks it up and flies away with it. He later finds it in an old tree in a park which the park commissioner is going to cut down.
|LineColor=AAC8F4
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=61
|EpisodeNumber2=29
|Title=The Boy Wonder
|DirectedBy=Charles Barton
|WrittenBy=Louella MacFarlane
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1961|4|23}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson builds a barbecue in his backyard with help from Dennis' friend, Fred Baines. They then realize something valuable was left inside, and it must be torn down.
|LineColor=AAC8F4
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=62
|EpisodeNumber2=30
|Title=The Soapbox Derby
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=Keith Fowler & Phil Leslie
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1961|4|30}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis enters a soapbox derby, and Mr. Wilson accidentally ends up being the one driving Dennis' car in the race.
|LineColor=AAC8F4
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=63
|EpisodeNumber2=31
|Title=Dennis and the Camera
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=John Elliotte
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1961|5|7}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson is supposed to take a picture of a plant that blooms briefly at night, but ends up dozing off when the time comes. Luckily, Dennis takes the picture of the flower for him.
|LineColor=AAC8F4
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=64
|EpisodeNumber2=32
|Title=Dennis and the Miracle Plant Food
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=Budd Grossman
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1961|5|14}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis accidentally steps on one of Mr. Wilson's plants. He buys Mr. Wilson a replacement and plants it in his flower bed without Mr. Wilson knowing. When Mr. Wilson sees the plant, which is much larger than the one that was there originally, he is convinced that the new miracle plant food he invented is the cause of the growth. (This episode marks Kathleen Mulqueen's final appearance as Grandma Mitchell.)
|LineColor=AAC8F4
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=65
|EpisodeNumber2=33
|Title=Dennis' Newspaper
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=Keith Fowler & Phil Leslie
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1961|5|21}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis overhears Mr. Wilson saying that he wishes he had his raccoon coat back. Dennis gives the story to the newspaper and, as a result, all day, people bring Mr. Wilson raccoon coats. (This was Gloria Henry's return to the show after missing nine episodes for maternity leave.)
|LineColor=AAC8F4
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=66
|EpisodeNumber2=34
|Title=Mr. Wilson's Paradise
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=Louella MacFarlane
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1961|5|28}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson wants to go to the Island of Happiness in Mexico, but changes his mind when he hears that his niece is going to have a baby.
|LineColor=AAC8F4
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=67
|EpisodeNumber2=35
|Title=The Fortune Cookie
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=Budd Grossman
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1961|6|4}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson gets a fortune cookie that reads "beware of tomorrow" and is convinced that the fortune will come true.
|LineColor=AAC8F4
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=68
|EpisodeNumber2=36
|Title=The Pioneers
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=Teleplay by: Arnold Peyser & Lois Peyser & Phil Leslie
Story by: Arnold Peyser & Lois Peyser
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1961|6|11}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis, his father, and Mr. Wilson camp out to prove that they can live off of the land like the western pioneers. Judson Pratt appears as Mr. Kawalski.
|LineColor=AAC8F4
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=69
|EpisodeNumber2=37
|Title=Father's Day for Mr. Wilson
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=Keith Fowler & Phil Leslie
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1961|6|18}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis decides to give Mr. Wilson his own Father's Day which, in the end, turns out very well after Dennis gets Mr. Wilson out of a lawsuit concerning his dog, Fremont.
|LineColor=AAC8F4
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=70
|EpisodeNumber2=38
|Title=Dennis and the Picnic
|DirectedBy=William D. Russell
|WrittenBy=Louella MacFarlane
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1961|6|25}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis' father finds a bag of money in the gutter. He calls Mr. Wilson to witness what he's found, and they take it to the police station. They later learn that the money is counterfeit.
|LineColor=AAC8F4
}}
}}

Season 3 (1961–62)

{{Episode table |background=#EDCC5B|overall=4 |season=4 |title=19 |airdate=16 |episodes={{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=1
|EpisodeNumber=71
|Title=Trouble from Mars
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1961|10|1}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson accidentally gets Dennis' space helmet stuck on his head. A fire truck is summoned, which arrives just as photographers from "Graceful Retirement" magazine also arrive at the Wilson house.
|LineColor=EDCC5B
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=2
|EpisodeNumber=72
|Title=Best Neighbor
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1961|10|8}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson reluctantly camps out with Dennis on a mountain so that Dennis can join the Junior Pathfinders club.

This earns Mr. Wilson an outstanding citizen award.


|LineColor=EDCC5B
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=3
|EpisodeNumber=73
|Title=Keep Off the Grass
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1961|10|15}}
|ShortSummary=Henry gets a ticket for walking on the grass in the park. When Mr. Wilson hears about it, he thinks it isn't fair, so he convinces Henry to go to court and contest it.
|LineColor=EDCC5B
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=4
|EpisodeNumber=74
|Title=Mr. Wilson's Safe
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1961|10|22}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis uses numbers for a football play that are the combination to Mr. Wilson's safe, so Mr. Wilson and Henry get Dennis so confused that he forgets the combination. Unfortunately, Mr. Wilson forgets it, as well, and he has something very important locked inside.
|LineColor=EDCC5B
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=5
|EpisodeNumber=75
|Title=Haunted House
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1961|10|29}}
|ShortSummary=George and Henry purchase a house as an income property and later find out that it is known to be haunted. Unable to get their money back, they sleep inside to prove that it isn't haunted. Noises they repeatedly hear are finally found to be from a squatter in the basement trying to scare them away. (The same house later is referenced in "The Bully," after George sells John half of his share in the house. Harvey Korman guest-stars as the real estate agent who sells Wilson and Mitchell the house. Harold Gould guest-stars as the hobo living in the house.)
|LineColor=EDCC5B
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=6
|EpisodeNumber=76
|Title=The School Play
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1961|11|5}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson ends up being in a play at Dennis' school after he and Tommy, who is in the play, accidentally get handcuffed together before the performance starts.
|LineColor=EDCC5B
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=7
|EpisodeNumber=77
|Title=The Fifty-Thousandth Customer
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1961|11|12}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Finch is having a contest in which his store's fifty-thousandth customer of the year will win five minutes of free shopping. Mr. Wilson is determined to be the winner.
|LineColor=EDCC5B
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=8
|EpisodeNumber=78
|Title=Dennis and the Pee Wee League
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1961|11|19}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson coaches Dennis' Pee Wee League baseball team because Henry, the team's original coach, becomes ill.
|LineColor=EDCC5B
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=9
|EpisodeNumber=79
|Title=Mr. Wilson's Inheritance
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1961|11|26}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson receives an inheritance from his aunt and thinks about starting a charitable foundation. Through a misunderstanding, a contractor thinks he has ordered a new foundation dug under his house, and begins the project while the Wilsons are away.
|LineColor=EDCC5B
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=10
|EpisodeNumber=80
|Title=Dennis Is a Genius
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1961|12|3}}
|ShortSummary=A mix up in grading the school IQ test mistakenly labels Dennis a genius.
|LineColor=EDCC5B
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=11
|EpisodeNumber=81
|Title=The Lucky Piece
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1961|12|17}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson tricks Dennis into taking a silver coin that reads "good luck" and has a horseshoe on it instead of a half-dollar that he owes Dennis for mowing his lawn.
|LineColor=EDCC5B
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=12
|EpisodeNumber=82
|Title=The Fifteen-Foot Christmas Tree
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1961|12|24}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis, Henry, and Mr. Wilson go out in the woods and cut down a big Christmas tree that almost ends up getting destroyed before they get it home.
|LineColor=EDCC5B
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=13
|EpisodeNumber=83
|Title=Dennis' Bank Account
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1961|12|31}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis wants to open an account at the bank where Mr. Wilson is temporarily working in the new-accounts department.
|LineColor=EDCC5B
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=14
|EpisodeNumber=84
|Title=Through Thick and Thin
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1962|1|7}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis' cub scout troop is putting on a circus, and Dennis convinces Mr. Wilson to be the lion. He tells Mr. Wilson that nobody has to know he's the one inside the costume.
|LineColor=EDCC5B
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=15
|EpisodeNumber=85
|Title=Calling All Bird Lovers
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1962|1|14}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson holds a bird lovers session at his home where a woman (Estelle Winwood) does bird calls that sound like real birds.
|LineColor=EDCC5B
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=16
|EpisodeNumber=86
|Title=Silence Is Golden
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1962|1|21}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson agrees to give Dennis his magnifying glass as long as he doesn't say a word to him or around him for the rest of the day. Henry and Alice had also told Dennis that he talks too much, so he doesn't speak around them, either.
|LineColor=EDCC5B
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=17
|EpisodeNumber=87
|Title=Dennis Has a Fling
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1962|1|28}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis is put on the spot when he asks both Mr. Wilson and Mr. MacTavish (an authentic Scot) to represent Scotland for his school project. Special Guest Star: Susan Jones, 1961 Miss Scotland.
|LineColor=EDCC5B
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=18
|EpisodeNumber=88
|Title=Frog Jumping Contest
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1962|2|4}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis enters his frog in a frog-jumping contest with Mr. Wilson as his partner. Mr. Wilson bets Sgt. Mooney that Dennis' frog will beat Mooney's.
|LineColor=EDCC5B
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=19
|EpisodeNumber=89
|Title=Where There's a Will
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1962|2|11}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson decides to leave Dennis a gold watch in his will. Soon after, Mr. Wilson begins to feel old and is convinced that he has a short time to live. (This episode aired six days before the actor playing Mr. Wilson, Joseph Kearns, actually died. He does appear in the next several episodes because they were made prior to his death.)
|LineColor=EDCC5B
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=20
|EpisodeNumber=90
|Title=Mr. Wilson's Uncle
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1962|2|18}}
|ShortSummary=George's uncle, Ned, (Edward Everett Horton) comes to visit and convinces George that he isn't in shape. Ned starts a physical fitness program and forces George and Henry to participate. (This episode aired the day after the actor playing Mr. Wilson, Joseph Kearns, died at age 55 following a stroke.)
|LineColor=EDCC5B
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=21
|EpisodeNumber=91
|Title=A Quiet Evening
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1962|2|25}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson plans to have a quiet evening at home, but his plans change when Henry needs a sitter for Dennis. Mr. Wilson is talked into being a sitter for Dennis, Margaret, and Seymour. John Astin appears as the policeman who arrests Wilson trying to retrieve his valuable coin from a vending machine. (Blooper: Alice refers to Margaret's mother as "Mrs. Moore," even though Margaret's last name was established as Wade during the first season. Margaret also says her last name is "Harrington" in the fourth season.)
|LineColor=EDCC5B
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=22
|EpisodeNumber=92
|Title=The Private Eye
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1962|3|4}}
|ShortSummary=While Mr. Wilson's arm is stuck in a public mailbox trying to retrieve an embarrassing letter, his wallet is taken by a passing pickpocket. Dennis and Tommy succeed in helping the police find the crook.
|LineColor=EDCC5B
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=23
|EpisodeNumber=93
|Title=Mr. Wilson's Housekeeper
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1962|3|11}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson hires a housekeeper for Mrs. Wilson, but soon regrets it when the housekeeper tries to tell Mr. Wilson what he can and cannot do in his own home. Jean Stapleton appears as the housekeeper.
|LineColor=EDCC5B
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=24
|EpisodeNumber=94
|Title=A Dog's Life
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1962|3|18}}
|ShortSummary=A big shaggy dog follows Mr. Wilson home from the market.
|LineColor=EDCC5B
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=25
|EpisodeNumber=95
|Title=Dennis' Documentary Film
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1962|3|25}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis enlists the help of Mr. Wilson in creating a documentary film of the town for Dennis' school project.
|LineColor=EDCC5B
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=26
|EpisodeNumber=96
|Title=Horseless Carriage Club
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1962|4|1}}
|ShortSummary=George buys a 1912 Winton to enter into the Horseless Carriage Road Race with the intent of winning the race and becoming president of he and Henry's chapter of the Horseless Carriage Club.
|LineColor=EDCC5B
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=27
|EpisodeNumber=97
|Title=Junior Pathfinders Ride Again
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1962|4|8}}
|ShortSummary=An Indian fire-starting demonstration is to take place for Dennis' Junior Pathfinders club, but the person who is to do perform the demonstration hurts his back. Mr. Wilson, trying to get into the Pioneer Club, is volunteered to be the replacement Indian chief and has to start a fire by rubbing together two sticks. (Mr. Wilson says early in the episode, "I'm his only great-nephew," referring to ancestor Jeremiah Wilson. This can be taken as a possibly false boast given not only the appearance in this episode of his cousin Fillmore, who shares the Wilson surname, but also in that just six episodes later, Mr. Wilson's brother, John, appears in the series for the first time.)
|LineColor=EDCC5B
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=28
|EpisodeNumber=98
|Title=The Treasure Chest
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1962|4|15}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson buys a treasure chest at an auction thinking that it has a pirate's treasure in it. When he gets it open and discovers nothing valuable, he tells Dennis that he can do whatever he wants with it.
|LineColor=EDCC5B
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=29
|EpisodeNumber=99
|Title=Wilson Goes to the Dentist
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1962|4|29}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis makes an appointment with a new dentist who gives out sports equipment to new patients, but then instead has Mr. Wilson go in his place, even though Wilson has long been afraid of dentists.
|LineColor=EDCC5B
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=30
|EpisodeNumber=100
|Title=The Man Next Door
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1962|5|6}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson thinks his next-door neighbor is the stocking bandit and tries to prove it. (This is the last episode to feature Joseph Kearns as Mr. George Wilson.)
|LineColor=EDCC5B
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=31
|EpisodeNumber=101
|Title=Dennis and the Dodger
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1962|5|13}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Quigley, though lacking experience, is named coach of the town's pee-wee baseball team, hoping it will help advertise his store. The mayor agrees to give the team new uniforms if Quigley can get Sandy Koufax and the Dodgers to play an exhibition game in town (Mrs. Wilson appears in this episode while Mr. Wilson does not due to the fact Joseph Kearns was ill after suffering a stroke.)
|LineColor=EDCC5B
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=32
|EpisodeNumber=102
|Title=Dennis' Lovesick Friend
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1962|5|20}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis helps Mr. Wilson's Uncle Ned plant flower bulbs in his yard in order to get out of playing house with Margaret. (Mrs. Wilson appears in this episode while Mr. Wilson does not due to the death of Joseph Kearns.) The bulbs unfortunately are planted upside-down.
|LineColor=EDCC5B
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=33
|EpisodeNumber=103
|Title=John Wilson's Cushion
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1962|5|27}}
|ShortSummary=George Wilson's brother, John, comes to stay with Martha while George is out of town. John is a writer, but has trouble working without his old seat cushion. (This marks Gale Gordon's debut as John Wilson, George's brother. In this episode, however, it is stated that George Wilson is away on business and that John is a guest of the Wilsons. A new title sequence begins that includes Gale Gordon's name.)
|LineColor=EDCC5B
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=34
|EpisodeNumber=104
|Title=John Wilson Wins a Chicken
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1962|6|3}}
|ShortSummary=After selling a rare 1919 dime for $150, John Wilson buys ten raffle tickets from Dennis and ends up winning a chicken. When he wants to cook the chicken for dinner, Dennis and his friends try to talk him out of it.
|LineColor=EDCC5B
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=35
|EpisodeNumber=105
|Title=The Bully
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1962|6|10}}
|ShortSummary=After being picked on by the school bully, Alice makes Dennis promise not to fight. As a result, the bully gives Dennis a black eye. Henry gives Dennis the go-ahead to fight back next time, so John Wilson teaches Dennis how to fight. (The house mentioned in this episode, of which John bought half of George's share, is the house Wilson and Mitchell originally bought in "Haunted House.")
|LineColor=EDCC5B
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=36
|EpisodeNumber=106
|Title=The Club Initiation
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1962|6|17}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis wants to join an older boys' club, but in order to do so, he has to go through an initiation. In a parallel storyline, John Wilson is planning a round of golf at the local country club but bumps into a few obstacles along the way. (Frank Cady, who went on to greater fame portraying Sam Drucker on Petticoat Junction and Green Acres, guest stars as Dr. Fred Ferguson. This also is the first mention of Eloise Wilson in the series, although not by name. Portrayed by Sara Seegar, Eloise's character would not join the cast until the next season.)
|LineColor=EDCC5B
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=37
|EpisodeNumber=107
|Title=The Community Picnic
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1962|6|24}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Brady and Tiny, an employee at his store, challenge Henry and John Wilson to compete against them in the sporting events at an upcoming community picnic. There, Henry gets his hand stuck in a pickle jar. (This marks the final appearance in the series of Sylvia Field, who played Martha Wilson.)
|LineColor=EDCC5B
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=38
|EpisodeNumber=108
|Title=Dennis and the Witch Doctor
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1962|7|1}}
|ShortSummary=John Wilson is writing a magazine article about voodoo. Dennis gets the wrong idea and tells the whole neighborhood that John is a witch doctor. (Martha Wilson does not appear in this episode. Alice states that Martha "has gone back east for a while", presumably to stay with George, although that is never explicitly said.)
|LineColor=EDCC5B
}}
}}

Season 4 (1962–63)

{{Episode table |background=#E9AFAF|overall=4 |season=4 |title=19 |airdate=16 |episodes={{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=1
|EpisodeNumber=109
|Title=The Chinese Girl
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1962|9|30}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis becomes a fast friend of a girl from British Hong Kong who is staying with the Wilsons. (This marks the debut of Eloise Wilson, John Wilson's wife, played by Sara Seegar. They now live in the house formerly occupied by George and Martha, and John states that George and Martha have sold them the house. This marks the last mention of Martha Wilson in the series, and the last mention of George by name.)
|LineColor=E9AFAF
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=2
|EpisodeNumber=110
|Title=You Go Your Way
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1962|10|7}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis hears the Wilsons argue over a minor issue, and mentions it to several neighbors, who then think that the Wilsons have split up. Miss Cathcart and Miss Tarbell (Alice Pearce) get a makeover and make a play for Mr. Wilson, each hoping to be his girlfriend. (Dennis briefly refers to George Wilson as "the other Mr. Wilson" early in the episode.)
|LineColor=E9AFAF
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=3
|EpisodeNumber=111
|Title=Dennis and the Circular Circumstances
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1962|10|14}}
|ShortSummary=Mrs. Elkins turns Dennis down for a job delivering circulars for her campaign, but Mr. Wilson agrees to help Dennis get it.
|LineColor=E9AFAF
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=4
|EpisodeNumber=112
|Title=The Little Judge
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1962|10|21}}
|ShortSummary=Sgt. Mooney gives Mr. Wilson a summons after a complaint from Mrs. Elkins for an alleged violation of a town ordinance. So Mr. Wilson requests a trial, which occurs on "Children's Day in Court" – the day he designated for the children of the town to run the court and Dennis is the judge.
|LineColor=E9AFAF
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=5
|EpisodeNumber=113
|Title=Poor Mr. Wilson
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1962|10|28}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson's money falls through a hole in his pocket while he was at Quigley's market and thus, he cannot pay Dennis for washing his car. Dennis misinterprets "the market" as referring to the stock market rather than the grocery and as a result, mistakenly thinks Mr. Wilson is broke.
|LineColor=E9AFAF
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=6
|EpisodeNumber=114
|Title=Dennis in Gypsyland
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1962|11|4}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson's article about gypsies is returned with the request that he, first, get to know them and research them further before submitting another. Therefore, he dresses in full gypsy attire and travels on a donkey to a local gypsy camp in order to best observe them. He performs a gesture that, unbeknownst to him, is a wedding proposal to a woman at the camp.
|LineColor=E9AFAF
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=7
|EpisodeNumber=115
|Title=The New Principal
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1962|11|11}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis and his school's new principal get off on the wrong foot after the principal takes a remark about his height the wrong way. He threatens to kick Dennis off the baseball team if he observes any further impudence. (This is the last episode that explicitly mentions that John Wilson was not the original Mr. Wilson and had recently bought the house from George. It also is the final appearance in the series of Charles Lane, who played Mr. Finch, owner of the local drugstore. Also in an apparent blooper contradicting information from earlier in the series, Margaret announces to the new principal and the class that her last name is Harrington, instead of the previously-established Wade on both this series and the comic strip.)
|LineColor=E9AFAF
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=8
|EpisodeNumber=116
|Title=San Diego Safari
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1962|11|18}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson is selected to pick up a chimpanzee from the San Diego Zoo, so the Wilsons and the Mitchells take a trip there. Confusion results when they try to hide and calm down the agitated chimp, at night, from their motel manager who is allergic to animals.
|LineColor=E9AFAF
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=9
|EpisodeNumber=117
|Title=Dennis at Boot Camp
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1962|11|25}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson's nephew visits him in San Diego and gives Mr. Wilson and Dennis a ride in his Navy truck – which is against Navy regulations. Mr. Wilson and Dennis hide in the back of the truck when Mr. Wilson's nephew has to pick up one of his officers. Mr. Wilson and Dennis are unable to get out of the truck and are brought back to the naval base.
|LineColor=E9AFAF
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=10
|EpisodeNumber=118
|Title=Henry's New Job
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1962|12|2}}
|ShortSummary=Henry is thinking of getting a new job that would relocate him and his family to a country called Calpuna near the Ganges River for three years. Dennis does what he can to prevent this from happening including running away from home.
|LineColor=E9AFAF
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=11
|EpisodeNumber=119
|Title=Wilson's Second Childhood
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1962|12|16}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson hangs out and plays with Dennis and his friends for the day to gather information for a magazine article about the changing behaviors of children. One of Dennis' friends is played by a young Kurt Russell.
|LineColor=E9AFAF
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=12
|EpisodeNumber=120
|Title=Jane Butterfield Says
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1962|12|23}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson takes over an advice-to-the-lovelorn newspaper column for a few weeks. He thinks he will have every single woman in town happily married by the time he finishes. (This episode marks the final appearance in the series of Mary Wickes, who played Esther Cathcart.)
|LineColor=E9AFAF
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=13
|EpisodeNumber=121
|Title=Dennis and the Hermit
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1962|12|30}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis visits a hermit (guest star Edgar Buchanan) who lives in a shack out in the woods. Mr. Wilson thinks that the hermit fought in the Civil War, so he tries to get his life story.
|LineColor=E9AFAF
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=14
|EpisodeNumber=122
|Title=My Uncle Ned
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1963|1|6}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson has written a book about his Uncle Ned's life. Ned, however, does not want the book to be published because certain parts of it, he claims, are not true.
|LineColor=E9AFAF
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=15
|EpisodeNumber=123
|Title=Junior Astronaut
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1963|1|13}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson is named chairman of a saving-stamps campaign for the Junior Astronauts. As chairman, he arranges a contest at Dennis' school in which the student who collects the most stamps wins a trip to Cape Canaveral to meet an astronaut. Guest appearance by Project Mercury spokesman "Shorty" Powers as himself. (John Wilson says briefly early in the episode, "I wasn't living here last year," the last allusion in the series to his not always having lived at 625 Elm Street. There is no mention of George or Martha Wilson.)
|LineColor=E9AFAF
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=16
|EpisodeNumber=124
|Title=Wilson's Little White Lie
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1963|1|20}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson tells Dennis he isn't feeling well just to get Dennis to leave him alone. Dennis spreads the word leading everyone to believe that Mr. Wilson is very sick.
|LineColor=E9AFAF
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=17
|EpisodeNumber=125
|Title=Dennis, the Rain Maker
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1963|1|27}}
|ShortSummary=Henry desperately wants to get out of playing golf with his boss and says he'd give $10.00 for a rain storm. Mr. Wilson gives Dennis a book called Secrets of the Indian Rain Dance, and he and his friends decide to give it a try.
|LineColor=E9AFAF
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=18
|EpisodeNumber=126
|Title=The Creature with the Big Feet
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1963|2|3}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson sees large footprints in his yard caused by Dennis' new novelty shoes and thinks they may be from a monster that has been reported in the newspaper. Mr. Wilson vows to capture the supposed monster.
|LineColor=E9AFAF
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=19
|EpisodeNumber=127
|Title=Dennis, the Confused Cupid
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1963|2|10}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis is interested in learning about love. His parents and Mr. and Mrs. Wilson both tell him how wonderful love is, but he just doesn't understand. The Wilson, the Mitchells, and a teenage couple each quarrel after Dennis secretly gives the girl, an old love letter that Mr. Wilson just threw away.
|LineColor=E9AFAF
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=20
|EpisodeNumber=128
|Title=Dennis Goes to Washington
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1963|2|17}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis is appointed by the mayor to go to Washington D.C. to ask their senator to support the creation of a national forest at nearby Hickory Mountain. Mr. Wilson goes along to cover the story and thinks his contacts there will be the thing that allows the idea of a forest to be realized.
|LineColor=E9AFAF
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=21
|EpisodeNumber=129
|Title=The Big Basketball Game
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1963|2|24}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis' basketball team's star player, Stretch, quits the team after Johnny Brady and some of the other players constantly make fun of him and make him feel unwanted. Dennis makes a plea to Mr. Quigley to talk to Stretch in an attempt to persuade him to rejoin the team. (This episode marks the final appearances in the series of Mr. Quigley, who was played by Willard Waterman, and Dennis' longtime nemesis Johnny Brady, played by Gregory Irvin. Gale Gordon and Sara Seegar do not appear in this episode, under the guise that John Wilson went from Washington D.C. to New York City to see his publisher. This also is the first episode since "The Party Line" in season 1 that does not include a Mr. or Mrs. Wilson character.)
|LineColor=E9AFAF
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=22
|EpisodeNumber=130
|Title=Wilson's Allergy
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1963|3|3}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson is convinced that he is allergic to Dennis because he sneezes every time he is around. Henry and Alice realize that Dennis has changed his bath soap recently, so he takes a bath with his old soap to see if that is the problem. Mr. Wilson still sneezes, so he tells Dennis that they'll have to stay away from each other from now on.
|LineColor=E9AFAF
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=23
|EpisodeNumber=131
|Title=Baby Booties
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1963|3|10}}
|ShortSummary=Mrs. Wilson knits several baby booties to use as golf club covers for a new set of clubs she bought for Mr. Wilson's birthday. Dennis sees the booties, and Tommy says it means that Mr. and Mrs. Wilson are going to have a baby. Dennis quickly spreads the word around the neighborhood. Word gets back to Mr. Wilson, and he thinks it may be true.
|LineColor=E9AFAF
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=24
|EpisodeNumber=132
|Title=My Four Boys
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1963|3|17}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson enters an essay contest that requires the entrants to be parents. When he wins the contest, he tries to pass off Dennis and his friends as his own children. Mr. Wilson assumes the contest judge (guest star Harvey Korman) is calling at his door, but it proves to be instead an angry motorist whose car the children had damaged. (This is Korman's second guest appearance in the series. He was the real-estate agent in Season 3's "Haunted House.")
|LineColor=E9AFAF
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=25
|EpisodeNumber=133
|Title=Dennis and the Homing Pigeons
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1963|3|24}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis and Tommy play at sending messages to each other using homing pigeons. Mrs. Wilson gives Dennis a scratch pad to use for the notes without knowing that Mr. Wilson had an important stock tip written on the pad. Dennis attaches the page with the tip to a pigeon and releases it. Mr. Wilson and Henry, who also wishes to invest in the stock, try to recapture the pigeon by spending a night in a haunted house.
|LineColor=E9AFAF
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=26
|EpisodeNumber=134
|Title=A Tax on Cats
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1963|3|31}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson becomes a cat catcher for the police department to help enforce a cat license law.
|LineColor=E9AFAF
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=27
|EpisodeNumber=135
|Title=The Uninvited Guest
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1963|4|7}}
|ShortSummary=With Henry away in New York on business and Alice having to spend the night with Henry's mother, Dennis stays with the Wilsons for a night.
|LineColor=E9AFAF
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=28
|EpisodeNumber=136
|Title=Dennis Plays Robin Hood
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1963|4|14}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis and his friends decide to play Robin Hood. Dennis takes Mr. Wilson's lawn edger to use on his own lawn. Mr. Wilson sees Mrs. Elkins using an edger she had recently purchased. Thinking it's his and that she had stolen it from him, he takes it back when she leaves to answer the phone.
|LineColor=E9AFAF
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=29
|EpisodeNumber=137
|Title=The Three F's
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1963|4|12}}
|ShortSummary=Property taxes have risen, and Mr. Wilson thinks the reason is that the school is wasting money on nonessential programs and luxuries. So the principal invites Mr. Wilson to spend the day as a regular student. Harold Gould guest stars as Dennis' principal. (This is Gould's second guest appearance in the series. He played the hobo in Season 3's "Haunted House.")
|LineColor=E9AFAF
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=30
|EpisodeNumber=138
|Title=Never Say Dye
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1963|4|28}}
|ShortSummary=A famous actress commissions Mr. Wilson to write her life story thinking he is a "young, vigorous author with a youthful point-of-view." He buys some hair dye in an attempt to look younger and asks Dennis to bring it to his house for him. The bottle falls out of the box and breaks on the sidewalk, so he and Tommy replace it with a bottle of Tommy's mother's dye thinking it's the same thing. An unsuspecting Mr. Wilson proceeds to use the dye on his entire head.
|LineColor=E9AFAF
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=31
|EpisodeNumber=139
|Title=The Lost Dog
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1963|5|5}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis finds a stray dog and, since the pound is closed until the next morning, Henry allows the dog to stay in their house for the night. The dog causes nothing but trouble including barking in the basement, jumping on Henry's bed, and chasing Mr. Wilson up a tree.
|LineColor=E9AFAF
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=32
|EpisodeNumber=140
|Title=Tuxedo Trouble
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1963|5|12}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis and his friends start a laundry service using Mrs. Elkins' old washing machine. Dennis offers to take Mr. Wilson's tuxedo to the cleaners but decides to try to remove a stain himself. While Dennis is away, Seymour throws the tuxedo in the washing machine with other children's dirty laundry. To cover himself, Dennis decides to give Mr. Wilson Henry's tuxedo to use.
|LineColor=E9AFAF
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=33
|EpisodeNumber=141
|Title=Hawaiian Love Song
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1963|5|19}}
|ShortSummary=Mrs. Wilson is angry with Mr. Wilson because she thinks he's not taking her to Hawaii for their anniversary even though he promised to. He really is taking her, though, and has the plane tickets mailed to the Mitchells' so that Mrs. Wilson won't discover them. When Alice gets the envelope, she thinks that Henry has used the money from his bonus to buy them tickets to Hawaii.
|LineColor=E9AFAF
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=34
|EpisodeNumber=142
|Title=The Lucky Rabbit's Foot
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1963|5|26}}
|ShortSummary=Dennis has what he thinks is a lucky rabbit's foot. With recent bad luck Mr. Wilson has been having, Dennis offers to let him borrow the foot. Mr. Wilson, however, doesn't believe in such superstition and doesn't take the foot. Immediately thereafter, his bad luck continues when something jams his lawnmower, and he runs over his garden hose with the mower.
|LineColor=E9AFAF
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=35
|EpisodeNumber=143
|Title=Listen to the Mockingbird
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1963|6|2}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson and Mrs. Elkins are each running for president of the Birdwatchers Society. The first mockingbird of spring has made its nest in Mr. Wilson's backyard, and its chirping keeps him up at night. (This episode marks the final appearance in the series of Irene Tedrow, who played Lucy Elkins.)
|LineColor=E9AFAF
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=36
|EpisodeNumber=144
|Title=First Editions
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1963|6|9}}
|ShortSummary=Henry tells Dennis to get rid of his massive comic book collection, so he decides to sell them. Meanwhile, Mr. Wilson wants to buy a new camera, and tries to sell his first-edition books to raise the needed funds.
|LineColor=E9AFAF
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=37
|EpisodeNumber=145
|Title=A Man Among Men
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1963|6|16}}
|ShortSummary=While Henry is out of town, Dennis takes his place and tries to do everything his father would do. Meanwhile, Mr. Wilson has a book he has written published and plans to give the profits to charity. He tries to get a window display for his book at the local book store, but the owner refuses, thinking that Mr. Wilson is a greedy man.
|LineColor=E9AFAF
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber2=38
|EpisodeNumber=146
|Title=Aunt Emma Visits the Wilsons
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1963|7|7}}
|ShortSummary=Mr. Wilson's Aunt Emma visits and takes an instant liking to Dennis. This causes Mr. Wilson to fear that she will make Dennis her heir instead of him. (Verna Felton plays Aunt Emma. Coincidentally, she was the mother of Lee Millar, who played Tommy's father, Mr. Anderson, in Season 1's "Dennis' Tree House" and Season 3's "Dennis and the Pee Wee League.")
|LineColor=E9AFAF
}}
}}

References

1. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0557903/|title=Dennis and the Cowboy|publisher=IMDB|accessdate=January 10, 2010}}

External links

{{wikiquote}}
  • {{IMDb episodes|id=0052461|title=Dennis the Menace}}
  • {{tv.com show|dennis-the-menace-1959|Dennis the Menace}}
{{Dennis the Menace}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Dennis the Menace (1959 TV series)}}

1 : Lists of American sitcom television series episodes

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