Wanting to be accepted into society, Andy Clyde's wife, Dot Farley, agrees to take in homeless people into her and Andy's home under the manipulative suggesting of her women's league matron. This doesn't bring Andy a moment of peace with overly loud snoring, the breaking of his belongings and just plain disarray. How's a man to enjoy his home and hearth when he can't even sleep in his own bed?
Not really funny, and certainly not an advertisement for being charitable and neighborly, although Clyde's frustration is presented believably. It almost seems deliberate in its moral, although Clyde does figure out a hysterically funny way to get even with his wife and make a point. That part is the saving element of this classic short.
Not really funny, and certainly not an advertisement for being charitable and neighborly, although Clyde's frustration is presented believably. It almost seems deliberate in its moral, although Clyde does figure out a hysterically funny way to get even with his wife and make a point. That part is the saving element of this classic short.