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Goober faces disaster when a printing error awards Floyd a large cash prize in his gas station contest.
Andy is distressed when Opie receives a failing grade for his school essay naming him his most unforgettable character.
Howard volunteers to become the Big Brother of a high school boy.
Staid Howard Sprague becomes a comedian and gets on a TV amateur hour.
Opie insists on studying piano until he finds out that football practice and piano practice conflict.
Andy and Opie face the difficult problem of helping an old milk-wagon horse find contentment in retirement.
Helen writes a children's book that will be published and Andy faces the uncomfortable prospect of being the fiance of a famous writer.
Andy and Aunt Bee learn their ancestor was the state's biggest swindler, just before the town of Mayberry unveils his statue as a hero.
Floyd decides to give up his Mayberry barbershop when Howard Sprague buys the building and raises the rent fifteen dollars a month.
Aunt Bee allows her superstitions dictate her decision to be a brief co-owner of a Chinese restaurant.
Andy's perennial romance with Helen is jolted a bit when Andy's old high school sweetheart moves back to town.
Detective Barney Fife pays a visit to his old hometown, the same day a glamorous movie star returns to Mayberry.
Andy visits Barney Fife, now with the Raleigh police department, and makes a hero out of his bumbling former deputy.
Andy looks forward to eating a few snacks and spending an evening alone in the house but he finds he must eat three spaghetti dinners cooked by thoughtful friends.
Andy and four of his levelheaded friends and relatives are taken in by a con man's get-rich-quick scheme.
The town's new doctor is shunned by all the Mayberry citizens until Andy shows his faith in the young physician by letting him remove Opie's tonsils.
Inarticulate Goober grows a beard and suddenly turns into a verbose philosopher.
Otis and Howard nearly botch rescuing Andy who has been taken prisoner by a pair of desperate bank robbers.
Opie accidentally ruins Aunt Bee's prize rose entry on the eve of the annual Mayberry flower show.
Town clerk Howard, a novice fisherman, tags along on the first day of the season and antagonizes the town's anglers by catching Old Sam, the legendary fish in the lake.
Opie and his friend find an abandoned baby and they run into trouble when they innocently try to find it some new parents.
Helen Crump and her students convince a crotchety old school principal that today's youngsters aren't so different from his own generation.
Aunt Bee and Howard both decide to run against each other for town council.
Goober's friends convince him that his minor mishap has resulted in a severe case of whiplash and he promptly becomes a helpless invalid.
Andy and the town of Mayberry undergo a trying experience when the hillbilly Darling family comes into a fortune of 300 dollars and are looking for wives.
Aunt Bee buys a blonde wig and upsets Andy and the rest of Mayberry.
Andy umpires a crucial baseball game and becomes the town pariah.
The Mayberry barbershop quartet loses its tenor right before a big singing contest so Andy drafts an unsavory prisoner with a beautiful voice.
Goober blackballs county clerk Howard when he applies for membership in the Mayberry men's lodge.
Opie feels inadequate when he meets Helen's niece who is athletically superior to him.