... as the episode before seems to be after Beaver has left the eighth grade and is headed for ninth grade. He is also supposed to be on a summer long tour of the United States along with other teens his own age. Yet, somehow, here he is still in the eighth grade.
As an individual episode though, it's pretty good. The kids in his grade are collecting clothes for a clothing drive so they can give clothes to the needy. Beaver gets a little over enthusiastic and grabs some of Wally's still serviceable clothes, and of course Wally retrieves them. Ward says he'll leave some clothes in the hall for the clothing drive. Instead he pulls three of his good suits out of the closet, puts a "PLEASE DRY CLEAN" sign on them, and leaves them tenuously balanced on the banister. When Ward leaves for work the clothes fall to the floor, and the DRY CLEAN sign blows away. Beaver naturally thinks these clothes are for the clothes drive. Complications ensue, none of which are Beaver's fault.
It's interesting that these kids are all working to win the good citizenship award. The fact that they are being taught about good citizenship at all and that noblesse oblige is part of being a good citizen seem as much a part of the past as June's always neat and well pressed house dresses. Yet it's sad to see both of these things fade into the past.
Also note that at the beginning of the show that Beaver and a friend are talking about hand-me-down clothes and wondering if the president's son has to wear the hand-me-downs of his older sister. They would be talking about JFK Jr. And his older sister Caroline as JFK is the president at this time.