The opening scene, in which a car drives past the construction site and the bag containing Pussyfoot is tossed in the trash, has been cut from all TV airings and official VHS/DVD releases since the mid-1980s.
The cat that Marc Anthony attacks while defending Pussyfoot is Claude. Claude also appears in No Barking (1954), with Tweety Bird and a different dog, Frisky.
Just like in Feed the Kitty (1952), Kiss Me Cat (1953) and Feline Frame-Up (1954), the bulldog's name is Marc Anthony and the kitten's name is Pussyfoot.
The first cartoon with a scene specific score by Milt Franklyn since Knighty Knight Bugs (1958). The six cartoons in-between used stock music, due to a musician's strike that year.
A song that sounds similar to Mel Kaufman's song "Me-ow" plays over the opening credits. This musical parody is also heard in Tree Cornered Tweety (1956), Goldimouse and the Three Cats (1960), Cat's Paw (1959), Hyde and Go Tweet (1960) and The Last Hungry Cat (1961).