When shown on network television during the 90s, an extended version of the end credits played.
Instead of showing Amos and Theodore riding with their mule, the film faded out as they rode over the top of the hill and then multiple scenes from the film replayed in a small square frame at the top of the screen starting from where Amos and Theodore get their pictures taken, up to the part where Woolly Bill Hitchcock gets strung upside down by Amos when he and Theodore are masquerading as saloon girls.
The music was edited to play multiple times before reaching its climax while a computerized credit roll slowly played at the bottom of the screen.
This may have been done for stations that needed additional time filled before their next program started.