James Bronis
Production
Known For
A little mouse is having a great day tramping through the jungle. Seeing a sleeping lion, he pulls his whiskers as a joke and wants to be friends. The lion is angry and starts to eat the tiny mouse. The mouse explains, "I ran away from home. I just found out my father was a rat." He tells the lion that if he will let him go, he will repay the favor. The lion scoffs, but he agrees. When the lion is caught in a trap with hunters coming, the mouse helps to get him out, but he falls in himself while doing so. The lion rescues the mouse, and they romp through the jungle, now as real friends.
Mouse Meets Lion
After the "Squawk Club" closes for the night, the mice come out and put on a show of their own. The Mouse of Ceremonies introduces the vastly-talented Miss Hedy La Mouse, and Hedy stops the show. Elmer, a rube-mouse from out of town, wanders in and falls for Hedy but the jealous M.C. attempts to restrain Elmer. The latter, evidently not all that far from out of town, assists Hedy in a couple of dances, including a Conga in which all the mice join in. But the night janitor, a real party-pooper, shows up, and all the mice scurry for cover.
The Merry Mouse Cafe

A small child pulls the pages off a calendar, one for each month, revealing a short skit on a holiday for that month
Happy Holidays

This was a Columbia cartoon starring the human boy Scrappy in which the leading character is an assistant to a mad scientist character who creates a robot but despite electrifying him, the robot won't work.
Man of Tin

Scrappy daydreams while in class.
School Boy Dreams

Into the Night is a 1928 American silent crime film directed by Duke Worne.
Into the Night
Scrappy runs a theater where he acts as the ticket collecter, the usher, the snack vendor, and the performer. He later has some probelms with another child in the audience.
The Little Theatre
Scrappy learns to play the piano.