The final cartoon of the Harman-Ising era, lasted from 1934 to 1938.
The final of the MGM's Happy Harmonies series to imitate with Disney's Silly Symphonies series, Columbia's Foney Fables series, and Warner Bros.'s Merrie Melodies series, until Harman-Ising Productions were fired due to budget problems and MGM founded its own in-house animation studio in 1937 and Fred Quimby is served as the head president and producer of the series and joining William Hanna and Joseph Barbera, starting with the other shorts in 1938 (and later Tom and Jerry in 1940 where Barbera and Hanna first directed). Meanwhile, Hugh Harman and Rudolf Ising successfully returned to MGM after Quimby joined starting with The Little Goldfish (1939), the first cartoon that Ising is directed and the first Barney Bear cartoon The Bear That Couldn't Sleep (1939) in 1939, and Art Gallery (1939), the first cartoon that Harman is directed during the Hanna-Barbera period.
The final Harman-Ising cartoon produced for MGM, before the two were fired and MGM took over to produce its own in-house animation studio in 1937, where Fred Quimby is originally served as head president and producer (and later William Hanna and Joseph Barbera in 1955) and the first Captain and the Kids cartoon produced by MGM's in-house animation studio, Cleaning House (1938), released in February 1938 before this short.
The final cartoon where William Hanna and Joseph Barbera worked on during the Harman-Ising era. Barbera and Hanna would later take over to work on the other shorts in 1938 (and later Tom and Jerry in 1940 when the two first directed with Rudolf Ising), where head president and producer Fred Quimby is served.