Van Beuren began turning out some color cartoons in 1935, after Disney lost its monopoly on Technicolor for cartoons, and they used old Disney hand Burt Gillett as the director. Unfortunately for adults, they aimed them squarely at the kiddies -- and not the sort of kiddie I was, with an appreciation of the sort of jokes and gags that the Fleischers and Schlesinger's staff liked, but at the sort of well-behaved child that we despised: a namby-pamby sort who was likely to squeeze his kitty to death and be beaten up by all the other kids. In the movies this sort of child would show up and parents would ask their children why they couldn't be more like this specimen. My parents would look at this sort of child and shake their heads.
This musical cartoon about three kittens who get into a spat with two small dogs over milk is aimed squarely at that despicable demographic. I can admire its technical competence -- the dogs are well rotoscoped and there is some nice camera movement to maintain composition. However, from about fifteen seconds in, until the end of it, I wanted it to stop. I stayed until the end so that I could write an honest review and urge you to avoid seeing this at all costs.
The following year Van Beuren lost his contract to provide cartoons to RKO when they got their hands on Walt Disney. It's because of cartoons like this.