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Odor-Able Kitty (1945)
$25.00A cat, tired of being abused by everyone in his neighborhood, disguises himself as a skunk and inadvertently attracts the romantic advances of a real skunk.
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Rabbit Punch (1948)
$25.00Heckling the Champ gets Bugs into the world championship fight as the challenger.
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The Bear That Wasn’t (1967)
$25.00A bear settles down for his long winter nap, and while he sleeps the progress of man continues. He wakes up to find himself in the middle of an industrial complex where nobody believes he’s a bear.
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Transylvania 6-5000 (1963)
$25.00Bugs is given a room for the night at the castle of Count Bloodcount in Transylvania.
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Hell-Bent for Election (1944)
$25.00A full-blown re-election piece for President Franklin Delano Roosevelt at the expense of Republican presidential candidate Thomas Dewey. Roosevelt is depicted as a streamlined diesel express train in a race against Dewey, a worn-out steam train. The public is admonished to “get behind the president and stay the course to victory.”
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Hare Tonic (1945)
$25.00Elmer brings Bugs home for dinner. To save himself, Bugs tricks Elmer into thinking there is a terrible outbreak of Rabbititus.
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A Hitch in Time (1955)
$25.00John McRogers dreams about his future after spending four years in the U.S. Air Force, and is convinced by “Grogan,” Technical Gremlin First Class, on why he should remain in the Air Force, rather, and what the advantages would be if he returned to civilian life.
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Baby Buggy Bunny (1954)
$25.00The story is about a dwarf gangster named “Babyface” Finster (a play on words on Baby Face Nelson) who, after a clever bank robbery, loses his ill-gotten gains down Bugs Bunny’s rabbit hole, forcing him to don the disguise of an orphan baby to get it back.
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Duck! Rabbit, Duck! (1953)
$25.00The final installment of the “Hunting Trilogy” once again has Elmer out hunting, while Bugs and Daffy try to con him into shooting the other.
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Rabbit Fire (1951)
$25.00Daffy Duck and Bugs argue back and forth whether it is duck season or rabbit season. The object of their arguments is hunter Elmer Fudd.
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A Connecticut Rabbit in King Arthur’s Court (1978)
$25.00Bugs find himself in Camelot and is mistaken for a “dwagon” by Sir Elmer of Fudde.
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