List of King Leonardo and His Short Subjects Episodes - The Hunter

The Hunter

The following cartoons originally aired on King Leonardo And His Short Subjects:

  1. Brookloined Bridge (Appears in syndicated Dudley Do Right And Friends Show #2733)
  2. Counterfeit Wants (Appears in syndicated Dudley Do Right And Friends Show #2734)
  3. Haunted Hunter (Appears in syndicated Dudley Do Right And Friends Show #2735)
  4. Fort Knox Fox (Appears in syndicated Dudley Do Right And Friends Show #2736)
  5. Stealing A March (Appears in syndicated Dudley Do Right And Friends Show #2737)
  6. Horn-A-Plenty (Appears in syndicated Dudley Do Right And Friends Show #2738)
  7. Concrete Crook
  8. Subtracted Submarine
  9. Risky Ransom
  10. Unfaithful Old Faithful
  11. The Armored Car Coup
  12. Telephone Poltergeist
  13. Sheepish Shamus
  14. Rustler Hustler
  15. The Case Of The Missing Muenster
  16. The Great Train Robbery
  17. Florida Fraud
  18. The Great Plane Robbery
  19. Girl Friday
  20. Stamp Stickup
  21. Statue Of Liberty Play
  22. The Frankfurter Fix
  23. The Case Of The Missing Mower
  24. Fancy Fencing
  25. Racquet Racket
  26. Seeing Stars
  27. The Elevator Escapade
  28. Hula Hoop Havoc
  29. The Counterfeit Newspaper Caper
  30. Diamond Dither
  31. Grand Canyon Caper
  32. Borrowed Beachland
  33. Peek-A Boo Pyramids
  34. Lincoln Tunnel Caper (Appears in syndicated Dudley Do Right And Friends Show #2727)
  35. TV Terror (Appears in syndicated Dudley Do Right And Friends Show #2728)
  36. Bye Bye Bell (Appears in syndicated Dudley Do Right And Friends Show #2729)
  37. Time Marches Out (Appears in syndicated Dudley Do Right And Friends Show #2730)
  38. Fox's Foul Play (Appears in syndicated Dudley Do Right And Friends Show #2731)
  39. Bow Wow Blues (Appears in syndicated Dudley Do Right And Friends Show #2732)

The following cartoons were first aired during the 1963–1964 season on Tennessee Tuxedo and His Tales, and are syndicated as part of Dudley Do-Right and Friends. The Dudley Do-Right and Friends syndicated episode number follows each title in parentheses. ("The Hunter" was featured as a segment on Tennessee Tuxedo during the 1963–1964 season. Repeats of "Tooter Turtle" replaced "The Hunter" on Tennessee Tuxedo and His Tales when "The Hunter" moved to The Underdog Show in 1964. "Tooter Turtle" and "The Hunter" were also featured on The Dudley Do-Right Show on ABC-TV between 1968 and 1970. "The King and Odie" appears in the syndicated Dudley Do-Right and Friends, but was not part of The Dudley Do-Right Show.)

  1. Breaking In Big (2701)
  2. The Bank Dicks (2702)
  3. Eye On The Ball (2703)
  4. Breakout At Breakrock (2704)
  5. Getting The Business (2705)
  6. An Uncommon Cold (2706)
  7. The Pickpocket Pickle (2707)
  8. Goofy-Guarding (2708)
  9. The Big Birthday Blast (2709)
  10. Under The Spreading Treasure Tree (2710)
  11. School Days, Fool Days (2711)
  12. Fall Of The House Of The Hunter (2712)
  13. Oyster Stew (2713)
  14. The Stolen Spoon Saga (2714)
  15. Under Par (2715)
  16. Chew Gum Charlie (2716)
  17. Using The Ole Bean (2717)
  18. The Case Of The Hunted Hunter (2718)
  19. The Purloined Piano Puzzle (2719)
  20. Record Rocket (2720)
  21. The Hunter's Magic Lamp (2721)
  22. Hunter Goes Hollywood (2722)
  23. Two For The Turkey Trot (2723)
  24. Captain Horatio Hunter (Part 1 of 2) (2724)
  25. The Horn Of The Lone Hunter (Part 2 of 2) (2725)
  26. Little Boy Blues (2726)

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Famous quotes containing the word hunter:

    There is on the earth no institution which Friendship has established; it is not taught by any religion; no scripture contains its maxims. It has no temple, nor even a solitary column. There goes a rumor that the earth is inhabited, but the shipwrecked mariner has not seen a footprint on the shore. The hunter has found only fragments of pottery and the monuments of inhabitants.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    ...I have wanted to believe people could make their dreams come true ... that problems could be solved. However, this is a national illness. As Americans, we believe all problems can be solved, that all questions have answers.
    —Kristin Hunter (b. 1931)