A young African-American boy (drawn in
blackface style) carries a sack to a river and laments that he has agreed to drown a cat. While the boy stares at the water, the cat slips out of the sack and fills it with bricks. When the boy says that he can't go through with the task, the hidden cat, pretending to be the boy's
conscience, says, "Go ahead,
Sambo, go ahead, boy," and reminds him that he has been paid "four
bits" to do the job. Sambo reluctantly drops the bag in the river rather than return the money. The cat then disguises itself as its own
ghost, painting itself white and donning wings and a
halo, and proceeds to "haunt" Sambo by repeatedly sneaking up on him and whispering "boo". Sambo runs away, but the cat rattles a pair of dice, causing Sambo to fall into a trance and unconsciously walk back to the cat (part of a
running gag in Warner Bros. cartoons that stereotypes African-Americans as being addicted to gambling). The hauntings continue until Sambo and the cat fall in a pond, washing off the cat's paint. When Sambo realizes that he has been tricked, he kills the cat with a shotgun blast. Immediately afterward, a line of nine ghost cats (representing a cat's
nine lives) marches toward Sambo, saying, "And this time, brother, us ain't kiddin'." ==Reception==