What if Paramount bought the pre-Gillet 1929 to 1934 Van Beuren cartoons

What if Paramount bought the pre-Gillet 1929 to 1934 Van Beuren cartoons to be repackaged for television, released on DVD, and getting an animated series based off these cartoons starting in the 1990s? Well, here's what might happen.

Classic shorts series

 * Aesop's Fables, AKA "Aesop's Film Fables" (1920-1928 for silent shorts, 1929-1933 for sound shorts. Both acquired by Paramount.) inherited from the Fables Studio, which was formerly run by Paul Terry. Originally a long running silent cartoon series, it became a series of sound cartoons which introduced one of the earliest sound cartoons, "Dinnertime", which notably predates Disney's Steamboat Willie by a month. The sound era of the series lasted around 120 shorts, including its sub-series. Paul Terry's Farmer Al Falfa was also a recurring star of the silent shorts, even appearing in a few of the early sound films before Terry, who had left to found his own studio, wrangled back the rights to the character.
 * The Fables had its own sub-series, "Cubby Bear" (1933-1934), which ran for 16 shorts, with a 17th one being finished, but unreleased until it resurfaced on a Cubby Bear DVD collection decades later. Notably, three shorts in the series, "Gay Gaucho" (1933), "Cubby's World Flight" (1933) and the unreleased "Mischievous Mice" (1934) were outsourced to the Harman-Ising cartoon studio, and they heavily resemble the Bosko cartoons they made.
 * Van Beuren's Tom and Jerry (1931-1933, also acquired by Paramount) Two bungling young men, one short, one tall, which ran for 26 shorts. Absolutely no relation to MGM's Tom and Jerry shorts, but when reissued as home movies, the characters were renamed "Dick & Larry" to prevent confusion.
 * The Little King (1933-1934): An animated adaptation of the classic Newspaper Comic strip, lasting 10 shorts. Two shorts preceding this series were also based on Little King's companion strip, "Sentinel Louie", but released as part of the Aesop's Fables series.