The Travel-Hog is a 1927 Felix the Cat short produced by Pat Sullivan.
Plot[]
Felix, taking his morning bath, is called to breakfast by his wife. He promises to slip on something. And he does slip—it's a bar of soap. Felix escapes through the window and onto a mule. The mule kicks the cat into the path of a tornado, which in turn carries him to the Arctic. There, a polar bear gives him a jolly moment. Then two seals pick him up and use him in a juggling act.
Felix is thrown between the windmills of Holland, is beaten and finally expelled by a low trumpet. This sends him skyward, to the moon. It is a quarter moon, and Felix rows along it, using it as a boat until it is punctured. Then he lands in the boot of Italy. The cat is kicked by this boot to Egypt. At the top of the Sphinx, Felix is picked up by a giant and blown across the Atlantic, and back to his home, where he sits down to his awaiting breakfast. Felix is fully tagged with luggage tags showing the various foreign lands he has visited.