Saturday, March 15, 2008
Herriman Saturday
Leave it to Californians to complain about a little rain. On January 10 (top cartoon) and the 13th (next to bottom) Herriman bemoans the unseasonably wet January they're having. I looked it up (because not even 1907 Los Angeles precipitation is more than a Google away) and they got 7 inches of rain that month. Break out the ark, Noah!
On the 12th (second cartoon from the top) Herriman makes the case for Los Angeles annexing the community of San Pedro. In 1906 LA had annexed a long strip of land adjacent to the community, and it seemed only a matter of time until San Pedro would be gobbled up. And it was -- the community was annexed in 1910.
On the 13th, in addition to the comic strip about motoring in the rain, Herriman produces an unusual boxing cartoon in which the faces of the two boxers' portraits are pasted-in photos. The cartooned body on Abe Attell is so misshapen I could hear Herriman calling to me from on high to please omit this cartoon. Not believing in an afterlife I chose to ignore his pleas. Sorry George.
Finally on the 14th Herriman continues his crusade for a safer LA gas supply, now suggesting that the city should take over the service and build a new plant.
Labels: Herriman's LA Examiner Cartoons
Friday, March 14, 2008
Obscurity of the Day: Cross Word Charlie
The crossword puzzle was invented by Arthur Wynne, debuting in the New York World in 1913. It wasn't the most demanding brainteaser ever (a sample clue -- "the plural of is") but it found an appreciative audience. The crossword craze was a slow builder, really taking off in the 20s, as did all sorts of diversions that helped people cope with the lack of readily accessible booze.
In 1924 the New York Times derided crossword puzzles as "a primitive form of mental exercise" and went on to predict that the public would quickly tire of them. But even that bastion of sane and sober journalism finally waved the white flag, and the toughest crossword of them all debuted in the Sunday Times on February 15 1942. Now if only they'd come to their senses and add a comics section they'd really have something.
A certain species of newspaper comic strip creators are always on the lookout for new trends that they can ride to syndication success. Here's a good example, Art Helfant's Cross Word Charlie. Created purely in response to the popularity of crosswords, it stands along strips about radios, bridge, manga, even mullets, subjects that momentarily cross the public's fancy. Like most of these cash-in projects, the strip was a pretty miserable effort, with Helfant taking the most obvious plotline (a guy who's crazy for crosswords) and for some reason often aping Rube Goldberg's style (his own, in my humble opinion, was better -- the first strip is more in Helfant's native style).
The strip was syndicated by the P.C. Eastment Syndicate. Eastment had been in charge of the McClure Syndicate in the teens and apparently had struck out on his own come the 1920s. The syndicate seems to have concentrated mostly on fiction, also an Eastment specialty at McClure. Cross Word Charlie seems to have been their only foray into comic strips, and it may have been their death rattle, because it's the last newspaper feature I can find bearing their copyright. The longest run of Cross Word Charlie I've been able to find is in the Boston Globe where it appeared from December 29 1924 to January 31 1925.
Thanks to Cole Johnson for the samples of this rare strip.
Labels: Obscurities
Comments:
Just for the record, the New York Times crossword isn't necessarily the toughest one out there, but people seem to think it is (especially the larger sized Sunday one). The daily puzzles grow in difficulty during the week so that Monday is pretty easy but Friday and Saturday can get quite tough. The Sunday puzzle is large, but more Wed-Thu in difficulty.
Thanks for bringing this strip to light. It never occurred to me that with all the other crossword merchandising going around back then that someone would try to capitalize on it on the comics page.
Thanks for bringing this strip to light. It never occurred to me that with all the other crossword merchandising going around back then that someone would try to capitalize on it on the comics page.
Well, those NYT Sunday puzzles certainly kick my butt but I rarely get to do them and you really have to do them regularly to get into the zen of their clues. So do any newspaper syndicates distribute a harder x-word puzzle, or are these harder puzzles you mentioned distributed some other way?
--Allan
--Allan
You are correct that you need to solve pretty regularly to get the crosswordese down, as well as the puzzle author and editor's styles. A lot of people think that if you're smart you can just pick up a crossword and knock it out in no time, but you'd be surprised: it takes a lot of practice.
As far as syndicated puzzles go, the Saturday Creators Syndicate puzzle (this is the Long Island Newsday puzzle edited by Stanley Newman) "Staruday Stumper" is one of the toughest regular ones out there.
Not syndicated, but also tough, is the Friday puzzle in the New York Sun, excellently edited by Peter Gordon.
You can get these and plenty of other crosswords regularly for free on the web. Just search for "Will Johnston's Puzzle Pointers" and you'll find a page he maintains that lists all of them.
As for me, I'm off to the Boston Public Library tomorrow to look for the rest of those Cross Word Charlies!
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As far as syndicated puzzles go, the Saturday Creators Syndicate puzzle (this is the Long Island Newsday puzzle edited by Stanley Newman) "Staruday Stumper" is one of the toughest regular ones out there.
Not syndicated, but also tough, is the Friday puzzle in the New York Sun, excellently edited by Peter Gordon.
You can get these and plenty of other crosswords regularly for free on the web. Just search for "Will Johnston's Puzzle Pointers" and you'll find a page he maintains that lists all of them.
As for me, I'm off to the Boston Public Library tomorrow to look for the rest of those Cross Word Charlies!
Wednesday, March 12, 2008
Hey Kids! Disney Comics!
In my ongoing attempt to gain much needed storage space, not to mention some dough, I am once again selling comic books on eBay. This first round of auctions is for all the Disney comics in my collection. There's a whole batch of auctions for more recent issues (from the Gladstone/Disney Comics years) plus some beautiful copies of earlier material. The highlights are nice copies of Uncle Scrooge #1 and #2 (Four-Color issues 386 and 456) and a set of the rare Cheerios giveaway series Y that includes the much sought after "Donald Duck's Atom Bomb". Here's a link to the auctions:
http://search.ebay.com/_W0QQsassZcomicstrip
and here's pictures of what's up for sale. Anybody winning my auctions who mentions Stripper's Guide when they pay will get some free bonus stuff with their shipment:
http://search.ebay.com/_W0QQsassZcomicstrip
and here's pictures of what's up for sale. Anybody winning my auctions who mentions Stripper's Guide when they pay will get some free bonus stuff with their shipment: