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⇧ Thank you for the spoiler alert as I, then, did not read your post. I'm really enjoying experiencing these comics as originally experienced - day by day.
Here's a great shot of Milton Caniff at work -- with a young actress posing as April Kane. Caniff used live models for most of his characters, especially for complicated scenes and poses. Some were friends and relatives, but occasionally he'd hire professionals when he wanted a very specific look.
View attachment 306956
Please tell us that she is telling that creepy Crispin guy to back off. (Actually, though, I believe the scene he's drawing is an illustration for one in a series of "young adult" novels he wrote in the early forties, based on the strip and featuring the same characters in slightly toned-down adventures.)
View attachment 306961 (I can't imagine, though, how this particular adventure would be "toned down.")
Makes you wish a real A-budget T&TP movie had been made. But nobody took comics seriously enough in 1941 to consider doing that -- so all you got were kiddie serials and B-series pictures. With the right cast, it could have been a spectacular wartime propaganda/adventure film.
Makes you wish a real A-budget T&TP movie had been made. But nobody took comics seriously enough in 1941 to consider doing that -- so all you got were kiddie serials and B-series pictures. With the right cast, it could have been a spectacular wartime propaganda/adventure film.
... View attachment 307164 (And for your convenience, many of these fine Brooklyn merchants offer one-stop gambling, loansharking, and murder-for-hire services. Just ask at the counter!)...
...If you need another reason to dislike the World Champion Cincinnati Reds, here's another one. Mr. Crosley's club has declared that "under no circumstances" will it put up in a Brooklyn hotel when it comes to play the Flock this summer. The harsh rebuke of Larry MacPhail's request that visiting clubs secure local accomodations has drawn the ire of the Emir of Ebbets Field, and you know what that will mean. But Larry is pleased, at least, that the Phillies and the Cardinals have agreed to stay at the Hotel Bossert instead of seeking Manhattan lodging this year, and the Cubs may be leaning in that direction as well. But Mr. MacPhail is really sore now at the Boston Bees, who primly declined the Dodger request, declaring that the "bars and nightclubs" in Brooklyn would pose a "too many pitfalls" to Mr. C. D. Stengel's innocent boys. "Where have those fellows been living before this?" queried Dodger secretary John MacDonald as his boss sputtered with fury. "The Seamen's Home?"...
"Smallville" didn't show up in "Superman" until the "Superboy" strip came along after the war. I think Mr. Gould uses it in at least a couple of sequences before that to represent one or another of the little towns in the remote orbit of Tracy's City. In 1941, Superman was never Superboy -- he didn't take on a costumed identity until he showed up as an adult in 1938. His childhood and family background were given very little attention until they got sketched out a bit in a "young adult novel" published in 1942 -- which seems to have been a pretty good year for "young adult" comic-based hardcovers.
Harold's age tends to float a bit given that he was sixteen or seventeen for about eighteen years, but we know that he graduated from high school in 1939, which would make him twenty this year -- the same age as Skeezix, and probably three years older than Terry. Of our three young members of "The Greatest Generation," Harold is unquestionably the least mature for his age -- but I also suspect that he is the only one of the three who has been inaugurated into certain adult mysteries, courtesy of the time he spent last year with Senga. Just imagine.
I get the feeling that Lana is a bit older than he is. Not Sally Snipe older, but maybe 21 or 22. Old enough, one hopes, to know better if what seems to be about to happen happens.
Mr. Stengel played in Brooklyn and managed there, so I'd imagine he'd know better than anyone just what a hive of villiany the bars and nightclubs were. In fact, he could probably give his boys a guided tour.
Mr. Stengel played in Brooklyn and managed there, so I'd imagine he'd know better than anyone just what a hive of villiany the bars and nightclubs were. In fact, he could probably give his boys a guided tour.
.. View attachment 307476
Fire ravaged a landmark building in Williamsburg last night, leaving the six-story Gomer Building a charred shell. Flames were visible more than a mile away, and trolley and elevated lines were halted as firemen battled to keep the blaze from spreading into the surrounding neighborhood. Until two years ago, the building had served as Station A of the Brooklyn Post Office, but since had been converted to factory lofts, with a floor-covering store and a bar occupying the street-level floor. The building was empty when the fire erupted, save for a few patrons and staff in the bar and grill, and they escaped safely. Total damage to the building is estimated at $75,000....
...Police in the Bronx are investigating the strangling death of a 29-year-old woman, whose body was found sprawled on a bed in the Grand Concourse apartment she shared with her husband, a wholesale grocer. Mrs. Kitty Pappas was found dead by her husband John upon his return from work yesterday, and police anticipate questioning "a family friend" about the slaying. There were no other marks of violence upon Mrs. Pappas's body, and no valuable items were missing from the apartment....