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The Era -- Day By Day

LizzieMaine

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Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
The British steamer Theseus was radioing a distress signal stating that the ship was under attack by a submarine today off the coast of Ireland. The 6527-ton passenger liner, based on its position, may be in a convoy of ships bound for Canada, and may be carrying refugee children.

A German airplane bombed and machine-gunned a southeastern English coastal town this afternoon, with stores and houses specifically attacked. Fires are burning in the town and some casualties are reported. It is stated that British fighters chased off the attacking plane.

Forty-three people were killed today near Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio when a Pennsylvania Railroad freight train was struck head-on by a self-propelled shuttle car. Railroad officials say the crew aboard the gasoline-powered work car, known as a "doodle bug" failed to shunt off to a siding as ordered to await the passage of the oncoming freight train. There were forty-three persons aboard a passenger coach attached to the train, along with an engineer and two crew members. The latter three jumped to safety just before the crash, but all those in the passenger coach died when the shuttle car exploded on collision.

A writ of habeas corpus has been granted for accused Murder For Hire gunman Harry "Pittsburgh Phil" Strauss, who will appear in court tomorrow to press a claim that he has been illegally denied the right to be examined by his own psychiatrists to determine whether or not he is sane. Strauss's legal counsel claims that he is insane, but state-approved psychiatrists state that their findings show that he is competent to stand trial. Assistant District Attorney Solomon A. Klein claims that Strauss is faking insanity, and that his cultivation of a bushy beard and moustache since his arrest is an attempt to create the appearance of being demented. Martin "Buggsy" Goldstein is Strauss's co-defendant in the coming trial for the murder of Irving "Puggy" Feinstein, but Goldstein has not grown a beard. Assistant DA Klein is seeking a court order to have Strauss forcibly shaven, and to keep him shaven thruout his trial. Strauss's attorney counters that removal of the whiskers would be a violation of Strauss's constitutional rights.

Police are seeking a mysterious red-headed woman who has been working a racket on children in Bay Ridge, Park Slope, and the better sections of South Brooklyn. Police say the woman, said to be about thirty years old, well-dressed, and "attractive," approaches children who are carrying utility bills and money for their payment, and strikes up conversations with them. If the child is a boy, the woman engages in a detailed discussion of the Dodgers, and if the child is a girl, the woman discusses popular movie actresses. Either way, the woman ends up offering the child an envelope to carry their money and thru sleight-of-hand substitutes the money-filled envelope for an empty one.

The Dodgers are trailing the Pirates 7-1 this afternoon in the top of the sixth inning first game of a doubleheader at Ebbets Field. Whit Wyatt started for Brooklyn against Ken Heintzelman for the Pirates. Among those in attendance today are thirty blind persons on an outing sponsored by the New York Association for the Blind.

Two young men collapsed at the Montgomery Street gate at Ebbets Field this afternoon from heat prostration while waiting to get in to today's twinbill -- even though the temperature was only 71 degrees. Cool breezes have dropped temperatures over the city, ending a deadly heat wave that lasted thirteen stifling days.

Flatbush residents have the choice of not one but two Tom Dyers in the race for the State Assembly this fall. Democratic incumbent Thomas A. Dyer of the 21st Assembly District faces a challenge from Communist Party nominee Thomas F. Dyer. Middle initials will be prominently featured on the ballot and in campaign literature.

The_Brooklyn_Daily_Eagle_Thu__Aug_1__1940_.jpg

(It seems that "Sparky Watts" is the first comic strip to directly parody the 1940 craze for superheroes that's flared up in the wake of Superman. It better be worth the hype.)

The chairman of the board of the Texas Company today defended his relationship with Dr. Gerhard Alois Westrick, Adolf Hitler's personal envoy to American businessmen, as simply "good business." Colonel Torkild Reiber declared there was nothing untoward about the fact that Westrick and his wife have been living secretly on the estate of a Texaco executive in Scarsdale for nearly four months, and denies that there are any political connections between the company and the Nazi government. Dr. Westrick has received many visitors in Scarsdale over the past four months, many of them executives of American oil companies who have been given a glowing picture of the profits that await them in doing business with a friendly Nazi Germany once Great Britain has been conquered

The new Brooklyn telephone directory is out, and includes an attractive "civic page" entitled "Brooklyn -- New York City's Greatest Borough." Scenes depicted on the page include photos of the Brooklyn Museum, the Soldiers' and Sailors' Arch, and a night game at Ebbets Field. The directory includes approximately 294,000 listings, up by about a thousand from last year.

The movie version of "The Boys From Syracuse," George Abbot's musical stage adaptation of Shakespeare's "A Comedy of Errors," makes for so-so screen entertainment, says Herbert Cohn. The picutre, now showing at the Times Square Paramount loses much of the bawdiness from the stage show, and severely underplays the Rodgers-and-Hart musical score, with the many hit songs from the play given only perfunctory performances by a cast that includes Allan Jones, Joe Penner, Martha Raye, Alan Mobray, Charlie Butterworth, Rosemary Lane, and Irene Hervey. It's not a bad picture but it could have been better with more Abbot, more Rodgers, and more Hart.

The_Brooklyn_Daily_Eagle_Thu__Aug_1__1940_(1).jpg

(Nobody loves an insurance salesman but his mother. And not even her.)

Old-time vaudevillian Thomas Heath, of the famous blackface team of McIntyre and Heath, was worth only $300 when he died two years ago. So reveal documents filed today in Surrogate's Court in Riverhead. Heath died in August 1938 at the age of 83, and his estate has been in dispute since then, with the depleted state of his finances having been affected by his longtime habit of handing out cash to destitute show-business friends and by heavy and unpaid medical expenses related to his final illness. Among the unpaid bills was a charge of $648.43 for Heath's funeral. The retired comedian died a year to the day after his partner James McIntyre. The bulk of Heath's estate consisted of clothing and a few personal effects to be distributed among his nieces and nephews.

The_Brooklyn_Daily_Eagle_Thu__Aug_1__1940_(2).jpg

The Dodgers and Pirates close out their series at Ebbets Field today with a doubleheader, and the Flock is not at all unhappy to see the end of July, a month in which they played disappointing .500 ball, with a record of 16 wins and 16 losses. They begin August seven and a half games behind the league-leading Reds, and are in desperate need of improvement. One possible source of such improvement is rookie Pete Reiser, who is considered one of the top prospects in the game. When he lined out to Lloyd Waner as a pinch hitter the night before last, the ball coming off his bat sounded like a rifle shot -- and the entire crowd sat up and took notice. Tommy Holmes says "this boy is the greatest natural hitter I have ever seen come to the Dodgers as a rookie." Reiser has yet to get his first major league hit -- but when he does, it won't be his last.

The_Brooklyn_Daily_Eagle_Thu__Aug_1__1940_(3).jpg

Following today's doubleheader, a team of Dodger Rookies will travel to Sterling Oval for an exhibition game against the Brooklyn Royal Giants. Fat Freddie Fitzsimmons and coach Ben Tincup will run the rookie squad for the contest, scheduled to begin at 9 pm.

You know Molly Goldberg, of "The Goldbergs," longtime radio serial success about the lives of a Jewish family, but do you know Gertrude Berg -- who earns $5000 a week writing, producing, directing and portraying Molly? Mrs. Berg is the highest paid woman writer in radio, and gets up every day at 6 am to begin the process of putting together another "Goldbergs" episode, adding to the four million words she has written since she started the program in 1929. She was a Flatbush housewife then, wife of sugar-industry chemist Lewis Berg, but had always had an interest in writing, and based "The Goldbergs" on the lives of her own young family and on stories told around the family table while she was growing up. Mrs. Berg is a stickler for realism in her broadcasts -- when you hear Molly make a telephone call, she's handling a real telephone. And when you hear her fry an egg, Mrs. Berg is actually frying an egg on a hot plate near the microphone. Mrs. Berg is also known for writing out every one of her scripts by hand -- "A typewriter?" she asks sheepishly. "I never learned to use one."

The_Brooklyn_Daily_Eagle_Thu__Aug_1__1940_(4).jpg
(Never mind this foolishness, WHAT HAPPENED TO THE ELEPHANT?)

The_Brooklyn_Daily_Eagle_Thu__Aug_1__1940_(5).jpg
(Ahhh yes, you thought we'd forgotten about that "autograph" John signed. Very clever.)

The_Brooklyn_Daily_Eagle_Thu__Aug_1__1940_(6).jpg
(Dan can be a real dick, and I don't mean Tracy.)
 

LizzieMaine

Bartender
Messages
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Location
Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
And in the Daily News...

Daily_News_Thu__Aug_1__1940_.jpg
Ick. Ick. Ick.

Daily_News_Thu__Aug_1__1940_(1).jpg

What??

Daily_News_Thu__Aug_1__1940_(3).jpg

Anybody who thinks the prewar American woman was a simpering little flower has never had their armpits waxed by Madame Berthe.

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The relief meat I remember came in cans. Pretty elite line Bert stands in.

Daily_News_Thu__Aug_1__1940_(4).jpg
And off we go on another lighthearted adventure....

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Oh my. Just wait'll she gets a look at Wilmer.

Daily_News_Thu__Aug_1__1940_(6).jpg
Somebody just watched "Dead End."

Daily_News_Thu__Aug_1__1940_(7).jpg
Yeah, great. Lissen, the WPA is gonna want that pick back.

Daily_News_Thu__Aug_1__1940_(8).jpg
Dick Tracy -- Dope Fiend!

Daily_News_Thu__Aug_1__1940_(9).jpg
At this rate they should be hitting the City Limits just about the end of September.
 
Messages
17,220
Location
New York City
...
Forty-three people were killed today near Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio when a Pennsylvania Railroad freight train was struck head-on by a self-propelled shuttle car. Railroad officials say the crew aboard the gasoline-powered work car, known as a "doodle bug" failed to shunt off to a siding as ordered to await the passage of the oncoming freight train. There were forty-three persons aboard a passenger coach attached to the train, along with an engineer and two crew members. The latter three jumped to safety just before the crash, but all those in the passenger coach died when the shuttle car exploded on collision...

Stunning loss of life. A bit hard to understand how they all died as you would think the freight train's engine car (and any freight cars in front of the passenger car) would have absorbed, at least, some of the force of the explosion before it got to the passenger car.


...Police are seeking a mysterious red-headed woman who has been working a racket on children in Bay Ridge, Park Slope, and the better sections of South Brooklyn. Police say the woman, said to be about thirty years old, well-dressed, and "attractive," approaches children who are carrying utility bills and money for their payment, and strikes up conversations with them. If the child is a boy, the woman engages in a detailed discussion of the Dodgers, and if the child is a girl, the woman discusses popular movie actresses. Either way, the woman ends up offering the child an envelope to carry their money and thru sleight-of-hand substitutes the money-filled envelope for an empty one....

The mysterious red-headed woman should apply for the position with Benjamin Gump.


... The_Brooklyn_Daily_Eagle_Thu__Aug_1__1940_.jpg
(It seems that "Sparky Watts" is the first comic strip to directly parody the 1940 craze for superheroes that's flared up in the wake of Superman. It better be worth the hype.)...

Hopefully, it will be smart and fun. Quite the wasp-waist on the woman in the foreground. It looks like Nina, Tula and Senga are going to have some new competition.


...The chairman of the board of the Texas Company today defended his relationship with Dr. Gerhard Alois Westrick, Adolf Hitler's personal envoy to American businessmen, as simply "good business." Colonel Torkild Reiber declared there was nothing untoward about the fact that Westrick and his wife have been living secretly on the estate of a Texaco executive in Scarsdale for nearly four months, and denies that there are any political connections between the company and the Nazi government. Dr. Westrick has received many visitors in Scarsdale over the past four months, many of the executives of American oil companies who have been given a glowing picture of the profits that await them in doing business with a friendly Nazi Germany once Great Britain has been conquered...

Charming.


... Fat Freddie Fitzsimmons ...

VelvetyNaturalChimpanzee-size_restricted.gif



...You know Molly Goldberg, of "The Goldbergs," longtime radio serial success about the lives of a Jewish family, but do you know Gertrude Berg -- who earns $5000 a week writing, producing, directing and portraying Molly? Mrs. Berg is the highest paid woman writer in radio, and gets up every day at 6 am to begin the process of putting together another "Goldbergs" episode, adding to the four million words she has written since she started the program in 1929. She was a Flatbush housewife then, wife of sugar-industry chemist Lewis Berg, but had always had an interest in writing, and based "The Goldbergs" on the lives of her own young family and on stories told around the family table while she was growing up. Mrs. Berg is a stickler for realism in her broadcasts -- when you hear Molly make a telephone call, she's handling a real telephone. And when you hear her fry an egg, Mrs. Berg is actually frying an egg on a hot plate near the microphone. Mrs. Berg is also known for writing out every one of her scripts by hand -- "A typewriter?" she asks sheepishly. "I never learned to use one."...

$5000/wk = ~$90,000/wk in 2020 or ~$4.7 million a year (if the series was on for 52 weeks a year - doubt that, but still - that's a lot of money)


... The_Brooklyn_Daily_Eagle_Thu__Aug_1__1940_(4).jpg (Never mind this foolishness, WHAT HAPPENED TO THE ELEPHANT?)...

Both elephants, Tootsie and not-Tootsie. It feels like Tuthill might be "experimenting" again with, umm, "unprescribed" pills as it looks like a strange trip is coming to the storyline.


... The_Brooklyn_Daily_Eagle_Thu__Aug_1__1940_(5).jpg (Ahhh yes, you thought we'd forgotten about that "autograph" John signed. Very clever.)...

Those two need to coordinate better when they are going to wear their loud suits; both on the same day is a bit much.


... View attachment 251036 (Dan can be a real dick, and I don't mean Tracy.)

:)


... Daily_News_Thu__Aug_1__1940_.jpg Ick. Ick. Ick.....

It looks like 318 E 50th was torn down and replaced, but a five-room apartment in, I'm assuming, a walkup at that address would probably rent today for, give or take, $4500-$6500 (depending on this, that and the other thing), but if we just went with the inflation calculator equation, his $48/mos rent in '40 would be ~$900 today. You could not rent a studio for under $1500 in that building today. Just pointing out how limited inflation calculators are and how much NYC real estate inflation has exceeded the overall inflation rate.


... Daily_News_Thu__Aug_1__1940_(1).jpg
What??...

tenor-4 copy 2.gif


... Daily_News_Thu__Aug_1__1940_(3)-3.jpg
Anybody who thinks the prewar American woman was a simpering little flower has never had their armpits waxed by Madame Berthe.....

Little did women know then what also would become common to wax by the '00s.


... Daily_News_Thu__Aug_1__1940_(5)-2.jpg Oh my. Just wait'll she gets a look at Wilmer....

It would take her less than a week to whip that office into shape.
 

LizzieMaine

Bartender
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Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
The Senate Military Affairs Committee today voted 6 to 4 against limiting the draft under the proposed conscription bill to a maximum of 1,000,000 men. The refusal to impose the limit means a total of 12,500,000 men in the 21-31 age group will be eligible for the military draft should the present version of the bill become law. That reversal for opponents of the conscription bill came as President Roosevelt issued a strong declaration that the draft "is essential to adequate national defense," but he continued to insist that he will leave the specifics of draft legislation as to who will be drafted, and how many will be drafted, to Congress. The Army estimates that out of the basic pool of 12,500,000 American men in the eligble age group, only about 4,500,000 are actually suitable for military service, the rest having dependents, physical or mental disqualifications, or religious scruples against military service, or are employed in essential industries.

The German port of Hamburg is in ruins today according to authoritative quarters in London. A British air assault on the port is said to have devastated the city, with an equally forceful raid on the port of Bremen, where docks and the famous Focke-Wulf aircraft factory were the focus of the bombing. German newspapers accused the British of attacking non-military targets, while British authorities insisted that the raids concentrated on aircraft factories and shipping facilities.

A legislative investigation into "subversive teachings" in New York City schools will likely be based in Brooklyn, with former corporation counsel Paul Windles, appointed to serve as legal counsel to the Legislative Committee to Investigate Education In New York City, reported to be searching for appropriate office space downtown. Windels stresses that "the rights of witnessess will be scrupulously protected" over the course of his probe, which is expected to yield a written report in the spring of 1941.

The US State Department and other Federal agencies are launching an investigation into the activities of Nazi commercial envoy Dr. Gerhardt Alois Westrick, following the revelation that Adolf Hitler's personal ambassador to American business has been meeting regularly with US corporate executives from a base in Scarsdale. The owner of the estate occupied by Dr. Westrick, Harold A. Callan, a Manhattan attorney associated with the Texas Company, is said to be rushing home from his summer residence, say Scarsdale police, in order to "protect his interests."

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Brooklyn women will learn military drill in preparation for emergency National Defense service as members of the Women's Defense Cadets, meeting under supervision of the Army at Livingston Hall, 301 Schermerhorn Street. Mrs. Joseph T. Ahern will serve as Kings County Director for the organization, which held its initial meeting at the St. George Hotel last night. Lt. John Lawrence Sullivan Jr. of the 607th Coast Artillery Corps will serve as drill instructor.

The once-dapper Harry "Pittsburgh Phil" Strauss will go on trial Monday for the incineration murder of gangster Irving "Puggy" Feinstein, after a Brooklyn Supreme Court judge today rejected his plea for a psychiatric examination by his own doctors. Strauss trembled behind his bushy whiskers as Judge Frank E. Johnson handed down his ruling that the State's examination ruling Strauss mentally fit to stand trial is sufficient. The fate of the beard itself, however, will have to be decided by Judge Franklin Taylor, who has taken under advisement a motion that would force Strauss to shave or be shaven.

French General Charles de Gaulle was condemned to death in abstentia by a French military court today. General de Gaulle was charged with treason and desertion after he formed a provision committee in London to carry on the fight against the German occupation of France.

The recent heat wave has been a real boon for business at cool Brooklyn night spots. The Marine Roof at the Bossert Hotel is having its best season in years, and the atmosphere is only part of it. The Roof has become the post-game gathering spot of choice for many of the Dodgers, and on any given night you'll find many of them there relaxing after a hard day of fisticuffs at Ebbets Field.

Ann Dvorak, Lola Lane, and Helen Mack cavort as "lady hoboes" in "Girls Of The Road," now showing at the Brooklyn Strand. Also on the bill, a British mystery drama, "The Mysterious Mr. Reeder," featuring Will Fyffe.

What will happen to the famous Parachute Jump once the World's Fair is over? Find out -- in this week's Sunday Eagle! A hint -- it won't be going far away at all.

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(The Boys never miss a trick.)

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(A pause to appreciate the spectacular uniforms worn this year by the Pirates. Here's a closer look --

27392742517_99dc09799a_c.jpg

Snazzy!)

The Dodgers are back in the pennant race with a doubleheader sweep to close out the Pittsburgh series, and while they're still six and a half games behind the Reds, the closing of the gap has been sufficient to revive the sense of momentum that characterized the early part of the season. Manager Durocher was managing furiously over the course of the day -- when rookie Ed Head walked the first batter he faced to open the first inning of the nightcap against Pittsburgh's left-handed-hitting lineup, Leo hooked the kid immediately in favor of righthander Lee Grissom, and the Dodgers went on to win the game 8 to 7 on the strength of a run-scoring double by Cookie Lavagetto. Whit Wyatt turned in a sparkling performance in the first game, pacing the Flock to an 8-3 victory. Brooklyn is now 5-1 over its last six games.

The_Brooklyn_Daily_Eagle_Fri__Aug_2__1940_(6).jpg


The Cubs arrive at Ebbets Field this afternoon with Kenny Raffensberger starting for the Chicago squad against Curt Davis for the Dodgers.

Fat Freddie Fitzsimmons was recently chosen "The Ideal American Father In Sports," and as such will join Mayor LaGuardia and Rabbi Stephen Wise on a committee to select "The Perfect American Son," with the winner to be announced at a luncheon Monday at the Hotel Astor. The Perfect American Son will be awarded a scholarship to any college he prefers.

The_Brooklyn_Daily_Eagle_Fri__Aug_2__1940_(1).jpg
(If you're going to pull an angle, you've got to stick to it.)

The_Brooklyn_Daily_Eagle_Fri__Aug_2__1940_(2).jpg
("The Black Hoods?" Never heard of it.)

The_Brooklyn_Daily_Eagle_Fri__Aug_2__1940_(3).jpg
(PWNED)
 

LizzieMaine

Bartender
Messages
33,766
Location
Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
And in the Daily News...

Daily_News_Fri__Aug_2__1940_.jpg

The DMV -- Premature Anti-Fascists.

Daily_News_Fri__Aug_2__1940_(1).jpg
"Aw," says Joe. "I hate Wheaties." "Eat 'em," snaps Sally. "FOR SUPPER?" wails Joe.

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Just Plain Suspicious.

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I never would have figured Bim as someone who'd go in for trolling, but what else can you call this?

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Dude has never been involved in any shady dealings before, oh no.

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Tess should have stuck around long enough to learn this trick.

Daily_News_Fri__Aug_2__1940_(6).jpg

Maybe Wilmer hooked up with Senga after all.

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Harold, dear boy, have you considered celibacy?

Daily_News_Fri__Aug_2__1940_(8).jpg
"A pumpkin in a checkerboard suit." Hehehehehehehe
 
Messages
17,220
Location
New York City
... View attachment 251256 (A pause to appreciate the spectacular uniforms worn this year by the Pirates. Here's a closer look --

27392742517_99dc09799a_c.jpg
Snazzy!)...

Fantastic.


...Fat Freddie Fitzsimmons was recently chosen "The Ideal American Father In Sports," and as such will join Mayor LaGuardia and Rabbi Stephen Wise on a committee to select "The Perfect American Son," with the winner to be announced at a luncheon Monday at the Hotel Astor. The Perfect American Son will be awarded a scholarship to any college he prefers....

Freddie has decided to take a Zen approach to the Eagle's name calling for a day.

Also, I assume you aren't allowed to choose your own kid for the scholarship. :)


... The_Brooklyn_Daily_Eagle_Fri__Aug_2__1940_(2).jpg ("The Black Hoods?" Never heard of it.)...

Just copying his signature onto a membership card or form is a pretty weak effort - not much better than the fake picture and, with Mary on the case, not hard to disprove.


... The_Brooklyn_Daily_Eagle_Fri__Aug_2__1940_(3).jpg (PWNED)

Irwin is having a couple of very good days.


... Daily_News_Fri__Aug_2__1940_(3).jpg I never would have figured Bim as someone who'd go in for trolling, but what else can you call this?...

While it's turning out that way, in fairness to Bim, he does not mean it that way at all.


.... Daily_News_Fri__Aug_2__1940_(4).jpg Dude has never been involved in any shady dealings before, oh no....

T&TP continues to lap the competition in story and artwork. Although, MW has had some really good illustrating going on as has GA now that we're back in the office, but still, TT&P is out in front.


... Daily_News_Fri__Aug_2__1940_(5).jpg Tess should have stuck around long enough to learn this trick....

The one they need is Mary Worth. She wouldn't fall for any of this nonsense. I'll take one Mary Worth to solve a crime versus Dick Tracy and Dad Dunn (with Irwin) combined.
 

LizzieMaine

Bartender
Messages
33,766
Location
Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
An Empire-wide roundup of Japanese persons by the British Government today is not retaliation for Japan's arrest of British subjects. So state British authorities in response to official Japanese protests of the British action, which led to the arrest of the two leading London representatives of the Mitsubishi and Mitsui banking interests among others taken into custody. The British arrests were accompanied by rumors that British intelligence has uncovered a vast Japanese spy ring branching out from London to Canada, Australia,and Burma.

Meanwhile, Britain has responded to the latest "surrender or die" warning from Germany with another round of merciless raids on German industrial sites. RAF bombers pounded the Krupp armament works at Essen, along with synthetic oil factories at Kamen and Reisholz. The sudden silence of the Bremen radio last night was taken as evidence that British raiders were again ranging out over northwestern Germany.

In Vichy France, the Petain government has ordered the dissolution of the Freemasons and all other secret societies, charging that such organizations undermine Marshal Petain's efforts to establish the ideals of "work, family, and Fatherland" among the people. The order also calls Masonic practices an influence of "hypocrisy, tyranny, defeatism, and hate" against France's Catholic faith.

The_Brooklyn_Daily_Eagle_Sat__Aug_3__1940_.jpg


The streets of Brooklyn felt the tread of marching boots this morning as 900 men from the 14th Regiment, New York National Guard, returned from three weeks of field training and marched in parade formation to the armory at 14th Street and 8th Avenue to receive their $1 a day pay for the 21 days of deployment. As the 14th Regiment was demobilized, other detachments of National Guard and Regular Army men from Brooklyn and Long Island were moving into the Waterstown/Ogdensburg First Army maneuvers area to participate in war games. Four hundred men from the 105th Regiment, Field Artillery, National Guard rolled out of Brooklyn this morning in a convoy of thirty-five automobiles and twelve trucks en route to the maneuvers.

In Germany, a Nazi order today denied telephone service to all Jews.

The Nazi business agent who has been conducting negotiations with American businessmen from an estate in Scarsdale may face an investigation by Manhattan District Attorney Thomas E. Dewey as well as by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Dr. Gerhard Alois Westrick spent yesterday dealing with the revocation of his driver's license and vehicle registration by the Department of Motor Vehicles. Dr. Westrick claimed on his license application to be an employee of the Texas Company, and he stated today that seeing as he has worked as a "legal adviser" for that firm, he felt justified in listing the company as his employer. He also told reporters that his "sole duty" in the United States was to "prepare the way for trade between Germany and the United States following the end of the European War."

In Adel, Georgia two jailed members of a snake-handling religious cult are in the second day of a hunger strike, following their arrest on charges of assault with intent to murder. Authorities are investigating their role in a ritual performed nine days ago that ended with a six-year-old girl near death from the bite of a poisonous snake. Authorities are also investigating the death of a woman in a similar incident last year.

Police in Mamaroneck have ruled as accidental the death of a 27-year-old nude model from West Virginia who drowned yesterday in the swimming pool of a wealthy cosmetics manufacturer. Ellen Legge Nash was a weekend guest at the home of Neal Reed Andrews, and had taken an unaccompanied swim in the pool during a party. Her body was found floating in the pool by other party goers.

The 51-year-old Scarsdale clubwoman accused of embezzling $500,000 in negotiable securities from the estate of her late employer entered a surprise plea of guilty yesterday in Manhattan General Sentence Court, and will be sentenced October 8th. Mrs. Mary B. Roberts pleaded guilty to charges of grand larceny and forgery, and could face a maximum term of ten years in prison. She remains free on $10,000 bail pending sentencing.

A 23-year-old Brownsville man faces charges of possession of policy slips. Saul Barkow of 571 Blake Avenue hid the betting slips under a signet ring he was wearing, but they were discovered by Patrolman Harry Lavin of the Miller Avenue precinct after he searched the man.

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(First rule of show business -- you can't hold an audience by giving them the same old thing.)

The Eagle Editorialist is amused by the saga of "Pittsburgh Phil" and his jailhouse whiskers, given how fastidious underworld figures tend to be. "The gangsters on our book were always manicured, shaven, massaged, and perfumed. In fact, their excessive grooming, their physical dapperness, always marked them as being correspondingly corrupt of soul."

The Chicago Cubs arrived at Ebbets Field yesterday thoroughly fired up by the recent Claude Passeau-Hugh Casey incident and got their revenge with a 4-3 win over the Dodgers. Before the game, the Cubs were offering their version of the Passeau-Casey matter, claiming that Durocher was overheard telling Casey to put weak-hitting Bobby Mattick on base in order to "get the next guy" -- who was, of course, Passeau. Passeau himself appeared in person during an attempted Dodger rally in the bottom of the ninth to strike out Pete Reiser and Pee Wee Reese and that was that. Reese stood at the plate for a full minute as the victorious Cubs romped off the field, and was in tears by the time he finally reached the dugout.

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Despite the loss, the Dodgers gained ground on the Reds, who lost a doubleheader to Boston. The Dodgers have a single game today, while the Reds play another twinbill against the Bees.

The Dodgers have another new pitcher to play with. Lefthander Charles Wesley Flowers will report to Ebbets Field tomorrow from the Louisville Colonels of the American Association, where he was 13-5 on the season so far. The twenty-seven-year old was purchased outright from the Colonels for an undisclosed sum. Flowers had a brief trial with the Cubs in 1936, but has spent the bulk of his career in the AA and the Pacific Coast League.

The_Brooklyn_Daily_Eagle_Sat__Aug_3__1940_(3).jpg
(And here's a sneak preview of our newest attraction. What, no cape?)

The_Brooklyn_Daily_Eagle_Sat__Aug_3__1940_(4).jpg
(Ohhhhhh, Sugar. Better hope for your sake you really *are* insane...)

The_Brooklyn_Daily_Eagle_Sat__Aug_3__1940_(5).jpg
("Why are they raising their right arms up straight like that?")

The_Brooklyn_Daily_Eagle_Sat__Aug_3__1940_(6).jpg
(So, um, she didn't even try to fence the stuff? She was just a crazy clothes hoarder? Wow, hard hitting story there Marsh.)
 

LizzieMaine

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And in the Daily News...

Daily_News_Sat__Aug_3__1940_.jpg
"Disciplinary?"

Daily_News_Sat__Aug_3__1940_(2).jpg

One of my favorite things to do on the subway was to observe the many things people did to avoid making any eye contact whatsoever. The arrival of smartphones has taken all the fun out of this.

Daily_News_Sat__Aug_3__1940_(1).jpg
Just how many pockets you got going there, anyway?

Daily_News_Sat__Aug_3__1940_(3).jpg
Sounds like a Bible quote -- but it isn't, at least not in those words. The phrase is, however, a key tenet of Rosicrucianism. Kindly Sam must've read one of those little ads in the back of "True Detective" magazine.

Daily_News_Sat__Aug_3__1940_(4).jpg
And just like that, Tracy and Pat became opium addicts.

Daily_News_Sat__Aug_3__1940_(5).jpg
Well well well. Look who's going to get stuck on Skeezix.

Daily_News_Sat__Aug_3__1940_(6).jpg
Oh, by the way, hope everybody remembered to pack a few guns...

Daily_News_Sat__Aug_3__1940_(7).jpg
It's been six months since Harold left home. Looks like he's aged about twenty years.

Daily_News_Sat__Aug_3__1940_(8).jpg
For an old fat guy, Willie can move pretty quick when he needs to. Right up there with Fitzsimmons.
 
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....Police in Mamaroneck have ruled as accidental the death of a 27-year-old nude model from West Virginia who drowned yesterday in the swimming pool of a wealthy cosmetics manufacturer. Ellen Legge Nash was a weekend guest at the home of Neal Reed Andrews, and had taken an unaccompanied swim in the pool during a party. Her body was found floating in the pool by other party goers....

Would not be stunned if we later learn that there's more to this story. Heck, it reads like the opening to a "Thin Man" movie.


...A 23-year-old Brownsville man faces charges of possession of policy slips. Saul Barkow of 571 Blake Avenue hid the betting slips under a signet ring he was wearing, but they were discovered by Patrolman Harry Lavin of the Miller Avenue precinct after he searched the man....

How big exactly could this signet ring be?


... The_Brooklyn_Daily_Eagle_Sat__Aug_3__1940_(1).jpg
(First rule of show business -- you can't hold an audience by giving them the same old thing.)...

Lizzie, you just gave us the explanation for why we have this at the Grand Canyon today:
06456070aecd3a60af400f91c2a2cc75.jpg


...
Despite the loss, the Dodgers gained ground on the Reds, who lost a doubleheader to Boston. The Dodgers have a single game today, while the Reds play another twinbill against the Bees....

That's a painful loss as a win would have really jumped them up in the standings.


... The_Brooklyn_Daily_Eagle_Sat__Aug_3__1940_(3).jpg (And here's a sneak preview of our newest attraction. What, no cape?)...

"All is fine except when the cosmic rays fade..then Sparky shrinks until he disappears." That's an odd Kryptonite with a double entendre on the side.

Are those suppose to be freckles up near his ear or are they the result of being charged with cosmic rays?


... The_Brooklyn_Daily_Eagle_Sat__Aug_3__1940_(4).jpg (Ohhhhhh, Sugar. Better hope for your sake you really *are* insane...)...

He's playing with fire. There are some things you never say to a woman and that is one of them.


... The_Brooklyn_Daily_Eagle_Sat__Aug_3__1940_(6).jpg (So, um, she didn't even try to fence the stuff? She was just a crazy clothes hoarder? Wow, hard hitting story there Marsh.)

Story inconsistency alert: If memory serves, didn't this story open with her getting cash from the, assumed, sale of the stolen dresses and demanding more clothes be stolen and sold 'cause she wanted more money?


... Daily_News_Sat__Aug_3__1940_.jpg "Disciplinary?"....

Caught that word too and had the same reaction. Maybe they are referring to how she ran the operation with a strict eye on the clock, as reported yesterday?

Re: Huntington Hartford 2nd and Arline Judge, 1. he can't complain later as it is very clear who he is marrying and 2. I believe we've said it before, rich society people should not be allowed to marry.



... Daily_News_Sat__Aug_3__1940_(2)-2.jpg
One of my favorite things to do on the subway was to observe the many things people did to avoid making any eye contact whatsoever. The arrival of smartphones has taken all the fun out of this.....

By the late '70s/'80s, when I started riding the subway - when NYC was genuinely dangerous - the advice was to avoid all eye contact on the subway. It was preached loudly and often by the police, city officials, newspapers, etc. It's something I've practiced to this day - old habits and all.


... Daily_News_Sat__Aug_3__1940_(5).jpg Well well well. Look who's going to get stuck on Skeezix....

Just noting that the police have not caught the "plump blonde" mastermind of the $108,000 heist yet.

Also, if you want to get that office into shape, hire the no-nonsense woman from a day or two ago.


... View attachment 251477 Oh, by the way, hope everybody remembered to pack a few guns...... Daily_News_Sat__Aug_3__1940_(6).jpg

They need guns - sure-sure, but how cool does Raven Sherman look in her popped-collar trench coat and scarf?


... Daily_News_Sat__Aug_3__1940_(7).jpg It's been six months since Harold left home. Looks like he's aged about twenty years.....

And what will be the real challenge of his young life is raging all over Europe.
 

Haversack

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Police in Mamaroneck have ruled as accidental the death of a 27-year-old nude model from West Virginia who drowned yesterday in the swimming pool of a wealthy cosmetics manufacturer. Ellen Legge Nash was a weekend guest at the home of Neal Reed Andrews, and had taken an unaccompanied swim in the pool during a party. Her body was found floating in the pool by other party goers.

That's awfully close to the estate that Nazi commercial envoy Westrick was staying at.
 

LizzieMaine

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I think it would be very interesting to know just who the other party guests were, and exactly what was going on. Hopefully there will be followup, and this won't be another one of these mysterious deaths that just drops out of the news after a day or two. Seems to be an awful lot of that in 1940.

As for Sparky Watts, either those are freckles or he's got a real bad case of zits going there. Looks like another feckless adolescent taking up residence on the funny pages -- the early 1940s will be the golden age of "teen humor" comics, so a kid with super powers ought to fit right in. Maybe he can fly over and straighten Harold and Skeezix out while he's at it.

Today's T&TP is exceptional -- that's a very careful and specific drawing of a trimotor Ford airplane that Dude has arranged for the occasion, just the sort of old banger that you might find around Hong Kong in 1940. I can confirm from firsthand experience that a trimotor Ford is a very loud airplane -- so we have to assume arriving by stealth is not part of the plan.

Raven could easily carry a strip of her own, but she's so busy being ABSOLUTELY COOL that she just doesn't have the time.
 

LizzieMaine

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Prime Minister Winston Churchill yesterday warned the British people to beware of German propaganda claims that "an invasion is not imminent," and stressed that "the possibility of German attempts at invasion has by no means passed away." The Prime Minister stated that the fact that Germany is now putting out rumors that it does not intend to invade Britain "should be regarded with a double dose of the suspicion which attaches to all of their utterances."

The_Brooklyn_Daily_Eagle_Sun__Aug_4__1940_.jpg


Cincinnati Reds catcher Willard Hersberger committed suicide yesterday in his Boston hotel room, while his teammates were playing the Bees in a doubleheader at National League Field. Hershberger slashed his own throat with a safety razor blade in the bathroom of his room at the Copley-Plaza Hotel around 1:30 PM, and his body was found bent over the bathtub, surrounded by towels, by Daniel Cohen, Cincinnati shoe manufacturer and close friend of Hershberger, who is traveling with the club on its current road trip. Reds manager Bill McKechnie issued a statement that Hershberger was despondent over his role in the Reds' loss in Friday's doubleheader against the Bees, and that the player failed to report to the park for Saturday's games. When telephoned at the hotel, McKechnie states that Hershberger told him he was sick and unable to the play, but would come to the park to watch the games from the stands. When he failed to appear, Cohen was sent to the hotel to investigate, and discovered the catcher dead. Teammates confirmed that the twenty-nine-year-old Hershberger was given to spells of depression over his failure to play consistently well. The catcher has been with the Reds since 1937, usually as a backup to Ernie Lombardi, but has been playing more often lately due to Lombardi's injuries. He went 0 for 6 in the second game of Friday's doubleheader, but was batting .309 for the season.

Leaders of both sides in the conscription debate agreed last night that compromise is essential if the Senate is to reach an accord on compulsory military service for American men between the ages of 21 and 31. The Senate Military Affairs Committee is set to take final action on the bill tomorrow, before the full Senate begins debate on authorization for the President to mobilize the National Guard. Democratic Senator Francis T. Maloney of Connecticut states that he will propose a compromise that would establish a special one-year voluntary enlistment program with base pay for privates raised from $21 to $30 a month, and that program failed to meet an enlistment quota by a specified date, then conscription could go into effect.

The_Brooklyn_Daily_Eagle_Sun__Aug_4__1940_(1).jpg
(Where are "Marie Dressler Dresses" now that I need them?)

The head of the Christian Front in Brooklyn may run for Congress as an independent candidate. John P. Cassidy, who was acquitted of all charges in the recent Christian Front seditious conspiracy trial, stated yesterday that he is considering running for the 6th Congressional District seat, but will not do so on the Democratic ticket. "While the Honorable Franklin D. Roosevelt is the standard bearer for the Democratic Party," said Cassidy, "I cannot in conscience run on the same ticket with him."

Bishop Thomas E. Molloy of Brooklyn has accepted a decoration from Generalissimo Francisco Franco of Spain. The Bishop received the Great Cross of Isabella from Franco in recognition for his support of the Nationalist cause during the Spanish Civil War.

The Parachute Jump attraction will move from the World's Fair to Coney Island next year, with a five-year deal having been arranged to shift the popular aerial ride to the boardwalk end of Steeplechase Park in 1941. That deal is only the first of several now being negotiated to bring popular World's Fair attractions to Coney Island once the Fair closes, with both Steeplechase Park and Luna Park working to make the necessary arrangements. Luna Park operator Milton Sheen states that he is hoping to bring at least eight Fair attractions to his midway next year.

Rabbi Bernard Segal of Queens Village has been named the Army's first Jewish chaplain since 1918, and he will report for duty this week at Fort Dix, New Jersey. He will take a year's leave of absence from his role at the Queens Jewish Center, and will be stationed at Fort Dix on a permanent basis. He has served in the Army Reserve since 1936, but has been transferred to the Regular Army at the rank of 1st Lieutenant for his new assignment.

The Eagle Editorialist takes note of the death sentence handed down in abstentia to Gen. Charles de Gaulle by the Vichy Government, observing that it only goes to prove the old adage: "A rebel is one who loses. A hero is a rebel whose rebellion succeeds."

The Firestone tire factory at the World's Fair turned out something new this week -- tires made of a synthetic rubber substitute. The material, a petroleum derivative called "butadiene," is said to yield tires as durable and reliable as those made from natural rubber, but at a somewhat higher cost. Company president Harvey S. Firestone Jr. stated that the company is offering the new material as a contribution to national defense, and will begin production of the new tires at an expanded factory line now being constructed in Akron, Ohio.

The_Brooklyn_Daily_Eagle_Sun__Aug_4__1940_(3).jpg


The Dodgers lost their second in a row to the Cubs at Ebbets Field yesterday, dropping to 6 1/2 games behind the Reds. A ninth inning home run by Pee Wee Reese and a triple by Joe Vosmik came to naught after Joe Medwick ground weakly to Stan Hack at third to end the game. Final score Chicago 2, Brooklyn 1. Cub pitcher Kenny Raffensberger held the Flock to five hits -- two of them coming in the ninth -- while Curt Davis turned in a decent effort in taking the loss for Brooklyn.

In Boston, the Reds split a doubleheader with the Bees, but the suicide of catcher Willard Hershberger overshadowed the action on the field. Manager Bill McKechnie wept openly as he told his players about "Hershie's" death, and the Cincinnati players went into the second game in a state of shock. Hershberger was well-liked on the club as an able backup for Ernie Lombardi, and was seen as a coming star who would one day replace the aging Lombardi as the Reds' number one backstop. Hershberger was unmarried, and had just recently built a new home for his mother in California.

The_Brooklyn_Daily_Eagle_Sun__Aug_4__1940_(2).jpg


The Dodgers and Cubs play two today, with Fat Freddie Fitzsimmons and Hugh Casey expected to start for Brooklyn. Vern Olsen, and the Dodgers' favorite boy Claude Passeau will get the nod for Chicago.

They're still talking about the ball clubs of Old Brooklyn on the Old Timers Page, and Edward E. Fuchs wants to say a few words about the Oakland A.C., which played its games in Flatbush at a vacant lot on Tilden Street near Rogers Avenue. He remembers the field as little more than a "nanny goat playground" in those days, but did they pack in the fans! Oakland went 42-5 in 1911 -- top that!

(A prominent Nazi cow makes the front of Trend this week. Wait, did I say that out loud?)

The_Brooklyn_Daily_Eagle_Sun__Aug_4__1940_(4).jpg


The most popular baby names of 1940? For boys, it's Joseph, John, Edward, Charles, and George. For girls, Mary, Anna, Helen, Rose, and Dorothy. That's according to the reference desk at the Brooklyn Public Library.

The_Brooklyn_Daily_Eagle_Sun__Aug_4__1940_(5).jpg
(Frontier Game Warden? Well, if he can handle lions and tigers....)

The_Brooklyn_Daily_Eagle_Sun__Aug_4__1940_(11).jpg
(Don't look so pouty there, Duce. They say being hung upside down by your ankles from the rafters of a gas station can extend the spine by up to two inches.)

The_Brooklyn_Daily_Eagle_Sun__Aug_4__1940_(6).jpg
(Hahahahahahahha!)

The_Brooklyn_Daily_Eagle_Sun__Aug_4__1940_(7).jpg
(It makes for more stimulating reading when you actually *see* the clues, rather than just being told about them. Get on the ball, Marsh.)

The_Brooklyn_Daily_Eagle_Sun__Aug_4__1940_(8).jpg
(Bungle's Existential Hellscape, cont'd.)
 

LizzieMaine

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And in the Daily News...

Daily_News_Sun__Aug_4__1940_.jpg
Looking for a flaky cult to join? In 1940 you can take your pick.

Daily_News_Sun__Aug_4__1940_(1).jpg


This post would have been finished ten minutes ago, had I not been laughing uncontrollably at the gal who looks like Goering.

Daily_News_Sun__Aug_4__1940_(2).jpg
"And not only that," bellows the Chief, "where's my damn suitcase???"

Daily_News_Sun__Aug_4__1940_(4).jpg
Plushie ought to go out for a drink with George Bungle. They have a lot in common.

Daily_News_Sun__Aug_4__1940_(5).jpg

For a kid-oriented adventure story, they're racking up an awful body count here. Is Harold Gray ghost-writing?

Daily_News_Sun__Aug_4__1940_(6).jpg

Raven vs. the Invader Army. Odds looking pretty good here.

Daily_News_Sun__Aug_4__1940_(7).jpg

This isn't quite how a worker's uprising is supposed to go.

Daily_News_Sun__Aug_4__1940_(8).jpg

Meet the Raven Sherman of 1960.

Daily_News_Sun__Aug_4__1940_(9).jpg

Kindly Sam is being set up for something here. Maybe he's actually the heir to a vast fortune that he walked out on a la the Buddha.
 
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... The_Brooklyn_Daily_Eagle_Sun__Aug_4__1940_(1).jpg (Where are "Marie Dressler Dresses" now that I need them?)...

One, I hope Ms. Dressler is getting a cut and, two, odd to advertise her dresses which, based on the copy, are for women with "full waists and hips" with models who have no waists and no hips.

And, what the heck, one of my favorite Marie Dressler moment from "Dinner at Eight:"
tumblr_liw8wnuuyn1qaphz7o1_500.gif


...(A prominent Nazi cow makes the front of Trend this week. Wait, did I say that out loud?)

The_Brooklyn_Daily_Eagle_Sun__Aug_4__1940_(4)-2.jpg ...

There is no insult too low for her, but "cow" seems a bit off the mark. Now, whoring, Nazi-sympathizing, gold-digging bounder - seems just about right.


...The most popular baby names of 1940? For boys, it's Joseph, John, Edward, Charles, and George. For girls, Mary, Anna, Helen, Rose, and Dorothy. That's according to the reference desk at the Brooklyn Public Library....

Do you think we have '39's "Wizard of Oz" to thank for Dorothy or was it always a popular '30s name?


...[ The_Brooklyn_Daily_Eagle_Sun__Aug_4__1940_(11).jpg (Don't look so pouty there, Duce. They say being hung upside down by your ankles from the rafters of a gas station can extend the spine by up to two inches.)...

You're fired up today aren't you Lizzie?

Also, good on Hull. Too much of that brainiac stuff can hurt ya.


... The_Brooklyn_Daily_Eagle_Sun__Aug_4__1940_(7).jpg (It makes for more stimulating reading when you actually *see* the clues, rather than just being told about them. Get on the ball, Marsh.)...)

Very early version of the "buddy" movie where, in the closing scene to the "caper," the two friends confess their foibles and missteps.

Dan's looking really thin in panel seven.


... Daily_News_Sun__Aug_4__1940_.jpg Looking for a flaky cult to join? In 1940 you can take your pick.....

Re "Campus Jester:" that is one crazy, scary story - thankfully no one was seriously injured. Also, doesn't the The Buccaneer have a faculty advisor who might have noticed something was going very wrong with this boy?

Re Leigh and Olivier: The marriage lasted 21 years. It was the 2nd of 2 for her and the 2nd of 3 for him. Not bad at all for a Hollywood couple.


... Daily_News_Sun__Aug_4__1940_(1).jpg

This post would have been finished ten minutes ago, had I not been laughing uncontrollably at the gal who looks like Goering.....

You are fired up today.


... Daily_News_Sun__Aug_4__1940_(2).jpg "And not only that," bellows the Chief, "where's my damn suitcase???"....

He and you are never going to let that suitcase go, are you? :)


.... View attachment 251717
For a kid-oriented adventure story, they're racking up an awful body count here. Is Harold Gray ghost-writing?....

Seriously, and true, at least before the editors broke Gray's spirit.


... Daily_News_Sun__Aug_4__1940_(6).jpg
Raven vs. the Invader Army. Odds looking pretty good here.....

Mazuma means money; new one to me.

The ballast thing is very funny.

Raven is a grittier, female "The Saint."

T&TP is on fire, the story and illustrating are just fantastic. Hate to call out any one panel as they are all so good, but panel eight is gorgeous - you can feel it all happening.


...[ Daily_News_Sun__Aug_4__1940_(9).jpg
Kindly Sam is being set up for something here. Maybe he's actually the heir to a vast fortune that he walked out on a la the Buddha.

There is an insane amount of Depression Era philosophizing and messaging going on here. Something clearly happened to Gray as he didn't transition from Nick, Axel and Tecum to this new world accidentally. Forced or chosen, the change is dramatic.
 

LizzieMaine

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There seem to be an awful lot of these messed-up teenage boy murder/attempted murder stories. The "incel" movement may be decades in the future, but it won't be plowing any new ground.

Mr. Gray has always been known for soapboxing in his strip, especially when Daddy Warbucks is around, but the tone of this particular philosophizing does seem to be moving in the direction of a plot point. I'm convinced that Kindly Sam is not exactly what or who he appears to be, because in LOA world, who ever is?

I just keep looking at today's Hill page and snickering. Even the dog has a Hitler face.

"Dorothy" doesn't appear on the name list for 1935, so I'd think "Oz" probably is the factor in its rise. It came out just about a year ago, and that's plenty of time for a crop of newborn Dorothys to pop up in its wake.

The death of poor Willard Hershberger is one of those stories that's always haunted me ever since I first read about it. There was a very fine piece on the incident in Sports Illustrated that's stuck with me for a very long time -- it's available here.

front.jpg
 
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There seem to be an awful lot of these messed-up teenage boy murder/attempted murder stories. The "incel" movement may be decades in the future, but it won't be plowing any new ground.

Mr. Gray has always been known for soapboxing in his strip, especially when Daddy Warbucks is around, but the tone of this particular philosophizing does seem to be moving in the direction of a plot point. I'm convinced that Kindly Sam is not exactly what or who he appears to be, because in LOA world, who ever is?

I just keep looking at today's Hill page and snickering. Even the dog has a Hitler face.

"Dorothy" doesn't appear on the name list for 1935, so I'd think "Oz" probably is the factor in its rise. It came out just about a year ago, and that's plenty of time for a crop of newborn Dorothys to pop up in its wake.

The death of poor Willard Hershberger is one of those stories that's always haunted me ever since I first read about it. There was a very fine piece on the incident in Sports Illustrated that's stuck with me for a very long time -- it's available here.

front.jpg

The Bill Hershberger story is heartbreaking. Maybe - maybe - today he would have been diagnosed with clinical depression and received help.
 
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'Marie Dressler' dress were manufactured by the Gottfried Company of Cleveland, Ohio between 1935 and 1947. Marie Dressler herself died in 1934. This fashion history blog has a plausible run-down on this might have come about.

Neat find. Makes sense, but still, even in the '30s, I'm surprised her estate didn't sue by claiming "squatter right" or something like that (I'm not a lawyer - obviously) to the name. It's clear what the company was trying to do.
 

LizzieMaine

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Ahhhhh, that old game. Another company tried the same angle in the early thirties putting out a line of "Amos 'n' Andy" brand work clothes -- and argued that since Amos and Andy were fictional characters, there was nothing Correll and Gosden or NBC could do about it. C&G immediately produced their trademark-registration papers, and that was the end of that.
 

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