- Teddy the Wrestling Bear: 1941
- Toy Store: 1941
- Ogoh Ogoh
- For No Particular Reason: Kirby Monsters!
- Again With the Comics is re-reading Howard the Duck
- You’re the One For Me, Fatty.
- Superman: All Choked Up!
- Marvel Should Publish This Already
- ANIMATED SHORTS: GROWING UP WITH GUMBY
- Sponsored Comics: Pier 19
- Interview: Gilbert Hernandez Pt. 2 (of 3)
- Cool Golden Age Page of the Day: A Rare Delicacy
- Dowloading digital comics: The sequel
- Gocco Printing Tutorial for New PG5 Model
- Ape Gestures Offer Clues To The Evolution Of Human…
- Bee die-off a sign of the apocalypse
- One week to stop REAL ID and save America from the…
- Washington, D.C.: 1935
- Chain Gang: 1910
- MARK CRILLEY: MIKI FALLS, AKIKO AND MORE
- 10 strange facts about Einstein
- Bill Watterson on School, Work, Art and Commerce
- Gizmo documentary on Google video
- Scans of 19th c. science book: “The World before the…
- And here’s to you, Lazy Robinson…
- Lazy Robinson video
- Cartoon & Comic Book Industry Obits for the Past 12…
- Sponsored Comics: Mildred the Zoo-Keeper’s Daughter
Monthly Archives: May 2007
700 Things: (Bunnies) #253 Bugsy Siegal
Here’s my contribution to the 700 Bunnies project from the larger 700 Things project.
Bunny #253: Bugsy Siegal.
Getting his start selling fermented carrot juice during prohibition, Bugsy Siegal’s activities soon spread out to other illegal ventures. The garden heists were bad enough, but it was his entry into the lucky rabbit foot trade that got him into serious trouble. With the law closing in on him, he high-tailed it out west, where, using his ill-gotten gains, he opened his casino, the Golden Carrot. It wasn’t long before his history caught up with him, though. He was found dead in his penthutch in 1949, strangled with his own ears.
Crumbling Paper: The Love of Lulu and Leander (1904) by F.M. Howarth (strip #7)
Here’s another example of F.M. Howarth’s strip The Love of Lulu and Leander from 1904. Click the image to read the strip.
You can see more examples of this strip (and many other classic comics) at Barnacle Press.
