Super I.T.C.H » 2010 » December
Get these books by
Craig Yoe:
Archie's Mad House Krazy Kat & The Art of George Herriman: A Celebration
Archie's Mad House The Carl Barks Big Book of Barney Bear
Archie's Mad House Amazing 3-D Comics
Archie's Mad House Archie's Mad House
Archie's Mad House The Great Treasury of Christmas Comic Book Stories
Archie's Mad House The Official Fart Book
Archie's Mad House The Official Barf Book
Popeye: The Great Comic Book Tales of Bud Sagendorf Popeye: The Great Comic Book Tales of Bud Sagendorf
Archie: Seven Decades of America's Favorite Teenagers... And Beyond! Archie: Seven Decades of America's Favorite Teenagers... And Beyond!
Dick Briefer's Frankenstein Dick Briefer's Frankenstein
Barney Google: Gambling, Horse Races, and High-Toned Women Barney Google: Gambling, Horse Races, and High-Toned Women
Felix The Cat: The Great Comic Book Tails Felix The Cat: The Great Comic Book Tails
Klassic Krazy Kool Kids Komics The Golden Collection of Klassic Krazy Kool KIDS KOMICS"
"Another amazing book from Craig Yoe!"
-Jerry Beck
CartoonBrew.com
Dan DeCarlo's Jetta Dan DeCarlo's Jetta
"A long-forgotten comic book gem."
-Mark Frauenfelder
BoingBoing.net
The Complete Milt Gross Comic Books and Life Story The Complete Milt Gross Comic Books and Life Story
"Wonderful!"
-Playboy magazine
"Stunningly beautiful!"
- The Forward
"An absolute must-have."
-Jerry Beck
CartoonBrew.com
The Art of Ditko
The Art of Ditko
"Craig's book revealed to me a genius I had ignored my entire life."
-Mark Frauenfelder
BoingBoing.net
The Greatest Anti-War Cartoons
The Great Anti-War Cartoons
Introduction by Nobel Peace Prize winner Muhammad Yunus
"Pencils for Peace!"
-The Washington Post
Boody: The Bizarre Comics of Boody Rogers
Boody: The Bizarre Comics of Boody Rogers
"Crazy, fun, absurd!"
-Mark Frauenfelder
BoingBoing.net
More books by Craig Yoe

Get these books by
Craig Yoe:
Archie's Mad House Krazy Kat & The Art of George Herriman: A Celebration
Archie's Mad House The Carl Barks Big Book of Barney Bear
Archie's Mad House Amazing 3-D Comics
Archie's Mad House Archie's Mad House
Archie's Mad House The Great Treasury of Christmas Comic Book Stories
Archie's Mad House The Official Fart Book
Archie's Mad House The Official Barf Book
Popeye: The Great Comic Book Tales of Bud Sagendorf Popeye: The Great Comic Book Tales of Bud Sagendorf
Archie: Seven Decades of America's Favorite Teenagers... And Beyond! Archie: Seven Decades of America's Favorite Teenagers... And Beyond!
Dick Briefer's Frankenstein Dick Briefer's Frankenstein
Barney Google: Gambling, Horse Races, and High-Toned Women Barney Google: Gambling, Horse Races, and High-Toned Women
Felix The Cat: The Great Comic Book Tails Felix The Cat: The Great Comic Book Tails
Klassic Krazy Kool Kids Komics The Golden Collection of Klassic Krazy Kool KIDS KOMICS"
"Another amazing book from Craig Yoe!"
-Jerry Beck
CartoonBrew.com
Dan DeCarlo's Jetta Dan DeCarlo's Jetta
"A long-forgotten comic book gem."
-Mark Frauenfelder
BoingBoing.net
The Complete Milt Gross Comic Books and Life Story The Complete Milt Gross Comic Books and Life Story
"Wonderful!"
-Playboy magazine
"Stunningly beautiful!"
- The Forward
"An absolute must-have."
-Jerry Beck
CartoonBrew.com
The Art of Ditko
The Art of Ditko
"Craig's book revealed to me a genius I had ignored my entire life."
-Mark Frauenfelder
BoingBoing.net
The Greatest Anti-War Cartoons
The Great Anti-War Cartoons
Introduction by Nobel Peace Prize winner Muhammad Yunus
"Pencils for Peace!"
-The Washington Post
Boody: The Bizarre Comics of Boody Rogers
Boody: The Bizarre Comics of Boody Rogers
"Crazy, fun, absurd!"
-Mark Frauenfelder
BoingBoing.net
More books by Craig Yoe

Archive for December, 2010

Saturday, December 25, 2025

Buster Brown’s Christmas

Below, from the 1907 collection, Buster Brown’s Latest Frolics, comes one of my favorite Buster Brown newspaper strips by Richard Felton Outcault — basically because it is an example of Outcault biting his own hand. Buster Brown was a highly merchandised character, and every one of the Buster Brown items shown in the below strip, was a real item you could order by catalog or buy in a store. Enjoy!

Click on the below pictures, to open versions large enough to read.

Merry Christmas!

Doug Wheeler

AdvertisingStrips Christmas Comics

Doug
Doug

Saturday, December 25, 2025

Cheerin’ Angst # 337

Craig spent a lot of time with Archie Andrews this past year preparing next summer’s big new history book on the Riverdale gang! The Groovy Agent “gets” the timelessness of Archie, too, and shares a number of early seventies Christmas stories today!

http://diversionsofthegroovykind.blogspot.com/2010/12/12-days-of-christmas-2010-step-into.html

Not really the most Christmas-y Christmas story of all time, but this Nick Fury, Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D. tale from 1968 certainly gets my vote for the best splash page ever-by Frank Springer and Johnny Craig!

http://mailittoteamup.blogspot.com/2010/12/25-days-of-christmas-extra.html

Here are the “lost issues” of Marvel Two-In-One, the 1970′s team-up title in which Ben Grimm teamed with a new character every month. What if they didn’t limit that to Marvel characters? See above.

http://braveandboldlost.blogspot.com/

Finally, after your holiday feast, settle down with some choice EC flavored Woodchips from Bhob Stewarts’s Potrzebie-complete with a side of X Minus One. The external links don’t seem to work for some reason but what’s right there on the site is tasty enough!

http://potrzebie.blogspot.com/search/label/stwallskull

Steven Thompson
booksteve

Saturday, December 25, 2025

Winsor McCay: Little Nemo, December 20, 2025

Merry Christmas!

Panel 1

Panel 1

Panel 2

Panel 3

Panel 4

Panel 5

Panel 6

Panel 7

Panel 8

Panel 9

Panel 11

Panel 12

David Donihue, GreatCaricatures.com
David Donihue, GreatCaricatures.com

Friday, December 24, 2025

Rankin’ Drinks # 336

Santa Claus Conquers the Martians was a low budget loser as a movie that became a great cult film. Here’s what may have been the only tie-in at the time of the original release-the comic book adaptation.

http://mailittoteamup.blogspot.com/2010/12/25-days-of-christmas_24.html

Here’s another sixties adaptation, this one a Gold Key showcase for the always welcome art of Dan Spiegle, here on the one and only issue of the now-forgotten Walt Disney TV character, Gallegher.

http://www.goldkeystories.com/2010/12/man-with-missing-finger.html

Back to the Christmas season again over at Pappy’s with a holiday-themed 1947story of Simon and Kirby’s Boy Commandos only here drawn by later Superman artist extraordinaire, Curt Swan.

http://pappysgoldenage.blogspot.com/2010/12/number-866-christmas-crime-comes-once.html

Finally today, here’s newspaper soldier Beetle Bailey taking Sarge home with him for a Christmas leave in an extended sixties sequence. We here at ITCH and Yoe Books wish a wonderful holiday weekend to you and yours!

http://pappysgoldenage.blogspot.com/2010/12/number-866-christmas-crime-comes-once.html

Steven Thompson
booksteve

Friday, December 24, 2025

The Happy Family Get Together

Click on the above picture, to open an enlarged version.

Another Victorian Age cartoon on the timeless joys of the holidays! I’m not absolutely certain on the artist, but the style matches that of Phiz (Hablot Knight Browne). From Judy magazine, December 22nd, 1869.

Merry Christmas!

Doug Wheeler

BritJudy Christmas Comics

Doug
Doug

Friday, December 24, 2025

Walt Kelly’s 1967 Pogo Christmas Card

Click here for yesterday’s post: Walt Kelly’s 1961 Christmas Card

1967 Pogo Christmas Card

1967 Christmas Card by Walt Kelly
Front
5 1/4" w x 4" h

1967 Pogo Christmas Card

1967 Christmas Card by Walt Kelly
Inside
8 1/4" w x 2 1/2" h

1967 Pogo Christmas Card details

 

Walt Kelly was creating Christmas Comics years before Pogo was syndicated. Some of his best stories are included in The Great Treasury of Christmas Comic Book Stories, available at Amazon.com, Barnes & Noble and other fine comic shops and bookstores. This handsome edition keeps the tradition of Christmas comics alive with a warm-hearted collection of classics from the 1940s and 50s by Kelly and many other artists.

Click here for BookSteve’s review!

 

David Donihue, GreatCaricatures.com
David Donihue, GreatCaricatures.com

Thursday, December 23, 2025

Manki’ sinkL # 335

Let’s all pretend that Jonah Hex movie didn’t exist. A friend has recently gotten me reading the Jonah Hex comics though, a series I had never really paid attention to previously….and they aren’t bad! Here’s some nice Dan Spiegle art on a holiday themed story.

http://diversionsofthegroovykind.blogspot.com/2010/12/12-days-of-christmas-2010-grooves-faves.html

I always love finding the creator biographies buried in the backs of old comics. They’re particularly prevalent in Silver Age DC comics. Here’s one of Mad’s master caricaturist, Mort Drucker.

http://sacomics.blogspot.com/2010/12/mort-drucker-bio.html

Mighty Mouse was a cartoon hero who had a long career in comics at various companies also but here, from 1955, is a wonderfully illustrated Mighty Mouse children’s Christmas book!

http://comicrazys.com/2010/12/22/mighty-mouse-santas-helper-chad/

Finally today, there’s more Sugar and Spike! This Christmas tale of Sheldon Mayer’s baby tornados would have been on the stands for my own very first Christmas back in 1959!

http://johnglenntaylor.blogspot.com/2010/12/sugar-and-spike-meet-santa-claus.html

Steven Thompson
booksteve

Thursday, December 23, 2025

Christmas Logic

Click on the above picture, to open an enlarged version.

Logic, by cartoonist Cuthbert Rigby, for Judge magazine, Christmas 1908.

Merry Christmas!

Doug Wheeler

JudgeMag Christmas Comics

Doug
Doug

Thursday, December 23, 2025

Walt Kelly’s 1961 Pogo Christmas Card

Click here for yesterday’s post: Walt Kelly’s 1960 Christmas Cards

1961 Pogo Christmas Card

1961 Christmas Card by Walt Kelly
Front
5 1/4" w x 4" h

1961 Pogo Christmas Card

1961 Christmas Card by Walt Kelly
Inside
8 1/4" w x 2 1/2" h

1961 Pogo Christmas Card

 

Walt Kelly was creating Christmas Comics years before Pogo was syndicated. Some of his best stories are included in The Great Treasury of Christmas Comic Book Stories, available at Amazon.com, Barnes & Noble and other fine comic shops and bookstores. This handsome edition keeps the tradition of Christmas comics alive with a warm-hearted collection of classics from the 1940s and 50s by Kelly and many other artists.

Click here for BookSteve’s review!

More Tomorrow …

David Donihue, GreatCaricatures.com
David Donihue, GreatCaricatures.com

Wednesday, December 22, 2025

W.H. Vanderbilt as Santa Claus: Episode 11, C.J. Taylor’s 1881-82 William Vanderbilt Comic Strips

What better way to celebrate Christmas, than with one of the Nineteenth Century’s real Scrooges — monopolist & stock market manipulator William H. Vanderbilt — performing a hostile corporate takeover of the North Pole, and displacing that red-suited socialist Santa Claus with a Kringle who understands how the “free”-market is better when controlled, manipulated, and best of all — not given away for “Free!”

And so, as our Christmas gift to you, we resume our presentation of artist Charles Jay Taylor‘s 1881-82 series of sequential comic strip adventures starring William Vanderbilt (for previous episodes, click here). Today’s installment — the eleventh strip in the series — is William H. as Santa Claus, published on the front page of the December 15th, 1882 issue of the (New York) Daily Graphic. The subject matter being poked at here, is that Vanderbilt, who controlled the train & subway systems of New York City, temporarily reduced the cost of a train fare to five cents for the holidays, and so was being parodied as a miser-Santa Claus (at this point, I guess, he’d already done so much bad, that he just couldn’t win with cartoonists or the public).

Click on the below pictures, to open versions large enough to read.

In the First Panel above, we see W.H. dressed as Santa Claus, entering a bedroom via the chimney, awakening/frightening fellow stock market manipulator Russell Sage. Sage exclaims, “Look here now, Bill, you can’t Nickel Plate me. Git!” Vanderbilt responds, “Well, if I don’t, Russell, Old Nick’ll plate you.”

In Panel Two, Vanderbilt points to a Christmas stocking, into which he’s stuffed “XMas: The Public B-” (in reference to his infamous “The Public Be Damned!” comment of two months earlier), adding, “I think the public got all they want this Xmas.”

Panel Three — referencing Vanderbilt’s famous Sept 1882 NYC horse race, we see Vanderbilt/Santa Claus attempting to gift his horse with “Condition Powder for Fast Time”, to which his (talking) horse tells him, “That won’t do me any good, Bill. If you want fast time don’t send me on the circuit — give me a private trial and let Eastman time me.”

Panel Four, in a double-reference to the horse race against rival Frank Work, and Vanderbilt’s train fare change, W.H.V. Claus is shown attempting to get his two race horses up to speed — “Get Up! You darling little reindeers — Santa Claus has got to get around among the boys this Xmas if it takes all Summer. Maybe my team don’t get along as quick in the same time as Work’s, but mine cost more.”

In Panel Five, Vanderbilt Claus, with his sack and brandishing shears, peeks over a wall labeled “Wall Street”, speaking to a group of lambs (Wall Street lingo for naive investors/suckers, to be sheared/swindled — click here for reference), saying to them, “Boys what you want this beautiful Holiday are overcoats. Might I suggest a Nickel Plater.” One lamb replies, “Lake Shore preferred, Bill.” (Lake Shore was one of Vanderbilt’s rail lines.) Another lamb, in reference to the practice of “watering stock” by falsely inflating its value with junk when selling it, says, “No more water in mine, William.”

Panel Six again refers to Vanderbilt’s “The Public Be Damned!” comment (made on a Chicago-bound train), while Panel Seven depicts W.H. as Capitalist Claus, stating “Talk about the Old Santa Claus making dolls, why I made 20,000,000 dolls” (meaning dollars) “myself this year. I always bring back my bag full while the other Claus empties his. Ta, ta!”

The large central panel depicts W.H. carrying a sack of “nickel plates” (his five cent train fares), a topic C.J. Taylor would take aim at again three days later, in the below December 18th, 1882 Daily Graphic cartoon.

Merry Christmas!

Doug Wheeler

NYDailyGraphic financial reform Christmas Comics

Doug
Doug

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