Wednesday, May 06, 2026

From the Dick Buchanan Files: Dog and Cat Cartoons 1949 - 1966

Dogs and cats. Living together. Mass hysteria!

Courtesy of gag cartoon collector extraordinaire Dick Buchanan, here are twenty magazine cartoons about cats and dogs that he culled from his vast Greenwich Village-based clip file. 

 

Thank you and take it away, Dick!

--

DOGS AND CATS
(1949 – 1966)

Dogs and cats play a big part of the lives of many Americans.  Some folks like cats while others like dogs.  Some like both.  For what it’s worth, the Cartoon Clip File’s office pet is our goldfish, Benchley.

We laugh at our pets.  We’re never quite sure whether or not they laugh at us.


This time it’s our turn to laugh at them.  Here are some cartoons about our animal friends, the dog and cat . . .

DOGS


1.  HANK KETCHAM.  Collier’s, circa 1951.




2.  RAY HELLE.  The Saturday Evening Post  June 11, 1949.




3.  JACK TYRELL.  1000 Jokes Magazine  September – November, 1956.





4.  PHIL INTERANDI.  This Week Magazine  December 4, 1960.



5.  DICK SHAW.  Collier’s  May 20, 1950.




6.  BOB KRAUS.  1000 Jokes Magazine  Summer, 1951.




7.  JOHN GALLAGHER.  The Saturday Evening Post  March 30, 1957.



8.  VIRGIL PARTCH.  Collier’s  March 19, 1949.




9.  EDWIN LEPPER.  The Saturday Evening Post  November 2, 1963.




10.  VAHAN SHIRVANIAN.  The Saturday Evening Post  July 27, 1957.  






 CATS

1.  TED KEY.  Collier’s  December 16, 1950.



2.  GEORGE WOLFE.  American Magazine  August, 1950.



3.  BO BROWN. American Magazine  September, 1950.



4.  THE BERENSTAINS, JAN AND  STAN.  American Magazine  July, 1953.



5.  LARRY REYNOLDS.  Look Magazine  January 17, 1957.




6.  JOHN NORMENT.  The Saturday Evening Post  July 20, 1957.




7.  MORT WALKER.  The Saturday Evening Post  July 30, 1949.



8.  TOM HENDERSON.  The Saturday Evening Post  September 27, 1958.




9.  HERB GREEN.  The Saturday Evening Post  May 4, 1957.



10.  BILL HOEST.  The Saturday Evening Post  May 21, 1966.




  -- Edited from a blog entry that originally appeared on November 14, 2019.

Monday, May 04, 2026

From the Dick Buchanan Files: More 1960s Cartoons from PUNCH

Dick Buchanan has scanned in over a dozen great cartoons to share, this time from his collection of the British PUNCH magazine. Thanks and take it away, Dick:

---

More CARTOONS FROM PUNCH--1960’s

Here are a few more cartoons by those funny British chaps across the pond. These cartoons are clipped from issues published in the 1960’s.



LARRY. Terence Parkes’ minimalist approach and fluid style was often compared to his friend, Bill Tidy.   Punch July 17, 1968. 
  


ARNOLD F WILES. Punch February 16, 1966.



BERNARD HOLLOWOOD.  A Punch cartoonist since the early 1940’s, Hollowood became Punch editor in 1958. Punch May 25, 1966.




MICHAEL FFOLKES.  (BRIAN DAVIS) Versatile Punch cartoonist, his work also appeared in The New Yorker. Punch March 27, 1974.



BILL TIDY.  His comic strip The Fosdicks, a parody of The Forsyth Sage was a huge success. Punch September 13, 1967.



NICHOLAS BAKER. Punch July 5,1967


J.B. HANDELSMAN. Punch April 13, 1968.



JAN VAN WESSUM. Punch August 28, 1968.



HEATH. Punch December 13, 1967



LESLIE STARKE.  Starke’s impeccable brushwork also appeared in The New Yorker. Punch March 2, 1966. 



BRIAN COOKE. Punch February 16, 1966.



HARRY HARGREAVES. Hargreaves specialized in wordless cartoons featuring birds and other small animals.  Punch July 19, 1967.



MIKE WILLIAMS.  Punch May 29, 1968.



BILL TIDY.  Tidy was one of the founders of the British Cartoonist’s Association. Punch November 22, 1967.



NORMAN THELWELL.  One of Punch’s best, Thelwell published more than 1500 cartoons and 60 covers over his Punch career. Punch February 23, 1966.






-- This has been a rerun of a blog entry that originally appeared on November 7, 2017,

Friday, May 01, 2026

The Garden As of May 1, 2026


The garden as of May 1st. It’s still near freezing some nights, but summer will eventually make it here. Nothing planted in the raised beds just now, but I’m going to change that very soon.
 
The metal colanders are for vegetable scraps from the kitchen. They'll decompose and add nutrients.  This is in addition to refreshing the boxes with an alfalfa meal mix.
 
 

 
 
Bought some pansies over at McKenzie's Farm this morning.


 

Thursday, April 30, 2026

The Saturday Evening Post, February 28, 1959 UPDATED

From a post I made back in the first year of the blog. Here we go, paging through a Saturday Evening Post from 1959. Let's explore this world of 1950s duplicity and dullness. Below: a gag cartoon by John Albano in which a cross, angry bald man has inappropriately placed another fellow's wife on his lap.

Below: A good gag, although today the big boxer would sport tattoos and piercings. You do get the immediate sense of where his is (a boxing ring, natch!) even though the cartoonist (whose name I can't make out) is only showing 2 of the 4 corners.




The great Chon Day gives us this bizarre gag. Now, did the guy just walk out of the car and happen to open the hood and walk THROUGH the grill? I like how the background (grass, bush, mountains) are drawn in 4 lines and that's all you need for a feeling of place. Economy, kids; Mr. Day has it!

Below: an advertisement against Generic brands! Buy things made by large corporations with logos and Madison Avenue ad campaigns!




Bill Harrison's cartoons shows us the lovable dope of a husband that, to this day, is the staple for much middle-brow humor. I think that this is the same fellow who, in the same year as this issue of The Post, began Harrison Greetings.


Veteran gag cartoonist Edwin Lepper gives us one of those "the moment before chaos" cartoons. I like cartoons where you imagine what will happen in the next couple of seconds later. It may have been more fun to draw a couple of brawling brides, but the choice of this nanosecond before their mutual discovery was, I think, the funniest choice. The non-reaction from the groom is a nice touch.


Below: Some great wash effects. Cartoonist Kirk Stiles' wash efforts reminded me a bit of Jack Cole's brush work, and that's the best praise I got. The gag, though, is a bit silly.



A color ad below: This looks kinda like an anime version of a bee. It reminded me of the character design in the BEE movie that's opening this week which, like this 48 year old bee below, is similar and not pretty.


Below: Bob Schwartz Schroeter gives us "blogging" 1959-style. I like how the regular guys are all in shirt sleeves and "management" sports grey blazers. A subtle way of reinforcing the power structure that you need to perceive understand in this gag.


Stiles and Lepper and Schroeter are three cartoonists who have scant Web presence. I was not able to hyperlink any bio info.

Below: One of the most boring stories I have ever read, and I have to wonder why it saw the light of print. Dull, dull, dull. I said there was dull, and here it is. The only silver lining: It's a good excuse for nice illustration by Boris Drucker; a piece of art that conveys more action and mayhem than the actual story of these two farmers ever had ever, ever in a million, jillion eons.

I said there would be duplicity today (other than the gag with the 2 brides). Below: Echoes of that earlier cartoon by Chon Day! This is a good gag by Joe Zeis, but the fact that Day's similar gag precedes it cheapens the effect.


This being the Saturday Evening Post, the last cartoon you get on the inside back page is HAZEL by Ted Key. Looks like HAZEL has lost her license (probably a DUI conviction) and now must bank via one of the kids' bikes.




Orlando Busino, cartoonist extraordinaire, wrote an email back in 2007 when I posted this, and makes these corrections to my errors:

"The boxer gag on your blog whose signature was hard to read was done by Jeff Monahan and the cartoon attributed to 'Schwartz' is really Bob Schroeter's work. Bob was cartoon editor for the King Feature's Laff-a-day panel for quite awhile. Both cartoonist have passed away."


I thank him for graciously correcting my errors! Thank you, Orlando! And happy belated birthday, sir!