Dec 22, 2012

Jack Cole's Second DEATH PATROL From Military Comics 2 (1941): A New Paper Scan!


 THE 12 DAYS of COLE-MISS: 
 DAY 9 


 12 days of NEW Jack Cole finds! 
 Posted every day until Dec. 25th 

Earlier this year, in a moment of temporary insanity, I bought a low-grade copy of Military Comics #2, which features the second Jack Cole Death Patrol story. Currently, there's no good scan of this issue in circulation. I've written about this morbid, screwball back-up feature of Cole's in previous postings. Overall, the Cole Death Patrols rank among the most accelerated and nutty comics he ever did -- perhaps because he was cramming 15 page stories into 6 pages.

As a special holiday treat, here's a nice paper scan of Jack Cole's Death Patrol story from Military Comics #2 (September, 1941). Enjoy!








Check back tomorrow for more rare Cole finds!

Season's Bleatings,
Paul Tumey




The 12 Days of Cole-Miss Postings to Date:

Days 1 and 2: Jack Cole's Sexy Playboy Style Humorama Cartoon Covers (1950-60s)

Day3: A Rare Jack Cole Playboy Style Cutie Pie Cover (1956)

Day 4: Teasing Blonde Triplets and Mad Japanese Spies (Private Dogtag 1944)



Day 5: Stretching to Playboy: Two Rare Jack Cole Judge Cartoons (1936, 1946)




Day 6: Jack Cole Sells Silk to the Burlap Market (1955 gag cartoon)


Day 7: Two More "Lost" Jack Cole Cartoons (1955)

Dec 21, 2012

More New Jack Cole Gems From 1955


 THE 12 DAYS of COLE-MISS: 
 DAY 8 


 12 days of NEW Jack Cole finds! 
 Posted every day until Dec. 25th 

Presenting two more dusty gems from Jack Cole's 1955 appearances in H-K Publications. For the dope on H-K, and more of these great cartoons, check out my previous COLE-MISS postings from the last few days here and here.

One thing that I appreciate so much about these cartoons is the delicate line work. Comics master Alex Toth visted Jack Cole at Quality Comics. Just a youngster, Toth was allowed to sit with Cole as he inked a Plastic Man cover. Toth remembered that Cole used a very thin brush, and had a remarkable facility with it. You can see Cole's skill with a brush in these cartoons.
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Appeal: If there's anyone out there who would like to plug this 12 Days of Cole event, please feel free! Currently, there's been a low number of hits per post and only one comment (which I appreciate)  -- so I think these new finds are remaining largely undiscovered. 
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Aside from the high quality of the line work, Cole's cartoons are delightfully offbeat in their choice of subject matter. 

The first of today's offerings deals with the see-saw nature of life as it pertains to parenthood. One moment, a child is being annoying -- the next, you want him to tug on your shirt! One of 100 or so cartoons in the March, 1955 issue of Smiles, Cole's cartoon is the only one to present a child.

From Smiles - March, 1955 (Collection Paul Tumey)

Our second lump o' Cole for your Xmas stocking deals with the fantasy/reality dichotomy of the television experience -- something that was evident to Jack Cole, even in the early days of television.

From Smiles - March, 1955 (Collection Paul Tumey)

Tomorrow - a change of pace as I share a BRAND NEW paper scan of a classic Jack Cole story from a comic book that sells for over $3,000 in near mint condition.

Dec 20, 2012

Two More "Lost " 1955 Jack Cole Cartoons


 THE 12 DAYS of COLE-MISS: 
 DAY 7 


 12 days of NEW Jack Cole finds! 
 Posted every day until Dec. 25th 

Here's two more previously unknown Jack Cole gems! These both appeared in the pages of 1955 cartoon and joke digests published by H-K Publications. These digests are filled with sub-par cartoons. Cole's elegant, offbeat cartoons stand out from the pages of these bottom-tier pulps like M&Ms in trail mix. It seems that H-K bought a lot of material from Bill Wenzel in 1954-55, including painted cartoons for their covers. Wenzel's work is competent, and times has a certain something. Aside from Wenzel, the remainder of the H-K stable of girlie gag cartoonists have little to offer. Here's a cover by Wenzel:


A typical Bill Wenzel cartoon for the 1950s H-K humor digests

Behind this cover, from March, 1955, we find this Jack Cole beauty -- a paper scan from my own collection:

A Jack Cole cartoon from Smiles - March, 1955
(Collection Paul Tumey)

This is hardly the subject matter Wenzel cover leads you to expect to find inside. In fact, one of the delights of Cole's H-K cartoons is how a great number of them have diverse subjects and situations -- almost like they were done for other others and then  -- after rejection -- sold here, to an editor who knew quality when  she or he saw it.

It bears noting that the above cartoon is yet another example of Jack Cole depicting suicide in his work. It's also worth noting that the layout is similar to the cartoon I shared yesterday. Here it is again, for a quick comparison:


Both cartoons are caption-less and show tiny people facing something large and daunting, perhaps the way Cole felt at shifting gears in his career. In both cases, you first see the huge object -- a house, or a charging elephant -- and then you peer at the diminutive figures and see the jokes. This creates a clever, delayed-effect reaction that stretches the gag out, and encourages you to look closer and perhaps reflect for a moment.

The elephant cartoon from the March, 1955 issue of Smiles is one of an incredible nine cartoons in that issue by Cole. I'll be sharing the rest of this lot over the next few days. It is interesting to observe that the March, 1955 issue of Smiles sister publication, Mirth, featured 12 Jack Cole cartoons (see them here)  -- both issues presenting 21 Cole gems in one month! 

Here's a second H-K 1955 Jack Cole cartoon. This cartoon appeared two months earlier, in the January, 1955 issue of Smiles. It is the only Jack Cole cartoon in this issue.


A Jack Cole cartoon from Smiles, January 1955
(Collection Paul Tumey)

I must confess that the joke is lost on me. The only sense I can make of it is that the woman in the balcony seat is pleased that she has drawn attention from the performance to herself. The name, "Dagsted," is confusing, too... being a mysterious compression of Dagwood Bumstead's name. Perhaps there's a cultural reference to the name that would explain the gag. The cartoon looks a little naughty at first, before you read the caption, since it looks as if the people in the upper seats are peeing on the folks below!


The 12 Days of Cole-Miss Postings So Far:


Days 1 and 2: Jack Cole's Sexy Playboy Style Humorama Cartoon Covers (1950-60s)


Day3: A Rare Jack Cole Playboy Style Cutie Pie Cover (1956)
 
Day 4: Teasing Blonde Triplets and Mad Japanese Spies (Private Dogtag 1944)



Day 5: Stretching to Playboy: Two Rare Jack Cole Judge Cartoons (1936, 1946)




Day 6: Jack Cole Sells Silk to the Burlap Market (1955 gag cartoon)

Only 1,099 more shopping days until Xmas 2015,
Paul Tumey
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