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ecgt

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Everything posted by ecgt

  1. I mentioned Malcolm Ater and his Commercial Comics Company in my post about "Where There's Smoke..." Ater's output in the USA was very similar to the work of Ganes in Canada. One of the Ater books that caught me off guard is "It's Best to Know…About Alcohol" from 1961. Unlike "Where There's Smoke..." this was actually a collaborative effort from "The Alcohol and Dug Addiction Research Foundation of Ontario" and the "National Alcoholic Beverage Control Association" in the USA. These usually seem to be available on the market, but one sold cheap on eBay a couple of weeks ago. That seller (popculureplanet) actually took the time to post good quality pictures, which I will re-use here.
  2. Whereas governments and businesses tended to hire Ganes or McCarron to make comics (if they did not merely re-purpose American giveaways), some interesting one-off giveaways appeared during this era. Here is a particularly obscure comic that was published by the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen in 1968. Chances are no one here has seen one of these before. This comic was political in nature and was intended to convince the government and the public to prevent confederating a number of trade unions in Canada at the time. Here is "The Confederation Against Confederation" from my personal collection.
  3. Here is one of the most common of all giveaway comics from the era: "Electric Safety from A to Zap" was given away throughout North America by power companies and even Radio Shack. There are so many variants of this comic from the USA that it's hard to keep track. These were published in 1972 by a group called "Custom Comics." Here are examples from Manitoba Hydro and Ontario Hydro. It is likely that other Canadian variants exist. If you have one, I'd love to see it.
  4. Just as interesting to me is that "Down with blabbermouth Musso"speech bubble.
  5. If anyone's interested, here's a link to my post sharing some of the research I have been doing on Canadian giveaway comics from the 60s/70s.
  6. Colonel Sanders was so impressed by McCarron's comics for Ernie Edwards that he ended up commissioning two comics for himself. All of these KFC comics are incredibly rare, as they included coupons for KFC. If you find one, make sure that the coupons aren't missing!
  7. Here's probably my favourite Owen McCarron comic: "Colonel Ernie Comics" # 2. Ernie Edwards was a close friend of Colonel Sanders and was one of the first franchisees of KFC in Canada. He brought KFC to Halifax and by the time this comic came out had eight locations. He commissioned McCarron to create a comic for him in 1965. This follow-up was published in 1968 and is essentially a photo comic insofar as McCarron used head shots of Colonel Ernie and drew everything else. Ernie Edwards died in 2008 at age 91. His flagship KFC on Quinpool road still exists, though it has undergone several renovations since the 1960s. The "Abdominal" Snowman haunts my dreams Here are some pictures of the flagship KFC, as it existed when this comic came out:
  8. Binkly and Doinkel is where things start getting weird for McCarron. There is quite a bit of misinformation about this series floating around and even the GCD is messed up (I'll get around to fixing it when I have time). Binkly and Doinkel were featured in a series of PSAs on Canadian television and were created by puppeteer Noreen Young who would also create the children's show "Under the Umbrella Tree" in the late-1980s. Here is an example of a Binkly and Doinkel PSA from the early 1970s: There is some reference to Owen McCarron and Robin Edmiston creating a Binkly and Doinkel comic in 1970 called "The Binkly and Doinkel Earth Show," but I have yet to come across an example and cannot verify its existence. Instead, the first confirmed issue of Binkly and Doinkel was published by Comic Book World in 1974: The second issue of Binkly and Doinkel was released in 1978, this time from the Minister of Supply and Services Canada. It was subtitled "Haunting Signs." McCarron and Edmiston did not create issue # 2. Instead, the government commissioned fine artist Diane Desmarais to do the work. The finished product makes the protagonists look a bit more creepy than McCarron and Edmiston's work, but the big mistake here is that issue 2 spells the name Binkly as "Binkley," which has created confusion ever since. The final issue of Binkly and Doinkel was published in 1981. It appears to be by Comic Book World. If not ,it tries its hardest to emulate the work of McCarron and Edmiston. I have two copies of # 3 in my collection and they do not mention McCarron, Edmiston or Comic Book World. My gut says that this final issue was from McCarron and Edmiston, but there are definitely some design differences.
  9. Here's another McCarron comic from circa 1969: "Cap’n Bluenose Comics." This was published in conjunction with Nova Scotia's South Shore Tourist Association. There has been one available on eBay since last year with no takers: http://www.ebay.ca/itm/Original-Vintage-Comic-CAPN-BLUENOSE-1-nova-scotia-South-Shore-/272636958203?hash=item3f7a6dd5fb:g:0iYAAOSwHMJYCNh9 Only recently has a decent scan appeared on Comic Vine:
  10. Here's an image of an early Ganes mini comic from 1963 called the "B/A Football Guide." A few of these have appeared on used book sites and Etsy lately (after I had spent months searching for an example). This mini explains the rules of the Canadian Football League (CFL) using the likeness of Bud Grant, who had recently coached the Winnipeg Blue Bombers to another Grey Cup (his fourth and final one as coach). Grant would later coach the Minnesota Vikings to the 1969 NFL Championship (which, for football fans was the last NFL Championship prior to the AFL-NFL merger in 1970). Interestingly, this comic was published in conjunction with British American Oil. A sweet cross-over collectable and a piece of epic Canadiana!
  11. McCarron published several other comics during this era and I have a few in my collection that I will need to scan and post. There are at least a dozen that I have never seen and it is quite possible that there are more that I have not been able to document (same for Ganes). If you have scans of any Canadian giveaway comics from this era that I haven't posted, I'd love to see them. Now, cue the jokes about Canadiana and these silly looking books!
  12. McCarron also published three issues of "L'il Easy Saver" between 1969-1970 for Atlantic Wholesalers LTD. I only have a cover scan of issue # 3 from an old Mile High listing.
  13. I think that this is the final self-published McCarron book. "Co-op Encounters" was a giveaway from the Atlantic Co-op in the early 1980s and features collaboration with Stefan Haley. It explains the cooperative movement as told by space aliens. Very strange book.
  14. McCarron also worked for The Chronicle Herald newspaper in Halifax and published giveaways through the paper on occasion. He collaborated with political cartoonist Bob Chambers on a number of these (whereas his most frequent collaborator for the other comics on this list was Robin Edmiston). Here are several of these Chambers collaborations, as well as a Joseph Howe comic that was also given away from The Chronicle Herald. All of these are from my personal collection and have rarely been seen and I believe that there were a handful of others. Note that these are all very large, as they were folded with the newspaper.
  15. 1972's "Captain Enviro" features New Brunswick's only superhero to date. This was actually the subject of an academic article called "Rise of the Eco-Comics" by Mark McLaughlin in 2013. McLaughlin uses this as an example of how the Canadian government employed comics in order to promote certain agendas around environmentalism at the time. One of my favourite McCarron books.
  16. My notes suggest that this one is from 1965, but my gut say it is from the early 1970s. Here is "Aylmer 'Taste of Canada' Comics" from Aylmer Foods.
  17. In 1969, Comic Book World published "Auntie Litter" in conjunction with the Nova Scotia Department of Highways. A second issue followed in 1970, but I have never seen a copy.
  18. In 1972, Comic Book World published "Skoodi the Rabbit Comics," a promotional comic for Atlantic Skidoo LTD.
  19. Between Ganes and McCarron, I must admit that McCarron is my favourite. He was based in Halifax, Nova Scotia, which I have called home for seven years. His first comics were published under the imprint "Comic Page Features" in the mid-1960s. He would change his company's name to "Comic Book World" circa 1969. He was close friends with Stan Lee and would later go on to do the Marvel Fun and Games comics. At the time, he had a great amount of autonomy with Marvel and worked from home in Nova Scotia (when Lee had a tight leash on most of his other artists). Later on, he got into making colouring books for properties such as Shogun Warriors. One of his first books was "Reveen and Sons Unlimited" from 1965. I have been trying to source one for some time, but have yet to find one for sale at a reasonable price. Reveen was a popular mentalist/stage magician from Australia who toured Atlantic Canada continuously and later made the region his home base. After he died a few years ago, one of his sons took on the mantle and now tours as Reveen, while living in the province of New Brunswick.
  20. There are several other Ganes comics that I have never seen and at least one that I own that I will make scans of soon. One of the things I love about this era of Canadian giveaways is that some groups opted to import foreign giveaways to Canada instead of hiring Ganes or McCarron. Here's an example called "Where There's Smoke..." from 1963 by Malcolm Ater. A French version also exists. Notice that the only difference is the back cover and the Canadian vs. American Cancer Society emblem.
  21. Here's one that was posted in a sales thread on the boards last year from 1971 by "G Educators," which is definitely Ganes: "Smoking and Cancer." Who's the lucky boardie who ended up with this one?
  22. From 1966, "Radiation and Man." This one was also published in French as "Le Rayonnement et l'homme." I wish I owned this one.
  23. Yet another one I don't own (I don't have many of the Ganes comics). From 1963, "Our Forest Lands."
  24. Another one I don't own: "For Future Generations, The National Parks of Canada" from 1965.