Saturday, January 4, 2014

Morty Comix # 2685












Mortry Comix # 2685 was slipped into a gap between the floor molding/trim and the wall in a dark corner in the upper loft of the dining area of Centralia's Olympic Club. My grandfather, Bryan McDowell, pretty much made this joint his second home back in the 1930s-1950s. He basically "owned" a pool table that was closest to the big woodstove.

The Ronald Reagan Song


Before Ron the Con took office
I never saw people standing on offramps
With little cardboard signs

Rube Goldberg on National Public Radio


[Above: co-author Paul Tumey with The Art of Rube Goldberg]

Nice coverage by our favorite radio network, National Public Radio, on the new book The Art of Rube Goldberg.

Here's the Link!

Unidentified

Printed: Sherer, Dodge City, Kansas

The Bleus Sing Bacharach

The John Tyler Song


John Tyler was a guy
Who didn't like to fly
Fortunately for him
The airplane had not been invented yet

Ellen Snyder

Printed: Wm. Echelberry, Casey, Ill.

The young woman on the left is my great-grandmother, Ellen Snyder, the compiler of this album. This looks like it was taken before she married Ben McDowell in 1879.

caricatureboy Sings Bacharach

The Jimmy Carter Song


God bless you, Jimmy Carter
You're the best ex-president
This country's ever had

Favorite Movie Quotes: Tin Men


"Yeah, a lot of good times. You can't eat good times."

Friday, January 3, 2014

Phone photo 3117


Centralia, Washington

Allie Miller



Handwritten on verso: Allie Miller

Printed on front: Stevens, Chicago, McVickers Theatre Bldg., Extra Finish

Printed on verso: Children's Pictures a Specialty, J.K. Stevens & Son Co., Portraits, McVicker's Theatre Building, Chicago. Duplicates can be had at any time.

Phone photo 3116

Centralia, Washington

Wednesday, January 1, 2014

Phone photo 3115

Chehalis River, Grays Harbor County, Washington

Favorite Movie Quotes: Todo sobre mi madre = All About My Mother

"Well, as I was saying, it costs a lot to be authentic, ma'am. And one can't be stingy with these things because you are more authentic the more you resemble what you've dreamed of being." 

[Reviewed in Cheaper by the Dozen 43]

Phone photo 3114

Chehalis River, Grays Harbor County, Washington

The William Henry Harrison Song


William Henry Harrison
Was really really old
His Inaugural Speech took forever
And he caught a cold

A self-important windbag
His words, they over-runneth
The cold developed into Death
And he served for only one monneth

Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Unidentified



Unidentified.

Printed on verso: J.A. Boston, Photographer, Galleries At Durango, and Silverton, Col. Negatives retained for future orders.

Kevin Camp Sings Bacharach


His second time here. I like his delivery. One man, one guitar, pure and simple.

Check out his YouTube page. Incredibly prolific and an intriguing progression.


The George H.W. Bush Song


George H.W. Bush is still alive
But in a pretty bad way
He never got my vote
But I'm going to give him a pass
And wish him well.

Intro to Mini Comix by Blake!


[Above: Blake shows a photo of the legendary Clay Geerdes as portrayed in the Michael Dowers book, Newave!]

Our old friend Blake has just released a 35 minute introduction to minicomix on YouTube.

It is quite an experience to see a comix movement one was a part of be treated as an exciting period in comic art history. Blake tracks the Newave Comix movement from the comix ancestors of the 1960s up to the 1980s.

To this day I still proudly classify myself as a Newave Cartoonist.

Go Blake! Thank you for recognizing the importance and spark of our comix genre!

Update: Blake follows this up with an addendum: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jamUb7Grhc0

Unidentified


Unidentified

Printed: Wiker, Amethyst P.O., Creede, Colo.

Intriguing medallion on his vest.


Whistler Sings Bacharach


Monday, December 30, 2013

The McDowell Brothers?

Unidentified

Printed: M.E. Chase, Ouray, Colorado

So here's the story I was told about the McDowells. The Pater familias was one Walter McDowell, born in Venango County, Pennsylvania in 1811. He earned his living making hats and gloves. As he made his way West, through Ohio, then to Casey, Illinois, he married at least four times and each marriage resulted in children.

My line connects to marriage # 3, with Kiziah Jane Albright. That union produced two children, my great grandfather Benjamin F. (born in Casey in 1858), and his sister Ruth "Mamie" (born 1867).

Kiziah died shortly after Ruth's birth. Not long following, Walter married a fourth time.

At some point in the 1880s, according to legend, the large family had some kind of major fight. Walter, now widowed again, and some of the adult children were said to have migrated to Oklahoma and Texas where they became cowboys. Ruth married into Choctaw culture. Walter died in the Chickasaw Nation, Indian Territory, in 1892.

Meanwhile, the other half of the family moved to Ouray, Colorado and became silver prospectors. The brothers who moved there were John, Henry, Joseph, Ben, and Walter Jr.

Ben McDowell was said to have struck it rich two or three times, and lost everything at the gambling tables. He deserted the family in 1896 and lived out his life in Cripple Creek, Colorado, site of the last great gold rush in the lower 48, where he made a living sharpening tools. He died in 1910.

My Mom recalls being told this photo depicts the McDowell brothers, with my great grandfather possibly being the guy standing in the upper left. But she isn't 100% sure.   


Morty Comix # 2684











Morty Comix # 2684 was left in a stack of broadsides advertising an event in celebration of The King's birthday. They were on a counter at a coffee bar at the entrance to a downtown Olympia, Washington grocery store.

Here's a LINK to the Elvis Dash if you are interested. Looks like a fun photo op!

Phone photo 3113


Buster and Charlie

The Martin Van Buren Song


Martin Van Buren's first language was Dutch
His favorite game was politics
He loved it very much

He was so ambitious
His feet were a-itchin'
He was America's first modern politician

Ol' Marty always said he worked for the public good
Problem was
No one knew where he stood

It probably would've helped him
If his positions had been firmer
Maybe the voters might not have made him
Another single termer