Saturday Leftover Day.
Plenty more newspaper strip ads to go. Some of these are from newspaper sections I am currently selling on eBay. Look for my name 'geapelde'.
Camels was one of the longest running series of newspaper ads in the forties and fifties. They are now often accused of trying to sell cigarettes to kids, but that is based on the popular misunderstanding that a. comics are for kids and b. newspaper comics are for kids. That is not the case, certainly not in the forties and fifties. And these ads are not made to appeal to kids, they are for the whole family. So the tabacco industry did ads to sell cigarettes to the whole family. Which is bad enough.
As a contrast, here is a cigarette ad (and character) that was aimed at kids. He even got a comic book of his own.
And here is one that sort of sits in between. The art probably is by kids and teenage comic artist Bill Williams.
Here's one where they shamelessly tried to get kids to smoke pipe tabacco.
And since I seem to be doing cigarettes today, here are two more ads of one of the best series ever, by Lou Fine. Look out, though. They are numbered, so very addictive for collectors like me. I have about 60% of them and won't stop until I have them all.
Showing posts with label Bond Street. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bond Street. Show all posts
Friday, June 28, 2019
Tuesday, October 12, 2010
The Pipe Tobacco Girls Like To Kiss
Wednesday Advertising Day.
Recently, I bought a whole lot of interesting comic strip ads from the late forties and early fifties. Among them were these four Frank Robbins ads for Bond Street pipe tobacco, which seem to have appeard once every four weeks. Intrigued by the numbering (these four are numbers 18 to 21), I tried to find others on NewspaperArchive. For the earlier ones I found that #18 was indeed Robbins' first. For the later ones I found one more in October and none in November or December, but the September 17th issue of the papers that were running this ad series are both absent. So it seems, that after six episodes the series was ended. It's odd one tier format must have made it hard to place for newspapers.
1950-04-02:

1950-04-30:

1950-05-28:

1950-06-26:

1950-07-23:

1950-08-21:

1950-10-15:
Wednesday Advertising Day.
Recently, I bought a whole lot of interesting comic strip ads from the late forties and early fifties. Among them were these four Frank Robbins ads for Bond Street pipe tobacco, which seem to have appeard once every four weeks. Intrigued by the numbering (these four are numbers 18 to 21), I tried to find others on NewspaperArchive. For the earlier ones I found that #18 was indeed Robbins' first. For the later ones I found one more in October and none in November or December, but the September 17th issue of the papers that were running this ad series are both absent. So it seems, that after six episodes the series was ended. It's odd one tier format must have made it hard to place for newspapers.
1950-04-02:
1950-04-30:
1950-05-28:
1950-06-26:
1950-07-23:
1950-08-21:
1950-10-15:
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