1910s In Comics
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1910s In Comics
This is a timeline of significant events in comics in the 1910s. 1910 * January 24: The final episode of George Herriman's ''Gooseberry Sprig'' is published. * March 29 - June 29: Herbert Crowley draws ''The Wigglemuch''. * June 20: George Herriman's ''The Dingbat Family'' makes its debut, syndicated by the precursors of King Features Syndicate, appearing in Hearst newspapers. * July 17: The final episode of Grif's ''It's Only Ethelinda'' is published. * July 26: In the panel edge of ''The Dingbat Family'' by George Herriman a cat and a mouse who will later evolve into Krazy Kat and Ignatz Mouse make their debut. * September: George Frink's '' Slim Jim and the Force'' makes its debut. It will run until 1937 by other artists. * October: The final episode of Walt Kuhn's ''Whisk'' is published. * Tad Dorgan's '' Judge Rummy'' makes its debut. * The first issue of the Belgian satirical cartoons and comics magazine ''Pourquoi pas?'' is published. * Dutch illustrator David Bue ...
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1900s In Comics
This is a timeline of significant events in comics in the 1900s. 1900 * January 7: Carl E. Schultze's ''Foxy Grandpa'' makes its debut. It will run until 1939. * March 11: Frederick Burr Opper's ''Happy Hooligan'' makes its debut in the William Randolph Hearst, Hearst newspaper Sunday pages. * May 27: Frank Crane's ''Willie Westinghouse Edison Smith, the Boy Inventor'' makes its debut. * November 4: Gus Dirks' ''Latest News from Bugville'' makes its debut. It will run until 9 March 1902. * December: Richard F. Outcault's ''Poor Li'l Mose'' is the first comic strip to star a black character. The series will run until August 1902. * Johannes Franciscus Nuijens (Korporaal Achilles), a Dutch Catholic teacher, publishes the political comic book ''Aanleiding tot den Engelsch-Transvaalschen Oorlog'' (''Reason for the Boer War, English-Transvaal War''). * Arpad Schmidhammer draws the text comics, text comic ''Totentanz der Politik'', a satire on war politics starring the Grim Reape ...
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Judge Rummy
250px, One of the strips of the character (1920) ''Judge Rummy'' (also known as ''Silk Hat Harry's Divorce Suit'', ''Old Judge Rumhauser'', and ''Judge Rummy's Court'')Judge Rummy, Silk Hat Harry, etc.
at Don Markstein's Toonopedia; by Don Markstein; published 2007; retrieved January 24, 2019
was an American by published from 1910 until 1922. It featured an

Ernest Riebe
Ernest Riebe was a German-American cartoonist and a member of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), who was known for the slapstick humor he used in his comic strips. He is best remembered for his comics series ''Mr. Block''. Biography Early years He immigrated to the United States in the early 20th century from Germany, and not much is known about his early and later life. However, it is known that he worked for the Spokane ''Industrial Worker'' in 1912, and until 1922, IWW publications issued his work. For at least a decade, Riebe helped the IWW, and it is assumed he lived in Minneapolis and possibly later in Chicago. Career Ernest Riebe worked as a cartoonist for ''The Industrial Worker,'' a weekly newspaper published by the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW). His most famous work was Mr. Block. On November 7, 1912, Mr. Block first appeared in the ''Industrial Worker'', a newspaper owned by the IWW, and the comic strip was also published in ''Solidarity (newspaper), ...
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