- UTRGV Recognized By ED As Among Schools ‘Doing The Most To Lift Students Up’
- Halloween is a Tradition That Dates Back Many Years
- Esteban Cabrera – December 26, 1945 – October 11, 2024
- Ready for District
- Harlingen Opens First Pump Track in South Texas
- ACE Flag Football
- La Feria ISD Hires Chief of Police for District
- Three Ways To Protect Migratory Birds This Fall
- Goodwill and the RGV Vipers Team Up for a Skills Camp
- Santa Rosa ISD Offers Law Enforcement Cadet Program
Back to Work
- Updated: January 15, 2016
Shrdlu our Office Cat has returned to work, as has all our help, and everything has returned to near normal.
Shrdlu is quite happy now that we’ve promoted him to editor. He doesn’t know why, but last week we had a colonel written up as a plain, ordinary, every day lieutenant. Also, we let a word or two get by that was not spelled too well. That’s the reason we’ve turned the job over to the cat. Nobody can bawl out a cat.
EDITOR’S NOTE: Shrdlu our Office Cat is a feature that ran weekly in the mid 1948 – 1949 editions of La Feria News. The feature ran in a one column section entitled “The Corner” which was used as a forum for small editorials and filler stories. The feature usually consisted of a small illustration with a humorous story.
Throughout the year we’ll be running the Shrdlu cartoons, as well as other vintage cartoons from our archives, as space allows.
We’re trying to discern the identity of the cartoonist that produced the Shrdlu feature, but haven’t been able to find very much information online.
At present our best guess is that it was a throwaway filler by cartoonist Nathan Collier.
According to Lambiek Comiclopedia: Collier was born in Orangeville, Illinois. He studied at the Acme School of Drawing and at the Lockwood Art School. He did cartoons for the Chicago Journal, as well as the feature ‘Our Own Movies’ (1920). His panel ‘Little Journeys to Yesterday’ alternated with ‘Wouldn’t It Make You Mad’. He did the comic strip ‘Kelly Kids’ around 1923 and cartoons for Life and Judge. In the 1930s, he made the panel ‘Can It Be Done?’ and the comic strip ‘The Professor’.
If any readers have any information on the identity of this cartoonist, please email us at [email protected].
This cartoon ran in the January 6, 1949 issue of La Feria News.