I understand that this image has to do with the tradition of greeting the new year by banging on pots and pans and generally making a racket, but I presume that both sailor-garbed primate and pneumatic drill were optional, particularly in times of scarcity.
Art by Stephen Douglas, from Famous Funnies 138 (Jan. 1946). FF number one (July, 1934) was likely the second comic book issued, and the first one *sold*. It was published by Eastern Color / Dell Comics.
Read the issue here: http://comicbookplus.com/?dlid=35200
And while we’re on the subject of ushering in the New Year by making a hellacious din, let’s treat ourselves to a couple of relevant Cul de sac pieces. The first returns us to the strip’s formative, watercoloured years, when it appeared weekly (2004-2007) in The Washington Post’s weekly magazine section.
The Washington Post Magazine, Dec. 31st, 2006. Richard Thompson: « From when Petey played the trombone, and I found it too hard to draw. » The master tackled the theme again in this brief sequence from Dec. 31, 2008- Jan. 1st, 2009.Nothing left to do now but to wish a joyful 2018 to all you monkeys and assorted critters!
– RG
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