– Our first issue of Comic
Cuts, The National Comic weekly carried a cover date of May 19, 1934. It sold
for a nickel and had 24 pages of color comics. The front-page comic strip was
called ‘Simple Simon Scores Again This Week.’
How it happened is told here in
Jake Geller’s own words, recorded in personal interviews, and taken, with his
permission from the text of It’s Jake with Me, Geller’s unpublished
autobiography. His is the true story of Canada’s own comic book hero.
“My Windsor News Company handled a
series of English comic papers published by Lord Northcliffe’s Amalgamated
Press in London, England. Every so often, a gentleman from Detroit would show
up in my shop and buy 15 or 20 back issues of these papers. One day, out of
curiosity, I asked him what he did with them. He told me, “When I was a boy I
lived in Hamilton, Ontario. I used to read these English comics all the time.
There is nothing like them available in Detroit, so whenever I’m in Windsor I
pick up a few for my kids.”
“THAT GAVE ME an idea. I had my
brother Maurice take the rest of the back issues to Detroit and set them up at
a variety store which was located near a school. The papers cost two-and-a-half
cents each and we sold them to the retailer for three-and-a-half cents, giving
the retailer a cent-and-a-half profit on each five-cent sale. Boy were we ever
surprised when Maurice returned the following week. Every copy had been sold
and the storekeeper was clamoring for more.
Finally, it occurred to me that if
I bought the American rights to these strips, I could issue my own publication
and make it any size I wanted. I could also control the number of titles the
retailers would have to handle.
I APPROACHED Wilbert Smith,
president of Select Magazines, and asked him to be our national distributor in
the United States. He was enthusiastic. Harry Baker, a friend of mine from New
York, agreed to put up some of the money. We opened an office in New York and
started to hire our staff. We hired a couple of big names to begin with. A.F.
Cole joined us as our advertising manager from Popular Science, and Robert
Ament, the former art director of the late lamented New York World, was hired
as editor.
Our first issue of Comic Cuts, The
National Comic weekly carried a cover date of May 19, 1934. It sold for a
nickel and had 24 pages of color comics. The front-page comic strip was called
‘Simple Simon Scores Again This Week.’
You know, the World Encyclopedia of
Comics (edited by Maurice Horn, published in 1976 by Chelsea House) gives
credit for the first comic book where it isn’t due. Look at this.” Geller takes
the book down from his shelf and reads, “In May 1934 the Eastern Color Printing
Company issued the first comic book, Famous Funnies, a monthly (Geller again
repeats ‘monthly’) collection of newspaper strip reprints.” There is no mention
of Geller. Or of Comic Cuts.
GELLER CLOSES the book and says,
“Why, we were a weekly. And we had six issues out before they were ever on the
stands!
“You know who Eastern Color
Printing was. They were the first printer we contacted for a price quote to
print Comic Cuts. We didn’t go with them because they were in New England. Instead
we chose a printer in Buffalo. But they sure must have liked the idea.
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