Stoker the Broker

Stoker the Broker is a cartoon gag panel by Henry Boltinoff which was distributed to newspapers from September 7, 1959 to 1985 by Columbia Features and the Washington Star Syndicate.[1][2]

Stoker the Broker
Henry Boltinoff's Stoker the Broker (April 12, 1975)
Author(s)Henry Boltinoff
Current status/scheduleConcluded gag panel
Launch dateSeptember 7, 1959
End date1985
Syndicate(s)Columbia Features (1960–?)
The Washington Star Syndicate (?)
Genre(s)Humor, finance

Characters and stories

Working in a style somewhat similar to the cartoons of Hank Ketcham, the prolific Boltinoff drew his stockbroker Stoker as a swell-dressed, balding chap with a white mustache and a distinguished demeanor. He interacted with buyers, sellers and his wife. In one cartoon, Stoker was revealed to be a grandfather.[2]

Designed with a narrow column width, the feature was formatted to fit on the financial pages of newspapers. Boltinoff sometimes used the same character in advertising cartoons.[2]

Awards

In 1981, Boltinoff received the National Cartoonists Society's Newspaper Panel Cartoon Award for his work on the cartoon series.[3]

gollark: No, I meant most of those things you could probably learn yourself. First aid you would likely benefit from in person teaching in but the rest is just "read the news" or "read a few pages explaining mortgages".
gollark: It is hard to know in advance whether you'll be interested in stuff which needs that several years later.
gollark: Yeees? I mean, I don't know how hard first aid is, but mortgages are trivial.
gollark: Anyway, maths is useful basically anywhere you'll need to analyze stuff quantitatively. Science, programming, engineering, finance, data science. School maths probably less so.
gollark: Your solution to a bad system is to make it involved in *more* important roles?

References

  1. Holtz, Allan (2012). American Newspaper Comics: An Encyclopedic Reference Guide. Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press. p. 367. ISBN 9780472117567.
  2. Apeldoorn, Ger. The Fabulous Fifties, June 20, 2011.
  3. National Cartoonists Society Awards
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