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Malcolm Ater
and the Commercial Comics Company
by Tom
Christopher
copyright 2003
Malcolm Ater Sr was born in Jacksonville
Illinois in 1915. He got a
degree
from Jacksonville College and took Graduate courses at George
Washington
University. He was married in 1942 and fathered five
children.
He served in the Navy as an Ensign during World War Two, and
upon
discharge, worked briefly for what he later described as the only
company
packaging commercial comics in New York City. This may have been
M.C.
Gaines’ Educational Comics. He seems to have figured in that time
that he
could do the whole job himself, and tried to get a G.I. Business
Loan for
that purpose but was denied. Undaunted, in July 1946 he set up
Malcolm
Ater Productions in a ten dollar a month flat at 220 West 42 St
in NYC
with fifteen hundred dollars that can be assumed to have been
savings
or loans.
His
first comic was The History of Gas, 1947, done for the American Gas
Association.
It introduced the charming Miss Flame, telling the history
of gas
from its discovery by the Chinese centuries ago. Miss Flame was
subsequently
used as a gas industry trademark for over 20 years. Script
and
concept were by Malcolm Ater and art and character design by Jack
Sparling.
The 1948
Presidential elections were approaching and Ater, a Democrat,
approached
the Republican party offering to produce comicbooks for them.
“I
thought that if anybody needed comicbooks - and could afford them -
it was
the Republicans” , he reflected in 1950. Instead he was rebuffed
with the
criticism that the idea was ‘too undignified’. Ater took his
ideas to
the Democratic National Committee via an old friend and ex
employer
named V. Y. Dallman, who Ater had seen on television during the
Democratic
Convention in Philadelphia. Ater had
taken an overnight
train
from New York City and presented Dallman with the finished art to
The
Story of Harry S Truman. Dallman was
impressed and took Ater to the
Democratic
National Committee, who liked the idea well enough to
eventually
buy three million copies. There were doubtlessly obscure uses of cartoons
in local elections, but this was the first
use of a comicbook in
a state
or national election, and Jack Redding, Democratic publicity
head
asserted that the comicbooks may have strongly influenced the
election,
particularly in the close states. The
book is full sized
comic,
16 pages, full color with newsprint covers and known copies exist
with
both glue and saddle stich binding . It features script by Malcolm
Ater and
art by Jack Sparling.
The
Republicans would eventually get on the comics bandwagon and produce
their
own comic for Eisenhower and Nixon during the 1956 presidential election.
By 1950
Malcolm Ater Productions was called Commercial Comics Inc.,
though
both names were used through the years, and had offices at 1507 M
St NW,
Washington DC. By that time they had
produced political comics
for
Senator Scott Lucas (D-Ill, and majority leader of the Senate)
Connecticut
Governor Chester Bowles and Senator Brien McMahon,
Congressman
Al Loveland (D - Ia) and Arkansas Governor Sid McMath. They
had also
produced the stridently left wing magnum opus Joe Worker and
the
Story of Labor for the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO),
The
Story of Elpido Quirino (for President of the Phillippines) Joe, the
Genie of
Steel (for U.S. Steel), and America Under Socialism and they
were
about to make their cultural mark again.


Smokey the Bear, a real bear cub orphaned
in a forest fire, had been
used in a
series of ads by the National Forest Service and had proven
popular.
The Forest Service approached Ater about producing a comic and
the
result was 1950’s Forest Fire. This is a lovely book. The character
was
created by Rudy Wendelein, and that the art is by Wendelein and
Sparling.
Mr Wendelien is indeed a skilled cartoonist, with a style that
enables
him to render the cartoony Smokey and two small bear cubs (in
trousers
and a dress) next to their realistic animal chums and humans in
a
seamless manner. This is the first Smokey and predates the Dell series
by five
years. Smokey the Bear is the longest running advertising campaign
in the
United States.

Ater’s business was taking off. His
comicbook promotions had drawn such
attention
that others had begun producing political books. There was a
mini
scandal in 1950 when the United Labor League of Ohio commissioned
Elliot
Caplan to do an anti Robert Taft comic and many thought the work
to be
libelous (see endnote). Many newspapers and magazines took note of
the
proliferation of political comics, and Life Magazine reproduced some
panels
of Ater’s and others’ books in an
article that acknowledged Ater
as
originator of the political comic.
Elsewhere,
Ater contrasted his own business philosophy at the time:
“Tell the story of your candidate, but
mention the other guy as little as
possible.”
Ater’s
business continued to grow. During the
1950s he continued to
produce
political books with a circulation average of 650 or 700,000 and
industrial
books with an average circulation of one million copies. One
of the
more interesting from a collector’s standpoint was a government
sponsored
book on nuclear war, The H-Bomb and You (1955) this was
similar
to a 1951 color strip that ran on the front page page of the
Washington
Post in July 1951 titled If An A-Bomb Falls.
Also notable
was the
first Oral Roberts comic. The popular
faith healer, one of the
first to
take advantage of the new medium of television, was so
impressed
with Ater,s book, Healing For You, that he launched his own
imprint,Tele-Pix,
which produced 19 issues of Oral Roberts True Stories.
In 1943,
before Ater’s entrance into the promotional comics field, the
industry
had produced 20 titles. Print runs totaled 9 million copies
generating
$250,000 worth of sales. By 1951, 120 books were produced for
a
combined print run of 100 million copies, generating $2 million in
sales,
and it was estimated that 1952 sales would top $3 million for 180
million
copies of almost 200 titles. Prices for commercial customers
were
estimated at 2.25 or 2.50 cents a copy for press runs of 500,000.
Half of
the costs went to printing and paper, 30% for script and art,
and the
remaining 20% was profit.
Ater
sold the concept of the books originally, but as his business grew
he was
usually approached by customers to develop comics. He worked
directly
with his clients, writing the strips from their biographies or
promotional
material. Malcolm Ater was a good
commercial writer. His
dialogue
is clear and simple. He organizes information well and has a
real
grasp of the structure of a comicbook page. He was conscious of the
visual
appeal of his work and in a 1950 interview spoke of moving away
from a
traditional comicbook style. After completing the script Ater
farmed the
artwork out to one of several artists, one of whom was Jack
Sparling,
a relative by marriage. Malcolm then published the books and
delivered
them to his clients for distribution.
In 1960
Ater traveled to Alabama to meet with George Wallace, who was
running
for governor. By Malcolm’s retelling, Wallace leaned across his
desk and
stated “I donユt see how a damn Yankee like you
can come down
here to
Alabama and help me get elected.” Ater replied “Well, Judge, if
you’ll
recall, I came down here a few years ago and worked for John
Patterson
and helped defeat you!” Wallace and he
became friends and the
result
was the comic Alabama Needs the Little Judge, George Wallace for
the Big
Job. This book is pro segragationist and in it Wallace promises
to send
“back north every freedom rider, sit-in, and every other
troublemaker”
sent by NAACP.


Pro segragation books were also prepared
for other Southern candidates
and
these are noted in the publications list. These books typically give
a nod to
ideas of ‘Southern tradition’ along with more strident
statements
such as being anti beatnik, anti goon and anit NAACAP
During
the 1960s the business continued to grow, and Ater became the
commercial
agent for Publishers Hall Syndicate and was working with
their
well known characters such as Dennis the Menace, Mark Trail, BC,
Andy
Capp and Rex Morgan, MD.
Under
this contract, Ater produced the popular Dennis the Menace Takes a
Poke at
Poison (1961, with a completely redone second version in 1981),
and
eventually twenty million copies were printed.
This was a very
influential
book, and Ater was told by the Department of Agriculture,
which
had commissioned it, that they believed it to have been an
extremely
valuable educational tool.
During this
time Publishers Hall approached him with a plan to put
$250,000
into his business and put their salesmen out on the road to
promote
his product, but Ater declined, preferring to keep control of
his
business. “I donユt want to become a millionaire” he
said.
During
the 1960ユs the purely political work became
less popular and the
bulk of
his work became more informational and funded by the federal
government. This trend continued into the 1970s with the
production of
books
such as Think First of Your Unborn Child (Rex Morgan, MD
introduces
foetal alcohol syndrome), It”s Best to Know....About Alcohol,
Teenage
Booby Trap and What if They Call Me Chicken (both anti drug).
There
were numerous cancer awareness books for the National Cancer
Society
and even the mischievous Dennis the Menace turned ‘relevant’ for
the
National Center on Child Abuse and Neglect’s Dennis the Menace
Coping
with Family stress.

This change in content and funding was
fine with Ater as he’d come to
see
politicians as hypocrites, though he still enjoyed the friendship of
George
Wallace, who by this time had pragmatically and honestly recanted
his
racist views and was seen by Ater and many others as a straight
shooting
realist.
During
the 1970s Ater produced The President’s House, a slick magazine
given
away to White House visitors during the Ford and Carter
Administrations. This was the only venture into non comics
publishing
He did,
and it was similar to his 1956 comicbook Visiting Washington,
which
was handed out as a travel guide by congressmen and senators to
visiting
constituents.
In 1971
Commercial Comics had twenty books in print. Ater was the
president,
director, board of directors and owner of a company making
about
$100,000 a year. He was the only full time employee, but he
employed
an additional staff of five artists and eight clerical workers
on a
freelance basis. At that time he was in the process of reducing his
hourly
work week from 80 to about 30
During
the 1980s he continued to produce comics, one of which was
commissioned
by the Central Intelligence Agency to be air dropped over
the
island of Grenada during America’s 1983 invasion of that country.
The CIA
had to distance itself from the project and neither their name
nor that
of Commercial Comics appears on the book.
When Ater was to
pick up
a check for production costs he was told by his CIA contact to
meet at
a pre arranged place in Washington DC. Ater the meeting he and
the
agent got into a taxi where he was given a suitcase filled with
$35,000
cash.


Also during this time he produced the
comic Madonna on Aids, which was
commissioned
by the rock star and given away at concerts.
Malcolm
Ater published comics until his death on 10 May 1992. He was
remembered
as a dignified man of high standards, who thought it awful,
as many
of his generation did, when his children started wearing jeans
in the
1960s, but he was also remembered as someone who was equally at
ease
hosting a formal party of politicians or a cook out for
professional
baseball players.
He should
also be recorded as the man who created the political
comicbook,
the first Smokey the Bear comic and one of the most
reproduced
comics ever. In a 40 year period
Malcolm Ater wrote and
produced
almost 80 comicbooks that propagandized and informed, and may
well
have influenced the course of democracy in the United States.
Robert Alphonso Taft (1889 - 1953) was the
son of William Howard Taft,
the 27th
president. Elected to the US Senate in
1938 after serving in
the Ohio
legislature, he was reelected in 1944 and was known as Mr
Republican
because of his influence as a policymaker.
He was the
co-author
of the Taft Hartley Act, a continuation of the National Labor
Relations
Act, which limits the rights of organized labor to strike if
the
public health is involved, bans closed shops, secondary strikes and
featherbedding.
He had been a strong contender for presidential
nomination
in 1940 and 1948.
In 1950
he was up for re election, and The United Labor League of Ohio
hired
cartoonist Elliot Caplin to do an anti Taft comicbook. The
simplistic
stereotype of J. Phinneas Moneybags and his cohorts plotting
to keep
Taft in office was offensive to many, and the book was described
as
libelous and a piece of character assignation.
On 31
August 1950 The New York Times noted that several persons had
distributed
the comic during one of Taftユs
speaking engagements. Taft
supporters
destroyed several copies on the spot, throwing the pieces
back to the
demonstrators, and Taft mentioned the incident in a speech,
declaring
that the democrats were resorting to lies and
misrepresentations
to keep him from reelection.
Taft was
reelected in 1950 and in 1952 was the leading Republican
contender
against Eisenhower for the Republican presidential
nomination.
COMICBOOKS PRODUCED BY
MALCOLM ATER’S
7
x 10, 16 pages
Truman for President (1948.
First political comic)
The Story of Al Loveland,
Candidate for the U S Senate
The Story of Elpido Quirino (for
President of the Phillippines)
published
in English, Tagalog, Cebuano, Ilocono and Ilongo) Rare
Escuela de Traidores (Spanish
language anti communist) Rare. Not
intended
for USA distribution. Possibly a CIA or USIA book
5
x 7, 16 pages
(pro segragation)
J Millard Tawes for Governor (Maryland)
Re Elect America’s Number 1 Senator, Paul
H Douglas (Illinois)
Let’s Keep Alford in Action in Arkansas (Pro
Segragation)
Robert B Meyner
(Unusual in that it names oponents and their connections
to
organised crime. Murder scenes, etc)
Alabama Needs John Patterson for Governor (Pro
Segragation)
Patterson for Alabama (Pro
Segragation)
Let’s Get Things Done for Kansas, Elect
Robert Ellsworth to the U S
Senate
Governor Dennis J Roberts, the Man Whoユs Done the Most for Rhode Island
The Truth on Hume, At Last! The True
Story on the Democratic Candidate
for Governor
It’s Time for Bryant
(Florida) Pro Segragation
It’s Time for Bagwell
(Michigan) Anti Segragation
A Man Named Stevenson
(Democratic Presidential, 1952)
Louisiana Needs Chep Morrison (Pro
Segragation)
You’ll Be The Winner with William Winter (Pro
segragation, Anti Beaknik
and
Goon. Shows Anti War Protestors. Late 1960s?)
The Man Who Beat Hoffa, Des Berry (Texas)
Wayne Morse, the Man
Elect Robert F Ellisworth to the U S
Congress
A Man of Action, Elect Maurice ‘Footsie’
Britt Lt Governor (Louisiana)
For One United Sunshine State, Elect Bud
Dickinson Governor (Florida)
Elect David Clark, Democratic Candidate
for Congress (Washington D C)
El Gobernador Que Se Ocupa
(Richard Hughes for Governor of New Jersey,
Spanish
version)
In
addition there are references in company files to comics for the
following
candidates, but the full titles and format are unknown:
Harrison A Williams, Senator, New Jersey
Robert B Meiner, Governor, New Jersey
Charles P Howell, Senator, New Jersey
Average print
runs of political comics were 700,000
7
x 10, 16 pages
History of Gas, Through the Ages with
MIss Flame (American Gas
Association,
1947) First appearance of Miss Flame. Scarce
Christmas is Coming (Commercial
Comics, 1948) done as a promotion for
the
company. Some overstock distributed years later through Toys R Us in
Washington
DC, with store stamp
Meet the New Post Gazette Sunday Funnies. (1949)
Announcing the addition
of a Sunday
comics supplament, with new art by many top cartoonists,
including
Gould, Montana, Wunder, Siegal and Shuster, Yagar, Messick and
others.
Rare
Joe Worker and the Story of Labor
(Congress of Industrial Organizations,
1948 -
1950.) Rare, 48 pages. Stridently left wing. Anti segragation,
has KKK
scenes, depictions of Anti Catholic lynching, black lynching,
underground
railroad, etc, and shows racial cooperation as an asset in
winning
World War Two, and portrays racial integration as an essential
expression
of American freedom
America Under Socialism (1948 -
1950) Rare
Joe, the Genie of Steel (U S
Steel, 1950) Scarce
Forest Fire (First
Smokey the Bear, 1950) Scarce
The Return of Joe, the Genie of Steel (U S
Steel, 1951)
If an A-Bomb Falls (U S
Government, 1951, 8 pages) Rare. Designed as a
brochure,
but only published as a color strip on the front page of the
Washington
Post in July 1951. Only a few hand bound copies of the
brochure
were made. 2 copies are believed to exist
The Conquest of Hunger
(National Fertilizer Association, 1951)
Scarce.
Small
print run
Safe Breaks Save Lives (Wagner
Electric Corp, 1951 or 1952)
Jack and Chuck Learn the Hard Way (Wagner
Electric Corp, 1952 or 1953)
From Goodwill Industries a Good Life
The Will To Win
(Goodwill Industries)
Happiness and Healing For You (Oral
Roberts, 1956, slick covers)
Seeing Washington
(Commercial Comics, 1956 or 1957). Done for newsstand
distribution,
print run was 100, 000, but with 15,000 copies sold in 10
days,
American News Company, the distributor, closed shop. Remaining
copies
sold to U S Legislators for distribution to visiting
constituents)
Knowingユs Not Enough (U S
Steel, 1956)
Copper...The Oldest and Newest Metal (Copper
Development Association,
1959,
also in Spanish)
Dennis the Menace Takes a Poke at Poison (U S
Dept of Agriculture, 1961,
with a
complete revision in 1981. Eventually 20 million copies of this
book
were produced)
It’s Best to Know...About Alcohol (Alcohol
and Drug Addiction Research
Foundation
of Ontario, 1961)
New Uses for the Good Earth
(Mined-Land Conservation Conference 1962)
Where There’s Smoke
(American Cancer Society, 1963.) there were 24 press
runs for
a total of 15,300,000 copies. Early runs had back cover ads of
non
smoking athletes, including Bobby Richardson, Bill Russel. Athletes
were
changed in 1972, and none at all in last press runs.
Where There’s Smoke
(Canadian Cancer Society, 1963) Back cover has
Canadian
athletes
Il n’Ya Pas De Fumme
(Canadian Cancer Society, 1963) Where Thereユs
Smoke,
for distribution in Quebec
Donde Hay Humo
(American Cancer Society, 1966) Spanish version of Where
There’s
Smoke
It’s Time for Reason, Not Treason
(Liberty Lobby 1967) 4 pg, promoting
patriotism
during the Viet Nam War, and exposing unscrupulous
industrialists
trading with our enemy. Scarce
Ladies...Wouldn’t it be Better To Know?
(American Cancer Society, 1969)
What if They Call Me Chicken? (Anti
Drug, Kiwanis International, 1970,
with a
second version with scrip and art updates in the early 1980s.
Both have
Jack Sparling art)
Danny and the Demon Cycle (Safety
Division of VIrginia, slick cover,
1972)
Bicycle safety
Andy Goes to the Park (Andy
Capp, National Park Service,1975)
Taking a Chance...With No Chance to Win
(American Cancer Society, 1976)
Coriendo Un Reisgo Sin Oportunidad De
Ganar, (American Cancer Society,
1976)
Spanish version of Taking a Chance
Think First About Your Unborn Child (Rex
Morgan MD discusses foetal
alcohol
syndrome)
So You Want to Stop? You Can!
(American Cancer Society, 1976) English
and
Spanish
Dennis the Menace Coping With Family
Stress (National Center on Child
Abuse
and Neglect, 1981)
Grenada (Central
Intelligence Agency, 1984) Commissioned by the CIA to
be
airdropped over Granada during the U S invasion. Scarce as none were
meant
for distribution within the United States)
AIDS: Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome
Madonna on AIDS (This
is the same book as AIDS, with a Madonna cover)
5
x 7, 16 pages
How to Get the Most Out of Your NEA
Membership (National Education
Association
1951) 16 pages bound into NEA Journal
From Ball Game to Ballroom (Arthur
Murray School of Dancing, 1952)
The Magic of Vitamins (Bexel
Vitamins, Mc Kesson & Robbins, 1953)
The H Bomb and You (U S
Government, 1955) 20 pages. Rare, low
distribution
in a few cities.
Freedom or Compulsion (U S
Chamber of Commerce and Ohio Right to Work
Committee,
1957) anti-union
Naked Force (Kansas
for the Right to Work, 1958) Anti union
Bouncy Bexie (Bexel
Vitamins, Mc Kesson & Robbins, 1961)
Oh, My Achin Back! (Michigan
State Chiropractic Association, 1963)
Take Care of Yourself
(American Cancer Society, 1967) 4 pgs, designed to
encourage
English speaking women of Spanish descent to take the PAP test
Cuidate, Mama
(American Cancer Society, 1967) Spanish version of Take
Care of
Yourself
Teenage Booby Trap (Bureau
of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs, 1970)
Beware the Booby Trap (U S
Department of Defense, !970) Teenage Booby
Trap
with military cover
In
addition, company records indicate the existence of the following
books
who's formats, subjects and publication dates cannot be
identified:
A Safe Start
Keeping Safe Off the Job
Average
print runs of industrial comics were 1,000,000 copies.
Sources:
Evening
Sun newspaper, city unknown, 9 Oct (1950?) Comic-Book Use by
Politicians
Increasing
Life
Magazine 25 Sept 50 (as reproduced in 1950s promotional brochure
for
Commercial Comics)
New York
Times 31 Aug 50. Pg 23 Col 5
Promotion!
American Gas Association, #2, 1947. Miss Flame to Tell Story
Unnamed,
undated reference: Assorted Smiles, newspaper column by
V.Y.Dallman
(Admiral). 1950?
Unnamed,
undated reference: (trade newspaper?) Mc Kesson Makes Use of
Comic
Type Book
Vet-Times
4 Nov 50; Elections Hinge on Comics
Wall
Street Journal 20 May 52. Supermanユs Kin
Washington
Evening Star 17 Oct 50. The Comic Book has Entered Politics
Washington
Post 6 Sept 71 Propaganda Funnies
Interviews
and correspondence with Malcolm Ater Jr
All text
copyright 2003
tom
christopher
All
illustrations copyright 2003
Commercial
Comics / Estate of Malcolm Ater
All
rights reserved