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Old Doc Yak
''Old Doc Yak'' was a comic strip by Sidney Smith that centered on a talking goat. The origin of the character was Buck Nix, a goat Smith drew in 1908 for the ''Chicago Evening Journal''. For three years, Nix romanced a she-goat called Nanny. In 1911, when Smith moved to the ''Chicago Tribune'', he introduced a new goat character when ''Old Doc Yak'' began as a daily strip on February 5, 1912 with the Sunday page starting a month later on March 10. In 1913, Doc Yak appeared in several short features produced by the Selig Polyscope Company, who further collaborated with the ''Tribune'' in the production of ''The Adventures of Kathlyn''. ==Yak moves out== Doc Yak was a family man and more mature than Buck Nix. He had a son, Yutch, along with a number of domestic problems. The last daily ''Old Doc Yak'' strip, on February 10, 1917, depicted Yak and his family moving out while wondering who might move into the house next. The last panel showed the empty house. The next day's newspapers, in the space formerly occupied by ''Old Doc Yak'', printed the very first strip of Smith's ''The Gumps'', showing the Gumps moving into the house formerly occupied by the Yak family. ''Old Doc Yak'' continued as a Sunday strip until June 22, 1919, when Yak was depicted selling his car to Andy Gump so he and Yutch could move away "to start life all over again". ''The Gumps'' likewise took over the Sunday space the following week.
抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Old Doc Yak」の詳細全文を読む
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