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Gasoline Alley by Jim Scancarelli is a gentle, good-natured continuing story of four generations of Wallets. Readers return daily for this positive slice of life, with universal themes and commonplace situations.
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Comments (13) (Please sign in to comment)
Arye Uygur said, 10 months ago
“Bur Officer, it was my wife who called in to complain about speeders.”
SUSAN NEWMAN
said, 10 months ago
Caught in his own trap!
Great!!!
And not even Lucky could get him out of this one.
Love the title panel.
axe-grinder said, 10 months ago
Today’s typical driver: too fast, too distracted, and learned to drive by playing video games!
battle of plattsburgh said, 10 months ago
If he loses his license, Uncle Walt will have to drive him around.
flagfly
said, 10 months ago
The hands-free phone must have been his wife’s idea.
ewalnut said, 10 months ago
Wonder how fast he was going.
Mineola said, 10 months ago
@ewalnut
Not fast enough to exit the comic page!
axe-grinder said, 10 months ago
@
Ha! Yes, what is this anyway, some kind of joke?
Night-Gaunt49 said, 10 months ago
An ironic strip today. Classic means of getting a smile and even a laugh.
whmIII said, 10 months ago
There is dumb…and then there is Slim!!!
JP Steve
said, 10 months ago
@Night-Gaunt49
I dunno — wasn’t it too obvious to get even a smile?
Jerry Carlson said, 10 months ago
Thirty days
Hath September
April, June,
And the
Speed offender
Burma Shave
Jerry Carlson said, 10 months ago
BTW, a University of Pennsylvania study in the 1950’s showed that the one factor that most consistently controlled highway speeds was Burma Shave signs – people didn’t want to drive too fast to read them.