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- 6fe08be2cc171e7e76a00c91c4b1fd32a7925d8c9d7d08c953435d9fbc2f8c7f accessdate "2007-09-25".
- 6fe08be2cc171e7e76a00c91c4b1fd32a7925d8c9d7d08c953435d9fbc2f8c7f date "1929-05-03".
- 6fe08be2cc171e7e76a00c91c4b1fd32a7925d8c9d7d08c953435d9fbc2f8c7f isCitedBy Tad_Dorgan.
- 6fe08be2cc171e7e76a00c91c4b1fd32a7925d8c9d7d08c953435d9fbc2f8c7f publisher The_New_York_Times.
- 6fe08be2cc171e7e76a00c91c4b1fd32a7925d8c9d7d08c953435d9fbc2f8c7f quote "Thomas A. Dorgan, Famous For His 'Indoor Sports,' Victim of Heart Disease. Was A Shut-In For Years. Worked Cheerfully at Home in Great Neck on Drawings That Amused Countless Thousands. His slangy breeziness won immediate circulation. It was he who first said 'Twenty-three, Skidoo,' and 'Yes, we have no bananas,' 'apple sauce' and 'solid ivory.' Other expressions that are now part of the American vernacular include 'cake-eater,' 'drug-store cowboy,' 'storm and strife,' 'Dumb Dora,' 'dumb-bell,' 'finale hopper,' 'Benny' for hat and 'dogs' for shoes.".
- 6fe08be2cc171e7e76a00c91c4b1fd32a7925d8c9d7d08c953435d9fbc2f8c7f title "'Tad,' Cartoonist, Dies In His Sleep.".