ST. LOUIS - Cross-marketing and multimedia weren’t the buzzwords they are now when, 100 years ago, a suburban St. Louis shoe company took a chance and bought licensing rights to a comic strip ...
For at least three generations, youngsters looked forward to a shopping trip with a parent to the former Jim’s House of Shoes on North Street in Pittsfield. It was not so much for new shoes, but an ...
ST. LOUIS — Cross-marketing and multimedia weren't the buzzwords they are now when, 100 years ago, a suburban St. Louis shoe company took a chance and bought licensing rights to a comic strip ...
Literally thousands of youngsters grew up riding on the small Buster Brown pedal merry-go-round in Pittsfield's Jim's House of Shoes, now at 239 North St. Baby boomers still talk about their memories ...
When I was a kid, getting a new pair of Buster Browns was always a big deal. And although much has changed in the world of children’s shoes, and the world at large, since then — in this house, a new ...
POCATELLO — For decades, a neon sign of a winking boy and his dog, advertising Buster Brown shoes, was locked away and forgotten in the basement of the Pioneer Block Building. When the city’s ...
POCATELLO, Idaho (KIFI/KIDK) - Pocatello's Relight the Night committee have added another neon sign in their efforts to help restore Historic Downtown. Buster Brown, a comic book character created in ...
ST. LOUIS Cross-marketing and multimedia weren t the buzzwords they are now when, 100 years ago, a suburban St. Louis shoe company took a chance and bought licensing rights to a comic-strip character.
Buster Brown debuted in Richard Outcault's comic strip in the New York Herald on May 4, 1902, nearly a quarter century after shoemaking Bryan, Brown & Co. got its start. It then changed its name to ...