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Donald's Cousin Gus is a Walt Disney cartoon released on May 19, 1939. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Gus Goose debuted as a recurring character in Al Taliaferro 's Donald Duck newspaper comic since 9 May 1938. [ 3 ]
Donald Duck is known in Nordic countries as Kalle Anka in Sweden, [41] Anders And in Denmark, Andrés Önd in Iceland, Donald Duck in Norway, [42] and Aku Ankka in Finland. [41] In the mid-1930s, Robert S. Hartman , a German who served as a representative of Walt Disney, visited Sweden to supervise the merchandise distribution of Sagokonst (The ...
Donald is thrown into a fully automatic processing facility which grinds and pulverizes the mined rocks, separating the gold from them. While Donald avoids the worst predicaments through sheer luck, he gets comically washed, scrubbed, and shaken about. Eventually, he is tipped into a gold bar-making machine.
Gus Goose is Donald Duck's second cousin, and the great-nephew of Grandma Duck. He debuted on May 9, 1938, in Al Taliaferro and Bob Karp 's Donald Duck comic strip , before making an animated appearance in the 1939 short Donald's Cousin Gus . [ 46 ]
Donald's Cousin Gus - This cartoon shows Gus' first appearance. Beach Picnic – in a Donald and Pluto cartoon. Sea Scouts; Donald's Penguin; The Autograph Hound; The Standard Parade – in a Mickey Mouse cartoon. Also, this second cartoon shows a cameo appearance of Donald. Officer Duck
When the saw gets stuck in the thick bark of the tree and jams, Donald attempts to pull it, but the force pushes Donald backward and throws him into Pete, knocking both to the ground. Donald ends up inside of Pete's shirt along with the saw, which is partially inside Pete's belly. Donald starts pulling the saw out, tickling Pete.
He hears Donald singing, and mistakes the wallpaper for flowers. Donald teases Spike by getting him stuck in glue before freeing him, causing the bee to hit the light, Donald pushes him outside and shuts the window. Spike gets revenge; he removes the key from the lock and decides to sting Donald's rear end, but misses and gets stuck on the ...
Gladstone Gander first appeared in "Wintertime Wager" in Walt Disney's Comics and Stories #88 (January 1948), written and drawn by Carl Barks. [3]In that story he arrives at Donald Duck's house during a freezing cold Christmas Day to remind him of a wager Donald made the previous summer; that he could swim in the Frozenbear Lake during Christmas Day or forfeit his house to Gladstone.