COMIC - "Ma's Little Worries" - "Tiger Skin Rug" - Artist: Tom Browne - 1909:  Tom Browne RI, born Thomas Arthur Browne (8 December 1870 Nottingham – 16 March 1910 Shooter's Hill), was an extremely popular English strip cartoonist, painter and illustrator of the late Victorian and Edwardian periods.  Browne started earning a wage as a milliner's errand boy in 1882. From there he was apprenticed to a lithographic printer and eked out a living with freelance cartoons for London comic papers. He received 30 shillings for his first strip, published by the magazine Scraps, and called "He Knew How To Do It".  Comic Cuts, a British comic book, was founded by Alfred Harmsworth in 1890. Cheaply printed, it proved to be the ideal medium for Browne's bold drawing style. Browne's comic strips soon became so popular that he moved to London and into a studio in Wollaton House at Westcombe Park. There he turned out six full-page strips a week, but also produced illustrations for several British magazines. His cartoons appeared in Punch, The Tatler and other highly rated periodicals of the day. The logo of Johnnie Walker whiskey, the strutting, monocled character, was created by Browne in 1908.  Browne was a founding member of the London Sketch Club, and was publicly acclaimed. He became a member of the Royal British Society of Artists in 1898 and was elected to the Royal Institute of Painters in Water Colours in 1901, which allowed him to use the letter RI after his name.  His cycling trips took him all over the world, while illustrations of these exploits appeared in the newspapers. Returning to Nottingham, he started a color printing firm and joined the Territorial Army.  This Divided Back Era postcard, mailed in 1909, is in good condition.  Davidson Brothers. London . Series 2556.