KomiKal Kop, 1930, 7” x 6 ½” high the chemical car the KomiKal Kop car is very reminiscent of the Keystone cops in the great silent comedies by Mac send it. The driver is probably the popular Ford Sterling chief of the co-op cops but no copyright credit is given, and the representation is not exact sterling wore a goatee at the time not a mustache another example of Marx is informal use of film characterization is the Marx toy, funny face popularly, thought to depict the film comedian, Harold Lloyd all further evidence beat it, and the comical cop in the K appear to be on the back of the t the chemical cop is similar to the joyrider. The same bodies are used for the driver in the car, and the dog sits on the running board, although it was later discontinued however, the lithography on the two toys differ, and the cops head is stamped in a longer shape.
The black car has red wheels edged in black the cop wears a blue uniform with “P. D.” On his cap and he is boldly drawn features on a ruddy complexion, eyeglasses, a white mustache, and a red nose. The car has “P. D.” On the radiator “traffic B” on the hood the Marx logo on the side of the trunk and the Marx name and address on the back. The license plate reads “P. D. 7000” and the number 7 on the side of the seat appears for the first time on this car, and it was subsequently used on several other eccentric cars.
The ad in the 1930 Montgomery wards catalog, with the price of the $.49 emphasize its “Marx unbreakable, spring motor"