Dot and Dash An accompanying
topper strip, also drawn by Sterrett, was created to run above
Polly on Sundays—a pantomime strip called
Dot and Dash, which ran from February 21, 1926, to June 24, 1928. Originally titled
Damon and Pythias, about the antics of a cat and dog—they became two dogs in 1926. Highlighting Sterrett's panels were oddly stylized backgrounds (trees, houses, windows, staircases), occasionally drawn in a distorted, cubist style.
Belles and Wedding Bells Belles and Wedding Bells was another topper created by Sterrett, which ran from June 22, 1930, to 1943. Unlike
Dot and Dash,
Belles (originally called
Sweethearts and Wives) had dialogue, and a constantly changing cast made up of diverse romantic human couples. The strip played up the ironic contrasts between courtship and marriage. Each episode began with a scene of pre-married bliss, followed by an "intermission" panel framed with wedding bells and an ominous caption: "And then they were married..." The exact same scenario would then be re-enacted
post-wedding by the now-jaded couple—with drastically different results. Starting on March 31, 1935,
Belles and Wedding Bells alternated as the topper with a variant called
And So They Were Never Married. Sterrett was initially the sole creator of the comic, producing both
daily and
Sunday strips. During the 1930s, however, Sterrett's arthritis prompted him to assign work on the daily strips to assistants
Paul Fung and
Vernon Greene. The daily strip ended in the 1940s. The last Sunday page, still drawn by Sterrett, was published on June 15, 1958. ==Influence and legacy==