|
Golden Age Greats #6, September 1983
MLJ Comics
By Raymond Miller
Once upon a time, long, long ago
there existed a four-color world of absolute and frenetic excitement. This world
featured the constant exploits of a large group of colorfully costumed and
upstanding individuals who helped to protect the shores of a mythical America
from the ravages of crime, saboteurs and the depredations of the Japanazi
menace. Foremost among these were the superheroes of a select few companies.
Timely offered Captain America, the Submariner and the Human Torch while
National/ American offered the likes of Superman, Batman and Wonder Woman,
Fawcett offered the incredible Marvel Family (including Marvel Bunny and Uncle
Marvel) and MLJ brought forth such avengers as the Black Hood, The Shield, the
Wizard and The Hangman.
Never before had literature seen the
likes of these icons of truth and justice, and truth to tell, never again would
their like be seen again, in numbers or in sheer freshness of presentation.
Looking back from our jaded present the sparkle seems to be somewhat dimmed but
at the time, this was something new, something unprecedented on the printed
page. And while there was multitude of four-color heroes only these four
companies really led the way. National merged with American and then in turn
changed its name to DC, continuing many of the same characters of that by gone
age, either in identical format or with minor alterations. Timely went through
several name changes and finally emerged as the leader of modern day comic book
publishing, Marvel Comics, also continuing many of the same colorfully garbed
wondermen. Fawcett became the property of DC and the victim of management unable
or simply unaware of how to revive and continue the Marvel Family. MLJ is unique
in that it did not continue its strongmen but turned to publishing the exploits
of Archie Andrews and teen-age compatriots although not abandoning its offspring
entirely. Every twenty or so years the company attempts to reemerge from the
doldrums of obscurity by re launching its heroes. Twenty years ago it was as
Mighty Comics. Today it is as Red Circle, and the jury is still out as to the
success of that endeavor.
What is certain is that in the 1940
s, a multitude of colorful, excellently crafted heroes emerged at the forefront
of adventurers and it is those days and those stories, which concern us here. In
the mid sixties Raymond Miller labored in the fields to bring forth a true
history of this colorful period in the history of comics. Here with very minor
revisions, it is reproduced from those lost pages of RBCC.
The first title to be published by
MLJ was Blue Ribbon Comics, dated Nov. 1939. There was really nothing
outstanding about this new comic. It was just another addition to the slowly
growing comic book industry and it wasn't even all in color. That first issue
was half color with the remaining pages red and white tints.
The lead feature in the first issue
and the only strip to appear in all 22 issues was Rang A Tang, the Wonder Dog.
Looking a lot like Rin Tin Tin, it was no secret that Rang A Tang was the main
stay even when the book featured super heroes. Rang A Tang appeared somewhere on
the cover of every issue but #3 and #21, mostly in a circle which was part of
the title logo. Inside he mostly had the longest story except for the first
issue when the story only contained six pages. With the second issue the story
was upped to ten pages and then to 11 with the fourth issue and the stories
remained at 11 pages through #18. No other strip in any issue ran 11 pages
except for the Captain Flag story in issue #22.
Rang was so popular that the good dog
soon had his own club, called the Rang A Tang Club ...what else? Blue Ribbon was
now carrying a club page every issue listing names of new members, letters,
information on how to join the club, tips on how to care and train your pet dog
and other related items. Charter members of the club included Rang's author Joe
Blair and the artist, Ed Smalle Jr. It only cost one thin dime to join and Hy
Speed would send you a membership card, a Rang A Tang button and a book on
"Health and Care of Your Dog and Cat."
Rang A Tang's origin appeared in Blue
Ribbon #1. As the story unfolds we find Rang has been treated rather cruelly by
his master and like most smart animals, decided enough was enough, so he ran
away. Being a stray dog means no regular meals, so he had to find his meals
wherever he could, such as in an alley. Well, it so happened that one day
Detective Hy Speed was attacked by some hoods in an alley Rang was looking for
food. Seeing that the Detective was outnumbered, Rang joined the fight and saved
Hy Speed. To show his gratitude, Hy adopted Rang and a long partnership was
born.
This first story was by Norman
Danberg, who may also have done the story in #2. Art in #3 was by Jack Binder
and Will Harr. With #4 the team of Joe Blair and Ed Smalle Jr. took over.
But a story about a man and his dog
isn't really complete unless a young boy is involved, so a young boy is added in
issue #6. Hy and Rang's adventure found them guarding a movie producer from a
series of attacks by the Bundonians. (The Wizard had just beaten them and kicked
them out of Top Notch Comics). During the action, a young bit player named Richy
saved the producer but Hy was shot during the fight. As he left for the
hospital, he turned the case over to Richy and Rang and from that story on it
was a trio: Hy, Richy and Rang. In the final story (#22) Hy, Richy, and Rang
journeyed to the North Woods where Rang saved the life of a small white dog.
They became real close companions and roamed the forest together. Meanwhile Hy
and Richy hunted for a killer of a trapper. High on a cliff, the killer attacked
Richy and when Rang and his new found pal raced to the rescue the killers struck
Rang a cruel blow, which momentarily stunned the great dog. Then Rang's brave
little friend attacked the killer but they were too close to the edge of the
cliff and killer and dog both went over the edge to their deaths. It was a very
sad ending in more ways then one. Not only did the little dog die, but as it
turned out, this was also the end of the trail for Rang, Hy and Richy as well
because Blue Ribbon Comics came to an end with issue #22.
I can't help but wonder what all the
Rang A Tang Club members thought when no more issues came out. There was no
hint, except in the Corp. Collins story, that #22 was the last issue, but more
on that later. The club was still open for new members in #22. I can't help but
wonder why MLJ didn't move the strip to another title such as Top Notch or Pep.
With a full-fledged club, Rang must have had a large following.
The other strips that appeared in
Blue Ribbon #1 didn't come off as well as Rang A Tang. Little Nemo, Burk of the
Briny and Crime on the Run (latter drawn by Jack Cole) didn't last past #1
(Crime on the Run did appear once more in #3). Dan Hastings, who would appear
late in such Chesler titles as Scoop and Dynamic Comics and Buck Stacey, a
cowboy range detective made it to #2 and #3.
The second issue introduced two more
winners. The first being Corporal Collins, who would appear in all remaining
issues and Bob Phantom who would fight his battles, not in Blue Ribbon but in
Top Notch. Charles Biro drew Corp. Collins, Infantryman, in the early issues
while later stories were by Carl Hubbell. Hubbell, who replaced Biro around #8,
had a style quite similar to Biro so the stories didn't suffer by the art
changes. Collins and his partner Slapsie (their Navy counterparts Sgt. Boyle and
Twerp, also by Biro/Hubbell, were in Pep) were army men, but they never seemed
to stick to army rules since they seemed to be more or less loners. Popping up
all over the world off the Irish Coast in #18 and in a Northern Russian Port in
#22. One could also find a number of crossover stories between Boyle and Collins
in both Blue Ribbon and Pep Comics. Corp. Collins also made the covers of Blue
Ribbon #3 #S, #16 and #20. His stories averaged 7 pages per issue, being upped
to 8 pages in #19 #22. It was in the Collins story in #22 that it was hinted
that the end had come. Collins addressed his fans with "Well gang, looks
like this might be the end of our adventures together! But I want to say it was
swell carousing around with you fellers. I sure hope you'll drop me a few lines
sometimes" to which Slapsie added "Gee". Collins and Slapsie did
appear in a couple of Boyle stories after that.
Bob Phantom made his debut in Blue
Ribbon #2 Dec. making him MLJ's first costumed hero. He also appeared in issue
#3, before moving over to Top Notch Comics. More on him later.
With issue #4 June 1940 (there were
no February through April issues) Blue Ribbon began to take shape adding more
permanent features with Hercules, Gypsy Johnson, Ty-Gor, Doc Strong, Loop Logan,
Green Falcon and the Fox.
Selected, as the number two
characters was that old stand by Hercules. As most readers know, Herc was the
God of Ancient Greece. In this case, he was sent back to earth to rid the modern
world of gangsters, mobs and the like by Zeus. He, of course, had super strength
and the other familiar powers. Sometimes he wore a blue business suit and other
times white trunks with a red belt and boots. In the stories, he often returned
to Mt. Olympus for advice and instructions from Zeus. He never made the cover as
the main feature but did rate his picture in a circle near the title logo for a
while. Both Hercules and the minor strip, Gypsy Johnson, were last seen in #8
January 1941.
Loop Logan, Air Ace, lasted somewhat
longer, through #20. Doc Strong and the Isle of Right, an interplanetary strip
with adventures on Mars, made it to #12. The Green Falcon was last in #15 August
1941. This strip, drawn by Ramona Patenaude, took place in the days of King
Arthur. The strip could have been called Robin Hood and one would never have
noticed the difference. The Green Falcon's band consisted of Tiny Tunk and Jolly
Roundfellow.
Ty-Gor by Joe Blair, art by Mort
Meskin, appeared in #4 #20. It was a story about a young boy named Tyrone Gorman
who was raised by a tigress in the wilds of Malay. Found, he was brought to the
USA by an explorer named Davis and his daughter Joan. Being uncivilized, modern
man's ways were hard for Ty-Gor to adjust to and this caused all kinds of
trouble, and good deeds such as saving two children from a burning house in #10
or fighting Bundists (Nazis) in #14. By #18 the art was by George Storm and
Ty-Gor was on his way back to Malay with his Guardians, to confuse the Japs, no
doubt.
Blue Ribbon's longest running
costumed hero was the Fox. The Fox's origin, if you can call it one, was in
issue #4. Paul Patton, who was a photographer for the Daily Globe was always
goofing up his shots of crimes, so he rigged up a camera to his belt to take
pictures that would convict criminals and put on a fox costume to fight crime.
(I wonder if Peter Parker read this story). The artist was Irwin Hasen on the
earlier stories with King taking over with #11. Hasen's Wildcat at DC, looked a
lot like the Fox at times. Bob Montana was the artist on #18 while Bobby King
was back to finish up the Fox's career in #22. Like most hero strips, the Fox
also had a girl in the cast. In this case it was Ruth Ransom, Girl Reporter for
the Daily Globe.
But it wasn't till Blue Ribbon #9,
February 1941, that the book came up with a real winner. It was in that issue
that one of MLJ's most popular strips made its debut in the form of the Royal
Wraith ...Mr. Justice. The story was by Joe Blair, with art by Sam Cooper.
Cooper along with Al Camerata and Irv Novick, were MLJ's so called " 3
Musketeers". They certainly carried the bulk of MLJ's art on the costumed
heroes, and besides they were three of the best MLJ or any publisher could ask
for, so it was only natural Cooper got t: 1e Mr. Justice assignment. When he
took his time, he could deliver the super natural with the best of them.
The origin of Mr. Justice was told
twice. The first time was in #9 and then repeated (not reprinted) again in the
final issue, #22. Both origins are the same although they are different stories.
During the Rogers Rebellion in Scotland in the year 1040, the Rogers Clan lured
Prince James of England into a secluded tower of the Rogers' Castle where they
suddenly turned on him and killed him. The spirit of Prince James rose from his
body, in the form of Mr. Justice. Mr. Justice then killed his murderers and his
spirit floated off into eternity. Then in 1940, while the castle was being
shipped to America for safekeeping, an enemy torpedo sent the ship and it's
cargo to Davy Jones Locker. In so doing, the spirit of Prince James was released
from eternity to return to earth once again. In America, Mr. Justice in his
mortal body met Pat Clark and her father and in stories, Mr. Justice and Pat
shared many adventures together. One of their most awesome adventures was in the
World of the Atoms where they once again did battle with The Green Ghoul. In #13
November 1941, we find that The Royal Wraith and Pat had trailed the Green Ghoul
into Atom World where the Ghoul had trapped them in a circle of flames. These
were the flames of Purgatory which no spirit or human could pass through and all
seemed lost until a large Pterodactyl flew over and plucked both up and
deposited them to it's nest. Free of the flames Mr. Justice flew away with Pat
in his arms. Meanwhile the Green Ghoul had left the Atom World and had destroyed
it, only seconds after Mr. Justice and Pat had escaped from it. Back on Earth,
in a battle royal, Mr. Justice defeated the Green Ghoul.
Throughout the Royal Wraith's career
he had a running battle with the Devil himself and it was the Devil who was
behind most of the evil beings Mr. Justice was always doing battle with.
In issue #22, March 1942, we find
that one, Harold Rogers had returned to the Rogers' Castle. (No explanation as
to why the castle exists is given since it was supposed to have been destroyed
in 1940, but such details were not part of the forties). Since a Rogers had
returned, it opened the door for a Spirit of Harold Rogers ancestor to return
also. The spirit informed Harold Rogers that he must seek out and destroy the
body of Prince James by fire. Then a vision of impending danger comes to Mr.
Justice and he flew to the Rogers Castle and entered the body of Prince James
just minutes before Harold Rogers was about to destroy the body. Seeing the dead
body rise caused Harold to become panic stricken and he leaped out of a tower
window and was killed. The castle burst in flames as the life of the last Rogers
passed away. The Royal Wraith then deposited Prince James' body in his own
family's resting place, and then returned to his human form in America. A
thrilling climax to the end of Mr. Justice's run in Blue Ribbon Comics. Mr.
Justice did manage to hang on for another year by being part of Jackpot Comics
line up.
Issue #13, June 1941, introduced
Penny Parker, a female private eye, who would disappear after #15, and a new
superhero called Inferno, The Flame Breather. Inferno had shared some adventures
with Steel Sterling in Zip Comics before striking out on his own. He first
appeared in the Steel Sterling story in Zip #11. In Zip #12 he went to jail and
in #13 was recommended for parole. He was not in costume in these stories, but
in Blue Ribbon he was decked out in a bright red and yellow costume. While he
was somewhat stronger than the average man, his main asset was that he was able
to breath fire. The art on the stories contained some of Paul Reinman's better
efforts. Inferno was last to be found in #19, December 1941.
Then came Blue Ribbon #16, September
1941, and the introduction of one of MLJ's best costumed heroes, and one of
their most short lived ones as well the colorful Captain Flag. As Howard Keltner
once wrote, most costumed heroes start out at the top and then taper off into
run of the mill fare, but it can be said of Captain Flag that he was one of the
few who improved with each succeeding story. Had he not been snuffed out of
existence by the abrupt folding of Blue Ribbon after #22 (which gave him only
seven brief appearances) who knows what heights he may have reached as time
passed by?
Captain Flag first appeared in the
last story in #16, a nine-page origin story, and he remained in that tail end
spot till #17. With #18, he was moved into the lead spot and with #19; his
stories were upped to ten pages as he took over the cover. Since #16 he had
shared it with Mr. Justice. With #22, he was upped to eleven pages, so he went
out in a flash of glory.
The stories were written by Joe Blair
and the art was split between Lin Streeter, who did issues #16, #19 #22, and
Bobby King, who did #17 and #18.
In the origin story, a master
criminal called The Black Hand had captured an inventor, John Townsend, in order
to get certain important plans from him. When he wouldn't co-operate, Townsend's
worthless, playboy son Tom was kidnapped so as to force his father to talk. When
the father still refused to talk, The Black Hand, in a fit of rage, choked the
life out of him with his diseased claw like right hand. Still in a rage, he
turned to the young Townsend, who he had been torturing, with the same thought
in mind. Before he could carry out his second murder, a great giant eagle, which
had lost it's way in the darkness of the night, crashed through a window into
the room, and in the confusion that followed, the bird, in panic, fastened it's
talons onto the first thing it touched, which was Tom Townsend's trousers and
flew off into the night with him. During the next few days, the eagle brought
Tom food and he slowly regained his strength, strength greater than he had ever
had before. Then one day the great bird returned, not with food, but with an
American Flag. Taking this as some sort of omen, Tom made a vow against evil in
all forms, made a costume out of the flag and thus was born Captain Flag. With
the giant eagle, whom he named Yank, he set out to seek the Black Hand, and
found him in an old shack. During the fight that followed, a lamp was knocked
over. Captain Flag escaped, but the Black Hand didn't or so Captain Flag
thought, for he returned in the next issue, and the next, before he disappeared,
only to return in issue #21 and finally #22. In a battle at sea, on a freighter,
The Black Hand finally ended his reign of terror at the end of a rope. What
adventures await Captain Flag now? “Watch for him in the next issue of Blue
Ribbon Comics" were the words that appeared in the last panel. Readers are
still waiting and watching.
Why the editors chose to drop Blue
Ribbon after only 22 issues is still a mystery. It had good stories and art, two
top notch super heroes in Mr. Justice and Captain Flag and a good dog strip in
Rang A Tang but looking over MLJ's over all history at that time it was apparent
the publishers wanted to change their image. They either saw no future in the
super hero, their books were not selling well, or they preferred a lighter fare.
Whatever the problem, the lighter fare won out with the likes of Archie and
company because soon after Blue Ribbon was dropped, other MLJ titles started to
add more and more humor strips.
One could see Blue Ribbon Comics was
in some sort of trouble when issue #20 appeared on the stands. A weird type of
tale called "Tales from the Witch's Cauldron" had replaced Inferno.
Then came #21 and more changes. Now two True Life Stories had replaced Ty-Gor
and Loop Logan. But even this change could not save Blue Ribbon and it was only
Corporal Collins who realized that he had just appeared in his last adventure
and not even Captain Flag, The Fox, Rang A Tang or the Rang A Tang fan club
hinted that they were on their way to limbo. So with issue #22, March 1942, Blue
Ribbon was laid to rest.
Unlike Blue Ribbon, Top Notch #1 was
a full color comic from cover to cover and featured MLJ's first costumed hero,
The Wizard, the Man with the Super Brain. As Howard Keltner once said,
"even though the Wizard did not wear a costume till issue #7, he still must
be classified as a superhero". Starting out looking a great deal like
Mandrake the Magician complete with tuxedo, high hat, cape and an added red
mask, Blane Whitney was ready to start his career as a crime fighter.
Blane Whitney had inherited a
heritage of greatness and had trained himself until he was a mental and physical
giant and, in time, he possessed the greatest brainpower on earth. Whitney was
the head of a newspaper empire although this was never really played up and in
later stories it wasn't even mentioned at all. After a while, the "Super
Brain" was also all but forgotten. During his early days, The Wizard fought
international spies but as time went on The Man with the Super Brain devoted
more of his time to fighting domestic crime. Using his Super Brain, he was able
to see visions of things that were happening many miles away. As it was, the
strip was definitely going no place, so a change was due and this change started
to take place with issue #5, May 1940.
In Top Notch #5 a new threat to the
USA is uncovered. As the story opened, Blane Whitney was shown being blown up as
he lifts a phone. With his Super Brain he sees a plot against the USA. A group
of plotters called the Mosconians are planning to attack Washington DC. In a
vision, The Wizard sees his brother Grover in trouble after the plotters house
is bombed by mistake by their henchmen. Blane wants to go to his rescue, but
Grover transported a message to him to move onto Washington and forget about
him, as the plotters are ready to attack the Capitol. The Wizard then races to
the FBI and there meets MLJ's number one star, The Shield. The Shield had not
been around as long as The Wizard because Pep Comics started later than Top
Notch but The Shield, like Superman, Batman, Captain America and others before
and after him, proved to be a best seller from the start. It never hurt to guest
star your #1 hero in the revamping of a less popular hero, so it was only good
business to bring The Shield in at this point. After this historic meeting, The
Wizard is sent off to Annapolis and West Point while The Shield remained in
Washington. The Wizard proceeded to break up the plot at Annapolis, and then
moved on to West Point where he and Cadet Keith Kornell (another character
appearing in Top Notch, better known as The West Pointer) broke up a bombing
attack and saved General Woods. After this, The Wizard's Super Brain gets a new
vision of his brother Grover being gassed by the Mosconians. Racing to his aid,
he rescues his brother and pulls the plotters house down.
In issue #6, The Wizard and his
brother talk over the spy activities. In another vision he sees new plans by the
Mosconians to attack. The rest of the story reads like a full-scale war with The
Wizard fighting Mosconians everywhere and saving a city and the army. He then
sends his brother a message to have the US Fleet go to the Pacific coast to meet
the Mosconian's invasion forces, heading for the coast himself.
In Top Notch #7, August 1940, the
full change in The Wizard begins. The Wizard encountered the invasion plan of
California in still another vision. He saw the Mosconian headquarters, which
were in Canada near the Washington state line. He attacked the head quarters and
for the first time came face to face with the Mosconian leader known as the
Master Mind. Caught off his guard, The Wizard is blinded when the Mastermind
escaped. Then, as Blane Whitney, he goes back and has an operation on his eyes.
It was touch and go as The Shield takes up the battle in The Wizard's place.
Meanwhile, the Mastermind, thinking The Wizard is out of the fight for good,
starts plotting anew. Now recovered, The Man With the Super Brain sees the new
plot. This time he wanted to be prepared before the battle. Returning to his
lab, he invented a costume (much along the lines of Superman's), which would
make him invulnerable against any new threats. With The Shield at his side, he
prevented the new invasion of California and captured the Mastermind. The Shield
and The Wizard then shook hands as the Mosconian threat was at last over.
There was to be one more major change
in The Wizard's career. In #8, September 1940, the story opens as a young
shoeshine boy sees come crooks run down a man. The crooks spot the boy and go
after him in order to shut him up. The boy puts up a pretty good fight and is
rescued by The Wizard who sort of adopts the boy and trains him as his aid,
revealing to him that he is really Blane Whitney. The boy was then given a
costume and named Roy, The Super Boy. If any of these changes in The Wizard's
career, the new costume and a young helper, were good enough to save Top Notch
Comics, it would never be known because with issue #9, MLJ introduced their most
popular hero next to The Shield, The Black Hood, Man of Mystery.
Harry Shorten wrote most of the
Wizard stories and Bill Woolfolk while the art was by Edd Ashe, Al Camereta and
Paul Reinman.
Unlike most of the MLJ heroes, The
Wizard and Roy had no recurring villains. They and their friends Jane Barlow and
Moe the cabbie fought a so called vampire in #14, The Purple Mafia in #19,
Voodoo in #21, Nazis in #22 and The Jingler in #26, before finally leaving the
pages of Top Notch with #27, May 1942.
It was with Top Notch #9, October
1940 that the real star was introduced. "The Man of Mystery," The
Black Hood, not only made his debut in #9 but took over the lead spot and the
cover as well. He only appeared solo on two covers, #10 and #27. All other
covers he shared with either The Wizard or Roy or both up to #27 and after that
issue he shared them with Pokey Oakey and the other comical characters through
#34, #41 and his last cover #43.
The stories were credited to either
Editor Harry Shorten or Cliff Campbell while all the art was done by Al
"Gamy" Camerata. The stories in Top Notch 9 27 were all 14 pages
except for those in #19, #26 and #27, which were 13 pages. The most pages The
Wizard ever had was 13 in #7 and #8.
The Man of Mystery had much going for
him. A1 Camy's art, story plots far above the standards for 1940 and a variety
of villains. Foremost on this list was The Skull. The original Skull, since The
Black Hood started some six months before Timely's Captain America. The Black
Hood, in other words, had it made. He was a hit at the time MLJ was reaching its
highest point of production.
The story began, where a million
others had begun, on the streets of New York. A few minutes before midnight
found patrolman Kip Burland checking the Woodrow Mansion before finishing
patrolling his beat for the night. Arriving at the mansion, he spotted an
intruder and discovered that the intruder was not just a man, but more like a
skeleton, which was the first meeting between Kip and The Skull. Seeing a man
who looks like a skeleton is enough to stun anyone and The Skull made good use
of Kips sudden shock by slugging him and placing stolen jewelry in the
unconscious patrolman's hand. He then blew Kips police whistle and beat it.
Shortly, two of Kips patrolman buddies found him and seeing the jewelry, had to
turn him in. Kip had been framed, but good. The chief of Police believed him,
but the newspapers blew the thing all out of proportion. Kips badge was taken
away; he was arrested and let out on bail.
Out on bail, Kip decided the only way
to clear himself was to find The Skull, which he did one night during a
warehouse robbery, a meeting that ended with Kip being taken for a ride, and his
body riddled with bullets as he was dumped out of the car. Nearby, an old man
known as The Hermit, heard the shooting and discovered Kips body. During the
next few months, The Hermit nursed Kip back to health, tells him that he was
once a sheriff, but The Skull had also framed him. He tells Kip everything he
knew about The Skull. Kip also went into training, training his mind and
building his strength for beyond what they had been. Then, with a costume, The
Black Hood was born. Later, The Black Hood is living in New York under an alias,
since Kip was now wanted for both larceny and bail jumping. In New York, The
Black Hood met Barbara Sutton when he battled The Skull at a masquerade party
held by the Suttons.
The battle between The Black Hood and
The Skull continued in #10 and in five more stories, the final meeting taking
place in#19, September 1941. The Black Hood finally accomplished his mission.
The Skull was finally captured, but it wasn't easy, as he had more than one
trick up his sleeve. In #19, the old Hermit paid The Skull a visit in prison and
told him he would help him to escape if he would sign a confession that would
exonerate Kip Burland. The Skull agreed and once freed turned on The Hermit
giving him a mild injection, which turned The Hermit into The Skull's double.
Finally The Black Hood catches up with him and The Hermit gave The Black Hood
the confession, which exonerated Kip Burland.
Around this time, the role Sarg.
McGinty was starting to be given a bigger build up. McGinty was starting a
one-man vendetta to capture The Hood. In issue #24, McGinty actually put The
Hood behind bars, which was more than Barbara Sutton could put up with. She
started writing an expose on The Hood, which more or less made The Hood a hero
to all but McGinty.
Being MLJ's second most popular hero,
The Black Hood was not dropped after #27, the final issue of the original Top
Notch Comics. When #26 appeared, the whole comic book was revamped. The title
was now Top Notch (in small letters) Laugh Comics (in bold letters). Gone were
all the costumed heroes except The Hood. Instead of an adventure comic, it was
now a humor comic. Still this did not affect the Black Hood stories. The mundane
and eerie settings were still there, although The Hood had lost both the lead
story and A1 Camy's art.
Camy was replaced by Sam Cooper who
was no stranger to The Hood's eerie atmosphere having done the equally weird Mr.
Justice stories in Blue Ribbon Comics. By now, The Black Hood was appearing in
both the pulps and on radio. Later artists were "Red" Holmdale and
Clem Harrison. The original Dark Knight was last to be found in Top Notch Laugh
#44, February 1944, before moving into Pep Comics.
The character that appeared in more
issues of Top Notch than any other character was Kardak, The Mystic Magician.
This strip appeared in #1 and#2 as The Mystic, missed #3 and returned in#4 as
Kardak. Kardak not only made it through #27 but through Laugh #29 as well.
Kardak was from the same mold as Mandrake, Zatara and the rest of the magicians.
Like Mandrake, Kardak had a giant size friend and his power or magic came from
hypnosis. Many artists worked on the strip including Ed Smalle, Paul Reinman,
Bob Montana George Strom and Lin Streeter.
Two long running strips were Wings
Johnson in #1 #27 (called Air Patrol in #1 and #2) and Keith Kornell also in #1
#27 (called The West Pointer in 16). Wings Johnson of the Air Patrol and his pal
Henry Higgins was a pretty good air strip because it's artist Ed Smalle knew how
to draw airplanes and knew which planes were which as many of the planes he drew
are listed somewhere in the strip. Drawing good aircraft was a problem many
artists, and that includes some of the best, were not able to lick, but a few
guys like Smalle, A1 McWilliams and Lee Elias were really good at it. Wings
Johnson was a pilot in the RAF so most planes were either British or German.
Keith Kornell spent most of his time
fighting on the home front. While he was in the army, his role seemed more like
that of a National Guardsman in all the stories. The art was by Nick Zuraw with
Bobby King taking over shortly after #14.
MLJ's first "real" costume
hero was Bob Phantom who made his debut in Blue Ribbon #2 December 1939, a month
before The Shield and The Comet started in Pep #1. After appearing in Blue
Ribbon #2 and #3, Bob Phantom moved into Top Notch with issue # 3, February,
1940.
Billed as "The Scourge of the
Underworld, Bob Phantom had no origin. His secret identity was that of Broadway
columnist Walt Whitney, who was always ribbing Captain Casey, a local Police
Officer, both as Bob Phantom and Whitney. Whitney was always getting booted out
of Casey's office, but the heckling kept up. The so-called feud was a friendly
one. Bob Phantom's powers were much like Timely's Vision. He appeared and
disappeared for good after Top Notch #25, March 1942, making him one of MLJ's
first costumed heroes to be dropped in 1942. More artists worked on Bob Phantom
than on any other MLJ hero. Irving Novick did him in #4, Gerry Thorp in#5 and
#8, Bernie Klein in #9, #10 and #12 and Bobby King in about every issue after
#12 with Romana Patendue in #18.
Top Notch's fourth costume hero and
one of MLJ's more popular second-string heroes was The Firefly. Harley Hudson
was a chemist and a biologist who spent a lot of time studying insects and their
muscular coordination, such as ants carrying great weights and grasshoppers
jumping great distances. After two years of study and research, Hudson masters
these feats himself, even to the point of staying under water for long periods
of time. He then decided to become a crime fighter. When he saw a firefly he
said he would become a Firefly and light up the darkness of the underworld. So
the Firefly was born. Many of his stories bordered on the macabre. In #14, he
fought a mad doctor called "The Cat". In #19, he fought a mad
scientist who injected a growth serum into birds and animals causing them to
grow to enormous sizes. The Firefly had his hands full with larger than
automobile sized rates. In #22, he pitted his wits with The Shark Man and in
#26; it was a scientist who could shrink humans. It was in #24 that we find the
weirdest story of all. The story is reminiscent of the story, "Three
Skeleton Key" better known as "The Rats". A freighter on which
Harley Hudson was a passenger came upon a weird looking deserted vessel at sea.
Pulling alongside, the ship's crew prepared to board the vessel when suddenly,
thousands of ferocious rats raced across the gangplank, overrunning the
freighter. The rats were controlled by The Pied Piper, a bizarre murderous
creature who played a pipe or flute. The rats attacked, but The Firefly spotted
The Pied Piper and his music that controlled the rats. In the fight that
followed, The Piper lost his flute and the rats attacked him, but The Firefly
threw kerosene on the rats and set them and the deserted ship afire. The Pied
Piper and his rats went down in flames with their ship.
Art on The Firefly was by Bob Wood in
#8 #11. When Wood left MLJ, along with Charles Biro, for Lev Gleason and Comic
House, the art was taken over by Bob King, who did most of the remaining
stories. The Firefly vanished with the rest of the serious strips after #27.
Other strips appearing in Top Notch
#1 #27 were Scott Rand, "On the World's of Time" and Swift of the S.S
in #1 #3; Lucky Coyne in #1 (who later appeared in the Dynamic group); Dick
Storm #2 #8; Stacy Knight, MD #3, #4; Galahad, the classic Galahad from King
Arthur's time in #5 #11; Streak Chandler and Shanghai Sheridan in #5 #8. Fran
Frazer, Girl Reporter for the Picture Magazine Strife and her partner Newspaper
Reporter Hal Davis appeared in #9#25. The St. Louis Kid, a boxing story starring
Jim Jennings, was in #12 #27 with art by Bob Montana and George Storm.
The route of Top Notch seemed
destined to follow that of Blue Ribbon. Just as Blue Ribbon started to change
its lineup with issue #20, Top Notch started the same thing with #26, April
1942. Gone were Fran Frazer and Bob Phantom and in their place, True Life
Stories and the first humor strip Snoop McGook, the Soupy Sleuth. No further
change came about in #27, but there was to be a big change with #28. A new hero,
The Web, was to make his debut, but this never even came about. Instead there
was almost a completely different book. The new issue, #28, July 1942, had a new
title logo, Top Notch in small letters and in large bold letters Laugh. Gone
were all the serious strips but The Black Hood, Kardak (who would last through
#29), and Hall of Fame (from Blue Ribbon would appear in #28 #32) and in their
place appeared a bushel of humor strips led by the Don Dean creation, Pokey
Oakey of Catfish Creek. Pokey was the Sheriff of this hillbilly settlement in a
strip right out of the same mold as Lil' Abner. Pokey Oakey was now the main
character and the main part of the cover as well, although The Black Hood did
appear on the covers of #28 #34, #41 and #43 with the rest of the humor
characters and it was a far cry from the covers he appeared on in issue #9 #47.
The Black Hood even lost the lead story to Pokey, although he did lead off in
issues #28, #30, #32, #35, #37, and #40. For the most part, the Black Hood was
lost in the middle of a slapstick magazine. This was almost the same as finding
an EC story in the middle of Millie The Model. Still, his stories seldom went
under 9 or 10 pages, even up to his last story in #44, February 1944. The other
humor strips besides Pokey Oakey, were Senor Siesta, South America's screwiest
citizen by Don Dean; Gloomy Gus The Homeless Ghost by Red Holmdale; The 3
Monkeyteers who were Yehuda, Small Fry and Sassafras; Percy; Dotty and Ditto by
Bill Woggon; and one of MLJ/Archie Publications most popular humor strips,
Susie. Susie was the forerunner of such strips as My Friend Irma, Millie the
Model and Torchy.
After issue #44, the words "Top
Notch" were dropped and the book ran through #48 as Laugh Comics. Then with
#39, spring of 1949, the book once again changed titles, this time to Susie
Comics and ran till #100 in 1954. A new incarnation is still published.
The Shield was by far the most
popular superhero MLJ ever produced and one of the all time most popular
superheroes of the '40s. Between the time he first appeared in Pep #1 and his
last appearance in Pep #65, The Shield had appeared in a total of 99 stories.
The only MLJ hero to come near that record was The Black Hood with 82 stories.
No other MLJ hero even reached the 60 mark.
The G Man Extraordinaire had his
origin told twice. The first time was in Pep #1. Joe Higgins had sworn himself
to a lifetime career of shielding our government after his father was killed in
a run in with foreign spies. Joe constructed a uniform that looked a great deal
like a shield. With this costume he possessed the powers of super strength and
speed and it also made him invulnerable to bullets and flame. After about six
months, the origin was retold, revamped and went into much more detail.
The new origin was told in the first
issue of Shield Wizard Comics. Lieutenant Tom Higgins of the US Army
Intelligence, received orders from his superior to supervise the loading of an
ammunitions ship and to be on the look out for sabotage. It seems that Higgins
was also an amateur research, scientist who had experimented for years in search
of a chemical, which, if absorbed in the proper parts of the body, would
transform an ordinary person into a super human being. Working with his son,
Joe, he at last found the right mixture, but had to postpone any new experiments
until, his current assignment was completed.
This he was not destined to do. The
ammo ship to which he had been assigned was destroyed in an act of sabotage and
Lt. Higgins mortally wounded. Later, in a hospital room in the presence of his
son and his best friend, J. Edgar Hoover, Higgins gasped out his anatomy
formula, a code combination of letters in this order: S H I E L D.
Young Joe didn't understand the
formula but filled with grief and an intense desire to serve his country in his
father's stead, he devoted himself to a deep study of chemistry. He finished
college with the highest rating ever achieved in the subject, and then spent
several more years completing his father's experiment. He perfected every part
of it except the most important, the meaning of the anatomical formula s h i e l
d. Then one day, quite by accident,
as he was leafing through a medical book, Joe found it a drawing of the human
body that revealed the important parts to which the letters of the formula
referred. Interpreted, it read thusly:
S Sacrum, the spinal center of the
body. H Heart, the pump of the body.
I Innervation, the nerve center of
the body. E Eyes, the power of sight.
L Lungs, the control of respiration.
D Derma, the skin covering of the
body.
Joe hurried back to his laboratory
and donned a special skintight fibrometallic suit, an invention of his own which
was designed to help his pores absorb the chemical. He rubbed the parts of his
anatomy the formula specified, then lay perfectly still for 12 hours as
fluoroscopic rays forced the chemical into the particular organs. The result;
one of the most powerful and formidable forces for freedom this country has ever
seen, the mighty Shield.
Joe revealed his secret to his
father's old friend, the chief of the FBI, J. Edgar Hoover, who granted him a G
Man commission, and thus was begun an arrangement by which The Shield, through
special assignments, cavorted through pulse pounding adventures to the delight
of comic fans of the early forties.
The Shield proved so popular that his
stories were upped to 13 pages each issue starting with #6, July 1940. The
artist who was selected to do the Shield was one of the best, and still is,
Irving Novick. Novick had a very tight style during 1940-41. Figures were drawn
to near perfection. People looked like people. There was no crudeness in the art
like many other artists suffered. Bodies, faces, everything was well drawn.
Novick swiped from no one, a rare thing in itself, since at that time, even the
best artists were not beyond swiping from Foster or Raymond.
In Pep #4 The Wizard/ Mosconian
battle found it's way into The Shield story. Soon supporting characters began to
appear. The first was Betty Warren, whom The Shield rescued in #6 after her
father, a US Senator, was murdered by enemy agents. She became Joe Higgins'
sweetheart. Next came Ju Ju Watson in #9 as the comic relief (MLJ may have been
one of the pioneers in providing humor in a serious strip) In #18, Ju Ju's dizzy
girl friend Mamie Mazda joined the group. These three, getting into all sorts of
trouble, really kept the Shield moving. Perhaps it was a little bit more than
one guy, even a super guy, could handle because when Pep #11 January 1941, hit
the stands, the first thing the readers saw was the cover and on it was a young
boy in costume fighting side by side with The Shield. A cover blurb read:
EXTRA!! NEW!! Dusty the Boy Detective with The Shield. Inside, FBI Agent Joe
Higgins, Ju Ju and Betty were investigating a sabotage case in an airplane
factory when a plane blew up on take off. A young redheaded boy rushed to the
burning plane only to find that one of the dead victims was his father. Joe
comforted the boy. Later, as the boy was strolling into a hanger, he came across
some men beating up on Betty and forgetting his own grief, rushed to her aid.
Then Joe, as The Shield, joined the fight. Later we learned that the leader
behind the sabotage is a robed figure called The Vulture. After that run in with
The Vulture, Dusty tells the Shield he wants to fight crime and be like him when
he grows up but The Shield told him he thinks they would make a great team right
now. Going to the Shield's laboratory, they made a costume for Dusty. So entered
The Boy Detective. Needless to say, The Vulture and his gang got their just
reward in the end.
While Dusty was the Shield's partner,
he never had any powers of his own, nor did he ever have a last name. His
familiar red and blue costume was yellow and blue in that origin issue.
Over the next few issues, the super
powered Shield, his pal Dusty and friends Ju Ju, Betty and Mamie went about
their business fighting crime, meeting up with The Vulture again in Pep #78. As
the number twenties rolled by, a big change was about to happen in The Shield's
way of life. Minor changes in costume had started to appear around #27 and #28.
With #28, Betty, Ju Ju and Mamie made their last appearance and finally in #29
July 1942, it happened. First of all, the reader noticed right off that The
Shield was wearing blue trunks for the first time and that the art had the
swinging free for all, Kirby effect. In the story itself, the reader found The
Shield and Dusty approaching a deserted shack by the waterfront, looking for a
Japanese spy Nest. Discovering a secret room, they attacked and a shot rang out.
But something then happened that never happened before. After 28 issues, the
incredible happened, the bullet struck and The Shield cried out, "Oooh I've
been hit every everything is going black." Yes for the first time The
Shield was stunned by a bullet. Dusty asked what had happened to which the
Shield replied, "I'm not sure myself, but I suspect that the formula of my
father's which gave me my strength is wearing off." Rushing back to his
lab, The Shield tells Dusty his origin, which marked the third, and possibly
last time the origin was ever told. After going through a number of tests, The
Shield learns the truth: all his superpowers are gone. But there was little time
to do anything about it, the Japanese Spies had to be stopped, superpowers or no
superpowers.
Losing his powers was not the only
change to take place. Irving Novick's art had made a drastic change also. Gone
was the tight detailed art of 1940-41 and in its place a new fast moving style
in the Simon and Kirby tradition. During the changeover in #29 and #30, Novick's
name was missing from the stories but it was back with #31.
Now The Shield had to go up against a
Japanese costumed hero known as The Fang, who feared no one. Even without any of
his powers, The Shield was more than a match for The Fang as he and Dusty and
the Police cleaned up the spies. Back at his lab The Shield once again went
through the steps to regain his powers.
In #30, the experiment was completed,
but it was a failure and The Shield was still powerless. The Shield wasn't
licked, the fight would be tougher but he and Dusty vowed to fight as long as
there was a spark of breath left. In #30 they met The Strangler for the first
time. The Strangler was a German costumed character as ruthless as they come and
a great painter as well. After his first real test without superpowers, The
Shield defeated The Strangler and turned him over to the police.
In #31, The Strangler joined forces
with a tommy gun artist named The Snowbird and escaped prison. The escape was
soon discovered. After a number of battles between the Shield and Dusty and The
Strangler and Snowbird and his tommy gun, The Strangler plunged to his death
into the ocean and The Snowbird was returned to prison.
In issue #33 November 1942, The
Shield's superpowers, temporarily returned when at the end of the story he and
Dusty and a professor and his daughter are about to be tortured by Germans. The
Shield, Exerting superhuman strength, burst his bonds, smashed into the Germans,
broke Dusty's chains with his bare hands and then picked up both the professor
and his daughter and crashed through the wall of the burning building. Was it
just a flash or had the Shield's superpowers returned? That was the last time
his superpowers ever returned although they were mentioned by The Shield from
time to time in later stories.
By issue #34, the words
"America's Fastest Growing Comic Magazine" began to appear on the
covers and these words continued to appear on' most covers for the next ten
issues.
But, as each issue passed, it was
becoming more and more apparent that The Shield was no longer the real star. He
was slowly losing ground to the freckle faced teenager, Archie Andrews.
Archie Andrews and The Gang made
their debut in Pep #22, December 1941. I don't think anyone needs to be
introduced to Archie and his friends Betty, Veronica and Jughead. This was the
first and best strip of its kind, and still is. Archie got more popular as each
issue came out. Originally drawn by Bob Montana and later by "Red"
Holmadale and then Harry Sahle, Archie started to make his move with issue #36,
February 1943, when he appeared on the cover for the first time. It was a
beautiful cover with Shield, Hangman and Archie hand and hand in a winter scene.
He didn't appear on the cover again till #41, August 1943, and now he was there
to stay. Gone were the great Shield and Hangman covers of 1940 42. Now Archie
was front and center with The Shield playing second banana on all the covers.
The Shield was able to hang onto the covers till #49, which was his last cover
appearance.
Inside Archie was not able to
dislodge The Shield from the lead story till x/49. With #49, Archie took over
the lead story for good although The Shield still hung in there with longer
stories from time to time until he finally had to call it quits after #65,
January 1948.
The Shield was drawn mostly by Irving
Novick but for a while during 1944-45, the art was by Clem Harrison and Sam
Burlockoff. Other artists over the years were Al Camerata,
Harry Sahle (mostly covers) and Bobby King. Most stories were written by Harry
Shorten.
The inside front cover of every issue
of Pep starting with #15 was devoted to The Shield G Man Club where Joe
Higgins’ always had Bulletins printed telling news, listing new members and
such. You could join the club for one thin dime, which would get you an
Identification Card and a metal pin button badge. After issue #65 The Shield G
Man Club became The Archie Club.
Also appearing in Pep #I were The
Queen of Diamonds with The Rocket which was shortened to The Rocket, from #2-12.
This was a Flash Gordon type strip by Lin Streeter, which found a huge rocket
ship crashing within the barriers of the Diamond Empire. The pilot, known as The
Rocket, had become a friend of the Empire's lovely Queen. The stories were even
close to that of Flash Gordon's adventures complete with a City of Hawkmen in
#4. By #11 The Rocket and The Queen of Diamonds had built a large wooden
schooner with the help of the Pigiodgeons a race of Lilliputians, and set out
for new adventures on the ship, which they called the Rocketeer. The stories
then became more like Eisner's Hawk strip.
An oriental strip along the lines of
Charlie Chan, appeared in issues #1-11. Fu Chang, International Detective and
Chinese Scholar, was educated in America and was the heir to the Magic Chessmen
of Aladdin, with whose aid he combated the forces of evil and oppression. He had
organized the Ti Yan Tong as a Secret Society, along with his fiancé Tay Ming,
to fight Princess Ling Foy and her evil creations. Lin Streeter drew many of the
stories.
Kayo Ward by Phil Sturm and Bob Wood
was a prize-fighting strip that appeared in #1-28. Also in #1-16 was Lee
Sampson, The Midshipman. This was Pep's answer to Top Notch's Keith Kornell.
A Green Hornet type hero called The
Press Guardian appeared in #1-11. This is one of those oddities of the comic
book industry. Starting in #1 the strip is called The Press Guardian but in the
story the character wears a costume, has no secret identity and was called The
Falcon. Then in #2 he is The Press Guardian and wears a green business suit and
red mask. He was really playboy Perry Chase, son of the publisher of The Daily
Express. In secret Perry becomes The Press Guardian, foe of all enemies of the
Press. In issue #3 Perry rescued Cynthia Blake from the Moroniabund and she
becomes his assistant and the only one, besides his valet, who knew his secret.
The stories were drawn by Mort Meskin and weren't bad at all especially the
earlier stories when Meskin used a fine line effect.
Bentley of Scotland Yard was MLJ's
longest running detective strip starting in #1 and running through #41 August
1943. Inspector Bentley was featured in some very weird and off beat adventures
like battling The Hunchback in #4, "The Riddle of the Whirring Wings"
in 11 or "The Case of the Armless Corpses" in #23 and a murderer known
as Mr. X in #29. Most stories before #19 were drawn by Sam Cooper while most
after #19 were by Paul Reinman.
Perhaps one of Bentley's most
puzzling cases was in #31's "The Church Steeple Murders". The story
opened with Bentley spotting the body of a man on the top of the church steeple.
With the help of the church sexton and his brother Dr. Tagg, Bentley removed the
body from the steeple and discovered that it was Jim Crivet's butler and he had
been clubbed to death. Soon Bentley, along with the sexton, Dr. Tagg, Jim Crivet
and Crivet's wife, Anne, was examining the belfry. He bent over the rail to
examine a clue just as the great bells began to ring knocking him over the rail.
Desperately he grabbed and hung onto the bell and was almost impaled on top of
the sharp point of the steeple which he discovered could be raised and lowered
lower than the bell, which explained how the butler got there ...he was knocked
onto the steeple by the bells, then the steeple was raised. Part of the mystery
was solved, but who was the murderer? The reader had all the clues and Bentley
asked the reader if he could now identify the killer. And if the reader were as
smart as Bentley. As it turned out, the killer was Anne Crivet who was a
bigamist. She was married to both Crivet and the butler and one had to go. So
for once the butler didn't do it, he was the one done in.
Debuting in Pep #1, was one of MLJ's
better early superheroes, "The Most Astounding Man on the Face of The
Earth", better known as The Comet. The main thing The Comet had going for
him was the art of Jack Cole. The stories Cole did were great but he didn't stay
with the strip long enough to make it as popular as other MLJ characters. After
#6, he was replaced by Bob Wood in #9 and 10 and by Lin Streeter in #11-16.
John Dickering, a young chemist, had
discovered a light gas, which he injected into his blood stream. It made it
possible for him to leap thru the air in great leaps a'la Superman although The
Comet looked more like he was flying then just jumping. Dickering also found
that the gas had settled in his eyes and that he was able to throw off a
powerful disintegrating ray that only glass would stop. Since the ray would not
pass through glass he wore goggles to prevent the ray from destroying anything.
To use the ray he simply raised the glass goggles and poof, he would destroy
whatever he pleased.
In Pep #2 The Comet saved Florida
from a villain who called himself Satan. In issue #3 Satan and his assistant Doc
Zadar captured The Comet and using hypnotism, forced him to become a criminal.
He went about destroying things and killing many policemen. Then in an argument
with Satan, Doc Zadar turned The Comet on Satan and he killed him. After killing
Satan, The Comet returned to Zadar but, accidentally, he had left his visor up
and the rays from his eyes struck Zadar, killing him. The Comet then came to
himself, read in the newspapers what he had done and vowed to clear himself,
which he never completely did.
In #5 The Comet met Thelma Gordon for
the first time. Thelma was a reporter who believed he was innocent and wanted
his story. In #6 while trying to plan a way to clear him, The Comet went out and
then returned in regular dress and said to Thelma: "How's this for a
disguise? Nobody knows me as plain John Dickering." This was the first
mention of her knowing his identity.
He never really cleared himself.
Although Thelma's stories always played him up as hero, he was always regarded
as a criminal at large by the police. While the stories after #7 tend to deal
with his fight against crime, rather than running from the police and trying to
clear himself, each time he met up with the police they went after him. Even at
the start of the story in #17 when he delivered Big Boy Malone's mob to the
police he leaves in a hurry in a hail of police bullets. He then returned to
Thelma who pleads with him to give up and become plain John Dickering as he has
atoned for accidentally killing police. He says no, his conscience would never
allow him and he must go on making amends. He then returned to his own apartment
and as he was changing clothes, his brother Bob walked in and discovered his
secret.
A few days later, two thugs, friends
of Big Boy Malone, laid in wait for John but way laid Bob by mistake and as they
tried to force him into their car, The Comet flashed onto the scene. Turning
toward the intruding Comet, the thugs opened fire and The Comet went down in a
hail of bullets. Before the police arrived, Bob was able to get him to Thelma's
apartment. The Comet was dying. His last words to Bob and Thelma were: "My
turn now, you two stick together Kind of a memorial to me Good bye Bobby Bye
Thel Aahhl"
Bob swore, "I'll carry on for
him Thel! I'll bring his murderers to the hangman. I'll be their Hangman!"
And he was.
This was a first for comics. No one
actually killed off a superhero but MLJ proved it not only could be done, but
the character that replaced him was far more popular than The Comet ever was.
Then Hangman made his debut in Pep
#17 July 1941. The origin story was written by Cliff Campbell and the art was by
George Storm. Storm was okay on humor strips, but his art on a serious strip
like The Hangman was not only atrocious but about the worst of any MLJ hero.
Storm remained on the strip thru #19 and one would wonder why the strip clicked,
but it did and became another MLJ instant hit.
If it wasn't bad enough that The
Comet was a wanted man, The Hangman almost met the same fate. In Pep #I8, a
master criminal called The Jackal decided to get rid of The Hangman by posing as
him. His plan was to hang some innocent people and place the blame on the real
Hangman. Not many heroes ever had anyone out to ruin their career in such a
short time. The Jackal started to plan his downfall in the third panel of the
second page. But The real Hangman finally caught the fake one and thanks to
Thelma Gordon, her newspaper cleared him. No two heroes ever had the same loyal
girl in their corner like John and Bob Dickering had in Thelma Gordon.
By Pep #23 the art had improved. By
now both Bobby King and Harry Lucey were doing the art. Now the stories were
written by Bill Woolfolk. Then came issue #28 June 1942 and for the first time
in his career, The Shield did not appear on the cover of Pep. Instead the cover
featured only The Hangman and a costumed villain known as Captain Swastika and
inside for the first time, The Shield gave up the lead spot as well to the
Hangman. On the inside front cover, on The Shield G Man Club page, The Shield
announced that he and Dusty were playing second fiddle to The Hangman this
issue. Dusty agreed. He was fighting Captain Swastika and this was the greatest
issue of Pep yet. Captain Swastika was back in #29 to steal a U.S. Battleship.
In a fight Captain Swastika proved he could defeat The Hangman in hand-to-hand
combat and he did it every time they met. At the end of the story in #29,
Swastika is almost killed when he accidentally hung himself in a noose he had
rigged to trap The Hangman. In #30 The Hangman met up with a weird witch like
character called Mother Goose. All her crimes were committed using nursery
rhymes as clues. The story had a weird night setting complete with a castle, an
old windmill, an old well (which almost became The Hangman's grave) and eerie
goings on. In #31 The Hangman journeyed to Germany to fight a Nazi called The
Hunter.
Issue #31 or 32 was Harry Lucey's
last. The art in #33 was by John Cassone and with #34 Bob "Fuji"
Fujitani would become the artist for most, if not all, the remaining Hangman
stories. In the first Fujitani drawn story, Captain Swastika returned. He was
supposed to have been killed of in Hangman #3 but in Pep #34 he told The Hangman
"it is not so easy to kill a man of my strength." Again the Hangman
was no match for Swastika and in the end Swastika was killed by his own henchmen
with an ice pick meant for The Hangman. He stumbled in front of The Hangman and
took the ice pick in his back.
In issue #32 The Hangman appeared
once again in the lead story, "The Bullfrog Strikes Again". The
Hangman would appear on all covers from #1-42 except for #41. He and The Shield
may just as well have been missing from the cover of #42 since Archie and
Jughead had the spotlight. Both The Shield and The Hangman were colored dark
blue on the cover and at first glance one almost missed them.
With Pep #47 March 1944 in a story
called "The Noose", The Hangman's career finally came to an end. Since
#41, The Hangman's stories had been reduced to only 9 pages after having
appeared in 13 page stories since #28. For the most part his stories had been
averaging 1-2 pages more per issue then The Shield's stories.
In Pep #48 May 1944 The Hangman was
replaced by The Black Hood. (The Hood had already replaced The Hangman in his
own book in the Fall of 1943). By now all of MLJ's heroes were running out of
steam and it seemed that all the heroes left, from The Shield on down and
including The Black Hood, were drawn by Clem Harrison. The Black Hood had just
finished his run in Top Notch Laugh #44 April 1944 and moved to Pep the
following month. But unlike his previous long run he would last only four issues
(to #51 December 1944) in Pep. In 1946 he would return for two more issues #59
December 1946 and #60 March 1947, but these were after he gave up the Black Hood
costume. By now, only The Shield was left and he would vanish after five more
issues.
Next to the Shield, the longest
running strip in the old Pep was Sergeant Boyle. As mentioned in the Blue Ribbon
chapter, Charles Biro did a character called Corp. Collins and his sidekick
Slapsie, Infantrymen in the U.S. Army. Not to be out done, Biro introduced
almost a carbon copy of Collins and Slapsie in Pep, called them Serg. Boyle and
Twerp, put them in the British Armed Forces and had an even bigger hit than
Collins' was. Before long Boyle and Twerp were popping up all over the globe
fighting the Japanese and Germans for the U.S.A. Just what part of the service
they represented was not really clear. They were more or less happy go lucky
troubleshooters. Many stories teamed them up with Collins and Slapsie. Both
writer Harry Shorten and artist Carl Hubbell were written into the story in #31.
Boyle remembers that he had forgotten to send in that months story so they pay a
visit to the MLJ offices where they find Shorten and Hubbell trying to think up
a story without much luck. After a meeting between the four, Boyle and Twerp
decide they could work up a story better alone so they go out and round up some
Nazis.
The stories were played for laughs
and there was a lot of fun in them. Biro did the stories through #10 while
Hubbell did the rest through #39, which was the last Boyle story in Pep.
A minor super hero made his debut in
Pep #12, February 1941. Ted Tyler, a young fireman, had entered a burning
laboratory, which was fired, by a pyromaniac known as the Bug. Inside the
building. The Bug had knocked out Tyler and tied him in the lab. While tied up,
a chemical spilled all over him and he came out of the fire alive. Later he
found out that his body was now able to absorb fire. Bullets would melt when
they hit him. He then added a blue costume, called himself The Fireball and went
about destroying The Bug. His costume was brief for a superhero, in that his
legs were bare and he wore no mask. His costume was blue with a yellow belt and
wristbands. The art was by Paul Reinman. The Fireball appeared last in #20,
October 1941.
In issue #16, June 1941, through #21,
November 1941, one would find a somewhat offbeat strip in the form of Madam
Satan. Madam Satan was the Devil's ally and she was sent to Earth to do his
bidding. A beautiful girl named Tyra was going to marry a young man but his
parents disapproved of the idea so she poisoned them and put them in their car
and caused it to crash into their son's car. After pulling them out of the
wreck, the son discovered that his father was still alive and he told him what
Tyra had done. Returning to Tyra, he killed her, but she was so beautiful, even
in death, that he just had to kiss her. As it turned out, hers was the kiss of
death and he died. Her evil spirit was then drawn to Satan and he returned her
to earth to do his evil work as Madam Satan. The artist on most stories was Bob
King.
Believe in fairy tales? Pep had one
in a wonderful fantasy strip called "Danny in Wonderland" which
started in Pep #12 and was last seen in #39. As it happened in #12, Danny was
visiting his Uncle's ranch and one night he was reading a book called
"Stories of the Land of Wonder" and he wishes that he was there. A
fairy then appeared and told him if he really wished it, to go outside. Outside,
he and his dog Snapper were caught in a tornado which carried them to Wonderland
a' la Dorothy in The Wizard o f Oz. In Wonderland, Danny met the dwarf Kupkake (Kuppie)
and the two and Danny's dog had all kinds of adventures. In #23 they meet the
Mad Hatter and in #29 everyone in Wonderland celebrated Danny's birthday by
showing flashbacks of his adventures since he arrived in Wonderland. In #30 he
saved Alice from the land of Nightmares. In #31 the story took on a sad turn of
events. While Danny and Kuppie were swimming they were attacked by an alligator,
which killed Snapper when he tried to save them. All through the forest the
trees and animals cried, when suddenly Mother Nature appeared and told Danny
that Father Time could restore Snapper but he may not be easy to find. Through
the Fiery Caverns and the Cave of Monsters they went until finally they reached
their objective, the mountain of Father Time. But they learn that he is unable
to help them because he was some 500 years behind his schedule and didn't have
the time. One place called Sleepy Town was almost 1,000 years behind time ' they
even used square wheels. But he agreed to help get Snapper back if Danny and
Kuppie would go to Sleepy Town and bring them up to date. All turned out well
and other adventures followed. Many stories were drawn by "Red"
Holmdale during 1942.
With Pep #30, MLJ produced what would
be their last attempt at a major costumed hero when they introduced Captain
Commando and the Boy Soldiers, a strip that would outlast all their costumed
heroes except The Shield and The Black Hood. In fact, he outlasted all but The
Shield in Pep Comics.
The first three stories had beautiful
art by Alex Blum and it was some of the best he ever did. But after #33, under
others, the art became just run of the mill fare and when Irv Novick finally
took over it had become almost a copy of DC's Boy Commandos strip.
"This is a tale of four average
boys like you or you, or you somewhere in England. Although they come from many lands, they
are united in their love of freedom l And their hero is freedom's foremost
champion, the world renowned fighter against tyranny CAPTAIN COMMANDO".
Thus read the splash page of #30. The four boys were Billy Grayson, American;
Gerald Sykes, English; Armand De Latour, free French; and Erik Jansen from
Norway. The boys hoped to join up with the Commandos but Billy's Dad didn't
believe in fighting, or so he let on. Billy thought he was a coward but the fact
was, he was really Captain Commando himself.
When the boys tried to join the
Commandos they were refused because of their age but were told they could use
Erik, the Norwegian boy, for a guide. Putting on uniforms, Erik helps the other
three boys slip on board the ship which was also the same ship Captain Commando
was on a mission to Norway to free prisoners and destroy oil wells. The boys
were soon discovered but when Captain Commando went to see them he saw his son
and he couldn't meet them as Captain Commando because his son might recognize
him. He finally faced them as Billy's father. Again he gives Billy a lecture
against fighting and a brokenhearted Billy is about to give up. After the
mission into Norway where Captain Commando and the Boy Soldiers fought
side-by-side, Captain Commando stood alone on the deck when Billy asked if he
could speak to him. Captain Commando says, "I'm pretty busy" to which
Billy replied, "Too busy to even talk to me, DAD." The secret was out
and Billy was now proud of his father, and Captain Commando and the Boy Soldiers
became a team.
The art was even better in #31 but by
#33 other artists took over and the strip really suffered. The relationship
between father and son was gone but the art did improve with #34 but the stories
just didn't seem serious enough without Blum's art.
There was nothing new in Captain
Commando and The Boy Soldiers. It
had been done many times before with
strips like Captain Freedom and the Young Defenders, Daredevil and the Little
Wise Guys, Guardian and the Newsboy Legion and Rip Carter and the Boy Commandos.
Within a few issues Irv Novick took over the art and brought a vast improvement,
except for the fact Novick chose to follow Simon & Kirby's Boy Commandos as
a pattern. The Germans now looked like they had stepped right out of a Boy
Commandos story and to make things worse, Gerald and Erik were replaced by Percy
and an almost exact copy of The Boy Commandos Brooklyn in Flatbush, complete
with red hair. After Novick left, the stories became no more than fillers, a far
cry from the first three stories. But as bad as the strip became, it did manage
to reach #56, March 1946 before it was finally dropped. In all Captain Commando
was in #3052 and #54 and 56.
Other short-lived strips in Pep were
Lucky Larson in #13-15 and Jolly Roger in #21-27. This latter strip was drawn by
Ed Smalle and featured Jolly Roger and his Sky Pirates. Issue #28 had Wings
Johnson who had been in Top Notch #1-27, but his appearance in Pep was just a
one shot.
While Pep outlasted both Top Notch
(as a serious comic) and Blue Ribbon, it was also written in the cards that
changes were due here as well. With #40 July, 1943 the first change came. Long
running strips Serg. Boyle and Danny in Wonderland were replaced with humor
strips Catfish Joe and Little Chief Bugaboo. Catfish Joe was another Li'l Abner
type drawn by Larry Harris while Little Chief Bugaboo related the comic
adventures of a little Indian boy and his dog Fido. Joe would last be seen in
#48 while Bugaboo vanished after #47. With #42, September 1943, a take off on
Marco Polo, called Marco Loco, was introduced and ran through #52. With #53
June, 1945 the reader would find this line up: Archie, Shield and from the old
Top Notch Laugh Susie, Twiddles and Pokey Oakey. Captain Commando was back for
#54 but the lineup for the years to come was pretty well set up with Archie,
Katy Keene, Twiddles, Gloomy Gus and Li'l Jinx. Pep had run its course and MLJ
was now officially dead as far as the superhero was concerned. Pep would last
into the 70s with Archie and his gang.
After introducing Blue Ribbon, Top
Notch and Pep Comics, MLJ decided to give it one more go. So one month after Pep
Comics #1 hit the stands and just four short months since Blue Ribbon Comics
first appeared, their fourth title, Zip Comcs #1, dated February 1940 was on the
stands. Now MLJ had four monthly titles going for them.
Charles Biro had been with MLJ since
the start and had been drawing both Serg. Boyle and Corp. Collins, but he had
yet to have a crack at a super hero. That would all change with Zip #1. He would
not only do a super hero, but it would be a first rate hero to boot. On the
cover of Zip #1 was a new red and blue costumed hero Steel Sterling, Man of
Steel. Yep, there was now another Man of Steel. Superman didn't have a monopoly
on that slogan.
John Sterling's father had been
killed by gangsters and John had vowed, as all good guys do, to right the wrong.
So young John went about studying chemistry in order to find a protection for
himself when he would be ready to begin his battle with the underworld. After
months of work he finally developed a chemical formula. He then made a cauldron
of molten metal, covered his body with the chemical, posed a few moments above
the molten metal, then plunged into it for the realization of his greatest
ambition ... or death. He survived the ordeal and Steel Sterling was born. A man
with the resistance, the magnetism and the strength of steel. John Sterling was
now ready to crush out crime.
Unlike most superheroes that had two
separate identities, John decided to be two people at once, Steel Sterling and
his twin brother John Sterling. As John he opened up his own Private Detective
Agency. By issue #4 Steel was joined by Dora Cummings who later would know John
and Steel were the same person. Unlike most female characters, Dora was not a
regular except for a few appearances, and she would all but vanish from the
series after 1940.
Clancy the Cop started appearing in
the Steel Sterling strip around #6 and was soon joined by Alec (Looney) Lumar in
#9. Clancy was the typical short, fat cop with an oversized nose, which seemed
to be the type of policeman most artists of the forties enjoyed drawing. On the
other hand Looney was the thin, stupid type, which made them a perfect Laurel
and Hardy type and a headache for Steel in many of his cases. Looney and Clancey
even rated their own starring series in Jackpot Comics 6 9.
Around #19 Steel, Clancey and Looney
began a good will tour of South America and were still there in #20. By #23 they
were in Hawaii. Even as early as #20, November 1941, months before we entered
World War 2, Steel was fighting the Germans. In fact, Hitler was on the cover of
#20. More Germans appeared on the cover on #23.
Shortly after #9, Steel gave up his
double identity bit and by #12 he was Steel in or out of costume. Issue #27 was
the first issue Steel Sterling did not appear in the lead story. In fact he was
regulated back to the third spot with The Web and Blackjack in the number one
and two slots but didn't hurt much in a book with three top strips and he would
miss the lead spot in 29 32 as well but never again.
But when the reader came face to face
with that Steel Sterling splash page in #27, they would meet up with a menace so
gigantic, that his very name would strike terror into the bravest of hearts, the
dreaded Baron Gestapo. Baron Gestapo was a monster dressed in a blue/black tight
costume with gray trunks, boots and gloves. On his chest was a flaming red
swastika emblem. His face was one you would not easily forget=a large mouth with
fanglike teeth, a monical in his right eye and short yellow hair. He wasn't
beyond killing anyone, not even his own men. But he was never a match for the
Man of Steel. He was back in #28, this time helping the Japanese. In #29 a new
German costumed menace named The Hyena appeared to battle Steel. Dora Cummings
was in this story and she almost met her death at the hands of The Hyena, but he
met his death instead.
By issue #35 Looney had become a
member of the US Army, but was still a vital part of the stories, but Dora had
once again vanished from the stories and by issue #39 Steel was the only
character in Zip worth buying the book for.
The longest running strip in Zip
Comics, except for Steel Sterling, was Zambini, the Miracle Man by Ed Waxler and
Joe Blair. Zambini got his magic from the Magic Amulet he wore about his neck. A
gesture, or words and a rub of the amulet and he could perform all sorts of
tricks of magic. After Waxler other artists like Bob Montana, Paul Reinman, J.
Phillips and Sam Cooper did the art. Zambini was in Zip #1-35.
Zip was still lacking from the start
what the other three titles had all along and that was a solid back up feature.
Blue Ribbon had Mr. Justice and Rang
A Tang, Pep had The Shield and The Hangman and Top Notch had The Wizard and
Black Hood, so with #10 January 1941 MLJ introduced what they hoped would be a
good number two strip in Dicky in the Magic Forest, the adventures of a young
boy named Dicky Farenwell who lived in an imaginary world. The Magic Forest
surrounded Panora, and Panora surrounded an independent city called Madowa, and
Madowa was rotten to the core. That's where Dicky has his adventures. But the
strip was not a success as a second feature so the call went out for a new
costumed hero and that call was answered in the form of Black Jack.
On the cover of Zip Comics #20,
November 1941, one would see Steel Sterling with his arm around a new red clad
crime fighter and introducing him to the readers as Black Jack.
Lucky Lavitto was King of the
Underworld and was always calling on a fortuneteller to hear what he had heard
year after year, that he was still Boss of the town, but this time fate had
shuffled the cards and a warning in the cards told him his days as the gang
Chieftain were numbered. The Jack of Spades card had appeared and warned the
Blackjack was coming into his life to ruin him. Lavitto laughed it off and he
and his gang went out and robbed a bank, killed a cop and made their getaway,
leaving behind one of their own men shot in the robbery. Later, at Detective
Headquarters one Jack Jones was playing his favorite card game, which was
“Blackjack” when another Detective named Baxter came in, and started horsing
around, kidding Jones about his silly card game. Because of this game Jones was
nicknamed "Blackjack" Jones. This kidding was interrupted when the
Chief entered and sent Jones, Baxter and another Detective to the bank to
question the wounded robber. Before the gangster died he told the Detectives
that the gang was hiding out at the old Larson Mansion. When they arrived they
discovered it was a trap and Baxter was a member of Lavitto's gang. Jones was
slugged and tossed into a hole in the wall with a Jack of Spades card, and the
hole was cemented over. The other Detective was dumped into the river. An hour
later Jack Jones awakened only to find himself sealed in and fast running out of
air. He was too weak to break out. Discovering the card that the gang had left
he slowly worked the card edgeways through the cement till it fell through
leaving a crack that let in enough air for him to breathe for awhile. Later an
old man entered the Mansion and spotted the card and the slit in the wall and
saved Jack. The man was Larson, and he was born in that Mansion and he wanted to
make a suggestion to Jack, which was: Since the gangsters and even the world at
large believed Jack was dead, why not take advantage of that belief. Criminals
were afraid of the Unknown so why not become a crime fighter using the nickname
Blackjack? So adding a red and gray costume, Jack Jones became Blackjack.
Black Jack made his first appearance
at a time when the costumed hero was just coming into his own and with the art
of Al Cammarata who had brought The Black Hood to such great heights, it was
only natural that Black Jack would be an instant hit also. While he would be co
featured on the covers of Zip from #20 thru 27 and 31, he was the only major MLJ
hero never to appear in the lead story in a comic. In the case of Zip Comics
that spot was always taken by Steel Sterling and for a while by The Web.
Black Jack's most renowned adversary
was a weird figure with a spine chilling mask like face that told nothing and
gave no quarter and he was as cunning as a fox and as ruthless as the devil
himself. His name was Poker Face. Black Jack came up against him for the first
time in Zip #23. In #27, which was the last Black Jack story with Camy art,
Black Jack met up with Black Seven, a villain who had the devilish luck with the
number 7. Bobby King took over the art in #28 as Black Jack continued his fight
with Black Seven. He finally defeated him when Black Seven fell into a pit full
of spikes. "Red" Holmdale was the artist in #29 and by Black Jack's
final appearance in #35, March 1943, Sam Cooper was doing the art.
Not to rest on their laurels with two
hits, MLJ decided to try their luck again with #27, July 1942. There on the
cover of 27 were Steel Sterling and Black lack introducing a new hero called The
Web. The Web was one of the last costumed heroes MLJ would introduced (only
Captain Commando and Red Rube followed) in any of their books.
When the reader flipped open the
cover he or she would look upon a new green and yellow clad hero sporting some
of the best art to ever grace the pages of any MLJ comic book. Yes, it was The
Web. The Web was originally created to become the new strip in Top Notch Comics
but when that book changed it's format and became T N Laugh, The Web was put in
Zip Comics. John Cassone was at his best on the first Web story. He had been
doing art for both Fiction House and Hillman prior to this. Here was art one
would expect to see in a Quality comic, in fact the story looked as if Quality's
Al Bryant could have inked it. When one started to read the story the first
thing they read was: "Spin your web of crime you creatures of evil Yes
...spin it strong, spin it cleverly, spin it any way you will! But this is your
warning ...You are weaving about you a mesh from which there is no escape ...A
trap of your own making. You Can't Escape The Web!"
The first story dealt with The Web
and Rose Wayne fighting the ruthless Jap agent The Black Dragon of Death. After
the adventure was over Rose told The Web she knew who he really was, and she
promised she would keep his secret a secret if he told her how he became The
Web. So the reader was advised not to miss the next issue for the secret of The
Web.
The Web made his second appearance in
Zip #28, August 1942. The story opened with Prof. Raymond explaining to Rose how
he became The Web. The art was by Irving Novick and had a chilling resemblance
to the art of Simon and Kirby. Prof. Raymond told Rose that many years ago there
were two brothers named Tom and John. Tom was a rough neck, while John was just
the opposite. One day John was returning home from school and ran across Tom
(who was almost a double for The Boy Commandos' Brooklyn) who had just robbed a
store. John tried to beat some sense into Tom and later that evening the police
came and took Tom away. This turn of events made John resolve to study the
criminal mind and as years passed, he became an authority and lecturer on
criminology. Years later, Tom escaped from jail and went to his brother for
money only to be recaptured in John's home by the law. Then and there John made
up his mind that criminals can't escape their own web of crime, so he became The
Web. After John Raymond finished telling Rose the origin of the Web, the readers
were introduced to a gray and purple clad villain known as Count Berlin who sets
out to kill Prof. Raymond. Attacking the Prof. in his home, Count Berlin sets
fire to the house and leaves Raymond trapped in the inferno, only to be saved by
Rose who had returned for something she had forgotten. As the Web, Raymond went
out and rounded up Count Berlin and his gang of Nazis.
The art of John Cassone was back with
Zip #29 when the Web battles the Nazis to save the life of Poster Michel in Nazi
occupied France. After #29 Irving Novick became the regular Web artist. In #35
The Web brings a killer to justice who went about killing people in search of a
book which had stolen money hidden inside it.
The Web made his last appearance in
Zip #38, July 1943 in a story called "The Man Who Went Nowhere", a
fitting title since The Web also went nowhere after that.
Zip's version of Archie Andrews was
Wilbur Wilkin. Looking a lot like Archie, Wilbur was one of MLJ's top sellers
during the forties and fifties appearing in 90 issues of his own book as well as
in other titles, Wilbur started in Zip #18, September 1941, and was in all
issues through #45, April 1944.
A flood of humor strips began with
issue #36 April 1943 with the arrival of Senor Banana, a south of the border
comedian; the Applejacks, a pair of Slaphappy twins; Woody Woodpecker (no
relation to the Woody) and Joe Edward's Chimpy.
Issue #39, August 1943, introduced
what must go down in comic heroes history as the most unoriginal and poorest
drawn of any super hero from a major company (as well as any minor) in the 'form
of Red Rube. This was MLJ's last attempt at a costumed hero and they should have
stopped when they were ahead. One does not try to introduce a new hero when you
are trying to phase out the few remaining ones you already have.
Young Rueben Rueben, a runaway
orphan, . had been endowed by his ancestral Ghost with the Greatest of Powers.
By merely calling the words "Hey Rube" these forces became his. With
these powers he dedicated himself to fight for what was right in the world.
Billy Batson calling Shazam and becoming Capt. Marvel was first and by far
better than anything this strip had going for it. Bill Vigoda's art was
uninspired and was very cartoonish and the panels were almost void of any
background at all. Vigoda was a much better artist than he was on Red Rube and
one could see what he could really do, such as on the strip called "The
Flying Dragons" in Zip #46, February 1944. But with the Red Rube stories he
used so few lines that it looked like he could have finished a ten page story in
just a couple hours. But as bad as the strip and character was, he managed to
appear in all issues of Zip from #39 through the last issue which was #47 summer
1944 and to end his career he was given two stories in #47. He also shared the
covers with Steel Sterling on #40, 41, 46, 47 and was solo on #42 45.
So came to an end, MLJ's fourth
title.
Copyright
© 1983 Golden
Age Greats |