![]() The comic includes these stories: “Split Second!” by Albert B. The comic includes the stories “Lulu Red Ridey Hoops,” “Down with the Sea in Ships,” “The Epic Cure,” “Beared Fangs,” and “Mother’s Gooseberry Rinds,” all by Walt Kelly. The comic includes the stories “The Case of the Pilfered Popcorn,” “The Working Girls,” “Hi, Alvin! What Are Looking So Sad About?” “Twenty Thousand Leaks Under the Sea,” and “The Evil Owl,” all by John Stanley & Irving Tripp, with Al Owens and Gordon Rose. The comic features material originally published in Chester Gould’s Dick Tracy daily newspaper strip. The comic includes the Donald Duck story “The Think Box Bollix,” by Carl Barks. Cover/indicia date: August-September 1952. Feldstein & Graham Ingels, with William M. The comic includes these stories: “Two of a Kind!” by Johnny Craig “Graft in Concrete!” illustrated by Jack Davis “Half-Way Horrible!” illustrated by Sid Check and “Hook, Line, and Stinker!” by Albert B. The stories include: “The Amazing Affair of the First Man on Mars,” by Jules Feiffer & Jim Dixon, first published on Janu“Contraband Wueen”, by Will Eisner & Jules Feiffer, first published on “The Case of the Baleful Buddah,” by Jules Feiffer & Jim Dixon, first published on Novemand “The $50,000 Flim-Flam”, illustrated by Klaus Nordling, first published on April 15, 1951. The comic features stories originally published in Will Eisner’s The Spirit Sunday-newspaper comic-book insert. The cover photographer and actors are unknown. The comic includes the story “I Married in Haste,” illustrated by Alex Toth, with Mike Peppe. Feldstein & Al Williamson, with Frank Frazetta and Roy G. Feldstein & Jack Kamen and “Mad Journey!” by Albert B. Feldstein & Joe Orlando “Close Call!” by Albert B. Feldstein & Joe Orlando “The Ad!” by Albert B. Feldstein & Wallace Wood “The Expert!” by Albert B. The comic includes these stories: “The Exile!” by Albert B. Feldstein & Jack Kamen, with Graham Ingels, Johnny Craig, and Jack Davis and “Buried Treasure!” by Albert B. Feldstein & Al Williamson “Kamen’s Kalamity!” by Albert B. Feldstein & Jack Davis “The Thing in the ‘Glades!” by Albert B. ![]() The comic includes these stories: “Survival… or Death!” by Albert B. The comic includes the story “The Golden Helmet,” by Carl Barks. Walt Disney’s Donald Duck and the Golden Helmet. McNabbem,” “I’ll Have a Little Time to Spare,” “That Awful Witch, Hazel,” and “…Now I’ll Mix a Couple of Drops,” all by John Stanley & Irving Tripp. Cover/indicia date: September-October 1952. The comic includes these stories: “Thunderjet!” by Harvey Kurtzman & Alex Toth “Caesar!” by Harvey Kurtzman & Wallace Wood “Chickamauga!” by Harvey Kurtzman & Jack Davis and “Night Patrol!” by Harvey Kurtzman & John Severin, with Bill Elder. To read the story illustrated by Alex Toth, click here. Edited by Wendell Crowley, Al Jetter, and Will Lieberson. This 38th post covers May 1952 to June 1952. If nothing else, the posts should prove a fun exercise in nostalgia. The series will give perhaps as good an idea as one can have as to the worthwhile comics a reader would have found at a retailer at a given point in time. There may also be a link if an online scan is available for copyrighted material, but only if that material is out of print. If the comic appears to be in the public domain, and a copy is available online for reading at the Digital Comic Museum [or elsewhere, a link will be included in the listing. Newspaper material will be included only when it has been published in these formats. Only magazines and books will be featured. The publication dates are by and large the on-sale dates the publishers reported to the U. This should reflect the books’ presence on newsstands when they were originally on sale. With the original Barks duck comics, they will, depending on the year, appear alongside the Walt Kelly Pogo books, the EC “New Trend” titles, and the 1960s Marvel superhero line. One will get to see something of the context in which the comics were published. For example, every comic book with an original Carl Barks Donald Duck story will be featured in the posts. While in some instances I will only include key issues of significant titles, I will for the most part be presenting the entirety of the major bodies of work. The comics will be presented in order of publication. (For an index of the series’ other published posts, click here.) The purpose is to provide a detailed chronology of the history of North American comic-book publishing. ![]() This is the 39th entry in this weekly series.
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