Wednesday 30 January 2019

Four Color Dell 1942-1962 [#0101-#0150]



Four Color
Dell, 1942 Series
Published in English (United States) United States

Publication Dates:
    1942 - April-June 1962 
Number of Issues Published:
    1331 (#1 - Little Joe - #1354 - Calvin and the Colonel) 
Color:  Color 
Dimensions:
    Standard Golden Age U.S.; Standard Silver Age U.S. 
Paper Stock:    Glossy Cover; Newsprint Interior 
Binding:    Saddle-stitched 
Publishing Format:   Was Ongoing Series 
Publication Type:   magazine 
Pages  68  Indicia frequency  ?

More information HERE





Four Color  Dell [#0101-#0150]  1946-1947

TITLES:

Four color 0101 Terry And The Pirates
Four color 0102 Oswald the Rabbit
Four Color 0103 Easter with Mother Goose
Four color 0104 Fairy Tale Parade (Walt Kelly)
Four Color 0105 Albert The Alligator And Pogo Possum
Four color 0106  Tillie The Toiler
Four Color 0107 Little Orphan Annie
Four Color 0108 Donald Duck In The Terror Of The River
Four color 0109 Roy Rogers Comics
Four Color 0110 Marge's Little Lulu
Four color 0111 Captain Easy
Four color 0112 Porky Pig
Four Color 0113 Popeye
Four Color 0114 Fairy Tale Parade.
Four Color 0115 Little Lulu 
Four Color 0116 Mickey Mouse And The House Of Many Mysteriesl
Four Color 0117 Roy Rogers
Four Color 0118 Lone Ranger
Four Color 0119 Felix the Cat
Four color 0120 Little Lulu
Four color 0121 Fairy Tale Parade
Four color 0122 Henry
Four Color 0123 Bugs Bunny's Dangerous Venture
Four color 0124 Roy Rogers
Four color 0125 The Lone Ranger
Four Color 0126-Christmas With Mother Goose
Four Color 0127 Popeye
Four color 0128 Santa Claus Funnies
Four color 0129 Brer Rabbit
Four Color 0130 Andy Panda
Four color 0131 Little Lulu
Four Color 0132 Tillie The Toiler
Four Color 0133 Dick Tracy
Four Color 0134 - Tarzan
Four color 0135 Felix The Cat
Four Color 0136 The Lone Ranger
Four color 0137 Roy Rogers
Four Color 0138 Smitty.
Four Color 0139 Little Lulu 
Four color 0140 Easter With Mother Goose
Four Color 0141 Mickey Mouse And The Submarine Pirates.
Four Color 0142 Bugs Bunny And The Haunted Mountains
Four Color 0143 Oswald The Rabbit And The Prehistoric Egg
Four Color 0144 Roy Rogers
Four Color 0145 Popeye
Four Color 0146 Little Lulu 
Four Color 0147 Donald Duck In Volcano Valley
Four Color 0148 Albert The Alligator And Pogo Possum
Four Color 0149 Smilin' Jack
Four Color 0150 Tillie The Toiler.



























LINKS: Four Color [#0101-#0150] ⇲⇲

Monday 28 January 2019

Latigo Kid Western #01 AC Comic



Latigo Kid Western
AC, 1988 Series
Published in English (United States)  United States
Publication Date: Summer 1988
Number of Issues Published:   1
Color:   color cover; black & white interior
Dimensions:    standard Modern Age US
Binding:   saddle-stitched

Stories by Bill Black and others. Art by Bill Black and John Severin. Cover by Bill Black. AC Comics presents a loving tribute to the masked lawmen of the Old West. Vintage John Severin Billy the Kid stories from the Golden Age are reworked by editor/artist Bill Black into tales of the Latigo Kid, the masked alter ego of real-life movie cowboy Charles Starrett. 
The Latigo Kid runs afoul of a crooked politician in Cactus Corners, protects a sheriff, and brings justice to a town with help from fellow masked gunfighters The Black Phantom, Redmask, and The Durango Kid - plus Steve McQueens TV bounty hunter, Josh Randall, for good measure. The Bigger They Are…; Red Mask of the Rio Grande; Los Tres Amigos. 44 pages, B&W. Cover price $1.95.

Sources: www.mycomicshop.com & www.comics.org


Table of Contents


Latigo Kid / cover / 1 page 

Pencils & Inks:  Bill Black (signed)

Reprints: 
US from Gunfighters (Charlton, 1966 series) #73 (June 1982)


The Durango Kid / illustration / 1 page (report information
Durango Kid (photo of Charles Starrett)


Latigo Kid / comic story / 1 page (report information)

Script, Pencils & Inks:  Bill Black (signed)


Latigo Kid / comic story / 5 pages (report information)

Script, Pencils & Inks:  Bill Black (signed)
Letters: Walter Paisley


Latigo Kid / comic story / 7 pages (report information)

Script : Bill Black
Pencils & Inks: John Severin; Bill Black
Letters; Walter Paisley


Red Mask of the Rio Grande / comic story / 2 pages 

Script, Pencils & Inks:  Bill Black (signed)
Letters: Walter Paisley


Los Tres Amigos - Latigo Kid / comic story / 9 pages
Script : Bill Black
Pencils & Inks: John Severin; Bill Black
Letters; Walter Paisley

Link:  #01

Friday 25 January 2019

Sun #234 - #263 Amalgamated Press


 The Sun (originally simply Sun) was comic launched on 11 November 1947 
by publisher J. B. Allen, changing from weekly to fortnightly during its run. 
It had previously been a health magazine called Fitness and Sun. 

More information about this collection, here 

Contents: 

  "Billy the Kid" (Geoff Campion, Don Lawrence, Alejandro Blasco, Harry Bishop)
  
  "Jeremy Blaze"

"Robin Hood" (Reg Beaumont)

"Dick Turpin" (John McNamara, Mike Butterworth, Hugh McNeill, 1951-54)




 




Links: Sun    #234 -  #263⇲⇲

Wednesday 23 January 2019

Hercules. The Adventures of the Man (#01 - #13) 1967 - 1969 Complete Series [Charlton Comics Collection]


1967 Series

Published in English (United States) United States
Publication Dates:
    October 1967 - September 1969 
Number of Issues Published:  13 (#1 - #13) 
Color:    Color 
Dimensions:    Standard Silver Age US 
Paper Stock:
    Glossy Cover; Newsprint Interior 
Binding:    Saddle-stitched 
Publishing Format:    Was ongoing 
Publication Type: magazine 

Pages: 36  -   Indicia frequency: bi-monthly

Note
Not to be confused with the magazine-size one-shot, which came out at the same time as #8
 of this series.


Authors:

Script
    Steve Skeates (signed),  Joe Gill,  Dennis O'Neil ,
Pencils
    Jim Aparo (signed),  Sam Glanzman [as SJG], Sanho Kim
Inks
    Jim Aparo (signed),  Sam Glanzman [as SJG], Sanho Kim
Colors  ?  
 Letters    Jim Aparo 









Sunday 20 January 2019

Tomahawk (#001 – #140) 1950 – 1972, DC, Complete Series


1950 Series
Publisher: DC
Publication Dates: September-October 1950 – May-June 1972
Number of Issues Published: 140 (#1 – #140)
Color: color
Dimensions: standard Golden Age US; then standard Silver Age US; then standard Modern Age US
Paper Stock: newsprint
Binding: saddle-stitched
Publishing Format: was ongoing series
Pages   52    -     Indicia frequency:  bimonthly

Authors:

Script
Jack Schiff, Cliff Rhodes, Dave Wood, Alvin Schwartz, Dave Wood, 
Al McLean, David Kahn, Sam Glanzman, Norman Maurer
Henry Boltinoff , David Kahn, Mort Drucker, Robert Kanigher

Pencils
Bruno Premiani, Fred Ray, Bruno Premiani, Leonard Starr, Martin Naydel, Otto Feuer,
 Win Mortimer , Mort Drucker, Joe Kuber, Sam Glanzman, Norman Maurer
Nick Cardy , Mort Drucker, Nick Cardy, 
Al McLean, Raymond Perry, 
Henry Boltinoff , Frank Thorne, 

Inks
Bruno Premiani, Fred Ray, Bruno Premiani, Leonard Starr, Martin Naydel, Otto Feuer,
 Win Mortimer , Mort Drucker, Henry Boltinoff , Al McLean, Raymond Perry,
 Joe Kuber,Frank Thorne, Nick Cardy, Sam Glanzman,
 Norman Maurer, Mort Drucker, Nick Cardy, 

Colors
?
Letters
Ira Schnapp, Mort Drucker, 
Al McLean, John Costanza, 


Tomahawk is a comic book character whose adventures were published by DC Comics
 during the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s as a backup feature in Star Spangled Comics and 
World’s Finest Comics and in his own eponymous series. 
He was created by writer Joe Samachson and artist Edmund Good, and first appeared in Star-Spangled Comics #69 (June 1947). Tomahawk’s uniqueness stems in part from the time frame of his fictional adventures: the American Revolutionary War.

Tomahawk was a backup feature in Star Spangled Comics from his first appearance, issue #69 (June 1947) to issue #130 (July 1952), and in World’s Finest Comics from issue #33 (Mar. 1948)
 until issue #101 (May 1959).

The Tomahawk series lasted 140 issues, from 1950 to 1972. Most stories during this period were by writer France Herron and artist Fred Ray. The last ten issues of Tomahawk focused on 
“Hawk, Son of Tomahawk” (Hawk Haukins), drawn by Frank Thorne. 
The cover title was “Son of Tomahawk” (#131 -#140.



Known as either Tom Hawk or Thomas Haukins, depending on which of two versions of 
his published history the reader prefers, “Tomahawk” was a soldier
 who served under George Washington in the warfare between the British, 
French and Iroquois forces during the decades prior to 
the American Revolutionary War and acquired his nickname due to its resemblance
 to a trademark weapon of the Iroquois Confederacy’s warriors, and to the skill he developed with that weapon.

He subsequently achieved further fame as one of Washington’s most capable operatives during the Revolution itself, leading a band of soldiers under the informal nickname of “Tomahawk’s Rangers”.

In issues 35 and 36 (Sept.–Nov. 1955), Tomahawk met a young Davy Crockett, who was very popular at the time. However, this was a historical error, as Crockett (1786–1836) was not born until after the Revolutionary War.

Issue #81 was also notable, introducing Miss Liberty (Bess Lynn), one of the earliest patriotic superheroes by the vague internal chronology of the DC Universe, who would make several more appearances in the series. Liberty Belle is a descendant of hers.

In the Time Masters mini-series, it is established that Tomahawk’s associate Dan Hunter is actually Rip Hunter’s cousin who travels back in time to stop the Illuminati during the Revolutionary War, deciding to stay in the past.

Information thanks to the Grand Comic Database and  Westerncomicsblog.wordpress











Links: #001 – #140⇲⇲

Saturday 19 January 2019

Jungle Comics (#001 - #163) 1940-1954 Complete Series [Fiction House Comics Collection 09]


 1940 Serie

Published in English (United States)  United States
Publication Dates:  January 1940 - Summer 1954
Number of Issues Published:   163 (#001 - #163)
Color:
Color Cover; Black and White Interior
Dimensions:
Early Issues Standard Golden Age U.S.; Later Issues Standard Silver Age U.S.
Paper Stock:
Glossy Cover; Newsprint Interior
Binding:
Saddle-Stitched
Pages: 68        Indicia: frequency every other month

"The Big Six"  Fiction House

Note
Original index for this series was created from the indexing work of Henry Steele.


Authors:

Script
Fletcher Hanks, Toni Blum, 

Pencils
Alex Blum [as Alex Boon], Fletcher Hanks, Arthur Peddy, Henry Kiefer, George Wilson, 
C. A. Winter, William M. Allison, George Appel, Al Stahl?, Robert Webb, 
Henry Kiefer, Joe Doolin, Howard Larsen, 
Taylor Martin, Dick Briefer, Al Walker, 
George Carl Wilhelms, Marcia Snyder, Lou Fine

Inks
Alex Blum [as Alex Boon], Fletcher Hanks, Arthur Peddy, Henry Kiefer, George Wilson,
C. A. Winter, Taylor Martin,William M. Allison, Dick Briefer, George Appel, Al Stahl?, 
Dan Zolnerowich, Al Walker, Joe Doolin,
Howard Larsen Marcia Snyder, Henry Kiefer, George Carl Wilhelms, Lou Fine

Colors: ?        Letters: Dick Briefer



Jungle Comics was first published by Fiction House in January, 1940. It enjoyed a long run finishing at issue #163 in Summer, 1954.

The main character associated with the title is Kaänga. He appeared in every issue of Jungle Comics. The original artist who worked on Kaanga is believed to have been Alex Blum but as he is so heavily and obviously based on Tarzan, no one can be credited for his creation.

When Kaanga was a child his parents died in the jungle and he was raised by apes. The reader never gets to know his real name or his ancestry, but the jungle is where Kaänga feels most at home. In the first issue Kaanga meets his mate Ann, who is a Jane clone, after he rescues her from a white slave trader named Bill Blackton. Ann then joins Kaänga in his jungle existence.

After nearly ten years Kaänga was given his own title in Spring, 1949. This ran for 20 issues until the Summer of 1954.

From http://furycomics.com







Links: #001 - #163 + 1 AUS⇲⇲

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