in house dollar bill thumbnail
 Total: 43,551 books
 New: 85 books




Index Card
« prev

0290 - The Chief

next »
Title
Four Color (1942 Series)
Date | Number: 290 | Lang: English (en)
Uploaded  by prime user
File size 18.24mb consisting of 52 pages | Format: EBook
File name4C0290_The_Chief___1__The_Chief.cbr
Downloads
159 and 6723 views
    To download files please Log in or Register
Rating
 10/10 (1 vote)
CommentsYou must be logged on to make a comment!
NotesThere is more information about this book at the bottom of the page
Large Thumbnail For 0290 - The Chief
You are WELCOME to enjoy our site & read ALL our books online. But to download & join our forum please create a FREE account or login
Prev  (94 of 476) Next
Book Cover For 0290 - The Chief
Prev
0290 - The Chief (94 of 476)
Next
Comic Book Plus In-House Image
Additional Information
 
PublicationAugust 1950 | Price: 0.10 USD | Pages: 1
NotesPencils, inks, and colors credits for this sequence from Alberto Becattini (May 14, 2007).
 
SynopsisAmerican Indians doing a night-time dance.
FeaturingThe Chief
CreditsLetters: typeset
ContentGenre: Western-frontier
NotesPencils, inks, and colors credits for this sequence from Alberto Becattini (May 14, 2007).
 
IllustrationBlackfeet Chieftain (1 page)
SynopsisHead-and-shoulders portrait of a Blackfeet chieftain, wearing a head-dress.
CreditsLetters: typeset
ContentGenre: Non-fiction
NotesInside front cover; black and white.
 
Comic StoryBuffalo Caller (14 pages)
SynopsisWhile his three comrades eat breakfast, Running Wolf, a Pawnee, nephew of Chief War Eagle, finds a buffalo herd that could feed the tribe for a year. Three Cheyenne enemy hunters appear, rivals for the herd, and liable to scalp him. Running Wolf's bow-string breaks. He flees, diving in the river, hiding underwater against a rock in the rapids. The Cheyenne believe him dead. Running Wolf runs home; he alerts War Eagle of the herd and the Cheyenne.
CreditsLetters: typeset
ContentGenre: Western-frontier | Characters: Running Wolf ["Buffalo Caller"]; Pawnee Chief War Eagle
 
Text ArticleWar Clubs and Tomahawks (1 page)
SynopsisIllustrations of war clubs, tomahawks, and lacrosse sticks, with hand-lettered text.
ContentGenre: Non-fiction; Western-frontier
NotesPencils and inks credits for this sequence from Alberto Becattini (May 14, 2007).
 
Comic StoryThe Towers of Death... (20 pages)
SynopsisOnce upon a time there was a nearby Pueblo Indian town of stone and brick. One rainy night a Pueblo band sneaked in the Pawnee village and stole the Pawnee's sacred bundle. The next evening, Pawnee Chief Wounded Bear led a band of his braves to attack the Pueblo town and retrieve the sacred bundle, but they were surprised by the Pueblos, and only Wounded Bear escaped. He raised an army, but they found the Pueblo town deserted, but for some corpses. The sacred bundle was missing. The trail was lost, and Pawnee fell ill with the Pueblo sickness.
CreditsLetters: typeset
ContentGenre: Western-frontier | Characters: Pawnee Chief War Eagle
NotesArt signed in splash panel.
 
Comic StoryApache Grass Hogan (2 pages)
SynopsisThe building of thatch huts among the Apache in New Mexico and Arizona. Informative text accompanies borderless panel illustrations, with dialogue balloons, of an Apache family building a winter home: Clearing a circle, cutting of saplings for a dome frame, tying bundles of bear-grass to the frame, from bottom to top. (Chippewas use birch bark.) For a summer home: a three-sided house thatched on top, and thatched only part-way up on three walls.
FeaturingHome Builders
ContentGenre: Non-fiction; Western-frontier
NotesTitle reads, "Home Builders No. 1 Apache Grass Hogan," suggesting this is intended to be a series about different types of dwellings. Running along the bottom of both pages are a sequence of small illustrations of 12 different types of dwelling-structures, including African huts, bark hogan, tee-pee, south sea stilt hut, log cabin, suburban home. Pencils and inks credits for this sequence from Alberto Becattini (May 14, 2007).
 
Comic StoryBlunt Arrow Boy (11 pages)
SynopsisThose little rascals of the Pawnee village, Badger Cub and Little Doe, play mischief with Auntie Crowfoot at her labors, as Badger Cub shoots a blunt arrow, knocking over her water gourd for target practice. In her ire, Auntie Crowfoot gives chase. They elude her, and Badger Cub continues target practice, knocking down a cottontail. They come upon a dead rattler, trampled by the hooves of a mare, herself dead of snake-bite; and her colt who will not desert his mother's carcass.
CreditsLetters: typeset
ContentGenre: Western-frontier | Characters: Badger Cub; Little Doe; Auntie Crowfoot; Pawnee Chief War Eagle
NotesPencils and inks credits for this sequence from Alberto Becattini (May 14, 2007).
 
IllustrationSac and Fox Warrior (1 page)
SynopsisHead and shoulders portrait of a warrior with mohawk haircut and war paint.
CreditsLetters: typeset
ContentGenre: Non-fiction
NotesInside back cover; black and white. Drawing made for the back cover of Lone Ranger #21.
 
SynopsisFour mounted Indians, three wielding lances, and one wielding a tomahawk, gallop over a small grassy bluff. The lead Indian wearing a head-dress, holding his lance forward, in a charge. The caption of this house-ad reads, "Authentic stories, portraying the life and customs of the American Indian before the coming of the White Man."
CreditsLetters: typeset
ContentGenre: Western-frontier
NotesBack cover. Pencils, inks, and colors credits for this sequence from Alberto Becattini (May 14, 2007).
 
The data in the additional content section is courtesy of the Grand Comics Database under a Creative Commons Attribution License. More details about this comic may be available in their page here
Comic Book Plus In-House Image
Mission: Our mission is to present free of charge, and to the widest audience, popular cultural works of the past. These are offered as a contribution to education and lifelong learning. They reflect the attitudes, perspectives, and beliefs of different times. We do not endorse these views, which may contain content offensive to modern users.

Disclaimer: We aim to house only Public Domain content. If you suspect that any of our material may be infringing copyright, please use our contact page to let us know. So we can investigate further. Utilizing our downloadable content, is strictly at your own risk. In no event will we be liable for any loss or damage including without limitation, indirect or consequential loss or damage, or any loss or damage whatsoever arising from loss of data or profits arising out of, or in connection with, the use of this website.