Comments |
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To the uploader and to Yok, thanks for putting Charles Voight back on my radar. |
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Additional Information |
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Publication | May-June 1946 | Price: 0.10 USD | Pages: 1 | Frequency: bimonthly |
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Featuring | Boom Boom Brannigan |
Content | Genre: Adventure; Sports | Characters: Boom Boom Brannigan; Urko |
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Comic Story | Urko--the Afhanafhian Terror (12 pages) |
Synopsis | Boom Boom gets involved with a pet shop racket in which people bring in their valuable pets for grooming, but the owners sell them and later tell the customers that their pets had incurable diseases and had to be put down. But when a lady brings in her young pet gorilla, the owners decide to shave all his hair off and put him in the ring as a boxer. Boom Boom, already on the case of the missing gorilla, as boxing Champion, must face Urko, who makes short work of the champ. But Brannigan realizes Urko is the gorilla and rounds up the racketeers, and Urko becomes the star of the local zoo! |
Featuring | Boom Boom Brannigan |
Credits | Pencils: Charles Voight | Inks: Charles Voight |
Content | Genre: Sports | Characters: Boom Boom Brannigan (Champion boxer); Character (Brannigan's manager); Pinky [aka Urko; aka Jujuboo] (a white gorilla); Gorilla's female owner; "Lefty" Wright (a boxer); "Mauler" Miller (a boxer); pet shop racketeers [Slim; Stinky] (villains) |
Notes | Voight drew this story just about a year before he passed away. |
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Comic Story | Frankenstein's Birthday Party--More or Less (8 pages) |
Featuring | Frankenstein |
Credits | Script: Dick Briefer | Pencils: Dick Briefer | Inks: Dick Briefer |
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Text Story | The End of the Rope (2 pages) |
Credits | Script: Lester Lee | Letters: typeset |
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Featuring | Jason |
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Featuring | Sir Prize |
Credits | Pencils: Charles Voight | Inks: Charles Voight |
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Comic Story | The Man Who Lived Alone (8 pages) |
Featuring | Yank and Doodle and Black Owl |
Credits | Pencils: Gil Kane | Inks: Gil Kane |
Notes | Art is consistent with Kane’s Wildcat art signed under “Gil Stack” from Sensation Comics #70-72 (1947), including his tall and burly characters with lanky arms and the antihelix of the ear drawn as a crescent shape. Previous indexer suggested Jerry Robinson. |
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Creative Commons Attribution License.
More details about this comic may be available in their page here |