Comments |
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Nice distinctive artwork on Story Two, and excellent lettering. |
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Additional Information |
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Publication | January-March 1952 | Price: 0.10 USD | Pages: 1 | Frequency: Quarterly |
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Featuring | Indian Chief |
Credits | Pencils:? (painting) | Inks:? (painting) | Colors:? (painting) | Job #: I.C. #5-5112 |
Content | Genre: Western-frontier |
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Text Story | Caribou! (2 pages) |
Synopsis | Kennebec (a white man) and his brother wander too far while hunting Caribou. His brother is killed by Indians and he is left for dead. |
Credits | Letters: typeset |
Content | Genre: Western-frontier | Characters: Kennebec |
Notes | This story is printed on the inside front and back covers. |
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Comic Story | The Sacred Fire (16 pages) |
Synopsis | Creek warriors put out the sacred flame of the Natchez while it is being guarded by Black Crow and Painted Thunder. Black Crow attempts to hide their failure. Painted Thunder ends up with the task of replacing the sacred flame. |
Featuring | Indian Chief |
Content | Genre: Western-frontier | Characters: Chief Great Sun; Black Crow; Painted Thunder (all Natchez) |
Notes | The stories in Indian Chief are among the first Giolitti made when he came to America. He did both pencils and inking on all his stories while in the USA, and was only assisted by Giovanni Ticci on pencils on backgrounds when he came back to Italy in 1960. Info from Angelo Todaro who worked with Giolitti. Art ID by Steinar Ådland January 2011. Script credit from Robin Snyder's The Comics!, taken from Paul S. Newman's personal records. |
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Comic Story | The False Face (16 pages) |
Synopsis | When Huron warriors overthrow an Iroquois camp, a young boy is taken as hostage in exchange for allowing the women to live. After ten years of peace, war breaks out again. A masked warrior comes to defend the Iroquois against the Huron. |
Featuring | Indian Chief |
Content | Genre: Western-frontier | Characters: Fleet Fox; White Moon; Hawk Feather (all Iroquois) |
Notes | Script credit from Robin Snyder's The Comics!, taken from Paul S. Newman's personal records. |
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Illustration | On the Southern Plains in 1860 (1 page) |
Synopsis | Reproduction of painting with this commentary: "On the Southern Plains in 1860" by Frederick Remington was such a good portrayal of the old United States Cavalry in action that it now hangs in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Their arms were an "Army Colt" and a saber. |
Credits | Letters: typeset |
Content | Genre: Western-frontier |
Notes | This is the back cover. |
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Creative Commons Attribution License.
More details about this comic may be available in their page here |