In my younger days this was my favorite genre. I drank up 30s Hollywood adventures, television's Tim and Toubo, and the pre-War
Terry and the Pirates. My enthusiasm cooled over the years as I had to face the racism, misogyny, religious prejudice, and jingoism at the heart of these celebrations of the White (American) Man's Burden. This comic is typical of its type. We have one Exotic Princess, one Airhead Girlfriend, two Double-Crossing Babes, a Menacing Witch Doctor, and plenty of tough situations solved with fists and bullets.
There are some interesting features, though, beginning with Ace Carter's trick of sticking his hand into white-hot lead. I love Ace's pasteover qualifier on page 10. Obviously it had occurred to the editor that an eager reader might cook up some hot lead! Speaking of lead, I'm surprised the Azulos aren't mentally deficient as well as blue-skinned after centuries of ingesting the stuff.
The writer packs a lot of action into "Captain Crossbones." It's crowded but it reads a bit better than the other stories. Once again a girlfriend stows away and endangers everybody by being taken prisoner. This time around the hero doesn't even bother to chide her. As a kid I was unaware of the anti-Islamic undercurrent in many GA pirate series. Quality's "Black Roger" was the most upfront about it, but most stories dealing with the Barbary pirates play up the good-guys-vs.-the-"Moslems" angle.
"Sailors of Fortune" is interesting in its completely non-judgemental description of William Dampier's career. I think we are supposed to admire him, but it's not clear. Dampier definitely went where the money was--and that's what soldiers of fortune are all about.
Lance Larson is an odd feature. Though the logo calls him a soldier of fortune he's really a non-costumed superhero. For a "man of a thousand faces" he seems rather well-known. Everybody recognizes him when he's not disguised, and everybody is aware that he's a master of disguise. Not very helpful for an undercover agent. It's remarkable that the rather over-complex story acknowledges Francisco Franco (not named) as a tyrant and casts Catalan separatists as freedom fighters. This was the opposite of the official US position; the media usually presented Franco in a positive light back then.
I'd like to know the truth about the Pancho Villa millions. Has anyone researched this? As for the ads--here is venerable old Cloverine Brand Salve. Cloverine Brand Salve has a fascinating story. Here's a brief description along with links to historical articles. Don't miss the comments, which include messages from people who actually sold the stuff.
http://www.appalachianhistory.net/2012/05/kids-get-rich-selling-cloverline-salve.htmlOverall impression: guilty pleasure.
Hey, Skinny! Be the master, not the slave! Learn to fix any part of any car!