Another odd thing is that on most of the strips I have, there's no dates printed. But on some of them, I've scribbled dates with a ball-point pen (in the margin above the art). Most of the strips in general seem to have been cut up and pasted down IN THE NEWSPAPERS, before I did my own cut and pasting, because you can see where the edges of the art don't quite match the drawn borders. The impression I get is someone was trying to CRAM as many comics into the newspaper pages as possible.
As part of my exhaustive clean-ups, I've been "fixing" (replacing") the outside panel borders. It's amazing how MUCH better this makes them all look!
The 5th strip I have (which I have "No.5" scribbled on), I can just barely make out the top of a printed date, "6/4", which would have been Saturday, and that's the one that says "Be back on Monday!" So either I'm missing a strip in the middle of the week, or, it started on Tuesday. I was discussing this with my best friend on the phone last night, and it occured to me... MONDAY would, quite probably, have been MEMORIAL DAY. There may not have been ANY newspapers that day! So if there was a Sunday strip that week (and again, Philadelphia NEVER saw them), it would have been 6-29-66, but, the daily would have started on 6-31-66, because there WAS no 6-30-66.
I haven't looked at the rest of the strips too close, but a quick count told me there were 34 strips in the 1st story. I wondered WHY there were 2 missing, but before I even thought about Memorial Day, I realized there would NOT be one on 7-4-66 (INDEPENDANCE DAY). So I probably do have the entire 1st story.
We did get the 2nd story (The Penguin) and the 3rd story (The Joker), although I remember distinctly being frustrated that-- FOR WHATEVER THE HELL REASON-- we somehow missed a few days worth of newspaper during The Joker story. Also, I suspect a few of those strips we did get were also run in the wrong order. I cut & collected the 2nd & 3rd story., but never put them in a scrapbook. I have a VERY STRONG, CLEAR memory of seeing the collected strips in a stack, all together, in a small box-- no more than, say, 15 years ago. But I have not been able to locate them since. DAMN.
I'm not completely sure, but I have a strong suspicion that the COURIER POST dropped BATMAN after the 3rd story. Although, when I think back on their often-wretched track record when it came to continuity strips, there's every chance they dropped it IN THE MIDDLE of the 3rd story. They always seemed to do that-- cut you off in the middle of a story and leave you hanging. Many times they would do this and readers would write in to complain, and sometimes, they would reinstate the strip, usually at the beginning of the next story. But they would ALMOST NEVER print the "missing" strips. I do seem to recall one instance where they did, but that stood out in my mind because it only happened ONCE. (Can't recall which series they did it with. It must have been unusually popular.)
I now have the impression that the comics editor must have hated him job, and his readers, and was deliberately "playing" with his readers to see if he'd get a reaction or not. A lot of people in the world are petty little tyrants, who push people around BECAUSE THEY CAN. It makes them feel less "small". (When, to my mind, that sort of behavior only makes them "smaller".)
The ONE exception to the local papers pulling a popular strip I can recall happened in the 80's. The INQUIRER (I think) had a poll to see which comics were the most popular, and least popular. They announced, in advance, that the least-popular strip(s) would be dropped. SPIDER-MAN "won". At the time, Larry Lieber was doing full art. My Dad, who normally never noticed the art, had actually been complaining that MJ looked "ugly". I remember digging out an issue of the comic with John Romita art to show him "Now this is what she's SUPPOSED to look like."
Dad was also a fan of Stan Drake's art on JULIET JONES. I remember what a laugh I got when I informed him that Drake had taken over BLONDIE. Drake was SO GOOD at drawing things with absolute precision, that he had perfectly imitated the previous artist's style. Apart from hairstyles & fashions, and the occasional high-angle camera shot on a Sunday strip, you COULDN'T TELL it was Drake! I'm sure he threw those things in just to let his fans know, yeah, it's him.
I read they eventually got Joe Sinnott to ink Lieber on SPIDER-MAN, and the two are still doing it to this day. But we never saw any of those... The last I heard, Stan Lee had threatened his brother's only source of income if Larry didn't testify in Stan's behalf at the court case involving Jack Kirby. (NICE-- GUY.)