Only a few days left, so I'll post my comments on this comic book now. As I stated above, I missed seeing this book in the beginning of the 1950s, when I read my 4 older cousins' hand-me down comics. I knew Joe Palooka and Dixie Dugan from reading the newspaper strips. I didn't read the human character strips, so, I never read "Big Shot" comics (probably because my cousins didn't buy that one, nor "Sparky Watts"). Overall, the newspaper strips which make up this entire book, were formatted so well into the comic book format, that most, if not all readers probably couldn't tell that they were all originally written and drawn for placement in newspaper Sunday comics pages.
Joe Palooka
This episode of Joe Palooka's saga was very slow-moving, stretched out with little of interest to me dragged out over many pages. It seemed to be mainly an advertisement for Boys' Town, even much more than the 1930s "tearjerker" film starring Pat O'Brian and Spencer Tracy.
Sparky Watts
I can't imagine why Columbia interrupted their issuing (re-printing) of consecutive episodes of The Saga of Sparky Watts, from its newspaper strip, in their showcase magazine, "Big Shot Comics", with a one-shot issue of Columbia Comics. The Big Shot subscribers and regular readers would have needed to find out about the Columbia issue, to avoid missing that episode. It is true that these "episodes", each being format modified collections of several strips, were made to simulate "stand-alone" stories. But, as a Sparky fan, I would much rather have had ALL his "stories" printed consecutively in a single magazine series.
As to the "story", it was fairly typical, and reiterated the basic premise of the series, that Sparky was given his super strength and flying, and super speed, and vision powers by being zapped by cosmic rays from a machine invented by Doc Static. In this episode, the only action demonstrates to the reader Sparky's "powers", but only mentions that Doc has a new crimefighting assignment in mind for him. But, unfortunately, we don't get to see even the beginning of it (which could have resulted in a great cliff-hanger, to make the reader want to read the next issue. But, perhaps because it wasn't sure, at the time of this book's preparation, whether or not the next episode would be in Columbia or Big Shot Comics, this episode had to remain only an advert for, and introduction to, the character and the series. So, it is a fairly boring "teaser".
Charlie Chan
This was a well-drawn, good story, with good action, lots of suspense. Of course, it takes advantage of old wives' tales about the art of hypnotism, and therefore, is a bit unrealistic, trying to make us believe that if the hypnotist who put the young lady under the trance dies, she can NEVER come out of the trance, and that a hypnotised person can NOT disregard and disobey a post hypnotic suggestion. But, believing those wives' tales told for centuries by carnival hypnotists, helps make this story work, and allow for an interesting plot. But, there is also the problem of how the villain could have gotten hold of the heir's money, had he falsely "proven" that Sally WASN'T the heir. He would have had to be the family's next in line for the inheritance, or would have had to have a ladyfriend of approximately Sally's age, and married her, before or after copying her infantile footprints, and forging a new birth certificate/ID and medical file for her, including the fiancee's footprints. In the 1930s, that would have been difficult to accomplish.
Hollywood Husband (Sunday Pages)
Not very funny, to my taste. Rather dull. But the art is good.
Captain Yank
An interesting story. An American adventurer has his boat destroyed by a Japanese air squadron's bomb, and makes his way through Japanese-occupied waters near the eastern end of the then Dutch colonies of Indonesia, to safety in Northern Australia. He teams up with a Dutch soldier, and then, an Australian, and is helped by local Malay island tribes. The artwork is good, and the writer's knowledge of the area is quite good. It all makes for a believable situation (which I find was not so common in a lot of The US early 1940s comic books). Many of them betray a lack of knowledge of geographical, historical, and/or socio-political conditions in those areas. Not my cup of tea, but easy to read, and doesn't insult the inteligence, because the author ans artist knew their subject and craft.
Dixie Dugan (Sunday Pages)
Also not my cup-of-tea. These one-pagers are slightly humourous, but not enough to my taste to be entertaining. Again, the artwork is good. I skipped over Dixie's strip when reading The Sunday Funnies, back in the 1950s and early 1960s.
Bo (Sunday one-page, stand-alone gags)
Frank Beck's late 19th and early 20th Century, engraving style artwork of The "Bo" newspaper strip was excellent. I love just looking at it. The on-page Sunday gags were usually clever, unusually realistic, and show that the author knew a lot about dogs (including their psychology). He relates that well to the human (especially dog lovers') sense of humour. The one pagers are mildly entertaining. But, I really like the 4-6 page complete stories, which included his master, Junior, and Junior's parents, that were printed during about half of the 1940s in Columbia's "Big Shot" Comics (the other half printing Sunday stand-alone gags). And later, during the mid 1950s, complete stories again appeared in Charlton's "Bo" series (3 issues).