Martians are such a trusting species. Korok brings some Earthlings to Mars and everyone just accepts this as proof of conquest. Bwuh? 'Look, I have Earthlings!' 'All hail, King Korok.' Yeesh!
Found this bit of dialogue amusing. "No queen is going to be dethroned while I'm toting a pair of six guns!"
Yeahhhhhhh, because America got its start defending monarchies.
I found myself forming a theory about all this. Here's my reconstruction of what had been going on behind the scenes:
Once upon a time there was a Martian civilization afflicted with a mentally unstable Queen. You never knew what her mood swings would cause her to do next, without rhyme or reason. Unfortunately, the Martians didn't have any legally established method for "impeaching" her because of medical inability to reliably perform the duties of her office. Nonetheless, Korok, being a true patriot, wanted to unseat this terribly unfit monarch with as little fuss as possible. One day, in yet another of her wild mood swings, she conceded (in front of witnesses) that the man who conquered Planet Earth would "deserve" to run Mars too, forming a two-planet Empire with himself at the head.
Korok, being a humanitarian as well as a patriot, wanted to find a way to exploit this opening and get her into "honorable retirement" with an
absolute minimum of bloodshed. So he flew to Earth, rounded up a few cowboys without doing them any harm, and flew back to Mars. No one had died; no one needed to; but he
knew the Queen was so crazy and gullible that she was highly likely to accept these "trophies of our recent conquest" as being "solid proof" of his achievement. (That sort of thing was exactly why she needed to be nudged off the throne as quickly as possible.)
Unfortunately, the American "trophies," being absolute suckers for a pretty face, never even considered the possibility that getting Queen Thula dethroned as quickly as possible might be the
best outcome for all concerned (including herself, even if she didn't realize it). Without knowing anything about the rights or wrongs of the situation, they blundered in, started shooting, and ended up ruining Korok's attempt to have a bloodless regime change.
A moment later, Queen Thula's mental instability was highlighted once again when she spontaneously made Spurs Jackson her new Prime Minister. She apparently felt that defeating a man with a bullwhip is the best possible proof that you have all the necessary political and administrative skills to know how to run an entire planet! (No
sane ruler would ever have made
that assumption.)
P.S. Here's something on the inside of the front cover that made me wince. Caption: "When rockets have achieved a speed of seven miles per second they will exceed the velocity necessary to escape the Earth's gravity." I was thinking, "No, no, no, no!"
A few years before this comic book was published, Robert A. Heinlein had some of his characters address that very point in a bull session in the novel "Rocket Ship Galileo." I think the basic point went this way (but not in these words): "Seven miles per second" is
only what it would take to get you out of Earth's gravity well if you acquired that velocity
all at once as a result of a single huge explosion -- as if your spaceship were basically a very large bullet being fired out of the barrel of an incredibly large "gun," and then the momentum from that one explosion was all you had going for you in your attempt to get far, far away from Earth so that its gravity didn't pull you right back down.
But if your ship had a built-in rocket engine with a huge fuel supply available, with constant combustion as you fight your way out of the atmosphere and so forth, then you wouldn't need to be moving upward at anywhere near "seven miles per second." You would only need to have a constant
acceleration which was at least
a little bit more than 9.8 meters per second squared. That would keep you getting further and further away from ground level, second by second,
until you were so far away from Earth that its gravity was no longer a major concern. One of Heinlein's character referred to this as a case of people getting confused about the difference between rockety and ballistics.