Little Miss Suzie shows a calculating, not very nice side to the character, pinching the kid's balloon, cheating on the fare and, fortunately getting her comeuppence at the end. But there are some nice panels in the story.
By #58, the art has indeed changed and the dopey boy friend is now present . I've been reading a lot of Archie stuff recently incl. Suzie and Ginger and here, Suzie really does carry on like a dumb blonde. It's all good cartoon fun.
#100 is again a change with shorter, snappier stories and I prefer this format. No messing about. The GGA is gone but the humour and fun is good.
I enjoyed all 3 comics but prefer the more Archie style and that could be because I'm a big B&V and Archie fan.
I'm still not sure of the value of this exercise as all I seem to have done is read, or in this case, re-read, 3 comics rather than one. Of course there are changes as you move along. It would be odd if over 50 issues there wasn't a change/progression/regression in art, storytelling, changes of emphasis, especially as this is a humour title.
I'd be curious to know if any of our members can point to reasonably long running American comics where there is no change of art, point of view, beefing up, toning down, or is aimed at a different audience as we move along.