Even during the try-anything days of the Golden Age, someone had to have realized there's no future for a hero whose only "power" is the ability to throw a giant key with a string attached. It's ludicrous to see a crook with a cord around his wrist howling like he's been grabbed by an octopus. Well, they found out quickly enough...this concept lasts exactly one more issue. Then Dr Quick is reduced to hosting unrelated stories featuring keys. His Faithful Indian Companion is never seen again. The artwork is okay but the story is a grade-F dud.
"Dick Dash" enjoys nice artwork. I don't know who Harold DeLay is, but he has a kind of H. C. Kiefer vibe that works well with the story. The story is a minor wish-fulfillment tale. A bit sad, though, in its naivete. I can't believe the last page, when the writer suddenly remembers he's lost track of Philippe! I would have expected this to be fixed in the script stage.
"Naval Guns": nice drawings of cannon."Key Korn": This page of gags looks as if it's supposed to be a narrative because it's done in panels. I don't understand the one with the horse. It took a while to figure out that the tailor joke refers to supporting the war effort by cutting consumption of materials. "A Soldier": no big deal.
"Will o' the Wisp": the origin is something of a stretch ("...to keep the kid quiet I'll give her this willow branch to play with."). In future episodes Gale's branch gains vague supernatural powers. At least it isn't tied to a string. Gale herself is a bit cold, but I'll accept that considering she's avenging her murdered mother. Chu Hing's artwork is very good.
"Curse of the Fortune Teller": I agree with an earlier comment that the Nazis should have sent spies with American accents. However in wartime comics Nazis always spoke with German accents, even home-grown ones. I'm reminded of an old B-western set in modern times (the 1940s) in which a gang of spies holds the hero at gunpoint. He escapes by yelling "Heil Hitler!" causing all the spies to drop their guns and make the Nazi salute. Anyway, two things irk me about this story. First, the one spy is ridiculously trigger-happy. None of the gang's troubles would have happened if he'd only kept it in his pants. Second and worse, the gypsy never says a spy will "die by breaking." She only describes one death before Itchy pulls his trigger. Fire this editor, please. So-so artwork.
"Mascot Monkeyshines": I know, I know, a relic of its time and all that. Still, the running joke about Hooch wanting to demonstrate that monkeys are superior to "Jap monkey men" pushes the limits of my tolerance. The cartooning isn't that bad. It looks worse than it is because of the huge, sloppy lettering.
Funny that The Key never appeared on the cover of his own comic. What can I say? Babes sell.