Regarding H-K & Harle Publications: It's not a new business,
Can you explain how you KNOW that it's not a new business, bchat? It's not "Centaur Comics" and it's not "Comic Corporation of America" and it's not "Comic Magazine Company". If you've got a case that extends beyond the confluence of the address and some of the owners, then make that case.
I made no claim that Hardie & Kelly had anything to do with Comics Magazine Company, because they didn't. "CMC" owned Funny Pages & Funny Picture Stories before they were purchased by Ultem Publications. "CMC's" affiliation with what's commonly referred to as "Centaur" is, in my mind, a "traditional" one, and is not something I wish to contest or dispute.
Here's all the information I have
(magazine & other non-comic info taken from various internet sources). I've tried hard not to speculate on anything beyond what I have to look at, and I've done my best to draw logical conclusions. The information regarding the publication of magazines and other periodicals is spotty at best, probably because magazines in general aren't treated in the same way that comics are
(people don't collect them or care very little for their publishing history, although there are exceptions such as "Life" or "TV Guide").
January 1939 - Funny Picture Stories v3 n1 "Statement of Ownership": Owners: Centaur Publications,
Harle Publications, Raymond J. Kelly & S.J. Fried. Based on my interpretation of the wording on a "Statement of Ownership", the "owners" are listed by the company that own the comic in question, followed immediately by the owners of that company. In this case, it appears to me that Harle (owned by Kelly) owns Centaur Publications, which owns Funny Picture Stories.
January 1940 - Funny Pages v4 n1 "Statement of Ownership": Owners: Centaur Publications, Raymond J. Kelly, S.J. Fried, Joseph J. Hardie, K.L. Angel. Harle is dropped from the list of owners? Why? How should I know?
Febraury 1941 - The Statement of Ownership for Amazing-Man Comics 20 is incredibly hard to read since it's fiche, but it looks like it might say that the owners are Comic Corporation of America, Joseph Hardie, Raymond Kelly and E.L. Angel. This open to debate since the Statement is so hard for me to read.
May 1941 - Stars & Stripes Comics 2 - Ads for "Dime Crosswords" and "Comet: Stories of Super Time and Space", both published by
H-K Publications, 215 Fourth Avenue, New York NY. That is the same address as Comic Corporation of America which published SNS #2. Comic Corporation of America (CCA) was the publisher of all of the "Amazing-Man Comics" that I've seen an indicia for.
October 1942 - Smiles # 3 (magazine) - Earliest issue of this title I could find information on. Based on what little I've seen of the covers and the occasional interior shot, my assumption is that "Smiles" was a "comic magazine" with a possible mix of artwork & text. Not having access to any copies first-hand, an assumption is all I have.
Winter 1945 - Smiles # 13 - Joseph J. Hardie & Raymond Kelly: publishers. George Weaver: art director. This info is from a copy listed for sale online. Based on the issue number, Smiles was probably published on a quarterly-or-less-frequent schedule.
1945 - Cheers 9 & 10 - published by Rockley Publications inc, the company that also published Motorsport (keep reading).
Summer 1948 - Smiles: A Magazine Gone Mad # 26 - Published by Band Leaders Publishing Company.
1948 - Flying Models is published. I ran across a Renewal but for the moment can't find additional information to go along with this.
1948 - Flying Models Including Clying Aces is first published (info from Renewals). This title is treated as a seperate magazine by the Copyright Office. "Consult Copyright Office" attatched to the entry. This is the same note all of Marvel's GA books contain.
January 1949 - Smiles # 28
1950 - Motorsport - Published by H-K Publications according to info I gathered from Google. Earliest year I can find info for this magazine. There was a period in 1953 where the publisher is listed as "Rockley Publications" but changes back to "H-K Publications" in '54.
October 1951 - Melodyland # 1 - Published by H-K Publications according to info I gathered from Google. - Earliest year I can find info for this magazine.
January 1952 - Melodyland # 2 - Published by H-K Publications according to info I gathered from Google. Only other issue I currently have information for.
November 1952 - Motorsport v3 n11 published by Rockley Publications, Joseph J. Hardie & Raymond J. Kelly: publishers.
May 1954 - Flying Models "Special Fun Issue" volume 61 number3 (whole number 254). "Published monthly by H-K Publications", 215 Fourth Ave, New York NY. I've seen nothing to indicate that "Flying Models" was a regular comic book title, but then again, I've never had my hands on a copy of "Flying Models", I've only seen pictures on eBay. Up to the point of seeing the scans on this site, I was under the impression that "FM" was a normal magazine-sized publication. The "Standard Guide to Golden Age Comics" only lists "Flying Models # 1: Health-Knowledge Publications: 1954". No clue where they get "Health-Knowledge" from or why they list the issue as "# 1".
1954 - Boat Sport - Info from Copyright Office website suggests that this was published by H-K Publications. Earliest year I can find info for this magazine. Oops! Should have copied that page ... then again, I don't care about boating. If I recall correctly, I believe Cadence Industries Corporation was filing the Renewals for this book in 1978.
Spring 1955 - Model Fun # 4 - Published by Harle Publications, 215 Fourth Avenue, New York NY. Joseph J. Hardie & Raymond Kelly, publishers. Walter H. Holze, managing editor. Bob Buragas, editor. George Weaver, art director.
Includes Statement of Ownership: Owners: Harle Publications, Joseph J. Hardie, Raymond J. Kelly, Clare S. Aichele (411 West Main St, Huntington NY).
Apparently a bi-monthly publication, Model Fun (at least this issue) included comic art. The "Standard Guide to Golden Age Comics" lists issues 2-5 as being published.
October 1955 - Smiles (issue unknown). Oops again. Forget where I got this info from. I think it was an eBay listing that didn't state the issue number. Nice artwork on the cover, though.
1955 - Flying Models - Published by H-K Publications - Earliest year I can find info.
February 1956 - Last issue of "Smiles" I can find info for. Another magazine entitled "Smiles" was published a significant amount of time later (70s, 80s?... who cares?), but this was a magazine associated with dentistry, not humor.
Fall 1956 - Rock N Roll Jamboree # 1 is published by Joseph J. Hardie & Raymond Kelly. The cover features Elvis and is exported to Australia. I ran across this magazine on a "bookseller" site first, then found something on eBay. In fact, it's THIS magazine that got the ball rolling for me, as it was the first clear piece of evidence that went beyond the usual, vaguely phrased "Hardie published magazines after comics" that I had typically run across.
1956 - Motorsport v8 n2 - Published by H-K Publications - Last year I can find info for this magazine.
1958 - Boat Sport - Published by H-K Publications. - Last year I can find info for this magazine.
1959 - Flying Models # 300 - Published by Harle Publications - Last year I can find info. "FM" was also published by H-K Publications up to 1958.
February 1960 - Foreign Car Guide: Featuring the Volkswagen v5 n2. This info is from a "Bookseller" site and included in the listing is "Joseph J. Hardie & Raymond Kelly". I'm assuming that the seller was implying that Hardie & Kelly were the publishers.
Additional Info that has nothing to do with anything ....
1978 - Cadence Industries Corporation was filing the Renewals for Flying Models, Melodyland, Boat Sport and Motorsport. By the early 80's, the Copyright Claimant becomes "Magazine Management Company, Inc., a subsidiary of Cadence Industries Corporation". By 1986, the Claimant on the Renewals is "Marvel Comics Group, a division of Cadence Industries Corporation". Smiles, Cheers and Model Fun have no record of renewals as far as I can tell.