I've just started reading the 'Death Valley' one and will make some comments on the stories when I finish, but I couldn't go past the fabulous (?) ads.
On p. 2. there's a book on hypnosis, with some great ad copy: 'Want the thrill of imposing your will over someone? Of making someone do exactly what you order?' Who wouldn't want a book like that?
Then on p. 18, you can buy the amazing Vacutex blackhead remover. No more squeezing with your fingernails and risking infection when you can suck those babies up with this painless contraption. And just like Jim and his sis in the comic strip, you'll be going to the prom before you know it. If only that was available when I was in high school!
And if you want to look even better at the prom, there's the new-improved Chewing Gum Reduce on p. 26.
(1) Also, I assume a comic book like this would have probably appealed more to boys and young men, so it seems strange that there are two full-page ads for women's underwear - the Young Form Bra on p. 33 and the Deluxe Tummy Flattener on p. 36. I guess they could be gifts for their mothers or wives.
Love looking at old ads. (2) I wonder what people will think of our 2022 ads in 50 years' time?
(1) Growing up, I also wondered why there were adverts for dolls in 1940s and 1950s Superhero, Military Combat, and other violence-laden action genre comic books. I NEVER saw girls reading such books. When I was young, I never even saw a girl reading a Classics Illustrated comic book. If they liked to read, they already would rather read an actual book. I only saw them, as little girls, read the cartoon-based comics, and "Little Lulu", and when older (9-14), Romance and some Comedy comics (like Blondie, Dotty Dripple, Archie, Wilbur, and other "teen humour" comics. - That was the same for newspaper comics. It was similar in The Netherlands, with younger girls reading the Disney, Marten Toonder (Thom Poes/Panda, etc., Suske & Wiske, and other cartoon-based comics, and moving on to reading books and teen magazines later(like "Tina"(for whom a good friend of mine writes).
Girls did like John Stanley's comic book version of title Lulu", and "Tubby" very much. They liked how she was so clever in dealing with adults and boys. They also liked Stanley's "Nancy" comics. from 1959-1962, when he took over the story writing and storyboarding for that Dell Comics series, making it more or less a clone of the previous comic book "Little Lulu". I never saw girls or anyone else reading St. Johns' "Little Lulu" clone, "Little Eva". But, it must have been reasonably successful, as it ran 27 issues, plus one Giant annual. But, it never came to Canada, as far as I know. I always wondered about Rural Home's "Calling All Girls". I saw it on the comics racks and shelves, but never saw any girls reading it, unlike their "Calling All Kids" series, which was quite popular in the mid and late '40s. Of course, in the late '50s through the '70s, a lot of the younger girls liked the "cutesy" Harvey cartoony series, including Casper, Wendy, Hot Stuff, Stumbo, Baby Huey, Little Audrey, Little Dot, Spooky, Little Lotta, etc. But they grew out of them, and all other comic books by ages 9 and 10.
(2) It's been over 70 years since I started noticing those comic book ads, and I still think the same of them that I did back then. Actually, I didn't like them polluting my treasured comics. So, now, when I scan comic books for my own use, or download them, I remove the advertising pages, and even the polluting half-pages.