The Blonde in a Red Dress decides to let the 800 pound gorilla stand wherever he wants on the cover.
Weird Terror #10, by Comic Media
The ubiquitous cover girl of the Golden Age of comics!
The Blonde in a Red Dress decides to let the 800 pound gorilla stand wherever he wants on the cover.
Weird Terror #10, by Comic Media
The Blonde in Red helps catch a kindly old lady falling down the stairs.
The Thing! #12, by Charlton
The Blonde in a Red Dress finds her date night once again interrupted by yet another “mysterious adventure” that can’t decide if it wants to be an “amazing tale”, a “thrilling tale of suspense”, or a “tale of horror”.
Mysterious Adventures #12 by Story Comics
The Blonde in a Red Dress gets into a fight with the employment agency as to whether there should be more than just those two career options available to her.
Web of Mystery #22, by Ace
The Blonde In Red realizes there was a slight miscommunication; she came here looking for a matching red and yellow basket.
Voodoo #13, by Ajax/Farrell
The Blonde in a Red Dress suffers through another blind date from Hell.
Mysteries #5, by Superior Comics
The Blonde in Red was enjoying her blind date with a botanist until one of his jealous co-workers decided to make a scene.
Baffling Mysteries #19, by Ace
The Blonde in Red has a typical commute on the New York subways.
Witches Tales #22, by Harvey
So if I’m reading this cover correctly, the Blonde in Red is trying to stab her captor, who looks like a Neanderthal brute being possessed by the ghost of an executioner being possessed by the ghost of a wizened crone?
Ghost Comics #9, by Fiction House
The “Circle of Life” involves a big musical number with cartoon lions, but the “Circle of Death” involves… whatever the heck this is.
Mysteries #4, by Superior Comics