Sometimes these all-natural, alternative-medicine health treatments can be taken to extremes.
Mister Mystery #6, by Stanley Morse
The ubiquitous cover girl of the Golden Age of comics!
Sometimes these all-natural, alternative-medicine health treatments can be taken to extremes.
Mister Mystery #6, by Stanley Morse
This sort of thing is what the Blonde in Red is actually referring to when she includes “website de-bugging” as a skill on her résumé.
Witches Tales #12, by Harvey
Are they talking past each other? Their dialog doesn’t seem to have anything to do with what the other one said. (Another relationship doomed due to poor communication skills.)
Mysterious Adventures #8, by Story Comics
The Blonde in a Red Dress decides to judge this comic by its giant alien space monster cover and she ain’t sticking around to find out what’s inside.
Weird Tales Of The Future #2, by Key/Stanley Morse
The Blonde in a Red Dress at the start of yet another blind date from Hell.
Eerie #6, by Avon
Shouldn’t that more accurately be “The Blonde, The Doomed, and the Dead”?
This Magazine is Haunted #4, by Fawcett
The Blonde in Red seems pretty blasé on this cover. I think her boyfriend has the more reasonable response this time: incoherent screaming!
Fantastic #9, by Youthful Magazines
Her mother always warned her to wear clean (and armor-plated) undergarments just in case her red dress/spacesuit accidentally gets lost while being carried away by a gibbering hellbeast smashing through cement walls.
Fantastic #8, by Youthful Magazine
Yes, technically this isn’t a red dress, but I’m going to assume it just got extra dusty while she was working in the museum. It would be a lot easier to keep clean if the mummies would stop breaking things.
Web of Mystery #7, by Ace
Mirror, mirror, on the wall… keep your hands to yourself, creep!
Strange Mysteries #4, by Superior Comics