“What happens in Germany stays in Germany” was a failed tourist marketing slogan ahead of its time.
Wartime Romances #7, by St. John
The ubiquitous cover girl of the Golden Age of comics!
“What happens in Germany stays in Germany” was a failed tourist marketing slogan ahead of its time.
Wartime Romances #7, by St. John
A Blonde in Red double feature, in which she’s tired of picking up boomerangs or something.
Wartime Romances #4, by St. John
OK, I’m starting to see where the interservice rivalry within the military comes from.
Fighting Leathernecks #5, by Toby
The fiance of the Blonde in a Red Dress has trouble recognizing her when the cover is cropped so that her red dress isn’t actually visible.
G.I. Sweethearts #38, Quality
The Blonde in a Red Dress lives in an alternate timeline where a weepy auburn-haired woman was the Commander-In-Chief of the United States Armed Forces?
True War Romances #10, Quality Comics
The Blonde in a Red Dress finds her quiet picnic at the park interrupted by a sudden outbreak of WW2 re-enactment enthusiasts.
Fight Comics #42, Fiction House
Happy Veteran’s Day weekend, from the Blonde in a Red Dress.
Picture News #5, Lafayette
The Blonde in Red joined a parade in Canada for a somewhat more reserved celebration of WW2 victory compared to a more well-known iconic photo of a certain random sailor kissing a certain random nurse in the street of a certain neighboring country.
Star Weekly, May 12, 1945
Not sure why the bamboo walls of the hut are red, but it allowed our heroine to try avoiding her captor’s attention by blending into the background using the inherent stealth camouflage of her Red Dress.
Fight Comics #20, Fiction House