In addition to art classes, our heroine had also signed up for “Swashbuckling Pirate Yarns” (she thought the name was referring to a knitting club.)
Buccaneers #24, Quality Comics
The ubiquitous cover girl of the Golden Age of comics!
In addition to art classes, our heroine had also signed up for “Swashbuckling Pirate Yarns” (she thought the name was referring to a knitting club.)
Buccaneers #24, Quality Comics
Merton doesn’t know art, but he knows what he likes. (Which must be polka-dots, right?)
Meet Merton #2, Toby Press
Nothing says “fun” like balancing plates on a broomstick.
Wilbur #33, MLJ/Archie
A young Blonde in a Red Dress soon regretted her blind date with an anti-plastic-straw activist.
Little Miss Sunbeam Comics #1, Magazine Enterprises
The Blonde in a Red Dress cannot be denied the excitement she craves (which apparently involves hallucinations of tiny faces wearing unfashionable hats.)
Campus Loves #2, Quality Comics
Again? That trick never works!
Boy Loves Girl #39, Lev Gleason
You can tell it’s going to be a lazy week when “Be Nice” tops your to-do list and counts as “glamorous” and “exciting”.
Glamorous Romances #42, Ace
Sorry, but “The Villainous Pirate Snuff” doesn’t quite have the same ring as “The Dread Pirate Roberts”
Buccaneers #22, Quality
The (Strawberry) Blonde in Red is a cover model star of Westerns, Fantasy, and Sci-Fi… and sometimes, all three at once!
Fantastic Adventures, Feb. 1944
If a “three-cornered romance” is “not good enough for him”, does that make him a square?
Dotty #40, Ace