“The underworld gangsters who control the shipment of drugs”… and the Blonde in a Red Dress so jaded and bored of it all that she sleeps through a gunfight.
Crime On The Waterfront #4, by Avon
The ubiquitous cover girl of the Golden Age of comics!
“The underworld gangsters who control the shipment of drugs”… and the Blonde in a Red Dress so jaded and bored of it all that she sleeps through a gunfight.
Crime On The Waterfront #4, by Avon
Hey, is the Blonde in a Red Dress also moonlighting as this comic book’s copy editor? Because while she’s asleep on the job, she’s missing the letter “E” in “HEROINE”!
Down With Crime #3, by Fawcett
The Blonde in a Red Dress regrets letting her blind date set the plans for the evening. (She wanted dinner and a movie; he apparently wanted to have a shootout with the coppers first.)
Sensational Police Cases #3, by Avon
Awk!
Crime Smashers #12, by Trojan
Those aren’t the facial expressions I generally expect to see on people bleeding from a hail of bullets.
Fight Against Crime #8, by Story Comics
See? This is what happened when the Blonde in Red didn’t listen to her parents when they warned her about running away to marry “a cheap, low-down gambler”.
Law Breakers #7, by Charlton
“We’ll take this joint for plenty!”
Authentic Police Cases #19, by St. John
This is one of those comic covers where there seems to be too much going on in too little amount of time.
Crime Smashers #8, by Trojan
Wow, that’s an up-to-the-minute news headline!
(And yes, I’m still considering this a “Blonde in a Red Dress” cover, if we assume the orange coloring is due to being a strawberry blonde under dim streetlights.)
Who Is Next? #5, by Standard Comics
In addition to shouting her warning, the Blonde in Red also attempted to communicate through sign language and interpretive dance. (It didn’t help.)
Fight Against Crime #11, by Story