The Black Terror and Yellowjacket were both so distracted fighting bad guys, they let themselves get upstaged by The Grim Reaper — the only superhero who bothered to save the Blonde in Red from her rooftop peril!
Wonder Comics #7, Pines
The ubiquitous cover girl of the Golden Age of comics!
The Black Terror and Yellowjacket were both so distracted fighting bad guys, they let themselves get upstaged by The Grim Reaper — the only superhero who bothered to save the Blonde in Red from her rooftop peril!
Wonder Comics #7, Pines
The Blonde in Red flees the theater robbery downstairs, but ends up caught in yet another hero/villain standoff up on the roof.
Yellowjacket Comics #8, Charlton
After a nice relaxing day off watching freeway traffic, the Blonde in Red heads back to work at the local theater box office… just in time for a stickup.
Exciting Comics #48, Pines
The grand opening of the new neighborhood Target store goes horrible awry.
Target Comics v6 #6, Novelty
Remember kids: don’t talk to strangers, and don’t take candy from Nazis. (A PSA from early in the Blonde in Red’s career.)
Exciting Comics #39, Pines
The Blonde in a Red Dress tried her hand at superheroics in the role of Lightning Girl, but found herself upstaged by the grotesqueries on display for what is apparently shaping up to be “Ugly Face Week”.
Four Favorites #14, Ace
An afternoon spent “hanging out” with a friend goes wildly out of hand.
Zip Comics #34, MLJ
The Blonde in Red, Yellow Nazis, Green Hornet, and… a Black Kato?! It’s a multi-media rainbow of multi-colored dangling danger!
Green Hornet #15, Harvey
The Blonde in a Red Dress learns it’s not always true that “No noose is good noose”.
Pep Comics #25, MLJ
“READ THE STORY INSIDE!”
This comic book has reached the point where its cover tagline hyperbole feels as desperate for attention as an early dial-up era webpage with an animated GIF with blinking text that says “Click Here!”
Pep Comics #29, MLJ