Jimmy Olsen #94

Người đăng: lecuongle on Chủ Nhật, 29 tháng 8, 2010



Jeez, Supes, did you have to rub his face in it by picking a new buddy with red hair and the initials "JO". Of course, these covers hit on common teenage themes of rejection and alienation. Who hasn't had a friend who suddenly becomes enamored of the new guy in town?

The opening story features Jimmy as "Insect Olsen". With Superman away in space, a new criminal named the Bug has begun a crime wave. Lana Lang is worried that he will try to steal her insect ring, and so she gives it to Jimmy for safekeeping. But just then:

Hmmm, Spider-Boy? As it happens, in the letters column of this issue, there's a missive claiming a resemblance between Jimmy and Peter Parker:

Those are pretty flimsy comparisons, and you'd have a hard time convincing me that Jimmy Olsen ever tried to avoid trouble.

At any rate, he saves the window washer, who turns out to actually be a private detective who's got a tape of the Bug discussing his upcoming crimes. Conveniently for plot purposes, the tape is slightly damaged so that Jimmy only gets partial details and has to fill in the blanks. But his deductions always turn out wrong:

Similarly:

But in the finale, Olsen, transformed into a ladybug, foils the gang and captures the Bug himself. Not! Instead, he is saved by the God(ess) in the Machine:

Comments: A more perfect example of the problems with the Jimmy Olsen title would be hard to imagine. Yes, it's somewhat amusing to see Jimmy's problems defeating the Bug. But in the end, he has to do it himself, or else he's not much of a hero. The art, by George Papp is serviceable but nothing special.

The second story is the cover one, and it's drawn by Pete Costanza. I like Costanza's art, but it has a cartoonish, old-timey feeling that didn't suit DC's house style in the 1960s. In the story, Jimmy Olsen is being given a big build-up for a new TV show featuring his adventures. As you can see here, even the target audience recognized the problems pointed out above about his characterization:

And we quickly see that stardom has gone to his head, as he refuses to sign autographs for his adoring public. When Life Magazine comes to inteview him at his new penthouse digs, he claims to be bored with his Superman trophies.

Alright, so I'm already guessing that this is some sort of plot by Superman and Jimmy to trap the Collector. This is one of the problems with Weisinger's puzzle covers; they almost always boil down to a plan to catch a crook or fool some aliens.

Jimmy gives Lucy Lane the cold shoulder here:

Of course, the continental dish's name is a combination of Sophia Loren and Brigitte Bardot, two of the hottest women on the silver screen at the time. Jimmy also snubs his fan club members, resulting in a bit of a bonfire:

Even the girls in his fan club wear bow ties? When rival reporters begin needling Jimmy about his only being famous because he's Superman's pal, he decides to show of his own abilities. First he tries a tight-rope act between two skyscrapers. But the rope breaks and he's only saved by the guy in the cape. And the same thing happens when Jimmy decides to go over Niagara Falls in a plastic bubble. When he jumps out of a plane followed by a parachute, a sudden storm blows it away and he's only saved by, you guessed it.

Jimmy's getting a little tired of the Man of Steel always horning in, and so he announces that he's no longer Superman's pal. There follows the contest to determine a new buddy, and Josh Oberlin is the winner. Meanwhile, Jimmy gets fired from the Daily Planet for always showing up late, and his TV show is canceled due to poor ratings. Desperate for cash, he shows up at the Collector's fortress to sell of his Superman trophies for a million dollars. The criminal is careful to check Jimmy for any microphones or listening devices.

Included are some items that would be very valuable to a crook, like this one:

But when the Collector opens up his lead-lined vault to reveal items he's stolen, Superman bursts in. How did he know the vault was open, with no "bugs" on Olsen or in the trophies?

There follows a needless explanation of how Superman and Jimmy collaborated on all his failed stunts, and a mention that Josh Oberlin will forever after be Jimmy Olsen's backup as Superman's pal. If he ever appeared again, the GCD doesn't have a record of it.

Comments: Overly predictable, but entertaining. Jimmy Olsen would remain a strong-selling title for the next few years, but the silly stories and immature nature of the title character probably ensured the steadily declining sales that the book showed for the next several years, as the Baby Boom turned into the Baby Bust and publishers tried to sell their wares to an older audience.
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Frew #1245: The Barbary Pirates

Người đăng: lecuongle on Thứ Bảy, 28 tháng 8, 2010


Story:    Norman Worker
Art:    Carlos Cruz

Download

It's scanned and edited by Micho & link provided by Rocklud . All thanks & credits go to both friends.

Fantomet #21 - 1999
Egmont India #14 (Sep 2001)
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D2-032 Solar Mirror (23-Jun-1958 to 26-Jul-1958)

Người đăng: lecuongle on Thứ Sáu, 27 tháng 8, 2010

Writer: Harvey Kurtzman
Art: Dan Barry
Summary:  Checking in at Continental Spaceport after his adventure on Pluto (see D2031 The Pluto Spectacular) Flash is informed that a spaceship carrying a killer to the prison satellite orbiting Earth has suddenly been diverted to a nearby colossal solar panel.

With the prisoner appearing on screen asking for a huge ransom not to kill the pilot and turn the solar panel on New York, Flash decides to throw caution to the wind and accompany the unmanned cargo ship to the satellite and its unpredictable inhabitants...
(Source of summary: www.ipcomics.net)

Download  Strip

It's from Emile's e-collection. All credits go to her & "Allen Lane" who scanned and first shared at net.
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The Last Phantom 01 ( 2010)

Người đăng: lecuongle on Thứ Năm, 26 tháng 8, 2010






This file contains 4 covers.

This comics is sent to me by  Emile. All credits go to her & unknown fan who scanned and first shared at net.
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Trivia Quiz #40: Grab Bag

Người đăng: lecuongle on Thứ Tư, 25 tháng 8, 2010

1. Who taught Roy Harper how to use a bow and arrow?

2. Name the three major differences between the Silver Age Mr Mxyzptlk and his Golden Age counterpart.

3. What souvenir did Batman bring back with him from the planet Zur-En-Arrh?

4. Who was Barry Allen's childhood sweetheart?

5. What famous actor was Hal Jordan's appearance patterned after?
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Os Bebês do Fantasma

Người đăng: lecuongle on Thứ Ba, 24 tháng 8, 2010

It is the story about the Phantom twins birth…

Title:               Os Bebês do Fantasma
Date:               1979-06
Download:       Especial-Os_Bebes_do_Fantasma.cbrEspecial-Os_Bebes_do_Fantasma.cbr
Language:        Portugues do Brazil
Scan:                Marcio Adriano

About the story:
Script:                Lee Falk
Art:                    Seymour (Sy) Barry
Title:                  Baby (The Heirs)
Kind:                 Daily Strips
Story #:             140 *
Start date:         1978-12-18
End date:           1979-05-18
Span:                 22 weeks
Last Frew:         1312

Note: The Phantom color is red like in France.

This comics is provided by Emile with all above mentioned details. All credits go to her & "Marcio Adriano".

P.S.:  I liked its slightly different size of panels and coloring from Indrajal Comics.Comics (Portuguese), Phantom
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A Lua de Mel do Fantasma

Người đăng: lecuongle on Thứ Hai, 23 tháng 8, 2010



Title:              A Lua de Mel do Fantasma
Date:             1978-05
Download:     http://www.mediafire.com/?r15sfev15qu   36,6MB
Language:       Portugues do Brazil
Scanned by:    Name or nick not available

About the story #1: Story #1 starts when the wedding is over (they skip nearly 2 months).
Script:             Lee Falk
Art:                Seymour (Sy) Barry
Title:               The Wedding of the Phantom
Kind:              Daily Strips
Story #:          136 *
Start date:       1977-12-26 [Original start: 1977-10-31]
End date:        1978-02-04
Span:             14 weeks


About the story #2:
Script:            Lee Falk
Art:               Seymour (Sy) Barry
Title:              Guardian of the Eastern Dark
Kind:             Daily Strips
Story #:         134 *
Start date:      1977-04-04
End date:       1977-08-13 [They skip the last strip: 1977-08-13]
Span:             19 weeks

Note: The Phantom color is red like in France.

This comics is provided by Emile with all above mentioned details. All credits go to her & Unknown scanner".

P.S.:  I liked its slightly different size of panels and coloring from Indrajal Comics.
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O Casamento Do Fantasma

Người đăng: lecuongle on Thứ Bảy, 21 tháng 8, 2010


It's a Brazilian version (1978) which contains the following 3 stories (script by  Stan Lee & art by Seymour (Sy) Barry):

1.The Proposal
2.The Tyrant of Tarakimo
3.The Wedding of the Phantom


Stories informations:
  • The Proposal
Story number:133
Title:The Proposal
Start date:1977-02-21
End date:1977-03-31
Span:6 weeks

Remarks: The last strip is missing (1977-04-01).



  • The Tyrant of Tarakimo
Story number:135
Title:The Tyrant of Tarakimo
Start date:1977-08-15
End date:1977-10-29
Span:11 weeks


  • The Wedding of the Phantom
Story number:136
Title:The Wedding of the Phantom
Start date:1977-10-31
End date:1978-02-04
Span:14 weeks

Remarks: The story stops on the 1977-12-24. It will be resumed in the next printed issue.

Note: The Phantom color is red like in France.
Download:   Especial-QA-O_Casamento_do_Fantasma.cbr   32,3 Mb - 100 scans

This comics is provided by Emile with all above mentioned details. All credits go to her & Unknown scanner".

P.S.:  I liked its slightly different size of panels and colouring from Indrajal Comics.
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Modern Silver: The New Frontier, Part 3

Người đăng: lecuongle

It's been awhile since I talked about the first two books in this series, so you may want to refresh your memory.

The third book opens with four men about to crash in a plane. They are, of course, the Challengers of the Unknown. Meanwhile, Hal Jordan has just accepted his job at Ferris Aircraft. The Suicide Squad battles a giant Pterodactyl, which kills Rick (the leader) before it dies as well. At his funeral, one of the women remarks that she never saw anything like that before in her life, but a WWII vet mentions seeing something like it on an island in the South Pacific. This is the first foreshadowing of the finale of the story.

Hal Jordan discovers that life at Ferris is nowhere near as exciting as he thought it would be, as he is subjected to a seemingly endless series of what seem to be useless tests. Then, just as he's about to quit Carol reveals:

They're planning a trip to Mars, with Hal as one of the crew. At the same time, Batman prods John Jones to obtain a book that was entered into the evidence locker when the two of them broke up a cult a year and a half earlier. When Jones does, he discovers that it tells a story of a Viking Prince who was cast adrift by his crew and landed on a mysterious island, where giant creatures (dinosaurs) lived. He barely managed to escape. At the end of the book is a description of a terrible force which dwarfs the planets of the solar system. Jones is shocked to realize that the force is already here.

Comments: The story is starting to take shape; we see how Cooke has taken the dinosaurs and monsters of the Silver Age and explained that they all had some common origin.
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Frew #1191 The Island of Death

Người đăng: lecuongle on Thứ Sáu, 20 tháng 8, 2010


Writer Tony de Paul
Artist: Cesar Spadari
 Year:1998
 Download
  It's scanned and edited by Micho & link provided by Rocklud . All thanks & credits go to both friends.

Note: It was first printed as Fantomen # 23/1997 & in India it was printed by Egmont Imagination India Ltd as #6  in  Dec 2000.


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Around the Comicsphere

Người đăng: lecuongle on Thứ Năm, 19 tháng 8, 2010

Comic historian Mike Madrid covers the history of female superheroes in a terrific interview at Collector's Weekly.

Batwoman was well-intentioned but Batman spent so much time telling her how incompetent she was and how fighting crime was not a woman’s job that they never developed much of a romance. She was portrayed as an inferior character that couldn’t be trusted. Batman trusted Robin, a 13-year-old boy, more than this grown woman.


Indeed, one of the main themes of Detective #249, where Robin teams up with Batwoman, is that the Boy Wonder is a much better sleuth than she.

Speaking of the fair sex, Jared at Blog Into Mystery has a post on one of the two stories in the Silver Age featuring a revolt of the girl members of the Legion of Superheroes. I touched briefly on the earlier story with the same plot here.

H at the Comic Treadmill covers four of the Silver Age Hawkman tryout issues in Brave & Bold. Excellent reading, and I heartily agree with this point:

Their three-issue tryout over, the Hawks vanished for a year of Earth-Prime time when they returned for a second three-issue stint in Brave & Bold. The first two issues had a mini-arc going with the goal of establishing a reason the Hawks would stay on Earth. The problem with it that it was the foundation of the series and Fox failed to sell it. The idea that Thanagarian police could learn from Earth methods required a smooth talking pitch by Fox and he failed to deliver. What did primitive Earth have to offer advanced Thanagarians? Apparently as shown in B&B 42’s, The Menace of the Dragonfly Raiders, Earth turned ropes into lariats, which turned out to be more effective than Stun Guns in subduing crooks mounted on dragon flies.


Indeed, assuming the Absorbascon worked as advertised, wouldn't Hawkman have learned all he needed to know about Earthling police methods without even bothering to set foot on the planet? And as H hints, he really wasn't studying police methods so much as he was studying ancient weapons.

Cartoon Snap reviews a collection of Felix the Cat comic book stories from the 1950s. As a second-grader in the early 1960s, I loved the Felix the Cat cartoons, although I recognize now that they were pretty crudely made. But the comics were very interesting and completely wild.

Bill Jourdain covers the latest release from DC's Golden Age, featuring the earliest adventures of Superboy. I am thrilled to hear that DC is finally reprinting significant material from that series, one of my favorites as you can probably guess from the way I've been covering it lately.

The Magic Whistle has a post on a rather bizarre 1960s book of one-panel gags called "My Son, the Daughter". Definitely not something that would have met with the approval of the CCA!
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Sexist Stan

Người đăng: lecuongle on Chủ Nhật, 15 tháng 8, 2010


From Avengers #34. Sure enough, in the next issue:
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D2-029 The Far Side of the Moon (27-Jan-1958 to 15-Mar-1958); D2-030 Behind the Flying Saucers (17-Mar-1958 to 3-May-1958) & D2-031 Movie-Making on Pluto (5-May-1958 to 21-Jun-1958)

Người đăng: lecuongle on Thứ Bảy, 14 tháng 8, 2010

Today 64th Independence Day of India.

Today enjoy 3 Flash Gordon Daily Strips.


Art: Dan Barry
Summary: Finally getting a chance to leave Mongo as the planet’s orbit takes it near Earth (see D2028 The Time Pendulum), Flash, Zarkov and Dale accept an invitation to take part in an Earth expedition to explore the hidden side of the moon.

Wasting no time in joining the expedition, the trio soon touch down on the lunar surface, but shortly thereafter Dale sees something moving in the darkness and decides to follow a trail that ends in an improbable lunar lake...

  Image and video hosting by TinyPic 

Summary: Finishing his report about the moon entity (see D2029 The Far Side of the Moon), Flash is transferred to the giant ‘Project SS’, a science satellite orbiting Earth where all nations’ data about flying saucers are being pooled and fed to a giant electronic brain in an effort to determine their origin.

As dignitaries from all countries assemble for the grand ceremony marking the disclosure of the data, a cloaked space vessel in the vicinity sends out a saboteur to infiltrate the gathering and blow the station to pieces before the truth is revealed...


Image and video hosting by TinyPic 

Summary: Joining Zarkov at the New York Spaceport, Flash is invited to join a scientific expedition to Pluto, on condition that the film company who has financed the entire trip is allowed to accompany the crew and shoot a film on the frozen planet.

Touching down on Pluto with the film crew and stars in tow, Flash and his team struggle to get the upper hand, but everybody’s attention is momentarily turned when strange creatures start emerging from the frozen drifts...


Image and video hosting by TinyPic 

(Source of summary: www.ipcomics.net)
These are from Emile's e-collection. All credits go to her & "Allen Lane" who scanned and first shared at net.
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D2-028 The Time Pendulum (9-Dec-1957 to 25-Jan-1958)

Người đăng: lecuongle on Thứ Năm, 12 tháng 8, 2010

Writer: Harvey Kurtzman
Art: Dan Barry
Summary: Finally approaching the Forest Kingdom after their many adventures on Mongo (see D2027 Radioactive Loot), Flash and Dale are attacked by two men who suddenly vanish in thin air, and shortly afterwards their imminent arrival at Arboria is prevented when the route to the city inexplicably lengthens before their eyes.

Soon realising that somebody is manipulating the past in order to affect the present, Flash and Dale decide to confront their mysterious attackers head-on in a reality that constantly changes depending who is in control of the crucial time factor...

(Source of summary: www.ipcomics.net)
  Image and video hosting by TinyPic 
It's from Emile's e-collection. All credits go to her & "Allen Lane" who scanned and first shared at net.
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The Atom #8

Người đăng: lecuongle on Thứ Tư, 11 tháng 8, 2010



I have mentioned the Dr Light series in passing as one of the two really extended tales that DC had during the 1960s; the other one was Zatanna's search for her father.

Dr Light had originally fought the entire Justice League of America and nearly won in JLA #12. Following that, he decided to set his sights a little lower and take on the individual members one at a time. As it happens, his first target was the Atom, who had not even been a member of the JLA at the time of Dr Light's initial assault on that team.

Dr Light starts by escaping from jail. See, they left a light bulb in his cell, and using that he's able to draw a door on the cell wall, and open to to escape into another dimension. Fortunately, Ray Palmer happens to be at the prison with his girlfriend Jean, who's just gotten a prisoner named William Wilson released (this is explained in the second story in this issue). Ray examines the light bulb and is able to duplicate the Lord of Luminescence's trick and enter the other dimension as the Atom. But:

There follows a brief battle, but Dr Light seems to have planned well, and thus it's not long before the Atom finds himself in the predicament shown on the cover. Dr Light explains:

He has ensured that the Atom will not be able to shrink his way out of the bulb by dripping solder on his controls. But the Atom melts the solder with the filament in the bulb:

He soon subdues Dr Light, ending the story for now.

Comments: Even though the story is only 15 pages long, it seems padded. I did like how the Atom got out of the death trap, but the powers of Dr Light seemed a tad too much like magic and not enough like science.

In the second story, a guard is accused of attempting to steal a miniature painting (the Queen of Swords by Bonifacio Bembo) from the Ivy Town Art Gallery, when the painting is discovered in his lunch bucket. He is found guilty, the first client of Jean Loring's to go to prison. But later at the grand opening, when the miniature is on display with two more of Bembo's painting, a gas seeps out from the case holding the Queen of Diamonds, rendering all the patrons unconscious. Fortunately, the Atom is himself hiding in a case holding the King of Clubs, so he's not affected by the gas. However, when he attacks the thief who appears he gets a shocking surprise:

However, the Atom has succeeded in deducing the villain's identity:

The story ends with a long, and unnecessary explanation:


Comments: Solid basic story although as noted the explanation is unnecessary and convoluted.

Incidentally, did you notice the pillbox hat Jean Loring sports in this issue? That was a style popularized by Jacqueline Kennedy; this issue came out about five months before JFK's assassination. Gil Kane was obviously paying attention to women's fashion.
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The Phantom Ghost Who Walks #11

Người đăng: lecuongle

Cover A
Cover B























Writter: Mike Bullock;
Artists: Silvestre Syzilagyi;
Cover: Steve Scott


“Godfall” Part IV (of V) In the aftermath of last issue, The Ghost Who Walks must pay a visit to some old friends. While the first provides helpful insight into the coming war, the second visit leads to the hunter becoming the hunted in the depths of the darkest house in all of Africa.
 
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All thanks & credits go to GreenGiant-DCP.
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D2-027 Radioactive Loot (21-Oct-1957 to 7-Dec-1957)

Người đăng: lecuongle on Thứ Ba, 10 tháng 8, 2010

Writer: Harvey Kurtzman 
Art: Dan Barry 
Summary: Continuing their long journey towards Arboria on Mongo (see D2026 Cybernia), Flash and Dale are paralysed by a forceful beam from an approaching ship and made to swap vessels with a band of robbers who have just raided the Thermo-Nuclear Bank in the Starport hub.

Later captured by the authorities and treated as accomplices, Flash and Dale must escape in order to find the real perpetrators in order to clear their names and contain the extremely radioactive flouranium before it causes devastation...

(Source of summary: www.ipcomics.net)
Image and video hosting by TinyPic 
It's from Emile's e-collection. All credits go to her & "Allen Lane" who scanned and first shared at net.
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Blogroll Roundup

Người đăng: lecuongle

Jacque Nodell has an interesting post on the way DC started marketing their female superheroes in their romance magazines. I heartily agree with this comment:
Like I mentioned earlier, one of the exciting parts of learning about a topic in-depth is all the nuanced pieces of information that seem to pop up as time goes on.

Yep. I started this blog partly because I felt I knew a lot about the subject. But as time has gone one, I've been learning a great deal about Silver Age Comics, probably more than twice the knowledge I had when I started.

Mykal Banta reprints a whole "War that Time Forgot" story from Star Spangled War Stories, circa 1963. White King Kong versus the dinosaurs versus a PT boat! How can you go wrong?

Illegal aliens taking jobs from Americans? Aaron points out that it has a long tradition in the comics world.

Hooray for Wally Wood has a post on Wood's last two pages of comic book art. Terrific stuff from one of the masters of the genre.

Superman Fan looks at what happened when teenager Clark Kent got fed up with concealing his real identity and decided to let the world know that he was Superboy.
That night, Clark is off to the big school dance, where he ditches Lana to dance with five other girls at the same time (through super-speed). Lana sobs, “I guess Clark will never forgive me for not showing more interest in him before he revealed himself to be Superboy!”

Meanwhile, Commander Benson has a long post where he disses Lois Lane.
She claimed to be in love with Superman, yet what did she spend at least half of her waking hours doing? Attempting to ferret out his secret identity---his most private, most closely guarded secret.

Fair enough, but whom do some of his commenters suggest as an alternate mate for him? Lana Lang! Now Lana did calm down as an adult, but in her teens Lana spent far more time on trying to learn Superboy's secret identity than Lois ever did.
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Frew #1383 - The Hood

Người đăng: lecuongle on Thứ Hai, 9 tháng 8, 2010

Writter: Claes Reimerthi   
Artist:Joan Boix

It's a story about  12th Phantom. 
Period: 1781 AD.  

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It's scanned and edited by Micho & link provided by Rocklud . All thanks & credits go to both friends.
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D2-026 Cybernia (19-Aug-1957 to 19-Oct-1957)

Người đăng: lecuongle on Chủ Nhật, 8 tháng 8, 2010

Writer: Harvey Kurtzman 
Art: Dan Barry 
Summary: As Flash and Dale make their way back to the Forest Kingdom in a donated ship (see D2-025 River Pirates), the city of Cybernia is developing ambitious plans to spread their gospel of 'Good Life' to the whole of Mongo by introducing a machine for every task imaginable and make man obsolete.

Having already 'converted' their neighbours by foot and ground-based machines, Cybernia now needs a rocket specialist to build ships and train their airborne troops - at that moment Flash and Dale pass overhead...
(Source of summary: www.ipcomics.net) 
Image and video hosting by TinyPic 
It's from Emile's e-collection. All credits go to her & "Allen Lane" who scanned and first shared at net.
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