New Comics #9 (of 11)
November 1st, 1936
Volume:
Publisher:
Number:
9
(of 11)
Name:
Aliases:
Cover date:
November 1st, 1936
Store date:
September 24th, 1936
Malcolm Wheeler-Nicholson - Editor and Publisher
Vincent A. Sullivan, F. Whitney Ellsworth - Associate Editors
Featured in this issue
- Unc [3] (by Joe Eichberger) [continued from More Fun Comics #13 and then in More Fun Comics #26]
- Captain Jim of the Rangers [part 8] (by Homer Fleming)
- Don Coyote [part 9] (by Bill Patrick)
- Ol' Oz Bopp [6] (by Alger [aka Russell Cole])
- Captain Quick [part 8] (illustrator Sven Elvén)
- Slim Pickins [part 7] (by Stan Randall) [continued from More Fun Comics #10]
- A Tale of Two Cities [part 6] (by Charles Dickens, illustrated narrative by Merna Gamble)
- The Blood Pearls [part 2] (story by Malcolm Wheeler-Nicholson, sketches by Pad [aka Cecelia Munson Paddock])
- Worth-While Films to Watch For (text article by I. W. Magovern)
- Straight from Hollywood [1] (by Laidlaw)
- Maginnis of the Mounties [part 6] (by Babe Mather [aka Richard Matheson])
- Komikross [1] (by Henry Jay)
- Andy Handy a Man of Action But of Few Words [6] (by Leo E. O'Mealia)
- 17-20 on the Black [part 9] (by Tom Cooper)
- Famous Poems Illustrated [5] Old Ironsides, Oliver Wendell Holmes (illustrated by Henry Carl Kiefer)
- Hollywood Screenshots
- She [part 4] (by H.Rider Haggard, illustrated by Sven Elven)
- A Thrill A Day With Hardluck Harry [part 1] (by Bill Carney)
- Do You Know ? (by [Richard] Speed)
- Jungle-Town [3] (by Dick Ryan)
- The Golden Dragon [part 4] (by Tom Hickey)
- Castaway Island [part 8] (by Tom Cooper)
- Slim and Tex [part 6] (by A. Leslie Ross)
- Clout O'Casey (by Whit Ellsworth)
- Magic! (text article by Andrini, the Great)
- Steve Conrad on Dolorosa Isle [part 5]
- Goofo the Great [6] (by Alger [aka Russell Cole])
- Sandor and the Lost Civilization [part 5] (by Homer Fleming)
- Cap'n Spiniker [part 13] (by Tom Cooper)
- The Vikings [part 9] (by Anthony [aka Alex Anthony Blum])
- Chikko Chakko [8] (by Ellis Edwards)
- Federal Men [part 8] The Invisible Empire (by Jerome Siegel and Joe Shuster)
- It's a Dern Lie [9] (as told by Robert Willig 1674 E-13th Street Brooklyn N.Y.; illustrated by Bill Patrick)