Baby Huey, the Baby Giant #76
☆ Be the first to review + Add to your collection — Join freeIn "The Ducks Who Came in Out of the Cold," Baby Huey finds himself in a series of lighthearted, animal-filled gags that lean into classic slapstick humor, all delivered with the crisp, typeset lettering of 1967. From a tooth-ache joke with Seymour Mouse to a chilly duck dilemma, this issue offers a playful, fast-paced collection of laughs from Harvey’s beloved cast.
In "The Ducks Who Came in Out of the Cold," Huey and Dimwit are enlisted by spies from Mosquack to steal top-secret files X-1, Y-1, and Z-1 from the Federal Building—only to return with a stack of patent documents instead. Written by a longtime collaborator and illustrated with classic charm, this lighthearted misadventure captures the duo’s bumbling charm in a spy spoof that’s as clever as it is absurd.
In "Super-Secret Spy Stuff," J. Edgar Quacker hands over top-secret files to Baby Huey and Dimwit, hoping to track them to a hidden spy headquarters—only to find himself outsmarted when Huey takes matters into his own webbed paws and captures the spies without a single clue from the agent.
In "Humpty-Dumpty Pussycat," Herman spins a clever ruse, convincing Katnip he's being groomed for a daring mountain climb—just so he can sneak in a cheese heist. The scheme unfolds with playful deception, as Herman's plan hinges on Katnip's trust and the promise of adventure.
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