Buster Bunny #3
☆ Be the first to review + Add to your collection — Join freeBuster Bunny uses a giant growth potion to become large enough to intimidate his peers and avoid dancing school, but his plan backfires when he encounters a friendly dragon who takes him to meet other forest creatures. After Buster returns to normal size, he attempts various money-making schemes as a waiter carrying increasingly heavy loads of dishes, eventually leading to a chaotic confrontation with a customer that ends with a laundry chute escape sequence.
Buster Bunny dreads dancing school so much that he tries every trick to escape—until he stumbles into Professor Zix's carnival, where a shrinking machine offers him the perfect solution. His troubles only multiply when being tiny proves as problematic as the original humiliation, sending him on a wild chain of mishaps that forces him to confront what he was trying to avoid all along.
Buster Bunny spots a freshly baked cherry pie cooling on the windowsill at his cousin Billy's house, and his appetite quickly overrides any sense of caution—he devours the entire pie before Billy can stop him. With trouble sure to follow once the theft is discovered, Buster will have to face the consequences of his greedy impulse.
Uncle Pigly learns a costly lesson about carelessly opening doors when a careless swing damages the wall—but his improvised fix using a rubber ball and glue proves to have unexpected consequences in this one-page comedy about the perils of do-it-yourself home repair.
Buster Bunny needs cash for a soda, and his luck turns around when a golf ball bonks him on the head at the local course—but his scheme to collect more balls and cash in on them quickly spirals into chaos when he tangles with some very angry golfers. After a wild chase through the clubhouse, laundry room, and back onto the course, Buster finds himself in the middle of an unexpected triumph that changes everything.
Brownie Bear discovers that a new carpet for his bare floor is way out of his budget at La Swank Carpet Shoppe, so he comes up with a clever workaround to get what he needs. This lighthearted 1950 tale shows how a little creative thinking can solve even the most frustrating household problems.
ComicBooks.com Value
Find on ebay
Sell my copy
Have this issue — or a whole collection? Get a fair offer from us, skip the marketplace fees and the hassle.
We Buy Collections ▸Reviews
Reader reviews
No reader reviews yet.