Feature Comics #121
☆ Be the first to review + Add to your collection — Join freeIn "The Hag," a 1948 clash of rival gangs heats up when Gunner Goran and Killer Yates fight for control, each seeking an edge through weapons supplied by the mysterious and menacing figure known only as the Hag—whose own sinister presence looms over the war-torn munitions plant she rules. Written by Bill Woolfolk and illustrated by Dan Zolnerowich, whose dynamic art defines the story’s tense atmosphere, this issue delivers a gritty, early example of crime-fueled intrigue from Quality Comics’ Feature Comics series. The cover, also by Zolnerowich, captures the Hag’s chilling aura in stark, shadowed detail.
In "The Hag," the ruthless Gunner Goran and the deadly Killer Yates clash in a brutal gang war, both seeking an edge in their violent struggle—until they turn to the mysterious, feared figure known only as the Hag, who rules her own munitions plant with an iron fist and quietly supplies them with the weapons they need to keep fighting.
Swing Sisson investigates a murder at the Clover Club when a district attorney collapses from a mysterious poisoned needle attack—the same weapon that felled a musician the night before. As Swing pieces together the clues, he uncovers a sinister plot involving Andy Brent, a trombone player with a deadly secret, and discovers the weapon is far more ingenious than anyone suspected.
Perky lands in Puzzle Land after stepping into a magician's vanishing box, only to discover that the mysterious realm needs help solving its problems—starting with restoring the missing mouth piece of Mr. Jigsaw, who's been hiding in a maze for years unable to speak. Armed with a magic crayon and a knack for puzzles, Perky navigates the Forest of Missing Persons and a treacherous jigsaw cemetery to reunite Mr. Jigsaw with his lost piece, but just as the moment of revelation arrives, things take an unexpected turn.
Officer Shenanigan hatches a scheme to con Inspector Insomnia into granting him time off by claiming he's got a bad toothache, with a strategically placed handkerchief to sell the ruse. But when he decides to prove which tooth is abscess and makes a crucial mistake, his elaborate fibbing backfires in spectacular fashion. It's a four-page romp through the misadventures of a cop who learns that sometimes the best-laid plans need more than just quick thinking to pay off.
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Reprinted in Diet Slurp & Hiccup #7 (1959)
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