Flash Comics #62
☆ Be the first to review + Add to your collection — Join freeIn "High Jinks on the Rinks," the Three Dimwits dive headfirst into a scheme straight out of a newspaper ad, convinced they're making a smart move by investing their savings—only to discover they've just bought a roller rink drowning in $50,000 of debt. Written by Gardner F. Fox and illustrated with lively energy by E. E. Hibbard, this 1945 Flash Comics tale captures the trio's trademark misadventures with a classic slapstick twist. The cover by Hibbard perfectly captures their wide-eyed confusion, a fitting frame for a comic that's equal parts chaos and charm.
When the Three Dimwits stumble upon a newspaper ad promising quick profits, they leap at the chance to invest their savings—only to end up buying a roller rink drowning in debt. With more enthusiasm than sense, they dive headfirst into running the rink, unaware of the chaos that awaits on the ice.
In "The Painter and the $100,000," a once-renowned artist grapples with the weight of his past as the fortune he stole years ago continues to haunt him—rich in value, yet utterly unusable, leaving him trapped by the very wealth he can’t spend.
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Reprinted in Picture Stories from American History #2 (1946)
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