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Comic Comics #6 (1946)

Fawcett · 1946 · 53 pages

Free to read · restored edition by comicbooks.com · Issue details →

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ContinueComic Comics #7 →
Contains 14 stories
A Minor Drum Major
6 pp · humor

Captain Kid volunteers to be the drum major for the Podunk Rotary Club's annual parade, convinced he can master baton twirling without any training—but his overconfidence quickly gives way to bruises and fumbles. When parade day arrives and he's caught without his secret shortcut, Captain Kid discovers that sometimes a little humility beats a lot of swagger.

Judge Smudge Marks One Off
1 pp · humor

Judge Smudge hears a complaint from a man claiming his cousin attacked him with scissors, leaving his face "torn and bleeding"—but when the judge points out there's not a mark on him, the plaintiff reveals he's got witnesses instead. A one-page gag that proves sometimes the best evidence is the one you didn't expect.

Untitled story
4 pp · humor
Untitled story
2 pp · humor
The Great Athletic Contest
5 pp · humor

When a sea captain needs to decide which rival should get his lucrative shipping contract, he settles the matter with an athletic contest between Jetsam Joe and the burly McTuff. Joe's well-meaning but bumbling attempts to gain an edge in a tug-of-war, a race, and a high-jump competition keep backfiring in hilarious ways, with each event ending in unexpected results. This 1946 humor tale from Comic Comics #6 is pure slapstick mayhem as Joe tries to outthink his opponent—usually with comically disastrous consequences.

One Track Mind
1 pp · humor

A railroad switchman on his very first day finds himself at the center of a train disaster in "One Track Mind." When investigators question him about how he could have let two trains collide head-on on the same track, his matter-of-fact response perfectly captures the absurd logic of classic 1940s humor comics.

Head's Up!
5 pp · humor
Everything for the Customer
1 pp · humor
When a Rival Paper Tries To Hire Gloria
4 pp · humor

When a rival newspaper tries to poach the Snortville Sneeze's best reporter, Gloria, things don't go quite as planned—a simple interview assignment spirals into chaos, misunderstandings, and a hard lesson about why some reporters are better off staying put. This 1946 humor story from Comic Comics delivers slapstick mishaps and the kind of newspaperman antics that made Golden Age comics such a blast.

A Branded Man
2 pp · humor; western-frontier

When a rancher's branching iron goes missing, Sheriff Sam springs into action to track down the stolen tool—but his unconventional detective work leads to a resolution that's equal parts clever and comedic. This 1946 frontier romp from Comic Comics proves that sometimes the simplest solution is hiding right under your nose.

Invisible Trouble
5 pp · humor

Freddy Freshman's latest chemistry experiment—a batch of disappearing ink—catches the eye of Ace, a conniving classmate trying to win the class presidency by any means necessary. When Ace swipes the ink to sabotage votes for his rival Harriet, his scheme backfires in the most humiliating way possible. A clever bit of competitive chaos from Comic Comics that proves sometimes the best-laid plans dissolve faster than you'd expect.

Ill at Ease
2 pp · humor

Colonel Corn is feeling under the weather with chest pains, so his pal Korny Kobb decides to drag him to a doctor for treatment—but the good Colonel's got wisecracks ready for every step of the way, from the medicine bottle mix-up to his hilariously skewed logic about medical bills. In this 1946 humor yarn, watching a stubborn patient and his well-meaning friend navigate the doctor's office becomes a comedy of misunderstandings and groan-worthy gags.

The Watch Case
6 pp · humor

Richard Richard, Private Dick, takes on his most baffling case yet when two masked bandits knock over the Podunk Watch Store in broad daylight and vanish with a suitcase full of timepieces. The master sleuth and his bumbling sidekick must track down the cunning crooks before time runs out—but a chance encounter at 13 Squeedunk Street reveals the case is far more twisted than it first appeared. It's a comedic romp loaded with mistaken identities, slapstick mishaps, and the kind of zany logic only a 1946 humor comic can deliver.

Pee Wee Pete Gets a Raise out of His Boss
1 pp · humor

Pee Wee Pete musters the courage to interrupt his boss, Mr. Hopkins, with an urgent request—he needs to use the telephone to call his mother and ask an important question about a raise. What Pete forgot, though, might just work out better than he planned.

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