comicbooks.com Join Free
HomeComic Comics#7Read

★ comicbooks.com Reading Room

Comic Comics #7 (1946)

Fawcett · 1946 · 53 pages

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

Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 1 of 53
1 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 2 of 53
2 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 3 of 53
3 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 4 of 53
4 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 5 of 53
5 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 6 of 53
6 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 7 of 53
7 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 8 of 53
8 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 9 of 53
9 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 10 of 53
10 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 11 of 53
11 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 12 of 53
12 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 13 of 53
13 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 14 of 53
14 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 15 of 53
15 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 16 of 53
16 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 17 of 53
17 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 18 of 53
18 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 19 of 53
19 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 20 of 53
20 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 21 of 53
21 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 22 of 53
22 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 23 of 53
23 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 24 of 53
24 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 25 of 53
25 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 26 of 53
26 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 27 of 53
27 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 28 of 53
28 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 29 of 53
29 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 30 of 53
30 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 31 of 53
31 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 32 of 53
32 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 33 of 53
33 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 34 of 53
34 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 35 of 53
35 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 36 of 53
36 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 37 of 53
37 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 38 of 53
38 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 39 of 53
39 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 40 of 53
40 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 41 of 53
41 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 42 of 53
42 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 43 of 53
43 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 44 of 53
44 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 45 of 53
45 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 46 of 53
46 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 47 of 53
47 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 48 of 53
48 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 49 of 53
49 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 50 of 53
50 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 51 of 53
51 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 52 of 53
52 / 53
Comic Comics #7 (1946) — page 53 of 53
53 / 53
Contains 12 stories
Capt. Kid Sees Stars
5.67 pp · adventure; humor
Captain KidDaisy MaeRita Straworth

Captain Kid claims to be pals with movie star Rita Straworth, but when Daisy Mae and the gang call his bluff by planning a party in her honor, he's forced to track down the actress at the local hotel—only to stumble into a kidnapping plot that turns his tall tale into an unexpected heroic moment. This lighthearted adventure proves that sometimes the best stories are the ones you live.

A Question of Values
1 pp · humor
Trader TomJim

Trader Tom puts his new clerk Jim to the test when a customer walks into the trading post looking to sell a hat—and Tom's conflicting advice about how to value the merchandise reveals more about his business ethics than he might intend. This humorous tale shows what happens when profit motive clashes with honest dealing.

Who's Zoo
4 pp · humor
Mystic MootBamboo (a tiger)

When Mystic Moot stumbles upon his old friend Bamboo, a Bengal tiger who's escaped from the city zoo, the two are reunited—but the tiger refuses to leave his side. With the zoo manager demanding his dangerous animal back and Bamboo growing increasingly uncooperative, Mystic Moot turns to his trusty magic snoot to transform the situation, though his solutions create chaos of their own. By the end, Mystic Moot finds an unexpected solution to his long search for lodging that satisfies everyone involved.

Untitled story
2 pp · humor
Joe Miller
An Arabian Night-Mare!
5 pp · humor
Jetsam JoeCaptainAli Baba

Jetsam Joe gets shore leave in modern Arabia and stumbles into a wild chase when a stranger with Aladdin's lamp begs for help against Ali Baba and a thief hot on his trail. Ducking bullets and impossibilities, Joe brings his new friends back to his ship and the Captain, only to discover things aren't quite what they seemed in this Arabian adventure gone hilariously wrong.

Sock Him!
1 pp · humor
Danny Dee

Danny Dee attends night school and takes his teacher's advice about daily hygiene a bit too literally—with hilariously stubborn results a week later. This 1946 humor piece shows what happens when good intentions meet dopey logic.

Kanvasback Kenny Leads With His Chin
5 pp · humor; sports
Kanvasback KennyMal Arkey
When Gloria Goes Hunting for a Story, It Turns Out to Be a Honey of a Tale
4 pp · humor
GloriaEditor Fishook

Gloria heads into the woods on assignment from Editor Fishook to track down a front-page story, only to stumble upon a trapper caught in his own bear trap—with no key to escape. What starts as a desperate rescue attempt spirals into a wild sequence of hijinks and bear-baiting as Gloria schemes to free the trapper and land the headline of a lifetime.

Sam the Sheriff Is a Saw Head
2 pp · humor; western-frontier
Sam the SheriffSly John (villain)
Freddy Freshman Uses His Scull
5 pp · humor; teen
Freddy FreshmanAceBillHarrietStooge

Freddy Freshman gets talked into entering a sculling race against Ace, Podunk University's two-time champion—though Freddy's never even been in a scull before. When a lucky accident involving a submarine gives Freddy an unexpected boost, he sets a new course record, catching the attention of Harriet and prompting Stooge to sabotage the competition in a desperate bid to help Ace stay on top. On race day, a case of switched boats sends everything spinning in a direction nobody expected.

Destruction of Construction
2 pp · humor
Colonel CornKorny Kobb

Architect Colonel Corn oversees builder Korny Kobb's latest construction project—a house that's supposed to be flawless, but every time the Colonel so much as leans against a wall, something comes crashing down. As the two bicker through one comedic mishap after another, it becomes clear that Korny's grand vision might need a little work.

Richard Richard and the Missing Tooth
6 pp · humor; detective-mystery
Richard RichardAh ChooFlub Dub (a dog)Dr. I. Pullem

Restored edition © comicbooks.com. Our digitization, remastering, and presentation are our own work.

See something wrong with this issue? Report it.