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New Heroic Comics #70 (1952)

Eastern Color · 1952 · 36 pages

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

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ContinueNew Heroic Comics #71 →
Contains 14 stories
Near Death in Ice Box
2 pp · drama; biography
Donald P. Kiselykhis mother

When four-year-old Donald P. Kiselyk wanders off to play with neighborhood children, he and his brother end up trapped inside an abandoned ice box with a door that won't budge. As the air grows thin and danger closes in, Donald must find a way to escape before it's too late. Based on a true incident from South Orange, New Jersey, this 1952 drama captures a harrowing moment of childhood peril and the quick thinking required to survive it.

Death was Up a Tree
2 pp · drama; biography
Paul E. Speight

Telephone exchange repairman Paul E. Speight witnesses two boys trapped in a blazing tree and springs into action, climbing through the flames to pull them to safety despite suffering severe burns himself. This true-life account captures a harrowing rescue and the heroic cost of saving lives.

The Heroism of James Kinney
2 pp
James Kinney

When 13-year-old Boy Scout James Kinney spots a younger child breaking through the ice on Lake Anna near his Barberton, Ohio home, he plunges into the frigid water without hesitation—asthma and all. Holding the boy afloat while clinging to the deteriorating ice, James fights exhaustion and the brutal cold in a desperate race against time. This true-life story captures one scout's raw courage when seconds mean the difference between life and death.

Buried Alive
2 pp · drama; biography
Albert Burditt, Jr.

When a young friend vanishes during a riverside exploration, fifteen-year-old Albert Burditt Jr. discovers him buried beneath a catastrophic embankment collapse—and races against time to dig him out before it's too late. This true-life drama from 1952 captures a pivotal moment of quick thinking and courage that means the difference between tragedy and survival.

Handicapped Hoboken Hero
3 pp · drama; biography
Samuel Sansevere

Samuel Sansevere, a dock checker in Hoboken, witnesses a longshoreman fall overboard and into the water between two boats—and despite being handicapped by an artificial limb, he removes it and dives in to save the man's life. When a rescue rope slips and the victim begins to sink again, Sansevere makes a second dive to keep him afloat until a ladder can be lowered. This true-life 1952 account celebrates an ordinary worker who made an extraordinary choice when seconds counted.

Salt of the Earth
2 pp · drama; biography
Willie Bell

A worker at a St. Louis salt company loses his footing and plunges into a hopper, sinking helplessly into the salt like quicksand. When fellow employee Willie Bell hears the desperate cries for help, he rushes into the danger himself, frantically clearing the salt from the victim's face while shouting orders to bring machinery and rescue crews to the scene. This true-life drama captures a moment of selfless courage that saves a man's life.

Don't Play with Fire
2 pp · drama; biography
John J. Canziani

When a neighbor child discovers a carelessly discarded book of matches, a moment of innocent curiosity turns into a nightmare of flames—but John J. Canziani of San Rafael, California hears her screams and rushes in without hesitation. Shielding her face and fighting the fire with his bare hands, Canziani manages to save her life, though the cost of his heroism—in injuries and medical bills—will test his resolve in ways the flames never could.

Always Around When Needed
2 pp · drama; biography
Bill Seber

Bill Seber of Houston, Texas has earned a reputation for being exactly where he's needed most—and when a fire breaks out at an elderly woman's home, he proves why. With flames spreading rapidly through the house, Seber springs into action alongside the arriving firefighters, climbing onto the roof to battle the blaze and guide the emergency response until the danger is contained. A true-life story of quick thinking and neighborly courage in a moment of crisis.

Down the Drain
3 pp · drama; biography
Alvin Julianhis older brother

When a toddler slips into a ten-foot drainage pipe in a California trailer camp, his frantic mother descends after him—only to become trapped herself. Fifteen-year-old Alvin Julian and his older brother witness the emergency unfold as firefighters call for a slim volunteer to squeeze down into the narrow pipe and reach the child. As his brother's rescue attempt fails inches short, Alvin steps forward determined to succeed where others have fallen short.

Path of Death
1 pp · drama; biography
Patrolman Paul Walker

Patrolman Paul Walker of St. Louis faces a split-second choice when a speeding automobile bears down on a young girl crossing the street—one man's instinctive act of heroism that shows why a police officer's guidance can mean everything to a child's safety. This true-life drama captures an unforgettable moment of self-sacrifice and the everyday courage that defines those who protect our communities.

Scout Training Proves its Usefulness
2 pp · drama; biography
Lorenz K. Duerr Jr.

When a defective furnace pipe fills their St. Louis home with dangerous fumes, Lorenz K. Duerr Jr. discovers that his Boy Scout training in artificial respiration becomes a life-or-death skill. Racing to save his young sister from the toxic haze, the boy scout puts his knowledge into action and proves that scout training isn't just about badges—it's about being ready when it matters most.

Honor Roll of Heroism John Matthews
1 pp
John Matthews
Kept His Head
1 pp · drama; biography
Charlie Ward

When a Christmas tree catches fire in his Conway, Arkansas home, eleven-year-old Charlie Ward keeps his wits about him while panic spreads—directing his family to safety and thinking fast when his aunt and brother find themselves trapped on a burning porch. This true-life account celebrates the quick thinking and courage that turned a household disaster into a story of rescue, proving that sometimes the youngest among us can be the steadiest in a crisis.

Two Lives at Stake
3 pp · drama; biography
William Forgette

When two young citizens of Fall River, Massachusetts break through the ice on South Watuppa Pond, William Forgette witnesses their desperate struggle from a nearby factory window and springs into action to save them. Racing against the freezing water and deteriorating ice, Forgette pushes himself to the brink—hammering through barriers with his bare hands and enduring the numbing cold to reach the boys before it's too late. Based on this true-life account from 1952, witness an ordinary man's extraordinary act of courage in the face of mortal danger.

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