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Real Life Comics #53 (1950)

Pines · 1950 · 37 pages

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

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ContinueReal Life Comics #57 →
Contains 9 stories
The Iron Horse Gallops West
1 pp · western-frontier

When the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe railroad pushed steel across the Southwest frontier, the Iron Horse brought more than just passengers and cargo—it brought chaos, humor, and unexpected challenges to the prairie. From longhorn herds blocking the tracks to tenderfoot sharpshooters ventilating coach windows, the journey west on this iron beast was anything but comfortable, though the fireman's boiler-fried buffalo steak and the telegraphers' inventive town names kept spirits high. A spirited snapshot of railroad life in 1950s storytelling, showing the grit and comedy that came with America's westward expansion.

Wells, Fargo and Company
6 pp · western-frontier
ClemHankHenry WellsJoeWilliam G. FargoSteve VernardBlack Bart [Charles E. Boles] (villain)El Macho (villain)Mr. Williams (villain)

When gold fever strikes California in 1849, Wells, Fargo and Company rises to meet the challenge—only to face a gauntlet of stage robberies, Civil War devastation, and cunning desperadoes determined to bring down the legendary mail line. Follow the brave agents, drivers, and guards of Wells, Fargo as they battle outlaws across the frontier, from Steve Vernard's showdown with ruthless bandits to their eventual clash with the infamous Black Bart, the bandit-poet who nearly broke the company with his clever holdups. Through sheer grit and quick trigger fingers, Wells, Fargo endures—proving that no outlaw can outmatch the men who ride for the brand.

The Twenty-Second Century
4 pp · science fiction
JerryJillMr. Noah

Jerry and Jill visit their friend Mr. Noah at the city museum with a question about the future—will New York still have towering skyscrapers in the year 2101?—and he invites them to step through the Magic Meteor to find out. The three travelers project themselves to the Twenty-Second Century, where they discover a world transformed by atomic power: cities built horizontally instead of vertically, helicopters powered by broadcast energy, factories buried underground, and even spaceships bound for Mars. As they explore this remarkable future and ask locals about the landmarks they remember, things take an unexpected turn.

Al Schacht, Baseball's Clown Prince
4 pp · non-fiction; biography; sports
Al SchachtClark Griffith

Al Schacht started as a promising young pitcher for the Washington Senators in 1919, striking out batters and keeping his teammates' spirits high with his natural humor—until a shoulder injury ended his pitching career. Rather than let despair set in, Al transformed that setback into something remarkable: a comedy routine that captivated fans and eventually earned him a spot performing at World Series games under the direction of Clark Griffith. His infectious clowning became a baseball tradition, and when World War II called, Al took his act overseas to entertain troops across Europe and the Pacific.

Misson, Freebooter for Freedom!
5 pp · historical
Captain TewCaraccioli (death)Misson (death)

Misson and his friend Caraccioli, a priest, commandeer a French privateer and set out to establish something far greater than a pirate vessel—a free republic built on the ideals of liberty and brotherhood. Sailing from the Caribbean to Africa, they liberate enslaved people, recruit followers from across the globe, and establish the colony of Libertatia on Madagascar, where citizens govern by vote and law. This is the true-life adventure of men who dared to dream of democracy on the high seas and in the untamed wilderness.

The Siege of Boonesboro
1 pp · war; western-frontier
Captain BooneGeneral Hamilton

During the Revolutionary War, Captain Boone leads the defenders of Boonesboro, a remote Kentucky outpost, as they face overwhelming odds against Shawnee forces allied with the British—including General Hamilton, who views the settlement as a key target that must be destroyed. Outnumbered ten to one, the resourceful colonists improvise ingenious defenses, from a log cannon to makeshift water guns fashioned from gun barrels, to hold their ground against fire arrows and a tunneling siege. The fate of the western frontier rests on whether this handful of men and women can survive the assault.

Mightier Than the Sword, the Story of the Pencil!
6 pp · non-fiction
BillClaudioHenry ThoreauNapolean

Trace the remarkable journey of the pencil from forest to desk in this six-page chronicle of industrial ingenuity, as timber, graphite mined from distant lands, and rubber converge in the largest pencil factory in the world—each material transformed through precision machinery into the writing instrument we barely notice using every day. Along the way, discover how this humble tool earned its name, why Napoleon himself commissioned its invention, and how even Henry Thoreau underestimated its potential when he inherited a pencil mill in 1850.

Thar She Blows
3 pp · non-fiction
Captain JensenMr. StoneMr. Talbot

In 1850s New England, Captain Jensen sets sail from New Bedford with a crew of inexperienced farmhands bound for the Pacific whaling grounds, where discipline and determination will be tested against both the hunt itself and the brutal conditions of the sea. As the voyage unfolds, the crew pursues their quarry with harpoon and oar, facing the very real dangers that made whaling one of the era's most perilous trades—from the whale's deadly thrashing to ice jams, disease, and violent storms. This glimpse into the golden age of American whaling captures the grit, hardship, and single-minded pursuit of profit that drove men across the globe.

Frontier Babylon
1 pp · western-frontier
Eddie FoyJohn BenderMarshal Jack Bridges

In 1872, Dodge City, Kansas was a wild frontier town where anything could happen—and this rip-roaring snapshot captures its chaos through the eyes of railroad conductor John Bender, Marshal Jack Bridges, and the colorful characters who passed through its saloons and streets. From rowdy cowhands to vaudeville performers like Eddie Foy, the town earned its nickname "Babylon" as law and order struggled to keep pace with the lawlessness that defined the era. A fun slice of Old West history told with the humor and energy that made frontier tales irresistible.

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