
These were all characters in the only issue published Gags and Gab by Ray Gill (inside front cover) The Green Giant by George Kapitan and Harry f. Sahle The Green Giant’s first and only story in which we are introduced to his ability to grow from his normal height of 6 feet to anything from 8 to 30 feet. When not a giant he has the ability to fly. 8 Pages Doctor Nerod Super Scientist A super scientist fights villains who seem to be Japanese. 8 pages Mundoo of the Northwest Good day ah? a macho guy in a check shirt deals with wolves in the Great White North. 6 pages at this point the comic goes from being full color to being printed in black, white & red. Kar Toon and his Copy Cat. A boy inventor is trying out his hand built camera by taking a picture of a drawing of a cat he has done, there is a band and the cat hops off the page and comes to life, later the cat, who can also talk, is shown to be able to take the form of any animal it has seen 4 pages Master Mystic A mystery man who’s name is unknown and who lives in a windowless and doorless tower at the North Pole uses his mastery of “mind over matter” to fight evil, his first foe is Rango of Slavonia a would-be world dictator who perfects a method to turn himself into a giant. 6 pages The Black Arrow "Magnetic Missiles of Doom!" Air Ace fights in the Pacific. 6 pages. With this and the following strips the comic goes back to full color Lucky Lane basic cowboy hero. 4 Pages The Researcher, Like Nerod and I guess Kar Toom for that matter The Researcher (and that seems to be his name) is another brilliant scientist, in his case using super-science items, such as an X-ray flashlight to investigating crimes while wearing a tuxedo 6 pages Nobby Hobbie 1 page Fun - O – Graphs back page) The Publisher was called Pelican Publications. They published only one issue. Harry Sahle did the cover art. It was only released in New York City. The comic was published to see if it could be profitable. The experiment failed due to being unable to obtain a good quality color registration. Mr. Moreau of Moreua Publications who helped to print the book beleived it never hit the stands.
