Spøk og Spenning 1/1941: Difference between revisions
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*"Tarzan" by Hal Foster. | *"Tarzan" by Hal Foster. | ||
*"Huckleberry Finn" by Clare Victor Dwiggins. ''(1940: February 12, 13, 14 and 15)'' | *"Huckleberry Finn" by Clare Victor Dwiggins. ''(1940: February 12, 13, 14 and 15)'' | ||
==Note== | |||
The cover is not a panel ''lifted'' from a "The Lone Ranger" Sunday page. Although the horse's head is similar to a panel from November 20, 1938. The way the Lone Rider sits on horseback is reminiscent of a panel from February 5, 1939. But all in all, the cover is drawn on an independent basis, more easily inspired by these two panels. | |||
[[Category:Spøk og Spenning issues|Spøk og Spenning 1941 01]] | [[Category:Spøk og Spenning issues|Spøk og Spenning 1941 01]] |
Revision as of 16:47, 4 May 2024
Spøk og Spenning #1/1941 | |
Cover artist: Gunnar Tandberg ? | |
Country/language: | Norway / Norwegian |
---|---|
Format: | 32,2 x 23,5 cm |
Pages: | 16 pgs, color |
Publishing date: | May 3, 1941 |
Editor: | |
Publishing company: | Magasinet for Alle |
Preceded by: | none |
Followed by: | issue 2 |
Contents
Mandrake stories
- "Den vandrende mumie" ("The Museum Mystery" part 1) by Lee Falk and Phil Davis.
Other comics
- "Tillie the Toiler" by Russ Westover.
- "Radio Patrol" by Eddie Sullivan and Charlie Schmidt.
- "Mickey Mouse" by ?
- "Rosie's Beau" by George McManus.
- "Skippy" by Percy Crosby.
- "Secret Agent X-9" by Robert Storm and Charles Flanders. (first part of "U.S. vs Martin Gang")
- "Elmer" by Doc Winner.
- "The Lone Ranger" by Charles Flanders.
- "Colonel Potterby and the Dutchess" by Chic Young.
- "Etta Kett" by Paul Robinson.
- "Sappo" by E. C. Segar.
- "Ming Foo" by Brandon Walsh and Nicholas Afonsky.
- "Dingle-Hoofer und his Dog" by Harold H. Knerr.
- "Connie" by Frank Godwin.
- "Tarzan" by Hal Foster.
- "Huckleberry Finn" by Clare Victor Dwiggins. (1940: February 12, 13, 14 and 15)
Note
The cover is not a panel lifted from a "The Lone Ranger" Sunday page. Although the horse's head is similar to a panel from November 20, 1938. The way the Lone Rider sits on horseback is reminiscent of a panel from February 5, 1939. But all in all, the cover is drawn on an independent basis, more easily inspired by these two panels.