Issue | #68 |
Published | May-June 1960 |
Cover Price | 0.10 USD |
Pages | 36 |
Editing | Jack Schiff; Murray Boltinoff (Associate Editor); George Kashdan (Associate Editor) |
Characters | Tomahawk |
Genre | western; period |
Pencils | Dick Dillin |
Inks | Sheldon Moldoff |
Synopsis | A public service announcement about good and bad manners. |
Genre | Fact |
Script | Jack Schiff |
Pencils | Bernard Baily |
Inks | Bernard Baily |
Letters | Ira Schnapp |
Notes | Inside front cover. |
Characters | Tomahawk; Lord Shilling; Dan Hunter; Jed (Sentry); Major Johnson; Chief Blue Bear |
Synopsis | When Tomahawk and Lord Shilling are captured by Chief Blue Bear they are forced to work together to escape the Indians. |
Genre | western; period |
Pencils | Fred Ray |
Inks | Fred Ray |
Characters | Chief Hot Foot; Weary Dog |
Synopsis | Chief Hot Foot tries to learn the white man's ways. |
Genre | Humor |
Synopsis | Facts about Pawnee Indians. |
Genre | Western; Fact |
Pencils | Morris Waldinger |
Inks | Tommy Nicolosi |
Notes | Pencil/Ink credits by Gene Reed and Bob Bailey [MN 9/2008] |
Characters | Tomahawk; Dan Hunter; Marvin Noyes; Chief Bent Pine |
Synopsis | Marvin Noyes is a ventriloquist who uses his ability to help Tomahawk and Dan escape from Chief Bent Pine. |
Genre | western; period |
Pencils | Fred Ray |
Inks | Fred Ray |
Letters | Typeset |
Genre | Western |
Letters | Typeset |
Synopsis | Facts about Indian medicine. |
Genre | Fact |
Pencils | Morris Waldinger |
Inks | Tommy Nicolosi |
Notes | Pencil/Ink credits by Gene Reed and Bob Bailey [MN 9/2008] |
Characters | Tomahawk; Dan Hunter; Chief Bent River; Chief Fire Arrow |
Synopsis | An Indian medicine man gives Tomahawk a potion that temporarily gives him super strength. |
Genre | western; period |
Pencils | Fred Ray |
Inks | Fred Ray |
Characters | Sequoyah |
Synopsis | The story of Sequoyah and how he created the Cherokee alphabet. |
Genre | Fact |
Script | Mort Drucker (?) |
Pencils | Mort Drucker |
Inks | Mort Drucker |
Notes | Pencil/Ink credits by Gene Reed and Bob Bailey. Gene Reed suggests writer credit based on the fact that Drucker wrote most of his fillers. [MN 9/2008] |
Reprinted | From ? (Probably early 1950's) |