Issue | #3 |
Published | October 1963 |
Cover Price | 0.12 USD |
Pages | 36 |
Editing | Richard Goldwater |
Characters | Josie; Melody; Pepper; Alexander Cabot III; The Boss; Waldo U. Fink |
Genre | humor; adventure |
Pencils | Dan DeCarlo |
Notes | Re-colored version of the splash page from part 4 of the issue's main story. |
Characters | Josie; Melody; Pepper; Alexander Cabot III; Alexander Cabot II; The Boss; Waldo U. Fink; un-named cop |
Synopsis | Melody buys a sweater that, unknown to her, has real diamonds sewn into it as part of a smuggling operation. The smugglers follow the girls up to Alex's beach house to steal the sweater back. |
Genre | humor; adventure |
Script | Frank Doyle |
Pencils | Dan DeCarlo |
Notes | Script identifiable as Doyle by his style and DeCarlo's statement that Doyle did "all the writing" for early Josie comics. |
Characters | Josie; Melody; Pepper; Alexander Cabot III; Alexander Cabot II; The Boss; Waldo U. Fink |
Synopsis | The Boss sends his incompetent underling, Waldo, over to the Cabot beach house to steal back the diamond-covered sweater. |
Genre | humor; adventure |
Script | Frank Doyle |
Pencils | Dan DeCarlo |
Characters | Josie; Melody; Pepper; Alexander Cabot III; Alexander Cabot II; The Boss; Waldo U. Fink |
Synopsis | Alex comes up with a plan to lure the smugglers out into the open and capture them at the annual Beach Comber's Ball. |
Genre | humor; adventure |
Script | Frank Doyle |
Pencils | Dan DeCarlo |
Notes | The manifesto Alex recites ("Breathes there a man with soul so dead who hasn't heard of Alexander Cabot III?") is a mangled version of a passage from Sir Walter Scott's poem "The Lay of the Last Minstrel." |
Genre | fact; music |
Letters | Typeset |
Characters | Li'l Jinx; Hap Holliday |
Genre | humor; children |
Script | Joe Edwards |
Pencils | Joe Edwards |
Inks | Joe Edwards |
Letters | Joe Edwards |
Characters | Josie; Melody; Pepper; Alexander Cabot III; Alexander Cabot II; The Boss; Waldo U. Fink; Ernie Watiko |
Synopsis | The smugglers see Pepper wearing the diamonds in her hair and force her to give them up. |
Genre | humor; adventure |
Script | Frank Doyle |
Pencils | Dan DeCarlo |