Issue | #16 |
Published | August 1953 |
Frequency | monthly |
Cover Price | 0.10 USD |
Pages | 36 |
Editing | Stan Lee |
Notes | Index revised with information from Saltarella via the GCD Error Tracker and atlastales.com. |
Synopsis | An escaped con goes after his defense lawyer on Christmas day with the intent to murder him and his wife and child. The boy got a disintegrator gun as his present and he aims it at the convict which provokes fits of laughter. The boy pulls the trigger and disintegrates him. |
Pencils | Bill Everett |
Inks | Bill Everett |
Reprinted | in Weird Wonder Tales (Marvel, 1973 series) #3 |
Letters | typeset |
Reprinted | from Strange Tales (Marvel, 1951 series) #5 (February 1952) [originally titled "Werewolf Village"] |
Synopsis | A human-looking robot employed to work in a factory of mechanical robots resents the conditions of his employment as he doesn't know he's a robot. When he meets a pretty young lady and makes a date with her, he tries to escape the factory, but the other robots take him back to his workstation. He makes a dash for the fire escape but the other robots pursue him and he falls from an open window to smash to pieces on the ground below. The robot supervisor says that it is unfortunate when robots come to think of themselves as different from other robots merely because they look different. |
Pencils | Vic Carrabotta |
Inks | Jack Abel |
Reprinted | in Beware (Marvel, 1973 series) #1 (March 1973) |
Synopsis | A woman suspects her husband of cheating on her and so she follows him during the evenings where he is seen giving flowers to young girls. She becomes enraged and sends poisoned candy to her victims. After several deaths reported in the newspaper, her husband reveals that he was delivering flowers to make extra money to buy her a gift. His wife is stricken by remorse for the poisonings, and eats a few of the chocolates the husband has left on the table. The husband reveals that the last flower delivery gave him the unwanted box of candy and it turns out to be a poisoned box that the wife sent to an intended victim. |
Pencils | John Forte |
Inks | Matt Fox |
Reprinted | in Dead of Night (Marvel, 1973 series) #3 |
Synopsis | Two brothers get hired as watchmen for a cemetery. One falls in a grave and calls for help. A bystander tries to dig him out and the other brother thinks he's grave robbing and shoots him. A month later, the buried brother returns as a zombie and strangles his brother. |
Pencils | Russ Heath |
Inks | Russ Heath |
Synopsis | A wealthy old man builds a viewing device so powerful that it even displays Death approaching him. He hires bodyguards and builds a vault to hold Death once the beam reveal its presence. The bodyguards can't see what the beam reveals but they manage to wrestle it into the vault nonetheless, and the old man dismisses them, joyful that he can spend all his money and never die. He gets a call from the hospital that his niece, whom he loves dearly, has been in a terrible auto accident and is suffering greatly. She should be dead, the doctors say, but it is almost as though something is preventing Death from coming. The old man realizes that he cannot allow his niece to go on suffering so he releases Death and Death claims him. |
Pencils | Joe Sinnott |
Inks | Joe Sinnott |
Reprinted | in Beware (Marvel, 1973 series) #1 (March 1973); in Incroyable Hulk, L' (Editions Héritage, 1968 series) #78/79 |