Issue | #15 |
Published | June 1957 |
Frequency | bi-monthly |
Cover Price | 0.10 USD |
Pages | 36 |
Editing | Stan Lee |
Pencils | Carl Burgos |
Inks | Carl Burgos |
Notes | Art credits from www.atlastales.com. |
Synopsis | When a crook finds gold outside of a Gypsy camp he tells them a story about a large meteor landing nearby soon in order to get them to leave. They go, but while he is staking his claim, a large meteor actually does land on him. |
Pencils | Sol Brodsky ?; George Woodbridge ? |
Inks | Sol Brodsky ?; George Woodbridge ? |
Notes | Brodsky credits from Frank Motler; Woodbridge from atlastales.com and Saltarella. |
Synopsis | A diver finds the fountain of youth in an undersea city, but when he drinks the water, he finds can no longer breathe air and must remain in the sea. |
Pencils | Richard Doxsee |
Inks | Richard Doxsee |
Synopsis | This story postulates that Robinson Crusoe was a time traveler from the future who was using a defective machine and got stranded. |
Pencils | Sol Brodsky |
Inks | Sol Brodsky |
Notes | Art credits from Frank Motler, via the GCD Error List. Sam Kweskin credited in www.atlastales.com. |
Synopsis | When a tramp picks up a suit from a murdered man, he dreams of the events which led up to his death and so leads the police to the body. |
Pencils | Bernie Krigstein |
Inks | Bernie Krigstein |
Pencils | John Tartaglione |
Inks | John Tartaglione |
Letters | typeset |
Notes | Text story with illustration. |
Reprinted | from Journey Into Unknown Worlds (Marvel, 1951 series) #44 (April 1956) [originally titled "The Strong Man"] |
Synopsis | A nightwatchman who works for a research lab observes a diamond through a microscope in a tiny world that scientists have developed a transportation device for. He goes to the world and swipes the diamond, but when he returns to his normal size, the diamond remains microscopic. |
Pencils | William Weltman |
Inks | William Weltman |
Synopsis | A thief steals a watch that can halt gravity. He tries to sell it to communists who test it out by flying a bomber over an enemy capital. When the bomb bay doors open, the bomb hangs suspended in air until it detonates. |
Pencils | Paul Reinman |
Inks | Paul Reinman |