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Red Ryder Comics, Comic book of the week on Gloucester, Virginia Links and News website. Free downloads available here. Visit us for more incredible content.
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RED RYDERCcTV^xvC-O
A 52 PAGE MAGAZINE
-*C.
for children Sm\|*B00KS*|LOOK FOR THIS TRADE MARK ON EVERY BOOK . .
EASY-TO-CLEAN, COLORFUL HARD COVERS! HANDY SIZE 3ys x6>/3 INCHES!
PAGE AFTER PAGE-FULL OF COLOR!
Whitman PUBLISHING COMPANYRACINE • WISCONSIN
RED RYDER COMICS. No. 129, April, 19S4. Published monthly by K. K. Publications, Inc.. at Poughkeepsie, N. Y. byarrangement with the Hawley Publications Incorporated. Subscriptions in the U.S.A. and all its possessions $1,00 per year. Canadiansubscriptions $1.20 per year. Foreign subscriptions ii-OO per year. Entered as second-class matter June 9, 1942 at Poughkeepsie,N. Y_, under the act of March 3, !S79i Copyright, 1954, by Stephen Slesinger. TELECOMICS Copynght, 1954, by Telecomics Inc.,N. Y. Copyrighted features licensed by Stephen Slesinger. N. Y, Ail rigbtl reserved. Printed ui U. £. A. by Western Pnating tic TrirVip-
gtapiung Co.
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In!4]ll|fil§wtllgljt^tfll
YOU'RE EIGHT, LITREBEAVEE.'THEEE HE IS...
QUIET NOW. ..HE LOOKSIMTESESTEP IN A\Y
HOOK.'
THEEE'LL BE AFRE&HT TRAIN CROSSINGTHAT TRESTLE IN ABOUTTHIETy MINUTES/ WE CANHOP ABOAEPANP EIPECLEAR. PAST THE NEXT
/^GOOD/I'M/ BUSHEP/ IT WAS
NO FUN PUCKIN'V THAT POSSEVyESTERPAY.'
THOSE BE-U/V\MPA\EN WE .<
LOOK-UM FOR"YESTEEPAY REP
eypee/
' THAT'S RIGHT LITTLE 1
{BEAVER/THEY CAN'T /'
• . SEE US THROUGH vJ'THAT BRUSH, SO KEEP! PAPPLING.. WE'LL.. CUT THEAA, OFF ANP, SIVE THEM A SURPRISE.
THIS IS A GCOPSPOT/ LET'S GET UPSEHINP THOSE ROCKS/THEY'LL HAVETDPASS- RIGHT
AUBeer-uMTHEieGUNS ANP THE
. GOLC, EEC
SOEEYTO PETAINyou,poys,suTi'Mafeaip vou'ee going-to miss youk.
' SRASTHEGOLPANPTHE PAWLES,SAV\ /I'LL 5ENC THESE TWO OFF ON THEIEJOUENEX OVESTWE FALLS/
/// NOT:ke we so, sam.'-II KG CAN STOP USJOW / _,__—^
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AIE / FISHIN& POLEBKEAK-UM IN TWO/HALF JLMP-LU\OUT OF CANOE /
Sgp eypeg ANP little SSAVgeHIPE 9ESIPE THE TRACK©
WELL I LL BE../THAT NOSV EEPHEAPSSTILL ALIVE/ BUT ILL TAKE CAEE
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OF HI/VV THISTIME /
(S?EP STAETS BACK ALONG- ONE SI* OF THE TKAIN . . —PS--*"1
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...WHILE LITTLE BEAVEE CREEPS9ACK ALONG THE OPPOSITE SIPE .
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eight; little beaver.'im anxious for newtto see this batch...anp we won't have,
-. to tell ww03?l about tlie ou£.
~ad-l THAT GOT'JA. > AU//IV
BAP APACHE,CRAZY POX,RA1P OUR VILUASE.^TEAL.HORSES, BURN HOGANS /
NOW HE HIC7S ON MESA OFEVI\- SPIRITS ONTHUNOSZ'MOUNTAIN/ WE MUST
f&xcr SO L.rrn.5 3£MSK SETS OlffAUONB ON I/fcrtr THE THTAlL THAT LEAC^S -fiJTHE MESA OPevil smerrs on thunpei? mountain...
9 WHAcTBETHACT? ME HEAR-UMNOISE IN BA.ee/SOrAEBOIPYEJE 1/-H BEHIND MS/
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ME HOPE EVIL SPIRITSFf?OM TMUNI7EK MES^ NOLOSE -UhA Vv^Y AsNP OWE -
THAT MOMENT.THB 0«fy OF" A WOLF INTHE DISTANCE KEACHSS LITTLE SEAVE?
MM? AT THAT MCMEfVT, LUKKINS INTHE BUSHES 3EHINTP THEM, IS TKEf?ENE<SAC?E AP-ACHE.ijrAZy POK---
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N\WE NCi-SE; :
HEAtS/fc«« WHAT '
THEY SNOOPAK0UNC7 MERE
ME SOT FEEUMS•SOMEBOPV BEWATOHIN& US,UTTLE BEAVEK.'
SQUAW BE Pei&HTNHO ALLTHE TINW .' LOOK I CAVE INtvtolJNTAIN /THATT BE HIPE-OUTOF CKA^ZY FOX,Y0U BETCM-UNM
I ...SNO\NBA.U. POSE CWCit-lJNA CK^ZV «>X.' 1
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NO, I WAS UPSTAIRS)I WHEN THE EXPLOSION/
TOOK PLACE'/
BY THAT LOOk IN YOUR EYE, CUCHESS,;I'P SAY YOU HAD SOMETHING
UP YOUR SLEEVE/
NEVER MIND ABOUT MYLOOKS, SHERIFF—JUST CALL ALL THE
MEN TOGETHER FORTHE &EARD JUPiSINY,
fTELECOVWCS PRESENTS" .COPR-. 1«7, BY TELECOMICS. INC.. N. Y
THE WEST THAT LIVES FOREVERVENGEANCE '/
Have you ever wondered what made some
of the bad men of the old West the way they
were? This question, has intrigued me for
some time, so I finally decided to ask some
questions on the subject. Putting all the
answers together was like fitting the pieces
of a giant jigsaw puzzle, but when I was
through, I had some mighty interesting facts.
Let's start with Jesse James. His home was
a peaceful farm in Missouri, which later be-
came a virtual battleground for Quantrill's
Missouri Border Guerrilla men and the Kansas
Jayhawker "Regulators."
When the "Regulators" discovered that
Jesse's parents were in sympathy with the
South, they destroyed his home, beat him
unmercifully, attempted to hang his father,
anil imprisoned his aged mother. Jesse's
brother, Frank, escaped to join Quantrill's
forces, and Jesse soon followed him. .
• By the end of the war, both Jesse and
Frank had only one thought in mind— get-
ting even— and like all other bad men, they
didn't know when to stop. They continued
getting even until ihey had become hardened
criminals and murderers/ and until society
finally got even with them.
Vengeance seems to be one of the strong-
est human emotions, one which is difficult
to forge! or put aside. This motive frequently
instigated the bad man's first criminal act.
George Coe, for example, once swore venge-
ance against Sheriff Brady of Lincoln
County, New Mexico, for Brady's cruel treat-
ment of him. Coe was arrested for a crime
pt which he was entirely innocent." iCoe^escribed this incident in his memoirs.
Frontier Fighter: "... They tied my feet to-
gether under the horse's belly (a commonmethod of preventing escape). At the same
time they bound Scurlock (another prisoner)
in a like manner. Then, with bedcord, they
tied my hands together after circling myarms about Surlock's waist. A slow, drizzling
rain had begun to fall. The cords on my wrists
tightened as they wet through, adding to mymisery! Though I have suffered gun wounds
and broken bones, that ride stands out in mymind as the most horrible three hours I ever
endured."
Swearing to get revenge on Brady and his
cohorts, Coe soon turned outlaw and killer,
and became a leading figure in the famous
Lincoln County war.
Another example which proves how strong
the motive of vengeance is for personal
injury may be found in the story of Clay
Allison.
Late one night, while making camp in the
W^hita country of New Mexico, Allison was
suddenly attacked and beaten by three men,
Left for dead, Allison miraculously recovered
and spent the following six months tracing
his attackers through the entire Western part
of the United States until he finally dis-
covered and killed all three men.
,
Strange as it may seem, the famed Dalton
Brothers, Bob, G*at, Frank and Emmett, were
once Osage policemen. Their life of crime
began after they were refused salaries due
them as members of the police force, and
because of this injustice they became bitter
and sought vengeance on all organized law.
The sudden death of their brother Frank,
while still a police officer, spurred their
hatred and was a definite influence to their
hot-tempered, vengeful nature.
William Clarke Quantrill, though not as
well known as Billy the Kid or The Dalton
or James boys, was perhaps the worst bad
man the West will ever know.
A quiet schoolteacher prior to the Civil
War, Quantrill changed into a bloodthirsty
murderer when his brother was wantonly
killed by the Kansas Jayhawkers. Organizing
a baad of nearly five hundred angry Southern
sympathizers, Quantrill completely burned,
ransacked and pillaged an entire Kansas
town, murdered eighty Yankees at a single
command, and spread violence across the
country.
Thousands suffered because of the need-
less death of one man and the savage nature
of a maniac who actually believed he wasright in avenging his brother in such a
manner.
In the summer of 1851, gold was dicovered
fit Pihos Altos, in the heart of the Apachecountry. The presence of so many white menworried the Indians, especially their great
chief, Mangus Colorado.
The Apache leader feared an attack, and
he watched the white men closely. He wassurprised when all they did was dig and
climb around the rocks of the desert moun-
tains. Since they seemed to be interested only
in finding the yellow metal they called gold,
Mangus decided that the quietest way to get
them out of Apache country would be to tell
them of another mine, richer than the Pihos
Altos diggings, in Mexico territory.
There was nothing wrong with the plan—except that it didn't work. The wise Apachemisjudged the white men and their greed —for none of the miners would believe that
Mangus knew of richer gold deposits, or that
he would tell of them unless it was a trick
to take their lives.
The miners, on the other hand, wished to
be rid of thr Indian, and one night they de-
cided they could have great sport by giving
Mangus Colorado a sound whipping. It
seemed like an amusing idea to these frontier
men, and it would surely convince the Indian
that they were not interested in his wild talk
of oro in another mountain range.
A dozen men jumped the unsuspecting
Apache and tied him to a tree, then beat him
nearly senseless with a blacksnake whip.
The chief was badly hurt when he was finally
released, and he barely managed to reach
his own camp and tell his story This was the
beginning of real trouble, and was a serious
mistake on the part of the white men.
Mangus Colorado swore revenge, morefor the indignity and treachery than for the
huge scars on his back He had been very
patient with the white men who were in-
vading his country— patient m spite of the
many Indians who had been killed already
in ambushes, massacres and real battles. But
the whipping was too much, and he never
forgot it. It was a great insult to a great chief.
and Mangus Colorado spent the rest, of his
life avenging his wrong.
Many white men in the Southwest died at
the hands of the Apaches because of this
needless brutality inflicted by the Pihos Altos
miners, and perhaps the whole history of the
area was changed because of it-
The strange stories behind the bad men.
of the West could fill many volumes if told
in detail, but it seems that one particular in^
cident. often a minor one, started these menon their lives of crime.
Billy the Kid blamed his outlaw career on
his stepfather, while Langford Peel blamed
ingratitude of the people he had befriended
as the reason for his life of crime. But what-
ever the reason, these were selfish men whofailed to possess the one common emotion
— forgiveness.
Unlike Bat Masterson, Pat Garrett and the
true heroes of the Old West, these men lived
theii lives in vengeance, until vengeanc*
became theii tombstones.
IT WAS VIC AeglGO/ WE'VE BEENHE ESCAPEP FgCMA STATS ICHASIN'HMA ,
cei'SONi this /MoeMN.'. I&ultu'wavanp jusTAMjBPEeep / FeoMEiiABset
AAAYoe WATSON.' (->—, REP
n booics uk.eHE'S SWRTlN'TOCaR«Y OUT THOSETHREATS- HE .V\APEAT HlSTEIAL LAST
/MONTH/
when the juey I
CONVICTEP HIM OP I
MURPEClN SUCK. t>
SlMPSON HE SWOREHE'P KILL "THE MAYOR,EUFETAgOg, AM' EVENUUPGE SEAOFoePU/MSELF IF HE EVEE
' GOT OUT OFPEISON.'
AN yOU CAN BETYOUR BOOTS HE'LLBE BACK FOE TABOR
,
TOO, IF WE PON'TFINP HIM/
WAIT A MINUTE,SHERIFF/R£A\EMBER
WHEEE AREISOHI P OUT AFTEEBUCK SliWPSON'S
YEAW,HEREALUySET THINGS UP FORUS...ANPONCE
TH' SHE-BIFFANPEYPEE ARE OUT
OF TH' WAY, I'LLHAVE CONTROL. OFTH 'WHOLE TOkVN.'
JUST TR.UST MESHERIFF.' :n GOINGTO RlpE OVER THERE sow,ANPHEEE'S WHAT IWANJT YOU AMP
OUTOf MY
STIU I CAN'TFIGURE OUT HOW YOU&USPECTEPTABOR/
I PlWTDNTILISAW THAT BULLETHOLE IN TU 'SCREENAT TABOE-S
OFFICE/ J
WIGWAM WAYS to1 RED MANSTELEPHONE
.., Wg ANNOUNC&P TMi5 TD Th£
HUNTgl?5 SV THROWING HIS
ROUUP UP BLANKET IN THE A)2
ANP CATCHING IT LIKE A BAu./
lE WUNTEZS KNEW A VEE> LA2SE HEKPOF BUFFALO tvEEE NEAE IF THE SCOUT
' WAvEP H<S BLANKET, ANP THEN SPEEAPIT ON THE GEOunP ANP OUW6P OVERIT.'
*MOKE SIGNALING WASPOPULAE A-MONS THE INDIANS \, .'
'OF THE GeEAT Pi-AIN=.< »_^sB^4"^!
rELECTJNG A HIGH CLIFF, THEVj PUS A UAEGg HOLE IN
WutC-iJ THFV (5UILT -THglE FICEr/
I . m-MM
21 ft" wi•.~]^-A"
*^W^W -•I*v*EEEN TWIGSIAN? GZASSrt'EEE PLAC6P
ON THB BLAZETO MAKE" IT
SMOKE.'
IhEN A WET BLANKET WASELP OVSe THE HOLE ANP
WAS LlFTEC AT INTERVALS TOALLOW GEEArr pu&FS Oc SMOKgTO FLOAT SKVWAEP.'
This fascinating magazine is chock-full of breath-taking thrills from cover to cover. Rough and readyRed Ryder matches his strength and wits against the
;
ruthless outlaws of the colorful Old West.
Little Beaver is always on hand to do his bestto help Red Ryder out of his usual dangeroussituations. Join these two side-kicks as theyride the frontier together.
Subscribe now! All the family will really enjoy read-
ing the entertaining stories in each issue.
ONE YEAR SUBSCRIPTION *1.00
Mall to K. K. PUBLICATIONS, Inc.
Gentlemen:Enclosed find $1.00 for which please enter the
following subscription to Red Ryder Comics for
12 monthly issues beginning wi£h _....
issue. D Check here if this is a new subscription.
Dept. R 4 Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
Gentlemen
:
Enclosed find $1.00 for which please enter the
following subscription to Red Ryder Comics for
12 monthly issues beginning with
issue. Check here if this is a new subscription.
(please print)
Street and Number
City or Town Mailing District No.
[please print)
t and Number
Donor's Name Donor's Nan
au. Saf-T-Pops, Fruit Drops and Mints
SEND FOR T WHEATIES OFFER NOW!
,^, Raised Numbers*\ —Just Like
Dad's License! MINIATURE SOLID STEEL
1954 LICENSE PLATES-fa Finished in Colorful Baked Enamel!
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