As 1978 ground to its drear conclusion, Britain entered a particularly acute period of industrial strife, which came to be known as The Winter of Discontent. IPC, publishers of Cheeky Weekly, had already suffered the effects of industrial disputes earlier in the decade, and there were indications that trouble was again brewing when Cheeky Weeky dated 02 December 1978 was reduced from the usual 32 pages to 27. No reason for the page reduction was given in that issue, but most readers would have guessed that some sort of strike or work to rule was the cause. This thread on the Comics UK forum suggests that the majority of the disputes that affected IPC's output in the 70s were at the printers rather than at IPC itself.
Welcome to the Cheeky Weekly blog!
Cheeky Weekly ™ REBELLION PUBLISHING LTD, COPYRIGHT © REBELLION PUBLISHING LTD, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED was a British children's comic with cover dates spanning 22 October 1977 to 02 February 1980.
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*** CHEEKY WEEKLY, KRAZY, WHOOPEE!, WHOOPEE, WOW!, WHIZZER AND CHIPS and BUSTER ARE ™ REBELLION PUBLISHING LTD, COPYRIGHT © REBELLION PUBLISHING LTD, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. ***
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Sunday, 2 September 2012
The missing issues
As 1978 ground to its drear conclusion, Britain entered a particularly acute period of industrial strife, which came to be known as The Winter of Discontent. IPC, publishers of Cheeky Weekly, had already suffered the effects of industrial disputes earlier in the decade, and there were indications that trouble was again brewing when Cheeky Weeky dated 02 December 1978 was reduced from the usual 32 pages to 27. No reason for the page reduction was given in that issue, but most readers would have guessed that some sort of strike or work to rule was the cause. This thread on the Comics UK forum suggests that the majority of the disputes that affected IPC's output in the 70s were at the printers rather than at IPC itself.
Friday, 31 August 2012
The one-offs - Commissionaire's Grandson
As we know, Commissionaire's appearances were linked to the Saturday morning picture show that readers of Cheeky Weekly witnessed in the first 59 issues of the comic. The final picture show to be featured in Cheeky Weekly was in the 02 December 1978 issue. The fact that Ursula the erstwhile usherette tells Cheeky in the following issue that she has a new job as a security guard suggests that the cinema had closed (a fate that increasingly befell picture-palaces during the 70s, as cinema attendance plunged while TV ownership boomed). However, Comissionaire's Grandson's comments indicate only that his grandfather retired - whether the grandson is working at the same cinema is open to conjecture.
Monday, 27 August 2012
Cheeky's Week title panel and What did YOU do today?
Thus, from the 30 September 1978 comic, all the Cheeky strips in each issue became titled Cheeky's Week…[name of day]. The front cover gag strip (previously called 'What a Cheek') had considerably more full stops between 'Cheeky's Week' and 'Sunday', but that's because this strip occupied the full width of the front page and the title of the strip was printed as a banner above the strip, spanning the panels.
With one exception, from the 30 September 1978 issue up to and including that dated 30 June 1979, the following pages would commence with the Cheeky's Week title panel;
- Monday (the continuation of Cheeky's Sunday shenanigans on page 2 would not feature a title panel, as the title banner for Sunday had appeared on the front cover).
- Tuesday
- Wednesday
- Thursday (in the 19 May 1979 comic, Thursday spanned one and a half pages. Thursday's Cheeky's Week title panel appeared on the first Thursday page in that issue. The half-page continuation contained a teaser strip for Skateboard Squad's return in the Speed Squad feature which would commence the following week. ).
- Friday
- Saturday (but only the first Saturday page. Interval, being a continuation of Saturday, wouldn't get its own title, nor would the continuations of Saturday)
- Sunday's continuation from the cover on page 2 (unlike the Cheeky's Week……..Sunday title panel, Sunday's WDYDT didn't appear on the front page).
- Monday
- Tuesday
- Wednesday
- Thursday (in the 19 May 1979 comic, 'WDYDT appeared on the first Thursday page in that issue, rather than the half-page continuation mentioned above)
- Friday
- Saturday - from 30 September 1978 to 02 December 1978 inclusive, WDYDT appeared on the first Saturday page each issue (except in the 14 October 1978 issue when the 'Published every Monday by IPC Magazines Ltd...' small print section was unusually located at the bottom of the first Saturday page, thereby shunting WDYDT to Interval for that sole occasion). From 09 December 1978 to 30 June 1979 inclusive (the June 1979 date being the final appearance of the readers' diary section), WDYDT appeared on the second Saturday page each issue.
A typical Cheeky's Week page showing the title panel and WDYDT can be seen here.
When I started this blog I adopted the term Cheeky's Week as a shorthand way of referring to the aforementioned strips depicting Cheeky's daily activities. Just to clarify, a list of the features which I consider to constitute Cheeky's Week can be seen here. Please note that only the strips based on days of the week carried the Cheeky's Week title panel and WDYDT diary.
Despite the introduction of the Cheeky's Week title to the element names in the comic, I continue to record each element as just the day of the week in my data (so Monday is still called Monday even when the intro panel says Cheeky's Week…Monday), to avoid unnecessary complication (for me!).
Thursday, 16 August 2012
Cheeky Weekly cover date 09 December 1978

Below the exciting news for fans of the diminutive blue songsters, Cheeky has a Sunday morning encounter with Bump-Bump Bernie. Also seen in the strip are comedy double act (Syd) Little and (Eddie) Large, who are currently attempting the unenviable task of filling the hole left in the BBC schedules by the recent defection of comedy legends Morecambe and Wise to ITV.
Unlike last week, when the reduced page count resulted in the loss of 2 Cheeky's Week elements (plus 6 Million Dollar Gran), this week's 28 pager does feature a full Cheeky's Week. However, the What did YOU do today? diary section, which has been present on all the introductory 'weekday' elements of the Cheeky's Week pages since the 30 September 1978 issue (with the exception of Saturday in the 14 October 1978 comic), is missing from the foot of the Sunday page. There is no evidence of page resizing so it seems the artwork was prepared without leaving space for the WDYDT area. Maybe the page was drawn before the introduction of WDYDT, but was pressed into use in the current issue by the exigencies of the industrial dispute.
Even the mighty 6 Million Dollar Gran cannot withstand the power of the Trade Unions, so for the second week the synthetic senior citizen is a casualty of the reduced page count, despite the Sunday page showing the toothy funster's anticipatory dash to the TV.
As Christmas approaches, the What's New, Kids page carries news of an innovative development in home entertainment, available to those with access to the appropriate technology. Yes, it's London Telephones' recorded Christmas stories, an expansion of their existing Dial-A-Disc service. Don't forget to dial 01 if you're outside London. Unfortunately, the technology is still a little primitive, and as the stories are recorded on a tape loop, you'll probably dial in part-way through a Christmas tale, finding you have to listen to the end before reaching the beginning. But think of the possibilities - one day, there will be a network of Dial-A-Disc machines, each loaded with a tape loop containing a recording of someone relating a particular fact. By simply looking up a question in a telephone directory to find the telephone number of the machine carrying the answer, we will be able to satisfy our curiosity on any number of obscure topics. They'll probably call this information distribution system the TeleWeb, or InterPhone or PhoneNet or something…
On Tuesday Cheeky meets Ursula, making her first post-Saturday Morning Pictures appearance. No longer an usherette, Ursula tells Cheeky she has secured a job as a bank security guard, a position for which she is clearly eminently suitable.
Page 16 is the home of the Smurfs competition announced on the cover. 6 seemingly-identical pictures of the little blue elves are on display but apparently only two are identical. Readers are invited to send a postcard containing their choice of twins. Winners will receive a copy of The Smurfs' latest LP, Father Abraham in Smurfland.
This is the second Smurf competition to feature in Cheeky Weekly; the first was just 3 months ago in the 09 September 1978 issue (and a list of fortunate winners of that earlier competition is printed on page 24 of this week's comic). That issue had sporadic Smurf content throughout Cheeky's Week, whereas this week's Cheeky pages are entirely Smurf-free.
On Thursday, Spiv finally finds a punter gullible enough to purchase the old banger he's been trying to flog since the 02 September 1978 comic. Posh Claude is horrified to discover that it's his dad who has been lumbered with the smoking wreck.
In the final panel of the Thursday page, Cheeky announces that Skateboard Squad will follow, but in fact it's Disaster Des who appears on the next page. The Squad actually arrive one page later. A full roster of Mystery Comic features are present this issue but, in a kind of Brundlefly co-mingling of comic DNA, 2 features which are actually part of Cheeky Weekly (The Smurfs competition and Thursday) are caught up within the pages of the mysterious publication, this week's mutated comic no doubt resulting from the effects of industrial unrest.
The Pin-Up Pal poster returns to the comic for the first time since 23 September 1978. This week's comic rounds off with a poster of Krazy Town's silly snapper, Flash Harry.
Despite the note at the bottom of the second page of this week's Laugh and Learn strip reading "There'll be another feast of fun and facts soon pals!", this is actually the final time the feature will appear.
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This week's Calculator Kid story depicts one of the rare occasions on which Calculator's electronic machinations turn out less than favourably for young Charlie. |
New features commencing this week are Friends of Cheeky Chit-Chat (readers' letters) and The Burpo Special, the terrible toddler's own feature in which he interviews characters from the Cheeky's Week supporting cast. The subject of the first Burpo Special is Lily Pop who, we learn on the Chit-Chat page, is the character from the cast of Cheeky's pals who is most popular with the readers.
Cheeky Weekly | Cover Date: 09-Dec-1978, Issue 60 of 117 |
Page | Details |
1 | Cover Feature '50 Smurf LPs to be won'\Cheeky's Week - Art Frank McDiarmid |
2 | Sunday - Art Frank McDiarmid |
3 | Monday - Art Frank McDiarmid |
4 | Calculator Kid - Art Terry Bave |
5 | What's New, Kids |
6 | Tuesday - Art Frank McDiarmid |
7 | Paddywack - Art Jack Clayton |
8 | Wednesday - Art Frank McDiarmid |
9 | Tub 'Mystery Comic' 11 of 34 - Art Nigel Edwards |
10 | Why, Dad, Why? 'Mystery Comic' 8 of 28 - Art John K. Geering |
11 | Mystery Boy reprint from Whizzer and Chips 'Mystery Comic' 11 of 37 - Art John Richardson |
12 | Mustapha Million 'Mystery Comic' 11 of 34 - Art Reg Parlett |
13 | Mustapha Million 'Mystery Comic' 11 of 34 - Art Reg Parlett |
14 | Elephant On The Run 'Mystery Comic' 11 of 34 - Art Robert Nixon |
15 | Elephant On The Run 'Mystery Comic' 11 of 34 - Art Robert Nixon |
16 | Smurfs competition (final appearance)\Ad: IPC 'Mickey Mouse' 8 of 18 |
17 | Thursday - Art Frank McDiarmid |
18 | Disaster Des 'Mystery Comic' 10 of 30 - Art Mike Lacey |
19 | Skateboard Squad - Art Jimmy Hansen |
20 | Joke-Box Jury |
21 | Friday - Art Frank McDiarmid |
22 | Laugh and Learn (final appearance) - Art Brian Walker (final art on feature) - Art Barrie Appleby (final art on feature) |
23 | Laugh and Learn (final appearance) - Art Brian Walker (final art on feature) - Art Barrie Appleby (final art on feature) |
24 | Chit-Chat (first appearance) |
25 | The Burpo Special (first appearance) 'Lily Pop' - Art Frank McDiarmid (first art on feature) |
26 | Saturday - Art Frank McDiarmid |
27 | Saturday - Art Frank McDiarmid |
28 | Pin-up pal 'Flash Harry' - Art Frank McDiarmid |
Artist | Elements |
Frank McDiarmid | 10 |
Thursday, 9 August 2012
Profile - Commissionaire
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Commissionaire's first appearance Art: Frank McDiarmid |
In the comic dated 17 December 1977, Commisionaire was relieved to see Teacher approaching the cinema entrance at speed, expecting the podgy pedagogue to discipline the kids into forming an orderly queue. He didn't realise that Teacher was being pursued by his mother in law and, seeing the cinema as a refuge, the dandruff-ridden schoolmaster trampled the downtrodden doorman in his rush to safety.
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Art: Frank McDiarmid |
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Commissionaire was not only trampled, but also slimed. Art: Dick Millington |
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Revenge in the 01 April 1978 issue Art: Frank McDiarmid pencils |
Crafty Commissionaire appeared from a hatch above the cinema doors to avoid being trampled in the 29 July and 05 August 1978 issues, but his supposedly impregnable lair was breached the following week as the kids played leapfrog in order to reach him.
In the 04 November 1978 comic, Commissionaire follows Bubblegum Boy's example and is seen suspended from a gum bubble above the cinema doors.
In 4 issues of Cheeky Weekly, Commissionaire made an additional post-show appearance on the second Saturday page, as Cheeky and pals exited the cinema. However, 3 of his post-show appearances used the same artwork.
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Variations on a theme by Frank McDiarmid |
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Snail makes a prediction Art: Mike Lacey |
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Apart from missing an 'A', Snail was right - Cheeky Weekly 01 July 1978. Art: Frank McDiarmid |
Commissionaire was absent from Cheeky Weekly's first birthday issue dated 21 October 1978. OR WAS HE? See my speculation on this topic here.
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Chit-Chat 27 October 1979 |
UPDATE 14 September 2012: It seems Saturday morning picture shows were in existence much earlier than I guessed, as this footage from Saturday 03 October 1914 (early in World War 1) shows. Nice clips of the commissionaires.
Character | Total Issues | First Appearance | Final Appearance |
Commissionaire | 51 | 22-Oct-1977 | 02-Dec-1978 |
Character | Artist | Total Elements |
Commissionaire
Frank McDiarmid
19
Commissionaire
Frank McDiarmid pencils
16
Commissionaire
Mike Lacey
7
Commissionaire
Unknown Cheeky Artist 1
5
Commissionaire
Jim Watson
4
Commissionaire
Barrie Appleby
4
Commissionaire
Dick Millington
2
Commissionaire
Cut and Paste
1
Wednesday, 1 August 2012
The features - Saturday Morning Pictures including Interval
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The first Interval. Art: Frank McDiarmid |
There were a number of Cheeky Weekly features associated with our grinning pal's cinema visit;
In the final panels of the first Saturday page in issues 1 to 59, Cheeky would be seen entering the cinema (usually leading the charge of kids trampling the long-suffering Commissionaire in the rush to get good seats).
Then there would be a cartoon supporting feature (or, on one occasion, a magic show).
This would be followed by the Interval (of which more later).
After the break, the latest episode of the adventure serial would commence. Over the weeks, a number of features fulfilled the role of the serial;
- Space Family Robinson
- James Bold in Island of Fear
- Archie's Angels
- Sonny Storm
- The Terrible Trail to Taggart's Treasure
Interval was the only Cheeky's Week feature to occur entirely within the structure of the Saturday morning pictures sequence.
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11 February 1978 - a Snail-less Interval Art: Unknown Cheeky Artist 1 |
The characters to feature most prominently in the Interval pages were;
- Cheeky (natch) who appeared in all 59 Intervals, as did Ursula.
- Snail, who was unaccountably absent for just one Interval - that dated 11 February 1978. Despite his absence during the cinema show, Snail was seen on Cheeky's shoulder in the same issue as he exited the cinema on the post-Interval Saturday page.
- Crunching Chris, whose cacophonous mastication was endured by the audience during 32 film shows.
- Snoozin' Susan, who snored through 20 programmes
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Frank McDiarmid's depictions of Ursula became more grotesque as the weeks passed |
The first Interval set the routine for most of the subsequent appearances of the feature;
Cheeky would deliver a gag to a gang of anonymous fellow cinema-attendees, who would sometimes be looking at the end caption of the preceding cartoon (occasionally using Warner Brothers' famous 'That's all, folks').
The toothy funster would insult Ursula the Usherette while selecting a snack of dubious provenance from her tray. Her responses to Cheeky's weekly ribbing were initially limited to silent fuming or guttural snarls, until she snapped in the 04 March 1978 comic and subjected the toothy funster to a retaliatory tirade that left him reeling. The lumbering lolly lady retained the power of speech in all but one of her subsequent appearances.
Walter Wurx would quite often be seen heading for an urgent appointment to check the cinema's plumbing.
As the adventure film was about to commence, Cheeky would try, and usually fail, to get a seat far from Crunching Chris, the only boy who could eat marshmallows noisily, and sonorous snorer, Snoozin' Susan.
The intervals in the 26 November 1977 and 24 December 1977 issues were the only ones to be introduced by a caption, which read 'During the interval…'.
All the Intervals occupied a full page, with the exception of that which appeared in the 04 February 1979 issue, which covered a half page. The remainder of that page contained a Bam, Splat and Blooie reprint from Buster which, Snail informed readers (by means of a gastropod-type thought bubble), was an extra cartoon before the serial.
In the 20 May 1978 issue, The Muppet Show's Waldorf and Statler were seen sitting in the balcony although, unlike in their TV appearances, they refrained from commenting on the goings-on around them.
In the comic dated 19 August 1978, Cheeky got a glimpse of his life 60 years into the future. It appears that the toothless funster of 60 years hence is still visiting the cinema on Saturdays, but for the Pensioners' Film Show. In an amazing coincidence, the senior citizens are enjoying a 60-year-old episode of Archie's Angels, which just happens to be the serial running in Cheeky Weekly 60 years earlier. In a further, astounding coincidence, the episode being shown this week in 2038 is the same one that Cheeky would have watched had he not been whisked into the future, meaning that the readers of Cheeky Weekly can continue to follow the Archie's Angels story uninterrupted.
Carriageway chaos occurred throughout Cheeky's Week in the comic dated 26 August 1978, as a learner driver terrified the populace of Krazy Town. Even the cinema patrons weren't safe, as the car motored through the interval.
The supporting cartoon was replaced by a special magic show in Cheeky Weekly's first birthday issue dated 21 October 1978.
The final Interval appeared in Cheeky Weekly dated 02 December 1978. In the following week's issue, Cheeky told us "Some of you readers have been wondering what I do on Saturday afternoons, after I've been to the cinema. Today, I'm going to watch our local football team". Thereafter, the Saturday pages depicted the toothy funster's afternoon pursuits. Interval stalwarts Ursula, Crunching Chris and Snoozin' Susan continued to appear in the comic after Interval came to and end.
Interval was an enjoyable part of Cheeky's Week and introduced one of the comic's most memorable characters, Ursula. However, by the late 1970s, attendance at Saturday Morning Pictures must have been in sharp decline due to the increasing number of homes with a TV, and the introduction of Saturday morning children's TV shows. Possibly feedback from readers indicated the feature should be dropped, although it seems at least one Friend of Cheeky wondered why it had ceased...
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Chit-Chat 27 October 1979 |
Interval in the Cheeky Weekly Index
Feature | First Appearance | Final Appearance | Total Issues | Total Issues Missed In Run | Page History |
Interval | 22-Oct-77 | 02-Dec-78 | 59 | 0 | 25,27,28,29 |
Feature | Artist | Number of Issues | First Appearance | Final Appearance |
Interval | Frank McDiarmid | 18 | 22-Oct-1977 | 25-Nov-1978 |
Interval | Frank McDiarmid pencils | 18 | 12-Nov-1977 | 18-Nov-1978 |
Interval | Dick Millington | 2 | 24-Dec-1977 | 27-May-1978 |
Interval | Unknown Cheeky Artist 1 | 5 | 14-Jan-1978 | 04-Mar-1978 |
Interval | Barrie Appleby | 4 | 11-Mar-1978 | 22-Jul-1978 |
Interval | Jim Watson | 6 | 01-Apr-1978 | 10-Jun-1978 |
Interval | Mike Lacey | 6 | 17-Jun-1978 | 02-Dec-1978 |
Preceding Page | Count |
Tweety and Sylvester | 27 |
Road Runner | 9 |
Bam Splat and Blooie | 5 |
Wile E Coyote | 5 |
Daffy Duck | 4 |
Cocky Doodle | 3 |
Henery Hawk | 3 |
IPC | 2 |
Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf | 2 |
Tweety | 1 |
Hey Presto! Magic Show | 1 |
Hickory Dickory Doc | 1 |
Ghouldilocks | 1 |
Monday, 23 July 2012
Cheeky Weekly cover date 02 December 1978

The cover gives no clue as to the untoward goings-on inside. The main feature promotes the Saint competition, running in 4 IPC humour titles this week. Cheeky seems to be so engrossed in Bernie's sorry tale in the Cheeky's Week…Sunday strip drawn by Mike Lacey, that he forgets to deliver the newspaper to Bernie's house.
The uncharacteristically silent Cheeky in the final panel of the main Sunday feature is presumably a symptom of the reduced page count. This is the location where Cheeky would normally tell us he's about to watch the latest episode of 6 Million Dollar Gran on TV but, as Gran is one of the features bumped from this truncated issue, it would appear the toothy funster's final Sunday speech balloon has been excised.
Although the comic has been reduced from 32 to 28 pages, there are in fact only 27 pages of content, because page 3 is the location of this stark message;
Skateboard Squad take a break from foiling robberies this week, and instead are on the trail of a rather large and unfriendly-looking snake which has absconded from the zoo.
Despite the reduced page count, The Mystery Comic is present this week, and retains the full 8 pages it has had since its inception in the 30 September 1978 issue. However, as one of those pages is devoted to The Big Four Saint competition, the Why, Dad, Why? feature is absent. The competition, which is also running in the current issues of Buster, Whizzer and Chips and Whoopee!, presents readers with 6 stick-men (drawn in the style of the famous logo from the two Saint TV series) engaged in various sporting activities. The challenge is to correctly identify each of the sports portrayed. The senders of the first 800 correct entries opened will win a Corgi model of the Saint's white Jaguar.
Return of The Saint, the second of the small-screen series to feature the adventures of Simon Templar, and starring Ian Ogilvy in the title role, began screening in the UK in September 1978.
The issue rounds off with the last in the brief series of Cheeky's Pal Puzzles. This is the final issue to show Cheeky's Saturday morning cinema visit and as a consequence also concluding this week are Interval, The Terrible Trail To Taggart's Treasure and (at last!) Tweety and Sylvester who were the longest-running representatives of the supporting feature. Since the toothy funster will no longer be seen leading Saturday's cinema-bound stampede, the long-suffering Commissionaire bows out of Cheeky's Week this issue (he will however make one further appearance in the comic, as the subject of a future Pin-Up Pal poster). Fans of Ursula the Usherette need not be concerned; her hulking presence will continue to loom in the coming weeks.
All 8 Cheeky's Week features this week are drawn by Mike Lacey, who also contributes his usual strip, Disaster Des.
Cheeky Weekly | Cover Date: 02-Dec-1978, Issue 59 of 117 |
Page | Details |
1 | Cover Feature 'Corgi Saint competition'\Cheeky's Week - Art Mike Lacey |
2 | Sunday - Art Mike Lacey |
3 | Feature Omitted (single appearance) |
4 | Ad: IPC 'Soccer Monthly' 5 of 5 Ad: 'Shiver and Shake Annual' 2 of 2 |
5 | Monday - Art Mike Lacey |
6 | Laugh and Learn - Art Brian Walker - Art Barrie Appleby |
7 | Laugh and Learn - Art Brian Walker - Art Barrie Appleby |
8 | Tuesday - Art Mike Lacey |
9 | Skateboard Squad - Art Jimmy Hansen |
10 | Tub 'Mystery Comic' 10 of 34 - Art Nigel Edwards |
11 | Big Four Saint Competition (single appearance) |
12 | Mustapha Million 'Mystery Comic' 10 of 34 - Art Reg Parlett |
13 | Mustapha Million 'Mystery Comic' 10 of 34 - Art Reg Parlett |
14 | Elephant On The Run 'Mystery Comic' 10 of 34 - Art Robert Nixon |
15 | Elephant On The Run 'Mystery Comic' 10 of 34 - Art Robert Nixon |
16 | Mystery Boy reprint from Whizzer and Chips 'Mystery Comic' 10 of 37 - Art John Richardson |
17 | Disaster Des 'Mystery Comic' 9 of 30 - Art Mike Lacey |
18 | Calculator Kid - Art Terry Bave |
19 | Friday - Art Mike Lacey |
20 | Paddywack - Art Jack Clayton |
21 | Ad: Trebor 'Double Agents Super Spy Gun Promotion' 2 of 2 |
22 | Saturday - Art Mike Lacey |
23 | Tweety and Sylvester (final appearance) 'Ivan the Terrible' |
24 | Tweety and Sylvester (final appearance) 'Ivan the Terrible' |
25 | Interval (final appearance) - Art Mike Lacey (final art on feature) |
26 | The Terrible Trail to Taggart's Treasure (final appearance) reprint from Shiver and Shake - Art Eric Bradbury (final art on feature) |
27 | The Terrible Trail to Taggart's Treasure (final appearance) reprint from Shiver and Shake - Art Eric Bradbury (final art on feature) |
28 | Saturday - Art Mike Lacey\Cheeky's Pal Puzzle (final appearance) 'Baby Burpo' 2 of 2 - Art Mike Lacey (final art on feature) |
Artist | Elements |
Mike Lacey | 8 |