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Issue: Mystery Tales #8
Publication Date: February 1953
 
Disclose Detail
Title:
Variant: unnamed
Rating: Authorized A. C. M. P. Conforms to the Comics Code
Publisher: FlagMarvel
Indicia Publisher: 20th Century Comic Corp.
On Sale Date: (not set)
Volume: 1
Pages: 36
ISBN: none
UPC/EAN: none
Price: $0.10 USD
Indicia Frequency: Authorized A. C. M. P. Conforms to the Comics Code
Content Items: 6 (5 stories, 1 cover)
Editor(s): Stan Lee
Disclose Notes: Indexed from information from atlastales.com.
  Does this data need corrections? Become an editor.
Disclose Format
Publication Type: Comic Book
Color: Color
Dimensions: Standard Golden Age US
Paper Stock: Glossy Covers; Newsprint interior
Binding: Saddle-Stitched
Publishing Format: Was ongoing
Format Notes:  
Disclose Reprinted In0
There is currently no data for this Issue being reprinted anywhere.
Disclose Reprinted From0
There is currently no data for this Issue being reprinted from anywhere.
Disclose Images1
Cover, Front
Original Artwork
Digital Edition
Adult Image
Title Page
Indicia on this Page
 
 
Assets0
 
Killer in the Streets!

Illustration  on  Cover, Front
Credits
Bill Everett
Bill Everett
Stan Goldberg
?
Subject Matter
horror
Reprinting
 
Miscellaneous
1
Coloring credit per Stan Goldberg.
The Madman!

Story  on  Interior Page(s)
Credits
Stan Lee ? (see notes)
Tony DiPreta (signed)
Tony DiPreta (signed)
?
?
Subject Matter
horror
George Wright; Henry Roscoe; Helen Wright
A serious actor, portraying Hamlet, sees his star begin to lose some lustre when nepotism rears its head and the producer's cousin is made his understudy. The understudy proceeds to sabotage the actor to the point where he accidentally kills the actor's wife by mistake. Driven mad by his loss, the actor kills the understudy, finally giving him the perfect part to play, as we see his decapitated head being used as Yorick's skull in the play.
Reprinting
 
Miscellaneous
7
B-688
Per Ger Apeldoorn via atlastales.com: "Unsigned, but the subject matter, the Shakespeare opening, the use of `thru' instead of `through', the length of the story suggest it could be a Stan Lee story. The job number is iffey, though. B-685/6 and 7 are all Al Jaffee stories. B-689/90/91/92 and 93 are all still missing, but B-694 is a signed Stan Lee story: B-694 Adventures Into Terror #16 My Name Is Death!"
Danger - Quicksand!

Text Story  on  Interior Page(s)
Credits
?
Russ Heath (illustration)
Russ Heath (illustration)
?
typeset
Subject Matter
horror
Slade Lansing; The Hermit; general store keeper
A thief decides to lay low in a small town and learns that an old hermit miser has a fortune in his shack somewhere in the dangerous swamp. He lets The Hermit find a pair of new shoes with soles that he's coated with phosphorescent paint. That night, he proceeds to follow The Hermit to his shack and kills him, taking all the money. On his way out of the swamp, he becomes trapped in quicksand. As he's sinking, he realizes his fatal error. Instead of the luminous footprints, he's been fooled by the light of fireflies.
Reprinting
 
Miscellaneous
2
B-587
A Killer in the Street

Story  on  Interior Page(s)
Credits
Art Wallace ? (signed) ; (see notes)
Paul Reinman (signed)
Paul Reinman ?; Art Wallace ? (signed); (see notes)
?
?
Subject Matter
horror
Detective Steve Braddock; Mrs. Christine Braddock; the Chief
A police detective is obsessed with a serial killer whose victims are all young pretty women in red dresses. When his wife buys a red dress, he insists that she take it back and she reluctantly agrees. Working late on the case, he has no time to go home and they agree to meet downtown for dinner. He sees she's wearing the red dress after all and flies into a rage. Too late, she realizes that he is the killer.
Reprinting
 
Miscellaneous
5
B-601
Cover story. Nick Caputo suspects the Wallace signature may be for script, not inks, since he is aware of an Art Wallace who presumably wrote some comic scripts before going in television.
This House Is Haunted!

Story  on  Interior Page(s)
Credits
?
Ed Winiarski (signed)
Ed Winiarski (signed)
?
?
Subject Matter
horror
Adam Benson; Josiah Benson; Hank; Lem
Josiah Benson's son Adam inherits his dilapidated property where four squatters play poker. Adam gives them notice, to no avail, because they know the place is haunted and unrentable. They tell Adam that his father was crazy. (The place was like a Hotel California: guests went in but not out.) Skeptical, Adam searches, despite strange noises and is killed by several creatures, chained and devolved humans that were originally Josiah's guests. Then we learn that the squatters are ghosts, having been similarly killed, and who know they'll soon have a fifth player joining them soon.
Reprinting
 
Miscellaneous
6
B-652
The Wooden Man

Story  on  Interior Page(s)
Credits
?
Bill Benulis ?
Bill Benulis ?; Jack Abel ?
?
?
Subject Matter
horror
Chick Black; a little girl; Aggie the babysitter; Bill and his girl friend; Mr. Monroe; John the guard; two young boys and their mother
Chick Black is a midget who looks like a wooden dummy. His modus operandi is to let people find him and take him in, whereupon he robs them, using his unique appearance and size to elude capture. On his latest heist, Chick shoots and kills a guard. Escaping to a train, Chick is found amongst the luggage by two boys who argue over ownership of the dummy. The mother suggests that whoever guesses what the toy is made of, wood or sawdust, gets to keep it. Using a hacksaw, the mother prepares to use it as Chick starts to sweat. The last panel asks, "What would you do if you were in Chick's place?"
Reprinting
 
Miscellaneous
5
B-789

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