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"Wonder Woman: "The Severed Bracelets"": The synopsis for this issue has not yet been written.

Quote1 No doubt about it, they've warped time and space! Their crazily angled windows and doors are like cosmic keys to open the time-and-space-continuum! Why-why, by going into one of those rooms, you would walk into another world! Quote2
The Flash

Comic Cavalcade #14 is an issue of the series Comic Cavalcade (Volume 1) with a cover date of April, 1946.

Synopsis for Wonder Woman: "The Severed Bracelets"


Appearing in Wonder Woman: "The Severed Bracelets"

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Synopsis for Johnny Everyman: "All Men Are Brothers"


Appearing in Johnny Everyman: "All Men Are Brothers"

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Synopsis for Hop Harrigan: "Voice in the Sky"


Appearing in Hop Harrigan: "Voice in the Sky"

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Synopsis for Flash: "The Fourth Dimensional House"

The Three Nitwits complain about wearing their bathing suits under their clothes to visit Jay and Joan on their beach plot, and get the couple to agree to let them build a changing house on it for convenience's sake. While the trio's shambolic antics ensue, a criminal nicknamed Mushmouth tells some compatriots about an ideal hideout, "and when I say outta this world -- I really mean it!" They soon ask him to lead them to this place when the Flash catches them robbing a bank, which alarms Mushmouth, because he was making up his claims of a "fourth-dimension" hideout.
Meanwhile the Nitwits have finished building the house they'd promised, but immediately a caveman and a dragon peer out of the crooked house's windows. In attempting to flee, they run into another room with an ocean in it (actually the exit to the seashore they built the house on). While making good their escape, the Nitwits run into Mushmouth coming the other way, and warn him about the bizarre house they just escaped, which he figures is exactly the place his buddies could use to elude the Flash. Seeing a desert in the upstairs window, he immediately rents it from them for $1K, and the crooks climb a ladder and vanish into the house. Flash comes upon the house, and when a solar flare shoots out of a window, realizes they've made such a mess of building a house, the doors and windows have actually ruptured space and time, and act as portals to different worlds!
When he hears Noddy got the wad of cash in his hand from the bank robbers the Flash was chasing (and Noddy suggesting Flash chase criminals on the run to the house so they can charge rent!), the hero races through the upstairs window after the fleeing felons. He runs across the desert to a silo where the crooks are hiding out, passing strange statues on the way, only for the statues to come to life and attack while Flash is busy beating the crooks into submission. He picks up a hammer and smashes the attacking statues at super-speed, then chases the criminals out into the desert, where a sandstorm blows them back through the portal to Earth. Safely back home, an annoyed Flash orders the dimwits to cement up all the windows so this can't happen again.

In the present, the Keystone City Liars' Club convenes its annual meeting, and the other members bounce Jay Garrick up and down on a tablecloth in annoyance for trying to tell them such an absurd story!

Appearing in Flash: "The Fourth Dimensional House"

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  • petty criminals
    • Mushmouth Macroom

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  • Four-Dimensional house

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Synopsis for Sargon: "The Movers"

After Sargon's latest show, his assistant Flora hurries home, afraid she left the gas on. She not only finds everything she owns stolen, but a different family living in her apartment! Before long it comes out that a gang of thieves collected deposits on phony leases from interested tenants, and robbed the apartments before the people could move in, before hurrying away with their ill-gotten goods.

An extremely indignant Flora calls Sargon and demands he solve this situation. Having touched Flora's furniture in the past, Sargon exercises control over it and commands her sofa to fly to his location, which happens to be carrying a dozing henchman as it does. Terrified by this display of power, the crook agrees to tell everything to the wizard. Flora's sofa flies them back to where the truck dumped its contents when the sofa flew out in the first place, and with a little magic, he easily overcomes the crooks and flies them back for their victims to take vengeance on them. The real sting comes when, under threat of more punishment, Sargon forces the criminal trio to move all their victims' furniture back into their original lodgings!

Appearing in Sargon: "The Movers"

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  • Johnny Brite

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Synopsis for Green Lantern: "Mayhem Comes to Town"

Alan Scott is on hand as two famous big game hunters, Samba Sahib (and his retinue of trained chimps) and Captain Keen (with his retinue of albino pygmies) disembark from the same ship. When the two hunters see each other they accuse the other of trying to steal some big opportunity from them and declare a blood feud. Alan leaves this altercation behind to hurry to an interview with actor Ronny Ham, but reconsiders when the hunters and their underlings start a war in the streets. He changes to Green Lantern and intervenes, but strangely the police merely tell the hunters to do a "publicity stunt" that isn't so disruptive next time.

Green Lantern and Doiby interject themselves into another battle between the hunters and get bonked unconscious by wooden clubs, then carted away by a mysterious third party. The kidnappers insist they aren't criminals, they're stuntmen, and when it turns out Ronny Ham hired them and refuses to release the heroes because the hunters fighting it out is great free publicity, Green Lantern figures out what's going on. One of the hunters' chimpanzees has fallen in love with Doiby and frees the two heroes, allowing Green Lantern to catch up to the hunters in front of a movie theater. He explains what this was all about: the hunters were after the chance to star in a thriller movie about adventures in Africa. That movie's playing at the theater they were fighting in front of, meaning there's nothing for them to fight over. The hunters call off their feud, and are glad they missed their shot at Hollywood fame when they actually watch the "corny film" and laugh themselves silly.

Appearing in Green Lantern: "Mayhem Comes to Town"

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  • Captain Keen
  • Samba Sahib

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Notes

  • Published bi-monthly by Gainlee Publishing Co. This 76-page magazine sold for fifteen cents a copy, in an era when almost all other comics were 64 pages, for ten cents.
  • Johnny Everyman story was prepared in cooperation with East and West Association.
  • Green Lantern is working to WMCG Radio.



See Also


Links and References

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Superboy Vol 4 69
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