NGC
CGC
PMG
About
FAQs
Research
Contact
Registry
Chat Boards
Journals
Submit Comics
Join!
Members Sign In
E-mail:
Password:
Remember Me
Become a member >
Forgot Login / Password >
Request Support >
FIND MEMBERS
Recent Journals
View All Journals >
4GEMWORKS COMPLETE FOUR COLOR EMPORIUM
Four Color 919
Previous: Four Color 918
|
Next: Four Color 920
Back To Set Listing >
COMIC DETAILS
Comic Description:
Four Color #919 Universal
Grade:
9.6
Page Quality:
CREAM TO OFF-WHITE
Pedigree:
File Copy
Certification #:
0910810015
Owner:
4GEMWORKS
SET DETAILS
Winning Set:
4GEMWORKS COMPLETE FOUR COLOR EMPORIUM
Date Added:
6/29/2009
Research:
See CGC's Census Report for this Comic
Owner's Description
Boots and Saddles 7/58 File Copy First of three Boots and Saddles Four Colors. Based on the 1959 syndicated TV series "Boots and Saddles."
Photo Cover: Luke Cummings (as played by Michael Hinn, photo); Capt. Shank Adams (as played by John Pickard, photo)
Interior Scripting and artwork undisclosed and unknown to date.
This copy is tied with two others as the best copy of six graded to date. 01/13. I originally bought this, graded as is, from heritage Auctions.
Table of Contents
1. 1. [Introduction]
Boots and Saddles
2. 2. Battle of Echo Canyon
Boots and Saddles
3. 3. The Good Soldier
Boots and Saddles
4. 4. Apache Drums
Boots and Saddles
5. 5. Warriors on Horseback
6. 6. Boots and Saddles This may be the back cover on some copies. The back cover of this copy is a Wrigley Gum Ad.
Some data courtesy of the Grand Comics Database under a Creative Commons Attribution license. http://www.comics.org/
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/legalcode
http://www.comics.org/issue/173588/
The following uis additional data from Wikipedia:
Boots and Saddles is an American Western television series created by Robert A. Cinader which aired in syndication from 1957 to 1958.
In the first episode entitled "The Gatling Gun", a visiting general who is unaware of desert fighting techniques challenges Hayes' command. In the second episode, an arms trader named Jackson, played by Ned Glass, sells repeating rifles at high prices to Indians. Captain Adams forces Jackson to ride patrol to see the danger of his transactions.[2]
In "The Obsession", an officer blocks a young recruit’s attempts to attend the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York on the grounds that the soldier (played by Wright King) cannot perform under battle conditions. In "Private War", the fort is split between lingering Confederate and Union Army sympathizers.[2]
In “The Prussian Farmer”, written by Gene Roddenberry, who nearly a decade later created Star Trek, a former Prussian cavalry officer named Franz Mueller (played by Herbert Rudley) helps the recruits repel an Apache attack. In "The Paymaster" calm at the fort dissipates after four months of pay arrives. Character actor Claude Akins guest stars. In the episode "Terror at Fort Lowell", scouts face danger tracking Apache raids. In "The Deserter" a trooper named Grimes (played by Paul Picerni) leaves his patrol in the desert without horses. In "A Quiet Day at Fort Lowell", Captain Adams helps a soldier deal with his feelings of guilt resulting from an act of cowardice.
In "The Treasure", an American Civil War bandit wills his contraband to the U.S. government, but his daughter, Laurie (played by Rebecca Welles), comes forward to contest her father’s will. Another episode "The Trooper’s Wife" features a domineering woman coming to the fort to reclaim her husband, played by character actor Strother Martin. DeForest Kelley, a Star Trek alumnus, appears as "Merriwether", a champion fighter from the Seventh Cavalry, in the episode "The Marquis of Donnybrook". In "The Duel", Lieutenant Kelly is challenged to a duel by an Apache chief, lance vs. saber.
Robert Knapp appeared twice as Private Hank Swanson in the episodes "Terror at Fort Lowell" (1957) and "The Indian Scout" (1958).
Joe Conley, later storekeeper Ike Godsey on CBS' sThe Waltons, appears as Private Spanner in the episode "The Superstition", the story of a supposedly jinxed officer. A scout flees the fort fearful of Spanner’s "evil spirits". In "Weight of Command", diphtheria strikes. In "The Decision" the soldiers give food to hungry Paiute Indians in violation of military rules and face discipline for their "good deed". In the series finale, "The Captain’s Leave", Adams encounters a couple, with the wife pregnant, trying to cross the desert without sufficient supplies.
The series aired for one season, and was produced by California National Productions.[2]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boots_and_Saddles_(TV_series)
Image #1
Enlarge
Image #2
Enlarge
To follow or send a message to this user,
please log in
Manage this user
Send Message
View Full Profile
Ignore
Ignoring