
Cover artist: John Richardson
Bella (artist John Armstrong, writer Primrose Cumming)
Running Rosie Lee (artist José Casanovas)
Dulcie Wears the Dunce’s Hat (artist Mario Capaldi)
The Face of a Cat (artist Tony Higham) – The Strange Story
Plain as Pearl (Artist Juliana Buch)
Wee Sue (artist Hugh Thornton-Jones)
Cut-Glass Crystal (artist Tony Coleman)
The Loneliest Girl in the World (artist Jaume Rumeu)
New additions to the collection.
“Eek!” goes the Cover Girls cover this week. Little sis cops the joke this week rather than big sis, who usually does. It’s probably because big sis doesn’t have those pigtails that fly up cartoon style in fright.
Inside, Bella is discharged from hospital, and she seeks out Uncle Jed and Aunt Gert for the first time in years. They’ve abused and exploited her since episode one, but in her opinion, better them than a children’s home. She hasn’t reached them yet, and already she’s in trouble. She chose to walk 25 miles instead of using the money she was given for fares, but now she regrets it. Her weak ankle can’t handle the distance, she’s run into trouble with crooks, and now she’s falling foul of scheming gypsies. And at the end – if she gets there – will it be the same old drudgery again? She has been out of touch with Jed and Gert for years, so things must have changed in the interim, but we doubt leopard’s spots will be among them.
Poor Dulcie Dobbs is forced to wear the dunce’s hat, not just at school but all the way home as well, so her father can see her shame (luckily for her, he keeps missing the dunce’s hat and remains unaware of her shame). This week, Dulcie gets an independent opinion on her academic ability, which informs her that she is not a dunce at all. Indeed, it shows that if it weren’t for those spiteful girls who keep sabotaging her school work because they get a kick out her wearing the dunce’s hat, she would be top of the class. But as long as they keep doing so, she’s got no chance to prove it or be free of the hat.
This week’s Strange Story, “The Power of the Cat”, is about an evil cat brooch. But as all it takes to break its power over is to throw it out of the window (for maybe someone else to find), it can’t be all that powerful.
Karen Chalmers, “The Loneliest Girl in the World”, thinks a mad scientist was behind the robot doubles of her parents, but now her real parents are back and her nightmare is over. Yeah, right. At the end of the previous episode it was stated that she was fooled into believing all that, but it can only be a matter of time before she finds out, as whoever (or whatever?) is behind the façade keeps making mistakes with it. Sure enough, they made more slip-ups that Karen quickly detects, but there’s worse to come. Karen now finds her best friend is a robot double! Here we go again.
Noise pollution is the problem facing Wee Sue this week. An inconsiderate teen keeps riding his new motorbike up and down the street where she lives, driving everyone mad with the racket he’s making. His father won’t listen to complaints or stop his son making the racket, but he says something that gives Wee Sue one of her famous brainstorms for comeuppance as well as stop the noise.
An editor’s comment on “Plain as Pearl” says it was a very popular story. There certainly is much in it to make it popular. Pearl Kent thinks she is plain until she finds out she has what it takes to be a model. She’s using her new modelling job to save up to buy her sick mother a holiday, but she keeps it a secret because she fears the jealousy of Claire Myles, the vain daughter of the family she is staying with. But of course secrecy and deceit cause complications for her. Worse, Mum keeps having relapses because she won’t stop stressing over the money problems that made her ill. If only she knew, but Pearl can’t risk telling her because shock isn’t good for her. Will she ever recover enough to go on Pearl’s surprise holiday?
Cut-Glass Crystal, a girl from a posh background, is having problems fitting into a working-class mining town after her father comes down in the world. Poor Crystal is trying so hard to be helpful this week, but it seems she can’t do anything right.
Running Rosie Lee is a school/sports story played for light relief. It may be a bit on the silly side, but it has the ever-popular José Casanovas artwork. Rosie Lee turns into the bionic woman at sport every time she has a cup of tea. Snobs at her school don’t like her and pull tricks on her, but in the end it always blows up in their faces and Rosie comes out on top after a good cuppa.













