| Issue | #56 |
| Published | June 1948 |
| Cover Price | 0.10 USD |
| Pages | 52 |
| Editing | Jack Byrne (Mgr. Editor); Joseph V. Daffron (Editor); S.M. Iger (Art Director) |
| Notes | Several guesses have been made as to the identity of the cover artists. The current educated best guess of HS/HW/JV is that Joe Doolin did the background scene and Jack Kamen (or another Iger Shop artist) drew the Tiger Girl figure which was finished by an unknown Iger Shop inker. |
| Characters | Tiger Girl |
| Genre | jungle |
| Pencils | Joe Doolin; Jack Kamen? [on Tiger Girl] |
| Inks | Joe Doolin; (Iger Shop) on Tiger Girl |
| Notes | Several guesses have been made as to the identity of the cover artists. The current educated best guess of HS/HW/JV is that Joe Doolin did the background scene and Jack Kamen (or another Iger Shop artist) drew the Tiger Girl figure which was finished by an unknown Iger Shop inker. |
| Reprinted | in Jungle Girls (AC, 1989 series) #7 (1992) |
| Characters | Tiger Girl |
| Genre | jungle |
| Script | ? [as Allan O'Hara] |
| Pencils | John Forte?; Jack Kamen? |
| Inks | Jay Disbrow?; ? (Iger Shop) |
| Characters | Rip Carson |
| Genre | adventure |
| Script | ? [as Rollin W. Bell] |
| Pencils | Robert Webb |
| Inks | Ed Waldman?; (Iger Shop) |
| Characters | Kayo Kirby |
| Genre | sports |
| Script | ? [as Chuck Walker] |
| Pencils | Matt Baker?; Jack Kamen?; [shop] |
| Inks | Al Feldstein?; [shop] |
| Genre | true |
| Letters | Typeset |
| Characters | Hooks Devlin |
| Genre | crime |
| Script | ? [as John Campbell] |
| Pencils | John Forte?; ? (Iger Shop) |
| Inks | David Heames; [shop] |
| Notes | David Heames sneaks his initials on the getaway car's license plate on page two. |
| Characters | Captain Fight |
| Genre | period |
| Script | ? [as Stuart Drake] |
| Pencils | Jack Kamen |
| Inks | Jack Kamen?; [shop] |
| Characters | Senorita Rio |
| Genre | spy |
| Script | ? [as Morgan Hawkins] |
| Pencils | ? (Iger Shop) |
| Inks | Jack Kamen?; Al Feldstein?; [shop] |
| Notes | It seems that this is the initial Iger effort on Senorita Rita and the anonymous penciler (slight chance it might be Maurice Whitman) has done his/her best to imitate the style of Bob Lubbers - who hadn't drawn the strip for nearly two years. |