This issue collects 64 Sunday strips featuring Chester Gould's famous detective.
It starts when Tracy arrests a gang of female perfume thieves and he meets spoiled Johnny Mintworth, who is sweet on one of the crooks. Johnny is being blackmailed by racketeer "Collie" Vinsso, but the picture that Vinsso is blackmailing him for is a fake, showing Collie with the wife of a man willing to kill out of jealousy; fearing for his life, Collie pays the up. Again, Tracy puts the kibosh on that. But Johnny isn't through acting dumb' he attempts to break his girlfriend out of jail, is caught, and then escapes. Now a fugitive, he is targeted by underworld lawyer Danny Supeena, who knows he comes from a very wealthy family. Supeena takes out accident insurance policies on Johnny and the proceeds to break his arm. Supeena kills Johhny's mother, making it look like suicide, but that does not fool Tracy. In the meantime Supeena talks Johnny into faking a drowning for the insurance money; Johnny tries to drown himself but is rescues by swimmers. Supeena shoots at Johnny, wounding him, but johnny makes his way to the police where he is arrested for his mother's murder. Things just don't seem to be going well for Johnny Mintworth...but there's worse to come.
In typical dick Tracy fashion, one crime leads to another: "Little crimes lead to big ones. Crime not only doesn't pay -- but it can't pay -- It has the world against it. Remember that, boys." Tracy not only uses his intuition and displays bravery, but he also has the latest crime solving techniques at his fingertips. Tracy (of course) also enters a death traps, as usual, and comes out unscathed -- not that the same can be said foe a progressive lit of bad guys. Pat Patton is here, and Junior, bot not Tess Trueheart. Nor are there Gould's patented, deformed super villains. Still, all in all, it's not a bad look at Dick Tracy in the Thirties.
Enjoy.
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