- Script
- ?
- Pencils
- Harvey Eisenberg
- Inks
- Harvey Eisenberg
- Colors
- Western Publishing Production Shop
- Letters
- Rome Siemon
- First Line of Dialogue or Text
- Hi, Stoop! What's the scoop?
- Feature Logo
- Genre
- anthropomorphic-funny animals
- Characters
- Tom; Jerry; Tuffy; the mistress
- Synopsis
- Stumbling upon a book titled "The Sacred Cats of the Orient", where "...cats are treated as royalty", Tom decides to carry himself in royal fashion demanding food, luxury, and pampering. Jerry and Tuffy do everything they can to undermine Tom's delusion.
- Keywords
- cat; exaggerating one’s importance; mice; pampering; reused story; royalty; wrong impression
This is a remake of the Tom and Jerry story in Our Gang with Tom and Jerry (Dell, 1947 Series) #57 (April 1949), but removing the character of "Mammy-Two-Shoes".
Two tiers per page.
- Script
- ?
- Pencils
- Harvey Eisenberg
- Inks
- Harvey Eisenberg
- Colors
- Western Publishing Production Shop
- Letters
- Harvey Eisenberg
- First Line of Dialogue or Text
- If you place the first letter of each of these objects in the proper space, you'll know what the telephone operator said to Tom!
- Genre
- anthropomorphic-funny animals
- Characters
- Tom; telephone operator
- Synopsis
- Associate pictures and the first letter of what the pictures represent, to spell-out the telephone operator's message to Tom.
- Keywords
- word and picture puzzle
The telephone operator in this puzzle is the same character design as the mistress in the issue's lead story.
- Pencils
- Harvey Eisenberg
- Inks
- Harvey Eisenberg
- Colors
- Western Publishing Production Shop
- Genre
- anthropomorphic-funny animals
- Characters
- Jerry
- Synopsis
- Jerry bounces along on a rubber-eraser-tipped pencil, as if it were a pogo stick.
- Reprints
- Keywords
- alternative uses; bouncing; mouse; pencil; repurposed art
Two-thirds of this back cover is reserved for the logo and ad copy for whichever firm is distributing the issue as a giveaway premium. This space can be blank if no named sponsor. The remaining vertical third of the cover space (nearest to the binding) consists of an upper rectangle containing an illustration of Jerry riding a pencil by Harvey Eisenberg, repurposed from the cover of Tom and Jerry (Dell, 1949 Series) #142 (May 1956), and a lower rectangle for the "March of Comics" logo.