Strip Title
|
Artist
|
First Appearance
|
Last Appearance
|
Notes
|
Big Bad Moggy
|
Peter Moonie
|
1
|
29
|
Not in 17,18,19. From 20 onward strip title changed to Moggy.[1]
|
Big Fat Flo
|
Phil Millar
|
1
|
103
|
Not in 35 & 39.[2] Continued in The Topper after the merger.
|
Billy the Kidder
|
Jimmy Glen /
Watson Kennedy
|
1
|
19[3]
|
|
The Buzzies and the Fuzzies
|
Gordon Bell
|
5
|
103
|
Two groups of feuding creatures resembling Weebles; one group very hairy like Captain Caveman, the others with short buzzcuts. Not in 34,38,75,83,86,88,89,90.[4]
|
Calamity Kate
|
George Martin
|
1
|
103 [5]
|
A girl who inadvertently broke things
|
Cookie
|
Tom Lavery
|
1
|
68
|
Not in 3,18, nor 32 to 67.
|
Fred the Flop
|
Tom Lavery
|
1
|
103 [6]
|
About an incompetent thief. Continued in The Topper after the merger.
|
Freeze
|
Terry Patrick
|
66
|
90
|
An adventure story [7]
|
Good Knight
|
Bill Ritchie
|
17
|
102
|
Not in 30, 31, 34, 36 to 38, 40 to 53, 68, 77, 81, nor 83 to 101.[8]
|
Gus the Galoot
|
J Edward Oliver
|
1
|
16 [9]
|
|
Harum Scareum
|
Gordon Bell
|
1
|
56
|
About a rabbit Harum and a farmer's dog Scarum in conflict over the farm's carrots. Not in 30.
|
Hop, Skip and Jock
|
Malcolm Judge
|
1
|
103[10]
|
About three boys whose strip consisted of large 'action' panels containing with numerous gags. Was the comic's only cover strip.
|
Jimmy Jinx And What He Thinks
|
Ken Harrison
|
1
|
103
|
About a boy with the metaphorical 'good angel' on one side of his head and a 'bad angel' on the other. Not in 16.[11] Continued in The Topper after the merger.
|
Monty Moneybags
|
Jimmy Glen
|
1
|
52
|
Not in 24, 25, nor 42 to 49.[12]
|
Nero and Zero
|
Tom Bannister
|
1
|
40[13]
|
About two incompetent Roman guards to Julius Caesar.
|
Nobby
|
Bob McGrath
|
1
|
103[14]
|
About a generic resourceful/mischievous boy. Continued in The Topper after the merger.
|
Olly's Occy
|
Phil Milar
|
1
|
29
|
About a boy and his octopus called Occy. Not in 19,20,21,22,23,26,27.[15]
|
Postman Knox
|
Various Artists
|
4
|
101
|
Not in 5.[16] Feature where reader's sent in jokes.
|
The Rooky Racers
|
Alan Rogers
|
62
|
103[17]
|
A strip with a similar premise to the cartoon Wacky Races.
|
Sammy's Scribbles
|
Gordon Bell
|
18
|
103
|
Continued in The Topper after the merger.
|
Skookum Skool
|
Ken Harrison
|
1
|
103
|
A similar strip to The Bash Street Kids. Continued in Cracker.
|
Sleepy Ed The nap-happy chappie
|
John Aldrich
|
41
|
103
|
Continued in The Topper after the merger.
|
Spookum Skool
|
Ken Harrison
|
60
|
103
|
A spinoff of Skookum Skool but with ghosts. Also continued in Cracker.
|
Tich and Snitch
|
David Gudgeon
|
1
|
27
|
Anthropomorphic antics of a female elephant (‘Snitch’) and a male mouse (‘Tich’).
|
Top Tec
|
George Martin
|
57
|
103
|
|
The Twitz of the Ritz
|
Bill Ritchie
|
1
|
61
|
|
Uncle Dan the medicine man
|
Bill Holroyd/Albert Holroyd
|
91
|
103
|
Reprints from The Beezer.[18] Another Adventure story.
|
The Whiteys and the Stripeys
|
Tom Lavery
|
30
|
65
|
Another 'feuding rivals' strip, this time with two marooned sets of pirates on adjacent islands
|
Wig and Wam
|
Arthur Martin
|
1
|
59
|
Two warring American Indians. Wam (the creepy older bad guy) and a young girl Wig. An unrelated strip of the same name (also about two American Indians) appeared in the first issue of The Dandy.
|
Willie the Wizard He's learning to spell
|
Ken Hunter
|
1
|
17 [19]
|
A strip about a wizard in training.
|