Dynamic Comics #022
Dynamic Man
Art by Paul Gattuso
Chesler (Sept1947)

seen from Singapore
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Japan
seen from Japan
seen from India

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Italy
seen from Singapore
seen from Japan
seen from Japan
seen from United States

seen from Hungary

seen from Japan
seen from United States
seen from Thailand
seen from China
seen from Italy

seen from Italy
Dynamic Comics #022
Dynamic Man
Art by Paul Gattuso
Chesler (Sept1947)
Socialite Lauren Mason, could transform into the stars-and-stripes clad heroine Yankee Girl by uttering the magic words Yankee Doodle Dandy! after which she would plunge into super-powered crime fighting. A patriotic version of Mary Marvel, Lauren was perhaps too derivative to stay the course and only featured once, in Dynamic Comics #23. This is a shame as she was illustrated by the excellent Ralph Mayo and her one and only story, The Cat Show Murders, featuring a dastardly plot to dispose of wealthy cat-owning pensioners by turning their pets into lethal poison-carriers thus enabling the baddies to loot their homes after they had expired, was certainly original.
Despite her brief appearance, Lauren was resurrected in the 1990s as part of the FemForce series, where her powers of super strength, flight and probable invulnerability were explained by Lauren being granted these abilities by the wizard Merlin, during World War II, on her pronouncing the magic words. Despite this reboot, Yankee Girl sadly remains something of an obscure Golden Age heroine.
The page featured is from the Yankee Girl story, The Cat Show Murders, published in Dynamic Comics #23 (November 1947). Art by Ralph Mayo. This was her debut/only appearance.
Source: comicbookplus /Yankee Girl Wikipedia page.
Dynamic Comics, #1 (1941), art uncredited (From the story "K-9")
Charles Sultan - Dynamic Comics #2 (Chesler, 1941)
Art source, cover source
Dynamic Comics #1 (October, 1941). Cover by Charles Sultan.
This issue includes the origins and first appearance of not only cover star Major Victory, but the first Dynamic Man, Hale the Magician, and the Black Cobra.
Major Victory was another of the seemingly unending parade of patriotic superheroes that followed the arrival of MLJ's The Shield the previous year. It seems that no one told the comic book publishers that America had not entered World War ll.
The Major was a nameless soldier who got an oil lantern to the face and blown up by an evil saboteur. Father Patriot, a poor man's combination of Uncle Sam and the wizard Shazam, takes pity on the soldier and brings him back to life. Father Patriot tasks the newly christened Major Victory with protecting America.
Father Patriot even goes so far as to equip the Major with a costume, a wireless shack with a super radio, and an airplane hangar complete with an airplane (which he destroys on his first mission) on a remote mountaintop somewhere.
However, Father Patriot neglected to give the poor guy any superpowers at all; at least initially. In later stories Father Patriot would grant Major Victory "the strength of 1,000 men" when he was in a tough spot (might've been smarter to give him that at the get go), and magically transport him to where he was needed (which was cheaper than replacing an entire airplane).
Vintage Comic - Dynamic Comics #013
Pencils: Gus Ricca
Inks: Gus Ricca
Chesler (Jan1945)
Lady Satan from Dynamic Comics.