Mr. “E” found a statue in the ruins of a prehistoric city. He housed the statue, which represented an ancient tribal god named King Kolah, in a hidden subterranean temple beneath his home, and appealed to it for guidance and assistance. Kolah answered. Kolah presented Mr. “E” with visions that led him to criminals. The idol also ordered his smallish elven assistants, the Messengers of Justice who could shape-shift into blackbirds, to help Mr. “E” wreak violent destruction on evil and injustice. The names of some of the creatures were Butch, Zipper, Tim, and Spike. Mr. “E” fought crime in Washington, DC. He dated a girl named Miss Terry. The character is seen with both blond and black hair. St. John later re-printed and re-named the character Lawson Hunt.
Alias Mr. “E” |
Real Names/Alt Names Unknown |
Characteristics Hero, Chesler Universe, Seer, World War II Era |
Creators/Key Contributors Charles Sultan |
First Appearance Punch Comics #1 (Dec. 1941) |
First Publisher Chesler / Dynamic [CB+] [DCM] [GCD] |
Appearance List Punch Comics #1-2, Dynamic Comics #9-23, Lucky Coyne #1, Weekender Comics #3 |
Sample Read Punch Comics (Chesler) [DCM] [CB+] |
Description Mr. “E” found a statue in the ruins of a prehistoric city. He housed the statue, which represented an ancient tribal god named King Kolah, in a hidden subterranean temple beneath his home, and appealed to it for guidance and assistance. Kolah answered. Kolah presented Mr. “E” with visions that led him to criminals. The idol also ordered his smallish elven assistants, the Messengers of Justice who could shape-shift into blackbirds, to help Mr. “E” wreak violent destruction on evil and injustice. The names of some of the creatures were Butch, Zipper, Tim, and Spike. Mr. “E” fought crime in Washington, DC. He dated a girl named Miss Terry. The character is seen with both blond and black hair. St. John later re-printed and re-named the character Lawson Hunt. |
Source Mr. “E” – Public Domain Super Heroes Wiki |