Gnome on the Range

Plot

In the 1840s Molly O’Doyle and her family emigrated from America from Ireland. Now they were going to head to California on the wagon trial, but Molly had a problem – a leprechaun called Flaherty who had accidentally been taken to America with the O’Doyles luggage. Molly had promised to take him back to Ireland.

Notes

Appeared

  • Gnome on the Range – Judy: #1278 (7 July 1984) – #1291 (6 October 1984)

The Loneliest Girl in the World

Plot

After a mysterious explosion destroyed her millionaire uncle’s yacht, Sandy Fuller and her tutor Jonas Withers were rescued by the strange inhabitants of the lost island of Mu, never seen before by other human eyes. They gave Sandy special powers in the fight against evil and arranged for her to be picked up by a passing liner. Back home she was forbidden from making any friends or she would lose her powers.

Notes

  • Art: Ana Rodriguez

Appeared

  • The Loneliest Girl in the World – Judy: #1258 (18 February 1984) – #1267 (21 April 1984)

The Plant

Plot

Christine Jenkins mother was looking after an unusual plant for Mrs Walton, an elderly neighbour who had been taken into hospital. But Mrs Walton had told Christine there was something evil about the plant and asked Christine to destroy it, which was proving to be difficult.

Notes

  • Writer: Maureen Hartley
  • Art: George Martin

Appeared

  • The Plant – Judy: #1256 (4 February 1984) – #1269 (5 May 1984)

Mrs. Dawson’s Daughter

Plot

Jenny Laidlaw who lived happily in a Children’s home was befriended by a wealthy widow Mrs. Dawson, who confided in Jenny that her baby daughter had been kidnapped years earlier and never seen again. Later Wendy Smith came to the home and she had the same distinctive birthmark as Mrs Dawsons daughter and connections to the town she was kidnapped from. Jenny decided she must turn the tough dishonest Wendy into a suitable daughter for the lonely and ailing Mrs. Dawson before revealing the secret

Notes

  • Art: Bert Hill

Appeared

  • Mrs. Dawson’s Daughter – Judy: #1256 (4 February 1984) – #1265 (7 April 1984)

A Girl’s Best Friend

Plot

After the death of her husband Mrs Cameron and her daughter Jill found it a struggle to keep the Cameron Hotel going. Then she met an old school friend Alice Delmount who was also a widow and had money to invest. Mrs Delmount suggested a partnership after a trial period but her daughter Emily was sabotaging the plans.

Notes

  • Art: Oliver Passingham

Appeared

  • A Girl’s Best Friend – Judy: #1256 (4 February 1984) – #1270 (12 May 1984)

Melody Moffat

Plot

Melody Moffat was pop star but also a top secret agent. She had to contend with an international group of criminals known as the Chord. Her deadliest enemy to date – The Duplicator,  an evil genius, who was producing life like robots of famous and influential people to use so that he could eventually rule the world.

Notes

Appeared

  • Melody Moffat – Judy: #1255 (28 January 1984) – #1266 (14 April 1984)

Runaway Ruth

Plot

Ruth Miller had always been known by her schoolmates as Ruth the Lionheart—and with good reason. She would never give up, no matter what the challenge. Then, when on the site where a Roman soldier, branded as coward, was reputed to have died, Ruth suddenly seemed to lose all her own confidence and courage.

Notes

  • Art: Oliver Passingham

Appeared

  • Runaway Ruth – Judy: #1201 (15 January 1983) – #1206 (19 February 1983)

The Girl From Tomorrow

Plot

Jody Powell had slipped back in time to the 1880s when Deansbrook School was Deansbrook Orphanage. She swapped places with a look alike Katy Stanley for 24 hrs but the plan misfired and now the girls were trapped. Katy was enjoying her time in the present and was unaware of the situation.

Notes

  • Art: Bert Hill

Appeared

  • The Girl From Tomorrow – Judy: #1280 (21 July 1984) – #1289 (22 September 1984)

They All Hate Hetty! (1975)

Published: Bunty PSL #146

Artists: Cover – Jack Martin; story – Mario Capaldi

Writer: Unknown

Special thanks to Goof for making the entry possible with scans.

Plot

Hester “Hetty” Mellish and her parents have only just moved to the isolated village of Widdivale when Dad is hospitalised in a road accident and Mum has to go to lodgings to be near him. Hetty is left in charge of a neighbour, Mrs Jones.

Hetty is curious to track down her great-grandmother, a Mrs Turvy who lived in Cubby’s Cottage in Widdivale. When Hetty finds Cubby’s Cottage, it is a rundown, neglected place, and then a couple of children suddenly run away in terror when they see her there. Tracking them down to sort things out, Hetty finds their mother, Mrs Preston, acting equally hostile and scared at her poking around Cubby’s Cottage. Mrs Preston warns Hetty to stay away from there and then slams the door in her face.

Next stop is the churchyard, where Hetty hopes to find her great-grandmother’s grave. She eventually finds it behind an overgrown bush, and the headstone bears the name Hester Turvy, the same first name as hers. But Hetty is astonished that the headstone is so neglected and kept behind the overgrown bush while every other headstone is kept immaculate – as if someone wanted it out of sight and mind. She tries to clean up the grave.

While she does, Sam Wiles, the man in charge of the graves, turns up. When he hears Hester Turvy was her great-grandmother, shares the same first name, and even looks like her, he suddenly goes scared and crazy and goes off spreading wild tales that Hetty is descended from Hester Turvy the village witch, come back to plague the village. Witch beliefs still persist in the village, and great-grandmother Turvy was believed to be a witch. From what Hetty and Mrs Jones can gather, it was all rumour mongering that arose because she lived alone, looked rather formidable, and, as the story later reveals, had a recipe book, which must have sparked tales of “a spell book”.

The whole village turns against Hetty, now believed to be a witch like her great-grandmother. When Hetty comes, people flee in terror, jeer and throw stones, or slam their doors shut. Wiles is spearheading the campaign to drive her out. He takes to the soapbox on a tree stump in the village square rabble-rousing the villagers, fanning the flames against Hetty, and urging people to burn down Cubby’s Cottage, saying it must be the source of her power. He even pays off Freddy and his friend Tom to spy on Hetty for any “witch” activity.

Mrs Jones remains Hetty’s only friend and staunchly stands up for her against Wiles, the persecution, and the crazy stories that get going. She knows how those villagers are so easily infected by gossip as they don’t have much else to occupy their minds with.

As is usual with these types of stories, strange things seem to happen and attract themselves to Hetty. The villagers start to imagine things that started when Hetty arrived. Good deeds Hetty tries to do to prove she’s all right just go wrong and look like more witchcraft. All of them inflame hatred against Hetty. There are rational explanations, and Mrs Jones helps Hetty to scotch a number of them, but it can’t really stop the persecution or Sam Wiles and his hate mongering.

Among them, Hetty tries to clean up the cottage and makes a makeshift broom for the job, but when the villagers see the broom, it sparks rumours it’s a witch’s broomstick. She acquires a cat, Tinker, who got left behind when his previous owner moved. Although the villagers know Tinker, they scream he’s the witch’s cat as he’s black, and throw stones at him. The frightened cat takes refuge in Cubby’s Cottage. While looking for Tinker in the cottage, Hetty finds great-grandmother’s old recipe book and tries a recipe for cowslip tea. She does not realise Wiles and his spies are watching her, and Wiles orders them to watch Hetty and that “spell book” very closely. The boys steal the cowslip tea, and Tom dares Freddy to drink it. Soon after, Freddy grows ill and his mother accuses Hetty of poisoning him with her witch’s brew. However, when Mrs Jones and Hetty investigate, they find Freddy is merely sick from eating too many sweets, which he admits were bought with the money Wiles gave him for information received.

The village fete comes up, and Mrs Jones is sure it will distract the villagers from Hetty. Hetty decides to contribute a doll in the hopes it will help the villagers to see she’s okay. No such luck.

When Hetty tries to be friendly and smiling to the villagers, crazy old Wiles starts the rumour that the “witch-girl” will harm Mrs Jones, the way Hester Turvy used to harm “innocent folk”. Oh, no, we can guess what happens next…

Sure enough, Mrs Jones soon has an accident and is sent to hospital. Hetty is blamed when the villagers see the doll – the doll’s dress is made from the same material as Mrs Jones’ and a needle is stuck where Mrs Jones got injured. It looks like Wiles’ “prediction” that Hetty would harm Mrs Jones by witchcraft has come true. At any rate, Hetty has lost her only friend and now faces the villagers’ hostility alone. She decides to stick things out so as not to worry her parents.

When Hetty donates the doll to the fete, the villagers refuse to touch it. Then a violent storm strikes, and the villagers blame Hetty although the weather forecast had warned about sudden storms. Wiles renews the call to burn down Cubby’s Cottage. Back home, there’s a note on the gate: “Get Out, Witch!”

Next day, Hetty decides to do just that. She packs a suitcase and strikes out for her mother’s lodgings, to tell her what’s been going on. But then, something tells her to go back to Cubby’s Cottage.

At Cubby’s Cottage, Hetty finds Freddy and Tom have been at it again. They tried to burn down Cubby’s Cottage for a lark, but it backfired on them when the fire got out of control. The cottage is going up like a torch, and Freddy is trapped in there. Hetty braves the flames to rescue him, but is soon in danger of becoming trapped herself. Then great-grandmother’s ghost appears and helps them both to safety.

After this, the villagers decide the great-grandmother wasn’t a witch after all and stop their persecution of Hetty. Weeks later, after Dad has recovered, the villagers want to make it up to Hetty, and they start by cleaning up great-grandmother’s grave. As Hetty and her mother inspect their work, great-grandmother’s ghost is doing the same and smiling.

Thoughts

Lingering witch beliefs in British villages have inspired numerous girls’ serials with the “descended from the village witch” formula. Other stories to use it include “Bad-Luck Barbara” (Mandy) and “Witch!” (Bunty). The formula is used to make a statement about the stupidities of witch beliefs, superstition and mass hysteria, and that 20th century people ought to be living in the 20th century, not the 16th century. And of course, illustrate how idiotic gossip and rumour-mongering can get as rapidly and dangerously out of control as the fire in the story.

The story is a little different from the formula its counterparts usually take, which makes it more interesting and novel. Usually there is an ambivalence about the things that happen, leaving readers to wonder if there really is something weird going on and the girl really is developing strange powers, or if it’s all coincidence, rational explanations, law of attraction or whatever. Here, the strange things all have rational explanations. In the end, it turns out there really is a supernatural force after all (something these types of stories usually hint at but keep ambiguous) – great-grandmother’s ghost, but it turns out to be benign and had nothing to do with the goings on the villagers blamed on Hetty. Also, instead of being a pervasive influence throughout the story, which is the more usual pattern, it only appears at the climax. It doesn’t even manifest during Hetty’s earlier visits to Cubby’s Cottage.

The story is also different in having males as the main persecutors. More often, they are female and don’t seem to be in it for much more than bullying, though personal gain can be linked to it. But it is logical to have ringleader as an older man, perhaps old enough to remember great-grandmother when she was alive, and his occupation (sexton) ties in well with how the whole thing starts. Being a man, and a respected one as the village sexton, would give him a whole lot more authority and power as a rabble-rouser against Hetty. Having the two boys as the main antagonists in the persecution and Wiles’ flunkies also makes sense. By nature they are scamps, and it’s obvious they get into all sorts of mischief. Persecuting a “witch” is the perfect excuse to cause mischief and worse with impunity, plus there’s money in it. After nearly getting themselves killed by their own mischief, maybe they will think twice about pranks and dares in future.

There is always a single person in these types of stories who serves as the girl’s only friend and sticks up for her against the persecutors (the girl’s parents are always useless for one reason or other). Usually it’s another girl who’s new to the village and therefore does not think the way the superstitious village idiots do. But this case, the story takes the unusual step of making her an adult who’s lived there for a long time, knows those gossiping, small-minded villagers all too well, and has friends among them. An adult is much more effective as an ally than a mere girl. An adult, and certainly one like Mrs Jones, is much more capable of standing up to those village idiots and trying to talk sense into them, or at least try to make them shut up.

As is common with similar stories DCT has produced, the protagonist eventually loses her only supporter, making her position even more precarious. And no matter how she tries to ride the storm, the situation inevitably reaches crisis point. If not for the supernatural intervention, Hetty and her parents would have been forced to leave the village altogether, which happened in “Witch!”

The ending – the persecution ending with the girl proving her goodness by saving lives and being accepted as a heroine – has been seen before in these types of stories. It usually comes off as pat and unrealistic because in real life, once witch believers think someone’s a witch, the label sticks and cannot be unstuck. But here we have a supernatural element taking a hand, and when there is one, we know things will be all right, which makes the ending more acceptable. And, unlike similar stories, we get to see the original “witch” finally happy and able to rest in peace after being persecuted in both life and death, which makes it even more satisfying.

“I Won’t Share with Shirley!”

Plot

Orphan Shirley Turner was given a comfortable home with her cousin Joan’s parents. While acting friendly, secretly, Joan hated having Shirley in the house and set out to make trouble for her in the hopes of her being sent away. After Shirley gets injured while saving Joan, Joan has a change of heart and confesses everything.

Notes

  • Art: Oliver Passingham (1982)
  • Later adapted into a picture story for Bunty Picture Story Library
    • Cover Art: Norman Lee, Inside Art: John McNamara

Appeared

  • “I Won’t Share with Shirley!” – Judy: #1179 (14 August 1982) – #1185 (25 September 1982)
  • Reprinted as PSL Book  “I Won’t Share with Shirley!” – Bunty Picture Story Library#279 (1986 or 1987)
  • PSL Book Reprinted as “I Won’t Share!” – Bunty Picture Story Library #422