(Science Comics 005, 1940)
En route to the court of King Neptune to deliver a new invention to him, Navy Jones and Princess Coral find themselves the prisoner of a heinous-looking clarinet-playing mermaid who looks a lot like something out of a 19th Century political cartoon.
I'll be honest here: while the Sea-Witch is a notable-enough villain to cover here, the real attraction of this comic is that it all looks like an outsider art fever dream. The Grand Comics database says that the artist was Bert Whitman and that he did enough comics work in the 40s that I should have run into him, but either luck has conspired against me in that regard or this was just a more interesting assignment than usual for him, because it's just really enjoyably weird.
Navy Jones escapes the clutches of the One-Eyed Octopus when it turns out that it is fatally allergic to pepper, and he and Princess Coral are able to simply swim away under the cover of its dying ink-cloud. The Sea-Witch's little imp minions give chase but are unable to contend with the sheer power of the "Speed Sea Tri-Motor" underwater jetapacks that the duo are wearing courtesy of Coral's as-yet-unnamed father.
Other weird and wonderful occurrences in this comic:
An idyll with Queen Nina and her subjects in Mermaid City,
This two-panel plot by a pair of incompetent undersea pirates,
Navy Jones visiting the grave/locker of his great great great grandfather, Davy Jones (bah gawd, his name isn't just a pun, it's hereditary!),
and the pomp, circumstance and wide array of weird sea creatures in King Neptune's court. The question of whether this is the Neptune of myth or just some guy is overshadowed (and possibly answered) by the presence of, for example, a cutlass-wielding fish-man centaur in the background. Delightful!
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