Belton of Earth-E

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(New page: A small, old swamp lumber town located somewhere in the great southland of America, populated solely by "beautiful chicks,". In October 1975 on the parallel world of Earth-E, Clark Kent, ...)
 
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A small, old swamp lumber town located somewhere in the great southland of America, populated solely by "beautiful chicks,".  In October 1975 on the parallel world of Earth-E, Clark Kent, Jr. and his traveling companion, Bruce Wayne, Jr., are in the midst of a road trip when they stumble upon the town.
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'''Belton of Earth-E'''
  
The boys, who are secretly Superman, Jr. and Batman, Jr., are thrown in jail for their inability to pay a $500 parking fine.  The town is ruled over by the mysterious "Big Sister Sybil", who only communicates to the "man-hating" populace through a giant stone monolith with a giant eye. According to Big Sister Sybil: "[M]ale attention is a fate far worse than death..."
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A small, old swamp lumber town located somewhere in the great southland of America on the [[Parallel-Worlds|parallel world]] of [[Earth-E]], populated solely by beautiful young women and ruled over by the mysterious [[Big Sister Sybil of Earth-E|Big Sister Sybil]].  In October 1975, [[Clark Kent Jr. of Earth-E|Clark Kent, Jr.]] and his traveling companion, [[Bruce Wayne Jr. of Earth-E|Bruce Wayne, Jr.]], stunble upon the town while in the midst of a cross-country road trip.
  
The sisterhood of Belton is eventually discovered by the Super-Sons to be part of a scheme by Big Sister Sybil, secretly an alien planning to use a serum in the town's water supply to change the all-female populace into "ugly things" resembling the alien.  
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The boys, who are secretly [[Superman Jr. of Earth-E|Superman, Jr.]] and [[Batman Jr. of Earth-E|Batman, Jr.]], are thrown in jail for their inability to pay a $500 parking fine.
  
"The only antidote to the serum was a male's touch! Hence my rigid rule against contact with men!", explains the gruesome alien.  
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The sisterhood of Belton is eventually discovered by the [[Super-Sons of Earth-E|Super-Sons]] to be part of a scheme by Big Sister Sybil, secretly an alien planning to use a serum in the town's water supply to change the all-female populace into "ugly things" resembling the alien.  
  
Upon her defeat by the Super-Sons, "Sybil" uses her monolith—in truth a space vessel— to escape to her home planet. There she is punished for her scheme by being forced to "[see her] hideous self reflected for eternity!" (WF No. 233: "World Without Men").
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"The '''only''' antidote to the serum was a '''male's''' touch! Hence my rigid rule against contact with men!", explains the gruesome alien.
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Upon her defeat by the Super-Sons, "Sybil" uses her monolith—in truth a space vessel— to escape to her home planet. There she is punished for her scheme by being forced to "[see her] hideous self reflected for eternity!" (WF No. 233: "World Without Men").
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[[Category:Entries]]
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[[Category:Parallel-Worlds]]
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[[Category:Bronze Age (1971-1986)]]

Revision as of 12:26, 14 September 2008

Belton of Earth-E

A small, old swamp lumber town located somewhere in the great southland of America on the parallel world of Earth-E, populated solely by beautiful young women and ruled over by the mysterious Big Sister Sybil. In October 1975, Clark Kent, Jr. and his traveling companion, Bruce Wayne, Jr., stunble upon the town while in the midst of a cross-country road trip.

The boys, who are secretly Superman, Jr. and Batman, Jr., are thrown in jail for their inability to pay a $500 parking fine.

The sisterhood of Belton is eventually discovered by the Super-Sons to be part of a scheme by Big Sister Sybil, secretly an alien planning to use a serum in the town's water supply to change the all-female populace into "ugly things" resembling the alien.

"The only antidote to the serum was a male's touch! Hence my rigid rule against contact with men!", explains the gruesome alien.

Upon her defeat by the Super-Sons, "Sybil" uses her monolith—in truth a space vessel— to escape to her home planet. There she is punished for her scheme by being forced to "[see her] hideous self reflected for eternity!" (WF No. 233: "World Without Men").

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