rdfs:comment
| - Four companies took advantage of the situation by publishing comics in Canada, sometimes using imported scripts. Anglo-American Publishing of Toronto and Maple Leaf Publishing in Vancouver started publishing in March 1941. Later, two other Toronto-based publishers joined in: Hillborough Studios that August, and Bell Features (originally Commercial Signs of Canada) in September. For the most part, the comics published had colour covers, but the interiors were printed in black ink on white paper, although there was a handful of comics with colour interiors.
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abstract
| - Four companies took advantage of the situation by publishing comics in Canada, sometimes using imported scripts. Anglo-American Publishing of Toronto and Maple Leaf Publishing in Vancouver started publishing in March 1941. Later, two other Toronto-based publishers joined in: Hillborough Studios that August, and Bell Features (originally Commercial Signs of Canada) in September. For the most part, the comics published had colour covers, but the interiors were printed in black ink on white paper, although there was a handful of comics with colour interiors. Some of the more notable "Whites" creators include Joe Shuster Award Hall of Fame inductees Ed Furness, Ted McCall, Adrian Dingle, Gerald Lazare, Jon St. Ables, Fred Kelly, and Leo Bachle. They produced stories featuring characters such as Nelvana of the Northern Lights—the first female Canadian superhero, predating Wonder Woman by several months—Johnny Canuck, and Canada Jack. This period has been called the Golden Age of Canadian comics, but the age of the "Whites" did not last long. When the trade restrictions were lifted following World War II, comic books from the United States were once again able to flow across the border.
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