Eagle, volume 19 number 2, 13th January 1968.
Condition is GD/VG. Some edge wear, including significant wear and tear to outer edge, particularly towards the back. Some spine wear. Also, by 1968, Eagle had moved from the earlier loose-leaf newspaper binding style to a glued binding in the style of DC Thomson comics. Some of the glue in this issue has dried out, so some of the pages are loose, but still present.

Important note on postage: The quoted postage price assumes the comic will be posted flat. 1950s/60s Eagle comics are too big to be posted by letter post without folding, which would affect the grade. If you want the comic to be folded for posting, let me know before paying, and I'll adjust the postage cost accordingly. Folded postage cost is £2.18.

CONTENTS:

Adventure strips
- "Mickey Merlin"
- "The Iron Man", art by Martin Salvador
- "Blackbow the Cheyenne", art by Frank Humphris
- "The Guinea-Pig", art by Brian Lewis
- "Dan Dare: Underwater Attack", part 3, art by Eric Kincaid
- "Grant (CID): The Haunted Highway"

Text Stories
- "Jennings Abounding", chapter 17, by Anthony Buckeridge

Features
- Eagle Merry-Go-Round
- New Lands from the Sea
- Scouts' World
- The Futurescope: The Hidden Power
- Challenge (quiz)
- Legends in Their Lifetime: Paddy Finucane, The Flying Tiger
- Eagle Cut-away: Big Swing-Winger From Russia (MiG VG), by Leslie Ashwell Wood
- British Bridges on Stamps Next Year
- It's New!
- Is Your Name Collins?
- Hail Bobby Charlton
- Frontiers of Science: Rockets
- Gag-Bag (jokes)

*Offers from £1.50 considered as part of multi-item purchase with combined postage

BUY MORE AND SAVE TWO WAYS

Combine Postage: 
A word on postage costs. This assumes the comics are not folded. Unfolded, these comics are too large for Large Letter and would have to be sent Evri or Royal Mail Small Parcel instead. So, unfolded, the cost of postage is £3.37 by Evri, whether for a single comic or for 17, or up to 34 comics by Royal Mail for £3.66. Comics of this type weigh about 50g on average. Packaging that will keep them safe in the post weighs about 75g, so cost of posting a single comic would be £2.18 second class if folded to fit a Large Letter envelope. But the same price will get you up to 250g, so you can typically get another two comics in there at no extra postage cost. I'll always charge actual postage, so by buying more than one comic at a time you save straight away.

Typical postage costs for late 1960s Eagle comics, folded double (guide only - weights may vary) are:
--- 1 to 3 comics = £2.18
--- 4 to 13 comics = £2.87

If you want to combine postage, do the following: 
1. Make sure all your items end about the same time, within a day or two (or make an offer to end early).
2. Optionally, when you win your first item, contact me to let me know you have others still to bid on.
3. Don't pay straight away. Instead, when all your items have finished, contact me for a single invoice. I'll pack and weigh the items, and charge exact postage.
4. Pay the single invoice and save.

Make Me An Offer I Can't Refuse 
Some comics (particularly common or low-grade ones) won't be worth the starting price. So why ask it? Well, it turns out that if I sell a comic for £1, and it costs £1.40 to post, I actually get 10p of the £1 you spend. The rest goes to eBay, PayPal, and the cost of packaging. Sell it for any less than that, and I'm paying you to take it off my hands. This isn't such a problem if you're combining postage. In short, it suits both buyer and seller if you're paying more for your comics than you are for getting them posted. So, as long as you're buying multiple items, feel free to put in an offer lower than the asking price. There's a pretty good chance I'll accept.

If you want to make me an offer, do the following: 
1. Line up the items you want to combine and make an offer on each of them in reasonably quick succession (within a couple of minutes of each other).
2. Wait a bit. When I'm sure you've finished submitting offers, I'll consider them. As long as we're saving on postage, and the offers are reasonable, I'll probably accept.

Incidentally, if there's a comic you just can't be without, and you're worried someone else will outbid you, feel free to put in an offer above the starting price. There's a fair chance I'll accept that too.