Clarice Winston
When we last saw Clarice Winston, Jim Corrigan had bargained to save her life and was bound with the Spectre Force. Soon after, he told her there was no future between them (because he was dead) and said goodbye.
I can’t explain in a way to make you understand. It’s just how it has to be.

To be continued…
Sandy, the Golden Boy
One night as Wesley Dodds drove along a lonely, New England road, young Sanderson Hawkins watched from a hill as he was attacked by a giant bee. After he killed it, the bee dwindled to its normal size.

Sandman asked the boy where he got his costume.
I saved up my money and bought some cloth and made it! My name’s Sandy and I pretend I’m you!
Ever since he could remember, Sandy admired the way Sandman fought criminals. He trained and studied so that one day he could help him. After doing just that during “The Case of the Giant Bees,” Sandy became Sandman’s partner and Wesley’s ward.
Oh, and Sandy was Dian Belmont’s nephew! Born in 1926, his father had abandoned his mother when he was seven years old. Later, when he was orphaned, Wesley adopted him.
The Unknown Soldier
In October of 1941, a young man joined the army with his brother, Harry. They were assigned to the Phillippines.

To be continued…
Star-Spangled Kid & Stripesy
During the screening of a patriotic movie, spoiled young Sylvester Pemberton and a mechanic on his day off, Pat Dugan, witness Nazi sympathizers start a riot. Having never met, the two cross paths as they join the fisticuffs. Afterwards, an idea was born…

When they crossed paths again, they were at odds, but after success as a team…

Travelling in an ultra-streamlined rocket-car that converted to an ordinary-looking limousine at the push of a button, ultra-rich and spoiled young Sylvester Pemberton and his new chauffeur, Pat Dugan, fought crime as the Star-Spangled Kid and Stripesy.
When foes of democracy come face to face with the Star-Spangled Kid and his sidekick, Stripesy, sheer terror strikes at their craven hearts!

Adventure Comics #69
Dec. 1941 (Oct. 31, 1941)
$0.10
“The Case of the Giant Bees”
8 pages
Penciller: Paul Norris
Inker: Chad Grothkopf
Editor: Murray Boltinoff

JSA (vol. 1) #69
March 2005 (Jan. 12, 2005)
$2.50
“Guardian Angels”
22 pages
Writer: Geoff Johns
Penciller: Don Kramer
Inker: Keith Champagne
Editor: Peter J. Tomasi

The Spectre (vol. 2) #23
Nov. 1994 (Sept. 13, 1994)
$1.95
“Consequence”
24 pages
Writer: John Ostrander
Artist: Thomas Mandrake
Editor: Dan Raspler

Star-Spangled Comics #1
Oct. 1941 (Aug. 6, 1941)
$0.10
(The Bund Saboteurs)
20 pages
Writer: Jerry Siegel
Artist: Harold Sherman
Editor: Fredric Whitney Ellsworth

Star-Spangled Comics #18
March 1943 (Jan. 6, 1943)
$0.10
“Stripesy vs. the Star-Spangled Kid”
13 pages
Artist: Harold Sherman
Editor: Jack Schiff

Star-Spangled War Stories #154
Dec/Jan 1980 (Oct. 22, 1970)
$0.15
“I’ll Never Die”
9 pages
Writer: Joe Kubert
Artist: Joe Kubert
Editor: Joe Kubert
