Data courtesy of the Grand Comics Database under Creative Commons license.

Issue Details

Issue #14
Published June 1948
Cover Price 0.10 USD
Pages 36
Editing Victor Fox ?
Notes Indicia: SUNNY, June, 1948, No. 14. Published bi-monthly by Fox Feature Syndicate, Inc., 221 Conyngham Ave., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Executive offices 60 E. 42nd St., New York 17, N. Y. Entered as second class matter October 3, 1947, at the post office at Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Price 10¢ per copy. Yearly subscription, in the United States and its possessions, Mexico, So. America, Spain, 75¢  including postage. $1.50 elsewhere. The publisher accepts no responsibility for unsolicited material. Copyright 1948 by Fox Feature Syndicate, Inc. Contents must not be reproduced without permission. The names of all characters that are used are fictitious. Use of a name which is the same as that of any living person is accidental. Printed in U. S. A.

Cover Details

Characters Sunny
Genre Teen
Pencils Al Feldstein
Inks Al Feldstein ?
Notes Indicia: SUNNY, June, 1948, No. 14. Published bi-monthly by Fox Feature Syndicate, Inc., 221 Conyngham Ave., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Executive offices 60 E. 42nd St., New York 17, N. Y. Entered as second class matter October 3, 1947, at the post office at Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Price 10¢ per copy. Yearly subscription, in the United States and its possessions, Mexico, So. America, Spain, 75¢  including postage. $1.50 elsewhere. The publisher accepts no responsibility for unsolicited material. Copyright 1948 by Fox Feature Syndicate, Inc. Contents must not be reproduced without permission. The names of all characters that are used are fictitious. Use of a name which is the same as that of any living person is accidental. Printed in U. S. A.

9 page Sunny story "Wolves and Whistles"

Characters Sunny Sender; Sunny's Mother; Teddy; Richy; Ginny Shores; Sunny's Father; The Devil (cameo)
Synopsis Sunny wants Teddy to take her to a moonlight sail party, but he doesn't have enough money for the ticket. Sunny decides they can sell the old papers in her basement, but it rains and the junk man's assistant pays for the wet papers by weight. Earlier, Sunny's mother discovered wolf whistles and is feeling suspicious of boys. She overhears the junk many accusing Teddy of being a thief over the wet papers, and forbids Sunny to see him. At the advice of Richy, Teddy tries to get Sunny's attention with a wolf whistle, but attracts the attention of Ginny instead, leading to a fight between the girls. Richy explains that Teddy was practicing a call for Sunny later on, which means that he actually has to do it to prove the story to Ginny. Ginny tries to set it up so Teddy is heard by Sunny's father. This works, but Sunny's mother is also nearby and thinks her husband was whistling after girls. She tells Sunny she can go because it's Mr. Sender she has to look out for.
Genre teen
Script Al Feldstein
Pencils Al Feldstein
Inks Al Feldstein ?
Notes As was common with Fox comics of this era, the first page of this first story was printed on the inside front cover. In this case, it is in red and black duo-tone. Unlike the other Sunny stories in this issue, this story was not signed. The Devil has a non-speaking cameo winking at us in between two of the panels.

8 page Sunny story "Evening Gown Blues"

Characters Sunny Sender; Teddy; Sunny's Mother
Synopsis Sunny wants a new $20 dress for the prom. Her mother says that if she cleans the attic, she'll give her $5 and she can sell whatever she finds. When Teddy comes by she gets him to help her move a large desk, and they find a letter with a rare Civil War-era stamp. They look up the stamp and end up writing to Mr. Dunby of Dunby and Smellin stamp collectors. Dunby writes back valuing the stamp at $200, but Smellin hears and dashes to offer them $20 first. Teddy thinks that's low, but Sunny just wants the dress. Fortunately Dunby's letter, followed shortly by Dunby himelf, arrives and stops Smellin as he's running away. Dunby buys the stamp for $200, and we see Sunny and Teddy happy at the prom, where Sunny says she was surprised that her mother bought her the dress after Sunny gave the $200 to a children's clinic she heard about on the radio.
Genre teen
Script Al Feldstein [as Jed Duncan]
Pencils Al Feldstein [as Jed Duncan]
Inks Al Feldstein ?

2 page Junior text story "Two Tickets for Trouble"

Characters Junior Hancock; Junior's Mother; Junior's Father; Deena; Gwenny; Goofy Gordon
Synopsis Junior's mother tells him he can't go on his saturday date with Deena because she and his father have tickets to the opening of a play and his father is expecting an important call. Junior has to stay home to answer the phone. Junior tells Deena about this and she gets angry and claims that someone else asked her out anyway and now she can tell him yes. But Junior's father's call comes on Friday and as a result he can't go to the play. They give the tickets to Junior, but Deena doesn't want to admit that she made up the other boy asking her for a date. They give the tickets to Goofy and Gwenny, but Gwenny's sick, so Goofy takes them in for a refund. Junior and Deena separately decide to go to the play because they're bored and each assume the other won't be there. Since theirs were the last two tickets available (as they had just been returned by Goofy), they end up at the play together after all, and Junior doesn't press Deena about the fictitious boyfriend.
Genre teen
Script Al Feldstein ?
Letters typeset
Notes Not signed, but has a very similar feel to the signed and illustrated Feldstein stories.

7 page Sunny story "Love in Boom"

Characters Sunny Sender; Teddy; Penrod Klippell; The Devil (between-panel interjections)
Synopsis Sunny and Teddy are trying to get to the roller-skating rink. Teddy is careless and splashes through a puddle, drenching Penrod, a boy Sunny's mother thinks is much better than Teddy. Penrod swears Sunny's mother will hear of Teddy's carelessness. Teddy has more trouble as his car gets a flat and then runs out of gas. By this point Sunny's mad over the delay and the fact that Teddy has oil all over his suit. By this point, Sunny's father, smoking a cigar Penrod gave him, shows up to haul Sunny off based on Penrod's latest allegations against Teddy. Through a series of mishaps, though, there ends up being a gas explosion that buries him under some junk, causing Sunny and Teddy to briefly think him dead. It turns out that the cigar Penrod gave him was an exploding trick cigar, and caused the larger explosion. Mr. Sender is not amused and throws Penrod out, clearing the way for Teddy to keep dating Sunny.
Genre teen
Script Al Feldstein [as Jed Duncan]
Pencils Al Feldstein [as Jed Duncan]
Inks Al Feldstein ?
Notes In a few places and at the end the Devil makes comments on the story between the main panels. He's portrayed as a man with reddish hair and a goatee and horns, in a red sweater. This story has numerous lettering errors (sentences with odd grammar, like "Maybe we'll have blast!", which was probably supposed to be "Maybe we'll have... Blast!", also one line clearly spoken by Penrod is shown as spoken by Teddy)

6 page Junior story "Stop Stop!"

Characters Junior Hancock; Deena; Gwenny; Goofy Gordon; Junior's Father; Junior's Mother
Synopsis Junior, Deena, Gwenny and Goofy are rehearsing as a barbershop quartet for a school event, but the music director thinks they're horrible. They go to Junior's house to practice more. When Junior's father returns home from dropping off Junior's mother to visit her sister, he's also horrified by their performance. They ask for his help. At that point, a neighborhood busybody hears the ruckus and misinterprets things looking through the window. She calls in the police, who smoke them all out with a smoke grenade through the window, and put Mr. Hancock in jail. Mrs. Hancock hears of this, goes home and gets Junior and the other kids out of the custody of the busybody's "Helping Hands Society", and goes to get Mr. Hancock out of jail, where she finds him singing the song the kids were rehearsing with the chief of police, the judge and the music directory. And all's well that ends well, as the kids do fine once they take the stage.
Genre teen
Script Al Feldstein [as Bill Brown]
Pencils Al Feldstein [as Bill Brown]
Inks Al Feldstein ?

1 page U. S. Savings Bonds public service announcement "If you can catch a Leprechaun..."

Letters typeset
Notes Ad (described as a public service announcement at the bottom of the page) for U.S. Savings Bonds.

Half page Simplex Portable Typewriter advertisement "America's Greatest Junior Typewriter Value!"

Letters typeset
Notes Inside back cover, top half.

Half page American Merchandising Company, Inc. Modernair Battery Radio advertisement "The Magic of Radio in the Palm of Your Hand!"

Notes Inside back cover, bottom half.

1 page Illinois Merchandise Mart Retractable Ball Point Pen and Genuine Leather Coin Holder Billfold advertisement "The Greatest Ball-Point Pen and Billfold Bargain in America!"

Letters typeset
Notes Back cover.