< Page:Weird Tales volume 11 number 02.pdf
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WEIRD TALES
[CONTINUED FROM PRECEDING PAGE]
Mephistopheles and Company, Ltd. | Seabury Quinn | 193 |
Jules de Grandin rescues an Austrian girl from the fiendish grasp of a heartless devil-syndicate | ||
The Purple Sea | Frank Owen | 213 |
Another exquisite Chinese fantasy, as full of color as was "The Wind That Tramps the World" | ||
The Giant World (Part 2) | Ray Cummings | 221 |
A three-part weird-scientific serial—a distant world—giants growing into largeness unfathomable—gooseflesh adventures | ||
The Three Witches | Ernest Dowson | 236 |
Verse | ||
The Isle of the Fairy Morgana | John Martin Leahy | 237 |
A cruel murder took place on Flang Island, hidden from the world, yet Guy Garford saw every frightful detail of the murder | ||
Folks Used to Believe: | ||
The Barnacle Goose | Alvin F. Harlow | 252 |
One of the curious superstitions of our ancestors | ||
The Mist Monster | Granville S. Hoss | 253 |
A weird mist billowed up from the cape—and horrific was the thing that it did | ||
The Dream Snake | Robert E. Howard | 257 |
An eery snake story—an unusual tale—night by night the horror grew, until it completely enmeshed the doomed man | ||
Weird Story Reprint | ||
Clarimonde | Théophile Gautier | 261 |
"La Morte Amoreuse" the most exquisitely beautiful of all vampire tales, translated by Lafcadio Hearn | ||
The Eyrie | 282 | |
A chat with the readers | ||
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