Page:Weird Tales volume 28 number 03.djvu/113

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.
WEIRD TALES
379

novel, The Hour of the Dragon.—The Editor.

LET ME TELL YOU
Simple drawn portrait of a bearded man in a turban
Simple drawn portrait of a bearded man in a turban

About your business, travel, changes, matrimony, love affairs, friends, enemies, lucky days and many other interesting and important affairs or your life as indicated by astrology. Send for your special Astral Reading. All work strictly scientific, individual and guaranteed satisfactory. FOR MANY YEARS PRIVATE ASTROLOGICAL ADVISER TO ROYALTY and the ELITE. Write same, address and date of birth plainly. No money required, but it you like send 20 cents (stamps; No Coins), to help defray costs. Address: PUNDIT TABORE, (Dept. 428-B). Upper Forject Street, BOMBAY VII, BRITISH INDIA. Postage to India is 5c.

Make easy money every day with fastest selling line of MEN'S TIES AND NOVELTIES in America! Every man is a prospect! These marvelous values SELL ON SIGHT! "No Risk" Guarantee assures satisfaction or money back. Unbeatable quality! Amazing low prices! WE PAY POSTAGE. Complete line of NEW FALL NECKWEAR priced $1 to $9.60 dozen. Also Muffler, Tie and Hand-kerchief sets. OVER 100% PROFIT! FREE
SAMPLES
Big extra with Patented Slyde-On ready tied ties. Send TODAY for Free Illustrated Descriptive Catalog and  FREE SAMPLE SWATCHES, See why our men are BIGGEST MONEY-MAKERS. Write NOW! BOULEVARD CRAVATS, 22 W. 21st St., M-23 NEW YORK

CONTROLS Disease of Blood

An effective treatment against disease of blood. Used for 60 years. Home Treatment. Hundreds of Endorsements. Whatever the cause, however far advanced, write for FREE Book.

JOHN STERLING REMEDY CO. Dept. 63
Kansas City, Mo.
Save
75%
Buy your Drug Sundries, Specialties, Supplies, Novelties, etc., direct from manufacturer through our Mail-Order Dept. All personal items are mailed postpaid by us in plain sealed package. We have everything. Send for FREE, illustrated mail-order catalog.
THE N-R MFG. CO.
Dept. H-20Box Hamilton, Ontario
60 ART LESSONS

Become Talented Artist with Big Income

SONGWRITERS: Poems, melodies. Outstanding collaboration offer, Hibbeier, D-156, 2157 No. Avers, Chicago.


The Falling Method

Corwin Stickney, Jr., of Belleville, New Jersey, writes: "The July issue is excellent. I rank it second only to the April issue when rating the seven published so far this year. Lost Paradise and Necromancy in Naat are in a virtual tie for this month's honors. Moore is practically unbeatable, while Clark Ashton Smith's work is always of the finest quality. Since each of these two stories is so different from the other, both in theme and in the style in which it was written, I do not undertake to evaluate one above the other. Let it suffice to say that I enjoyed both hugely, and would appreciate nothing more than a story by each of them in each issue. Ronal Kayser constructed a vivid, stirring story in The Unborn. Seldom have I read one more fascinating. Edmond Hamilton disappointed me with When the World Slept. It was entirely too obvious; I hadn't read two pages before I had guessed the story's outcome. I cannot at all understand how this yarn can possibly be called weird. It might pass—on a dark night—as science-fiction. But weird fiction—never! The other tales are good, especially Loot of the Vampire and The Return of Sarah Purcell. I haven't yet read the new serial or the reprint. . . . Peculiar thing: three of the victims in this month's stories—in The Return of Sarah Purcell, The Unborn, and Kharu Knows All, to be exact—'got theirs' by way of the falling method—either by jumping out a window or by falling down a flight of stairs, as in the case of Emma in The Return of Sarah Purcell. I wonder how many discerning readers will notice that Tim Cirewe (in Kharu Knows All) chose Kharu as his new name because it and his real name, Carewe, are phonetically alike."


French Phrases

Gertrude Hemken, of Chicago, contributes the following comments: "Now I'm gonna unload something from my mind that's been rankling me for yars 'n' yars. So often in stories one runs across French phrases, and it is taken for granted the reader knows what they mean, so no explanation is offered. All well and good. However, when one uses a sprinkling of other foreign phrases, unless the author offers translations immediately