Index:Weird Tales Volume 10 Issue 03 (1927-09).djvu
| Contents for September, 1927 Cover Design C. C. Senf Illustrating a scene in "The Wolf-Woman" The Eyrie - 292 A chat with the readers The Wolf-Woman - Bassett Morgan - 295 They dug her out of a glacier, this golden-haired vampire of the North, and she called the white wolves to her bidding The Moon Menace Edmond Hamilton - 311 A terrific prospect faced a darkened world, with the moon men its masters from pole to pole The Beast of the Yungas - Willis Knapp Jones - 331 A tale of fear, and a gigantic prehistoric beast that came snuffling through the darkness The Dead Wagon - Greye La Spina - 337 A ghost-tale of the London Plague—a story of the curse that took the first-born of Melverson Abbey The White Lady of the Orphanage - Seabury Quinn - 350 A strong story of the horrors that occurred at the Orphan's Home—a tale of the exploits of Jules de Grandin The Turret Room - August W. Derleth - 365 A five-minute ghost-story of the old-fashioned kind—Lord Alving spends a night in a haunted room of the castle The Adventure of the Pipe - Richard Marsh - 367 A bizarre, whimsical and fantastic tale about a very peculiar pipe, which had a strange effect on the smoker The Bride of Osiris (Part 2) - Otis Adelbert Kline - 379 A three-part Egyptian serial story of Osiris, the Festival of Re, strange murders, and the dungeons of Kameter Verse The Blue City - Frank Owen - 401 A Chinese tale—the story of the beautiful and eery adventure that befell Hwei-Ti The Soul-Ray - Don Robert Catlin - 407 A weird adventure befell the young man who consented to let Professor Latour experiment on him Folks Used to Believe: The Indestructible Bone - Alvin F. Harlow - 411 One of the peculiar beliefs that were held by our ancestors Night Wings - Jack Snow - 412 Eerie flitted through the universe on the wings of dreams, but they could not bear his earthly weight Interrogation - Clark Ashton Smith - 414 Verse Weird Story Reprint Lord of the Jackals - Sax Rohmer - 415 In the sands of the Egyptian desert was enacted an eery tragedy—a tale of the dark magic of a cave-dweller. The Knight's Tomb Samuel Taylor Coleridge - 425 Verse |