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November, 1928
Vol. 3, No. 8

Editorial & General Offices: 230 Fifth Ave., New York City
Published by Experimenter Publishing Company, Inc.
H. Gernsback, Pres,; S. Gernsback, Treas.; C. E. Rosenfelt, Sec’y
Publishers of Science & Invention, Radio News, Radio Listeners’ Guide, Amazing Stories Quarterly, Your Body
Owners of Broadcast Station WRNY

In Our November Issue:

The World at Bay

By B. Wallis and Geo. C. Wallis 678

The Ananias Gland

The Psychophonic Nurse

The Moon Men

The Eye of the Vulture

The Living Test Tube

Our Cover

this month depicts a scene from “The Moon Men,” by Frank Brueckel, Jr., showing our pioneers emerging from their space-flyer, after having unexpectedly landed on Ganymede, the third of Jupiter's satellites, and left holding a tremendous disc {Jupiter} striped with broad, red bands and whitish-yellow ones, spread over an enormous part of the heavens.

In Our Next Issue:

The World at Bay, by B. and Geo. C. Wallis. (A Serial in Two Parts) Part II. The chapters of the final instalment of this story are vibrant with excitement and strategy and interesting possible means for combatting the horrors of the Troglodytes and their unknown deadly poisonous gas. It is no mean job to fight the fiends in their strangely devised helicopters, run by radium energy. But not once is the human interest part of the story allowed to lag.

The Space Bender, by Edward L. Rementer. May it not, after all, have been purely accidental that the anthropoid adapted itself to varying conditions on this planet more quickly than the others, and so finally evolved into the higher animal—a human being? It is an interesting conjecture, what the results of a snake or fish ancestry, for instance, would be like. Qur new author has chosen an interesting subject, to which he does full justice in this story.

Before the Ice Age, by Alfred Fritchey. The Eye of the Vulture We know practically nothing about the “pre-record” day civilizations. What did the people in the days of the Aramaic language, for instance, use to build and mold? This story, told with the easy facility of sailor-inn charm and freshness, makes delightful reading, though there is plenty of food for thought.

Before the Ice Age, by Miles J. Breuer, M.D. We are sure that all those readers who have read Dr. Breuer’s short stories of medical science and psychology, will be glad to welcome him back. In this new story, our author enters into a slightly new combination with his medical science—if anything, more successfully than ever.

And others.


How to Subscribe to “Amazing Stories” send your name, address and remittance to Experimenter Publishing Co., 230 Fifth Ave., New York City. Checks and money orders should be made payable to Experimenter Publishing Co., Inc. Mention the name of the magazine you are ordering inasmuch as we also publish Radio News, Science & Invention, Radio Listeners’ Guide, Amazing Stories Quarterly, Your Body and French Humor. Subscriptions may be made in combination with the other publications just mentioned at special reduced club rates. Send postal for club rate card. Subscriptions start with the current issue unless otherwise ordered.

On Expiration of your subscription we enclose a renewal blank in your last number to you, and notify you by mail. Then, unless we receive your remittance for a renewal, delivery of the magazine is stopped.

Change of Address Notify us as far in advance as possible, giving your old address as well as the new one to which future magazines are to go. It takes several weeks to make an address change in our records.


Amazing Stories is published on the 5th of each preceding month. There are 12 months per year. Subscription price is $2.50 a year in U. S. and possessions. Canada and foreign countries $3.00 a year U. S. coin as well as U. S. stamps accepted (no foreign coin or stamps). Single copies, 25 cents each. All communications and contributions to this journal should be addressed to Editor Amazing Stories, 230 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. Unaccepted contributions cannot be returned unless full postage is included. Publishers are not responsible for Mss. lost. All accepted contributions are paid for on publication.

Amazing Stories Monthly. Entered as second class matter March 10, 1926, by the Post Office at New York, N. Y. under the act of March 3, 1879. Title Registered U. S. Patent Office. Copyright, 1927, by E. P. Co., Inc., New York. The text and illustrations of this magazine are copyrighted and must not be reproduced without giving full credit to the publication. Amazing Stories is for sale at newsstands in the United States and Canada. European Agents, S. J. Wise Et Cie, 40 Place Vert, Antwerp, Belgium. Printed in U. S. A.

General Advertising Dept., 230 Fifth Avenue, New York City.