Page:Weird Tales Volume 42 Number 06 (1950-09).djvu/6

 "Here I am again, Hank"

Here's a smart gal! She buys gas and oil for her car the same way she buys cosmetics—by brand name. Naturally, she patronizes only the dealer who carries the brand name she prefers. She knows that buying by brand name is the only way to get the exact product she prefers.

Brand names offer you protection! By knowing brand names, you make the manufacturer responsible for the products that bear his name. Any manufacturer knows that if you find his products good, you will buy them. If not, you won't—and the manufacturer will be forced out of business.

Brand names assure you of better and better products to choose from. Manufacturers compete to improve their products—to give you more for less money.

Remember—you get protection, quality, better value—and exactly what you want, when you buy by brand names. You'll find the ads in this magazine a big help. They include some of America's most famous brand names.

The Editor, 9 Rockefeller Plaza, New York 20, N. Y.

''I observed in the "Weirdisms" department of your March, 1950 issue what I conceive to be an inaccuracy. It is there stated as fact that Matthew Hopkins, the witch-finder, was tried and hanged. This conclusion differs from that ascribed as an end to Mr. Hopkins by the Rev. Montague Summers who, if anybody does, should know.''

I cite you to page 144 of Summers' "Geography of Witchcraft," New York, Alfred A. Knopf, 1927, where it is stated:

According to Summers, however Hopkins may have perished finally, it was not by hanging. Giving the third of his three hypotheses short shrift, it remains that he has decided from the evidence that Hopkins died a natural death—and at the outside was drowned while being "swum." I have cited Summers' sources from his own footnotes;