Page:Weird Tales Volume 7 Number 3 (1926-03).djvu/136

422 school. I am anxiously waiting to find out whether or not this club meets the same sort of fate which befell ours."

Edward Murphy, of Elizabeth, New Jersey, found The Tenants of Broussac, in the December issue, utterly irresistible. He writes to The Eyrie: "That is great, wonderful! The part that has me yet is where the huge snake curls himself around the body of the girl. Oh, boy!"

A letter from Washington, D. C., signed "A Constant Reader," asks us to keep the magazine unchanged. "I want to thank you," says the writer, "for the many thrilling, breath-taking and horrified moments your most wonderful magazine has given me. Please continue to publish in the most hair-raising stories you can find. I am tired of the everyday things of life, and I know when I pick up  I will be carried far away from the humdrum things around me. One story I shall never forget is The Statement of Randolph Carter. Please publish more like it."

Writes Ray Greenan, of Gastonia, North Carolina: "I have read every issue of from the first to the current. Let me say here that, it takes only one story like Frank Owen's The Wind That Tramps the World to make one eagerly await the magazine that prints such literature.”

Wilmot Hunt, of Joseph, Oregon, writes: "In the January issue I liked Stealer of Souls, by Charles Hilan Craig, best. I thought that in The Waning of a World, by W. Elwyn Backus, it was cruel to let poor 'Tag' die the way he did; nevertheless, it takes all points, joyful and sorrowful, to make a truly successful story. I think the suggestion concerning a popularity contest of authors, made by D. C. Knight, is about the best ever, and may we soon have one, but my vote is for Nictzin Dyalhis."

Readers, your favorite stories in the January issue, as shown by the letters you have written to The Eyrie, are Stealer of Souls, by Charles Hilan Craig, and The Dead Soul, by Raoul Lenoir. What is your favorite story in the present issue?

Story Remarks

(1).

(2).

(3)

I do not like the following stories:

(1).

(2).