Page:Weird Tales Volume 7 Number 4 (1926-04).djvu/137

568 is only one real change you could make in your magazine that would please me and that is, make it more weird if possible."

Rev. J. W. Pelton writes from Fort Sam Houston, Texas: "I am taking the liberty to tell you of the thrilling enjoyment I have received from your unique magazine. I have never found a better magazine in the whole market than yours. —how strange but wonderful that name is to me! I look forward with the greatest enthusiasm to every issue. Among the good things I read this month, nothing has struck me with so much force as the last chapter of The Waning of a World''. The author deserves congratulations for his wonderful description of our waning planet."

A fourteen-year-old reader, Fred W. Bott, of Chicago, writes: " is the best magazine on the market. In the tales of horror and fear which form a large part of its contents I find the most interesting and wholly engrossing material I have ever read. We want more tales of the sort which cause one's backbone to feel a pleasant chill and which bring to one's mind thoughts that make sleep impossible."

Writes Edwin F. Bailey, of Washington Mills, New York: "I am nineteen years old and a reader of . In my mind there is no doubt that this magazine is the best on the market—bar none!"

Mrs. Charles Brandenburg, of Hot Springs, Arkansas, writes: "Perhaps you didn't know it, but you have a new name for your magazine. There is an old man down here in Arkansas who calls it 'Wired Tales.' I bought one from him and he insists it is 'Wired.' I have long been a reader of your (indeed unique) magazine and wish to say I enjoy reading it ever so mueh; in fact, I read the issues from cover to cover. I enjoyed The Tenants of Broussac, and wonder if it is quite impossible. Are any of these stories based on fact?"

The first installment of Pettersen Marzoni's tale of destruction, Red Ether, wins your vote for favorite story in the February, with Seabury Quinn's novelette, The Isle of Missing Ships, a very close second. What is your favorite story in the present issue?

Story

Remarks

(1)

(2)

(3)

I do not like the following stories:

(1)

(2)

It will help us to know what kind of stories you want in Weird Tales if you will fill out the coupon and mail it to The Eyrie, Weird Tales, 408 Holliday Building, Indianapolis, Ind.

Reader's name and address: