Page:Weird Tales volume 32 number 01.djvu/117

 stupid Trowbridge. In the May issue Thunder in the Dawn, Pigeons from Hell and The Secret of the Vault, in the order named, pleased yours truly best. Honorable mention goes to the poem, Where Once Poe Walked. In closing I will say that anyone who derides Poe and his work is not and cannot possibly be a lover of weird tales as exemplified by Lovecraft, C. A. Smith, Kuttner and others in our own Unique Magazine."

John H. Green writes from Washington, D. C: "No use to tell you how much I enjoy WT, because if I didn't I wouldn't read it and keep on reading it. Roads by Seabury Quinn was about the only story I ever read three times and probably will read it again Current novel by Jack Williamson is great. The Eyrie is as interesting as the stories. Might add to E. Hoffmann Price's statement concerning the Stanzas of Dzyan that there and there only is the explanation of the Easter Island images."

Francis G. Howes writes from Rugby, England: "I am writing to congratulate you on WT. There is nothing like them in England and they are the only stories that I get a real kick from. I am a research worker and a folk-lore expert who possesses a remarkable library dealing with the occult and the weird, but in the fiction line your magazines take pride of place. I put some of your stories, especially those not overburdened with a superfluity of adjectives, on a par with those of Bram Stoker, M. R. James, and Algernon Blackwood I have traveled through middle Europe collecting folk-lore and legends and I was astounded at the amount of superstition and credence in the supernatural which abounds among quite civilized people. There are grounds for these beliefs, as I have discovered, especially in the Carpathians and the Black Forest, but to all but my most intimate friends I have remained silent for fear of ridicule. I can assure your readers that some of your magnificent yarns touch alarmingly near to the truth. I was grieved at the passing of H. P. L. Will he ever have a successor? Of recent issues I enjoyed The Last Pharaoh most of all. Let us have more of Thomas P. Kelley. Virgil's illustrations are the goods.

TALES 125 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS SMALL ADS WORTH WATCHING Authors' Service MANUSCRIPTS WANTED. Books. Stories. Plays and Articles lor placement In U. S. and foreign countries.' Motion picture rights placed. Circular T-738 describ- ing UNIFIED SALES PLAN free on request. OTIS ADELBERT KLINE, Authors' and Publishers' Rep- resentative, 347 Fifth Ave., New York City. Books A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM — Illustrated bf Virgil Finlay. Containing twenty-five exquisite illus- trations. A beautiful edition you will be proud to own. Price 35 cents. WRIGHT'S SHAKESPEARE LIBRARY, 840 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago. THE MOON TERROR— A stupendous weird-scientiflc novel of Oriental intrigue to gain control of the world! Cloth-bound with handsome colored Jacket — 50 centa postpaid. WEIRD TALES, 840 N. Michigan Ave* Chicago. Business Opportunities NEWSPAPER clippings pay. InstrucUons 25c. Good-i all Agency, 742 Market, San Francisco. Indian Relics INDIAN RELICS. Beadwork. Coins. Stamps. Mln-i erals. Books. Old West Photos. Weapons. Curios* Temple Mound Birdpoint 15c. Knife, ancient, 15cj Catalogue 5c. Indian Museum, Northbranch, Kansas* Magazines WEIRD, Sclentiflction magazines. Bought, sold, ex- changed. Price list free. POIS, 2101 W. Grand Coiw course. New York. ORIENTAL STORIES (Vol. 1, No. 1) Fascinating stories by Robert E. Howard, Frank Owen. G. G. Pen- darves, Paul Ernst, Otis Adelbert Kline, and other favorite writers. Price 25 cents. ORIENTAL STO- RIES MAGAZINE, 840 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, Song Poems Wanted WANTED — Original poems, songs, for immediate con- sideraUon. Send poems to COLUMBIAN MUSIC PUBLISHERS, Ltd., Dept. K-69, Toronto, Canada* Miscellaneous PEOPLE having lost hope or whose doctor has glvea up. who desire absent metaphysical help, write to: ABSENT METAPHYSICAL HELP, Box 441, San Diego, California. WHO IS THE MYSTERIOUS "KWO"? The solution to this baffling mystery is thrillingly told in one of the most startling stories ever written — THE MOON TERROR, in book form. Price 50c. WEIRD TALES. 840 North Michigan, Chicago, Illinois. WEIRD BOOKS Rented by mail, ghost stories, tales of terror, etc. 3e a day, plus postage. Write for details. Werewolf Lending Library, 227 S. Atlantic Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa* Subscribe to Weird Tales