Index:Weird Tales Volume 44 Number 7 (1952-11).djvu
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. . . Jet’s yellow eyes were on her, and Moira began to learn just how a dog could hate!
Bandits and Mandarins, they all coveted the Unicorn; but it belonged to a small boy, last seen climbing a hill where no hill was.
. . . forty cents' worth of bananas, untold shoes and costumes! Could gremlins or leprechauns cash and carry?
The house and contents had been exorcised of evil—but maybe the door had been left open, the holy words lost outside.
Scalding, searing hatred was to be far stronger than love, strong enough to fling aside the veil separating life from death.
Grapes grafted on cactus. . . the whole wine industry in revolution.
Connection, my friend—? Is there not connection between the serpent and his venom, between the devil and the flames of hell? (Copyright 1928 by Popular Fiction Publishing Company)
Someone—or something—had entered, passing, as it seemed, through steel and stone and concrete, like a djinn or a wraith. (Copyright 1923 by the Rural Publishing Company)
Published bi-monthly by Weird Tales, 9 Rockefeller Plaza, New York 20, N. Y. Reentered as second-class matter January 26, 1940. at the Post Office at New York, N. Y., under the Act of March 3, 1879. Single copies, 26 cents. Subscription rates: One year in the United States and possessions, $1.50. Foreign and Canadian postage extra. The publishers are not responsible for the loss of unsolicited manuscripts although every care will be taken of such material while in their possession. Copyright, 1952, by Weird Tales. Copyright in Great Britain Title registered in U. S. Patent Office.173 Printed in the U. S. A. Vol. 44, No. 7 D. McIlwraith, Editor |