Page:Weird Tales Volume 11 Number 06 (1928-06).djvu/4

There was a problem when proofreading this page.
722
Weird Tales
VOLUME XI
NUMBER 6

Published monthly by the Popular Fiction Publishing Company, 2457 E. Washington Street, Indianapolis, Ind. Entered as second-class matter March 20, 1923, at the post office at Indianapolis, Ind., under the act of March 3, 1879. Single copies, 25 cents. Subscription, $2.50 a year in the United States; $3.00 a year in Canada. English office: Charles Lavell, 13, Serjeant's Inn, Fleet Street, E. C. 4, London. The publishers are not responsible for the loss of unsolioited manuscripts, although every care will be taken of such material while in their possession. The contents of this magazine are fully protected by copyright and must not be reproduced either wholly or in part without permission from the publishers.

NOTE—All manuscripts and communications should be addressed to the publishers' Chicago office at 450 East Ohio Street, Chicago, Ill. FARNSWORTH WRIGHT, Editor.

Copyright, 1928, by the Popular Fiction Publishing Company



Contents for June, 1928

Cover Design - C. C. Senf

Illustrating a scene in "The Devil's Martyr"

The Eyrie 724

A chat with the readers

The Devil's Martyr - Signe Toksvig 726

A romance of love and witchcraft and Satan-worship, and dark clouds of doom that rolled up about the two lovers

The Serpent Woman - Seabury Quinn 737

Jules de Grandin solves a mystery involving a lost child and a giant snake—and back of it all is the serpent woman

The Elemental Law - Everil Worrell 753

A weird story of aviation and reincarnation—indescribably eery were the faces that stared out of the black pool

The Hate - Wilford Allen 767

Bom of a murderer's lust for torture, the Hate grew through the ages, and worked its retribution during the World War

The Dimension Terror Edmond Hamilton 769

Millions of lives were blotted out in the frightful catastrophe that came upon the earth out of the fifth dimension

[continued on next page]

722
COPYRIGHTED IN GREAT BRITAIN