Bonavia Hunt ISource: The Quiver, 19072672

Transcription

Bonavia Hunt ISource: The Quiver, 19072672
Cassellte
Bonavia Hunt
ISource: The Quiver, 19072672)
Fanily
llagazine,
later
Cassellts
ltagazine
(1874-1910)
December l874-Novenber 1897 Gassellrs Family llagazine; December
50 vols.:
Issued rnonthly; cumulated in yearly
1897-October 1910 Cassellrs Hagazine,
Vol.
November 1896 and in six monthly volumes thereafter.
volumes until
47 cuurulates five monthly issues however.
Cassellrs
Hagazine ceased publication
in
L932.
Proprietors:
1874-1878 Cassell,
Petter
1878-1883 Cassel1, Petter,
1883-1910 Cassell
& Galpin
Galpin & Cornpany
& C o r n p a n yL i m i t e d
Editors:
1874-1896 Bonavia Hunt
1896-1905 Max Pemberton
1905-1906 David Williamson
Max Pemberton
f s o u r c e : M u n s e y t sM a g a z i n e ,2 9 ( 7 9 0 3 ) : 651]
1906-1910 Walter
Smith (Snittr
remained as editor
V.
until
March 1912)
--Y-
INTRODUCTION
Between 1874 and 1910 Cassells Family Magazine, later Cnssellts Magazine,
introduced to readers in the then British Empire two fictional characters who have
captured the public imagination over several generations: amateur cracksman
and gentleman cricketer, A.J. Raffles (In tne Chains of Crime, 1898), and Kim
(1901). Cassell'sfailure to nurture its connections with their creators, E.W. Hornung
and Rudyard Kipling, was symptomatic of both the timidity, snobbery and
niggardliness of management policies which hampered editorial initiative and a
heritage of rigid publishing values which eventually led to a deep trough in the
firm's fortunes between 1905 and 1912.1 After traving issued lrralie's nustranger
(Hornung's first Stingaree story) as a supplement to Cessell's Family Magazine
and having published in book form three of Hornung's novels and a volume of short
stories, Cassells management did not take up the book rights to In the Chains of
Crime. Methuen seeured those rights, publishing the episodic novel as firc Amateur
Cracksman. Hornungts next series of Raffles stories, A firief in the Night, was
published in Pall MaI Magazine; his subsequent Stingaree stories were secured
by the market-leading Strand Magazine. Max Pemberton regarded his securing
of the serial rights to Kipling's novel as an editorial eoup, but Cassell's board of
management remonstrated with him that it would be too highbrow for the magaziners
traditional working-class and lower middle-class readership and haggled with the
well-established and popular Kipling over the 1850 payment for serial rights. To
cope with increased demand Cassell's had to print larger runs of issues containing
instalments of Kim, but the book rights to the novel went to Macmillan. Cassells
mishandling of Hornung and Kipling (and surely other authors whose difficulties
are less well documented) contrasts sharply with the practices of The Strand
Magazine, which treated its popular authors very generously. In the 1890s and
1900s Cassellts was slow in adapting to changing community standards, newer
magazine styles, and high financial rewards for popular writers. Cassellts Magazine
in this period continued in many ways to reflect the conservative and pious
mid-Victorian morality of its founder, John Cassell, its longest serving editor, the
Reverend Herbert George Bonavia Hunt, and the tgrey beardsr on the companyts
Board.
CnsseUrsFamily Magazine started life in December 1853 as Cassell's Illustrated
Family Paper. The indexes to fiction published in it commence, though, when the
magazine began to be issued in monthly rather than weekly parts (December 1874)
and close at the end of the Edwardian period. John Cassell, founder of the Family
Paper, was, like the publishers William and Robert Chambers and Charles Knight,
F
<'oncernedto issue publications which would, in his view, improve the moral, social
and intellectual well-being of the working classes. Before the Select Committee
on NewspaperStamps in 1851 he testified:
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I am one of those individuals who have sprung from the working classes; I
have associated with them, and I know their sympathies well, and the position
in which I am placed as a publisher has made me acquainted with the tendency
of their minds, and also the tendency of our literature [to depravel.... The
people want cheap publications, but they will not take what is termed a
namby-pamby literature.
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The rigidity of his social and literary values is suggested by his magazine formulae.
In fiction Cassell's tastes were austere and moralistic, supportive of the Protestant
work ethic and reflective of the social complacency of many a 'self-mader,
self-educated religious man: he appre,piated tales tennobling and pure, in the place
of that which is corrupting and false'," tales 'illustrative of the triumph of religion,
temperance, morality, industry, energy atd self-control over idleness, apathy,
intemperance and habitual self-indulgence'.- The triumph of the former qualities
would guarantee, he believed, upward social mobility on an individual level and
the furtherance of true Christian principles. For The Quiver, a fundamentalist
Protestant family magazine that he also published, Cassell demanded 'one article
to address the intellect, one full of gushing feeling addressed to the heart, one
literary, and one juvenile taler (Nowell-Smith, p. 127). This formula reflects Cassell's
publishing priorities: firstly cultivation of intellect through reading to acquire
knowledge, then evangelical sentimentalism, improving fiction for adults, and finally
improving fiction for children. Cassellts Illustrated Family Paper (1853-1867)
published undistinguishedfiction by Percy B. St. John, John Frederick Smith, Francis
H. Keppel, Captain Mayne Reid, Harriet Beecher Stowe (Cassell having met her
through his vigorous temperance campaigning), Anthony Trollope, and Alexander
Dumas and Octave Feuillet in translation. The magazine owed its success in this
period to its low price and its many illustrations printed from electrotypes procured
from the Paris office of L'Illustration. Its illustrations of the Crimean War. in
particular, proved very popular.
Within two years of John Cassell's death the firm of Cassell, Petter and Galpin,
proprietors of Cassells llltrstrated Family Paper, realised that in order for it to
compete more effectively with Charles Dickensr All the Year Round a change of
style was needed: its name was changed to Cassellts Magazine in 186?; a suceession
of new editors was brought in; and efforts to attract writers of circulating library
renown were made. As book publishersCassell, Petter and Galpin had always catered
for the stationerrs shop and bookstall trade rather than the circulating libraries.
Between 1869 and 1872 Cassell's Magazine was to carry serials by Joseph Sheridan
Le Fanu, Wilkie Collins and Charles Reade. Simon Nowell-Smith, the official
historian of the Cassell company, suggests that the strife surrounding publication
of Reade's A Terrible Temptation and Collins' Poor Miss Finch may well have
contributed to the company?sdecision in 1874 to return Cassells Magazine to its
tproper mill-pond of I'family" mediocrity'(p. 125). The publication of these serials
had brought the firm loss of an important retail account, public outcry, a brush
with Reade over censorship, and trouble with Collins over Smith's refusal to order
adequate stock of his novel in three-deeker form - a refusal which forced Cassell,
Petter and Galpin to drop mention of Collins' serial from their advertisement of
the half-yearly volume of Cassells Magazine. With the December 18?4 number
a newly appointed editor of the rechristened Cassells Family Magazine, to appear
in monthly parts, was entrusted to provide the magazine's readers with 'a dead
level of romance and adventure, varied at most by sociological purpose but never
touched with inspirationr(Nowell-Smith, p. 125).
The management'schoice of Herbert George Bonavia Hunt as the new editor
guaranteed a return to the piety and conservatism of the magazine in John Cassell's
day. The eighteen-year-old Hunt had jointed Cassell, Petter and Galpin in 1865
as sub-editor of The Quiver; within six months he had taken over editorship of this
earnest publication which endeavoured, in John Cassell's words, to tmake men feel
the reality of religious things: of God, of their Duty to Him, of Eternity'
(Nowell-Smith, pp. 250-251). Hunt was a man well able to accommodate that vision.
He was brought up by strict Nonconformist grandparents, and his religious
commitment was eventually to lead to his taking orders in the Church of England
in 1878 and to a series of positions as curate and vicar, held until 1905 in conjunction
with various Cassellts editorships. John Cassell would, too, have approved Huntrs
efforts at self-improvement through community leadership, reading, musical
discipline and formal education. By the time Hunt took over Cassells Magazine
in 18?4 he had founded and was first warden of Trinity College, London, a position
he held from 1,872 until 1892. After studying for university entrance while at
Cassell's, he took his Mus.B. at Christ Church, Oxford in 1876 and his Mus.D. at
Trinity College, Dublin in 188?. By 18?4 Hunt had had published The Golden Gate
and Other Stories (18?0) and An Initiatory Inquiry into the Philosophy of Beauty
(1871). Later he would have published in the Cambridge School and College Text
Book series A Concise History of Mu.sic from the Commeneement of the Christian
Era to the Present fime (a book which went through many editions and various
revisions). A collection of his sermons was published in 1884. His scholarship in
music was recognised in his appointment as a teacher of musical history at the
University of London from 1900 until 1907. Hunt was also to found and be first
warden of Kilburn Grammar School.b The esteem in which Cassell's Board held
Hunt is amply demonstrated by his long tenure of the editorships of fite Quiver
(1865-1905) and Cassellb Family Magazine (18?4-1896) and his founding editorship
of Little Folks (1871-18?5).
A
Hunt encouraged his readers to practical charitable Christianity.
retrospective glance at his editorship of fite Quiver shows that he devoted one
page to the charity drives he organised, a Quiver tradition begun by John Cassell,
and two paragraphs to the literary side of the magazine. An initiative of John
Cassell's renewed by Hunt in Cassells Family Magazine was the offering of small
prizes of money and publication in literary competitions for his readers. (.lohn
Cassell earns a place in the history of Victorian publishing for the working class
for having actually published the writing of his working-class readers as part of
the prize in such competitions. The price of Cassells Family Magazine - it peaked
at ?d. - would have put it beyond the reach of many working-class families however.)
One feature of Huntts editorship of Cassellb Family Magazine which perhaps surprises
is his running of various pieces on employment for women. The very first number
of Cassells Family lVlagazine he edited contains a piece titled rWomen Who Work:
The Hospital Nurse'; a series of articles in 1890 usually titledtEmployments for
Gentlewoment offered sound praetical advice on careers in medicine, dental surgery,
chiropody, piano tuning (a career reportedly hampered by few openings), shorthand
reporting, typing, dressmaking, massage and cooking. Huntrs low-key promotion
of women in the workforce might reflect a social awareness that many
lower-middle-class women, a large part of his readership, were eompelled to earn
a living or, and probably also, his endorsement of the Protestant work ethic. A
graphically illustrated article in the first number he edited, 'Drawn from the Life
I - The Unemployedr,clearly depicts the slide of an idle person into depravity and
slovenliness. Writing in 1958 Nowell-Smith asserts that the only readable fiction
published during Hunt's editorship is that written by writers for boys like George
Manville Fenn (p. 121). Certainly few of the individual authors publishedin Cassell's
Family Magazine would repay detailed research and criticism in their own right.
The magazinersmost regular serialists were John Berwick Harwood, Frank Barrett,
Florence Warden and Arabella Hopkinson. Nowadays the best-known authors to
have had stories published in Cassells Family Magazine are Arthur Conan Doyle,
Grant Allen, and, in Australia, Ada Cambridge: their contributions, though, were
not extensive. Victorian scholars might find the fiction published in Cassell's Family
Magazine of value in investigating the ideologies of the family and the courtship
romance genre' the conventions and formulae of popular moral fiction,
lower-middle-classand working-classreading, and semi-religious publishing.
The Board of Cassells initially underestimated the potential impact of the
spectacular successesof their new rivals in the 1890s, The Strand Magazine, Windsor
Magazine and Pearsonrs Magazine. In November 1894 they were forced to reduce
the price of Cassell's Family Magazine from ?d. to 6d., the price of The Strand
Magazine. The move did not recapture Cassells Family Magazinets lost market
share; Sir Georg Newnes, the founder of The Strand Magazine, identified a major
problem of Cassell's Family Magazine in describing it as inadequate to the changed
spirit of the times (Nowell-Smith, p. 131). By 1896 the fortunes of Cassells Family
Magazine were perceived to be desperate enough for the Board of Cassellts to take
the editorship from Bonavia Hunt and offer it to lt{ax Pemberton, who had
successfully revamped the boystmagazine Chums for Cassell's in 1892 and who
was a popular writer of fiction for boys, his first success having been The lron Pirate
(1894). The son of a rice broker, Pemberton had been educated at Merchant Taylors'
School and Caius College, Cambridge. His tentative plans for a career at the bar
had been abandoned for casual journalism at the instigation of his close personal
friend, Alfred Harmsworth, later Viscount Northcliffe. The pair shared rooms
early in their journalism careers and indeed the first copy of Harmsworth's Answers
was sold to Pemberton, the paperrs 'Mr Answers'. Pemberton's familiarity with
the new journalism ushered in by Harmsworth must have impressed the Cassell's
Board when they deliberated about offers of editorships to him. Northcliffe would
later allow his influence to be used to help Pemberton establish the London School
of JournaliSm in 1920 - this was apparently Britainrs first professional school for
journalists.b
As the story surrounding Cassells Magaziners publication of Kim indicates,
Pemberton's editorial initiatives were hampered by the conservatism of Cassell's
Board. The editorial announcement in December 1895 of changes in the format
of Cassellrs Family Magazine, thenceforth to be known as Cassells Magazine, is
wary of giving offence. It stresses that the 'guiding traditions' of the magazine's
history - its niche in hearth and home, its moral conservatism and its standard
of illustration - would be insulated from new fashions and announces an expansion
from 80 to 112 pages. It also, however, points to efforts to achieve a wider general
appeal; Pemberton strove to achieve that appeal principally through provision
of adventure, crime, historical and mystery romances. When the morality of a
story might alarm readers not diverted by the gusto of the telling, illustration (and
possibly titles) could be used to allay their fears. The illustrated heading to Hornung's
In the Chains of Crime (reproduced on p. ii) is a case in point. pemberton's own
literary ambitions are sufficiently indicated by H.W. Massingham'sreview which
successfully launched The lron Pirate: it hailed Pemberton as 'The Lost Liar Foundr,
an allusion to Oscar Wilde's denunciation of realism and elegiac celebration of
'the wit to exaggerater, 'the genius
fo romance' and the limitations of probability
in his essay ?The Decay of Lying." During his editorship of Cassell's Magazine,
which lasted until the death in 1905 of Cassell'sgeneral manager Sir Wemyss Reid,
an ally and mentor, Pemberton was to write nineteen novels and many short stories.
The five novels serialised in Cnssells Magazine are distinguished by liveliness and
some novelty in handling the formulae of adventure romance rather than by wit'
genius and courage and he can manage a sprightly style. David Williamson, who
worked in the Ca.ssells Magazine office during Pembertonts editorship wrote of
him that: 'He came into the office like a breeze from the Atlantic, and his
light-hearted vivacity brightened the whole day.'8 Bret Harte and Stephen Crane,
both past their literary prime; William Le Queux, the writer of detective and spy
romances; Halliwell Sutcliffe, writer of popular historical romances; Gertrude
Atherton; empire writers Guy Boothby and Louis Becke; and L.T. Meade and Robert
Eustace, the successful mystery writing partnership, were introduced to Cassells
Magazine readers during Pemberton's editorship.
Despite the momentum gained under Pemberton's editorship the magazine
had not fared as well against its rivals as the Board hoped. The cheaper London
Magazine was a new threat. David Williamson, an experienced journalist, popular
biographer, writer of tracts for the Religious Tract Society, and Bonavia Hunt's
successor as editor of fire Quiver, was offered the editorship of Cassells Magazine
after Pemberton's resignation; Williamson, though, was to step down from the
position in 1906. His reminiscences of his editorship record frustration at dealing
with William Le Queux over episodes of The Spider's Eye: Williamson had had to
'threaten to go to press without them unless he [Le QueuxJsent the matter at once.
A messenger would be requisitioned to fetch the story from Le Queux when he
was staying at the Savoy Hotel, and in the }ounge the lad would wait while the
author scribbled the last few pages'(Williamson,p. 1?8). Under this sort of pressure
Le Queux could produce 4,000 words in four hours but the state of the manuscripts
distressed Williamson - errors of spelling and grammar, confusions between the
names of characters and Le Queux's alteration of the name of the hero half-way
through the story called for meticulous last-minute editing.
In casting about for another new editor Cassell's Board settled on James Walter
Smith, an American journalist and American editor of The Strand Magazine. The
editorial flair which contributed to the success of fire Strand Magazine in the United
States did not extend to Smithts conduct of Cassells Magazine: its sales slipped
steadily to 34,000 copies at a time when the proprietor of The London Magazine
worried about a circulation of 300,000 and The Strand Magazine consistently sold
in excess of 500,000 copies. One reason for falling sales was undoubtedly staleness
- Max Pemberton was still Cassellb Magaziners leading serialist. In 1912 Cassell's
Board invited one of the company's most successful editors, Walter Newman Flower,
to produce a dummy for a revamped Cassellb Magazine. Walter Smith resigned
the editorship and Newman Flower became editor of Cassells Magazine of Fiction,
each issue of which promised 260 pages comprising a 30,000 word novel' about
20 stories, four or five illustrated articles and a fully illustrated fashion section.
A lower price of 5d. was announced. The same successwhich had attended Flowerrs
editorship of The Storlrteller was to attend his conduct of Cassell's Magazine of
Fiction. Later, still under the directorship of Newman Flower, Casselltssold Ca,sselIs
Magazine of Fiction, along with its other magazine interests, in 1926.
In the Edwardian period Cassells Magazine editors certainly encouraged the
l r r l r l r . , l l ) ( ) [ ) u l l r tp' e r i o d i c a l f i c t i o n - d i r e c t n a r r a t i v e , s u s p e n s ea n d r e l a t i v e l y
urr((,rnplrcirtt:<icllaracters. Cassells Magazinerscomparative standing at this time
rrrrrylxr gauged by the range of publications in which the renowned literary agent
.J.l]. Pinker placed the second-rate stories collected in Joseph Conradrs A Set of
Six and the inferior stories Henry Lawson wrote in London. The former appeared
in Cassell's Magazine, Pall Mall Magazine, the Daily Chronicle and Harper's
Magazine; the latter in Black and White, Outlook, Onlooker, Cassellts Magazine,
Chambersts Journal and a couple of unidentified others. Cassell's Magazine was
of middling quality, avoiding the merely sensational and willing to publish stories
enlivened by small doses of subtlety, for example, Vance Palmerrs 'The Littlc
Typewriter Girl' which plays on the sentimentality of its characters and readers
to expose the false basis of sentimentality. Edwardian scholars would be able to
use the fiction published in Cassell's Magazine to extend or correct bibliographies
of individual authors, for Cassellts Magazine attracted writers better known today
than those published in Cassells Family Magazine; the fiction could also be used
to trace the development of adventure, detective, spy and mystery romance and
the openings for empire writers in London, which were in fact quite fair, contrary
to establishedscholarly opinion in Australia at least.
The fiction in Cassell's Family Magazine and Cassell's Magazine appeared
alongside articles of general interest. The December 18?4 number contained, for
instance, in addition to those on nursing and the unemployed, pieces on such topics
as dress, cooking, sport in Albania, life on an emigrant ship, Christmas decorations,
and the postman. In a regular tThe Gatherer?sectionparagraphson popular scientific,
technological and technical topics were published, ?The Gatherer' for December
1874 containing, for instance, paragraphson Fog Signals and Soundsat Sea, Typhoid
Fever and Disinfectants, Sea-Sicknessand its Cure and Antipathies to Flowers.
The information conveyed in 'The Gatherer'generally had some practical applications.
Gradually some paragraphs of literary news began to appear there. By December
1900 the articles of general interest were less immediately domestic -tChristmas
in Old London?,'The Prince of Wales' Horsest,'Ice Boats and Ice Boating', tChristmas
at the Front: A Reminiscence of Christmas at Modder River', rThe Inky Cloak:
Legislators and Their Garmentst and 'Old Druryr - and tThe Gathererr had been
rechristened rSomethingNew.t Controversy was scrupulouslyavoided.
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'1"
Cassells Family Magazine, later Csssells Magazine, never achieved great
popular success, but until the 1890s the proprietory company might have been
satisfied that the magazine was performing satisfactorily in meeting the perceived
rnoral and social needs of its readers. Even moralising, cosy domesticity and social
complacency must continue to pay its way though, and in the 1890s and 1900s when
Cassellts realised that tough, new competition made a change of style mandatory,
it acted slowly and overcautiously, clinging to its rapidly outdatingrguiding
traditions', and always content to react rather than lead in the marketplace.
FOOTNOTES
1.
In 1892 George Newnes Ltd., publisher of fite Strand Magazine, declared
a dividend of 10o/oon assets of 5400,000and Cassell and Co. \0o/oon assets
of I500,000; in 1905 George NewnesLtd. was able to declare a dividend
of 107o on assets of €f ,000,000 while Cassells declared no dividend at
all. By 1905 editors of Cassell'scheaper and less prestigious publications
were expected to commission struggling authors to write stories around
old picture-blocks dating from 1870 and stored in an appropriately
nicknamed clich'e department. By 1912 one leading agent would not
offer book manuscripts to Cassell's because 'the terms offered by Cassell's
were so low, and even at that the haggling so acrimonious, that he could
not be bothered with such a firm'. Simon Nowell-Smith, The House of
Cassell 1848-1958 (London: Cassell & Co. Ltd, 1958), p. 177, p. 204;
Newman Flower, Just As It Happened(London: Cassell, 1950), pp.27-28.
,
'Report
of the Select Committee on
Parliamentary Papers, 1851, XVII.I, p. 338.
Newspaper Stamps', English
John Cassell in his Prospectus to a New Series of fite Quiver in 1864
'Social, Intellectual and Religious Progressr, Appendix I,
titled
N o w e l l - S m i t h ,p . 2 5 0 .
4.
This prescription formed the criteria for entry in a literary competition
conducted by Cassell in Cassellb Illttstrated Family Paper. Quoted by
Nowell-Smith, p. 42.
5.
Sources of biographical information on Bonavia Hunt are Nowell-Smith,
pp. 90-91; Huntts obituary in The fimes Educational Supplement, 4 Oct.
1917, p. 382; and the British Museum Catalogue.
6.
Sources of biographical information on Max Pemberton are Reginald
Pound and Geoffrey Harmsworth, Northcliffe (London: Cassell, 1959),
passim; Max Pemberton, Sixty Years Ago and After (London: Heinemann,
f 936); and the British Museum Catalogue.
7.
Oscar Wilde,'The Decay of Lying'in his Intentions (1891); rpt. in Poems
and Essays: Oscar Wilde, ed. Kingsley Amis (London & Glasgow: Collins,
1 9 5 6 ) ,p . 2 5 3 .
8.
David Williamson, Before I Forget: A Busy Lifeb Harvest of Memories
and Stories (London: SampsonLow, Marston & Co. Ltd, 1932),p. 176.
AUTHOR INDEX
The volume numbers in this index refer to the third British
series.
An American edition which had the same contents as the British
edition
first
appeared in December 1883 with the conmencement of volume 10.
Volume l0 of the third British
series was designated volume 1 in
what. is recognised as a fourth series in the United States.
The
Chronological
Index gives both British
and American edition
volume
numbers.
Adair, E. 'Miss Chance.' 13 (1886/87):
400-405.
'Cancelled:
Adcock, AIrthur]
A Christmas Story. I
49
St. John.
(1909/10):
L36'I44.
lMaster Loggattrs
Agnus, Orme. IPseudonymof John C. Higginbotham].
Waterloo.'
42 (1906):
649-656.
'The Wound of the Marquis. '
47 ( 1908/9) :
3I2-3L6.
'Carter's Incandescent Cats. t
Alden, WIi11iam] LIivingston].
2l
(1894/95) z 450'454.
'The Fatal Ears.'
22 (1895/96):
225-229.
'Louise.'
2L (1894/95): 67I-674.
'A Modern Vampire.r
2I (1894/95):
304-307.
'The Purple Death.'
2L (1894/95):
112-119.
Aldington, May. 'A Sea Breeze.'
43 (L906/l):
156'757.
Aldrich,
Annie C.C.
See Childar, Cat.herine.
'
T
h
e
A1len, Grant.
Camisard's Bride.'
23 (1896/97)z 183-189.
'Cup'n TomWoolley.'
2 (1895/96)z 737-74L.
'Ceccars Choice. ? 2L (L894/95) :
3 8 7- 3 9 I .
'Fogo Skerries. I
2I (1894/95) t
59I-596.
'Joe's Rascaliry.t
2L (L894/95)z 203-205.
'A Lady of Florence.r
483-49L.
23 (L896/97)z
'l-'eon and L'eonie. I
2 L ( 1 8 9 4 / 9 5) ,
81-85.
t
C
r
o
o
k
e
d
Anderton, John.
Cronies.f
18 (L891/92):
530-536.
'A Friend of the Jintons.r
17 (1890/91):
529-533.
ArmitE,
Mary L.
Hr Trench of Brasenose:
fire Romance of a Long Vacation.
15 (1888/89):
35-44, 65-73, I7O-L79, 193-203.
Ashdovrn, Clifford.
[Pseudonym of Richard Austin Freeman - see also.]
The Adventurea of Rmey
Pringle.
34 (1902):
54-62, 185-194,
27L-279, 380-389, 503-512, 590-598.
Prom a Surgeon's Diary.
139-146, 253'261,
39 (1904/5)t
321-329, 442-450, 563-57L, 683-690.
fire Further
Adventures
36 (1903):
of Rorrney Pringle.
73-80, L90-L97, 295-303, 390-397, 508-516, 623-63t.
'The Jilting
Ashford,
A.E.
A Story Exhibiting
of Miss Attridge:
the Value of Artfulness Aided by Irnagination.r
48 (1909):
598-603.
'The
393-398.
Questing of Mr McMunn.' 49 (1909/f0):
lThe Battle Won.' 50 (1910):
Askew, Alice & Claude.
389-398.
'The Big House.' 48 (1909): 51-57.
'Elizabeth's
'
A Novelette.
Lover:
46 ( 1908):
318-333.
'Tides of Fortune. | 44 (1907 z 299-329.
)
'Lady Anne and the Virginian.'
Atherton,
Gertrude.
2 7 ( 1 8 e 8 / e e) :
566-578.
rone Adventure
Too Many: A story of San Francisco.,
23
(1896/97) |
I2s-r36.
'The
Tapesrry of a Night.r
24 (lg9: )z 653_66I.
'The
Yankee and rhe Don.'
27 (rg9g/99):
2g2-292.
'Barbarats
Avenel1, A.M.
Secrer.r
gl4-91g.
20 (1g93/94):
'
E
n
n
u
i
Axtens, Fay.
House.'
12 (fgg5/g6):
726_130.
'The Lighr
Ayres, Ruby M[ildred].
of orher Days.'
50 (1910): 497-503.
'Mala pasqua:
Bagot, Richard.
A Tale of the Romagna.' 43 (L906/7)l
307-313.
'The
Bailey, H.C.
A m e n d m e n to f M . d e C h i r a c . ,
4g (1909):
509-514.
'una
Bainbrigge, E.M.
and rhe Lion.'
10 (1gg3/g4):
175-17g.
rJosiah paxley's
Baker, O1af.
Wooing.' 5O (1910):
517_519.
'When
Bal1iol, M.A.
I p s e u d o n y m ?] .
in Doubr. , 42 ( 1906):
333_335.
'
A
n
Banks, Elizabeth L.
Anglo-American Courtship.r
46 (190g):
209-304.
Signed Elizabeth Banks.
'The Antecedents
of Captain Jinks.'
46 (190g):
26_32.
Signed Elizabeth Banks.
tMy
Trials as a Housekeeper.r Zl (Igg4/g5),
903_906.
'One
of Life's
Mockeries. '
g 4 5 _ g 4 7.
2L (1g94/95) :
'The
Word of praise.r
47 (190g/9):
2L8_22I.
Banks, Hrs G. Linnaeus Ii.e.
Isabellal.
Ttre ]lanchester l{an.
I (1g74/
75): 65'76, L2g-r40, rg3-204, 257-268, 32r-331,
385-396,
449-460, 573-525, 577_59L, 64t-655, 705_720.
'old
Elspa.'
5 (L87g/79):
LB-22.
[Banks, George Nugent].
By the Author of 'A Day of My Life at Eton,l
'Across
'
'A
France in a Caravan.
Black Shelp. , 2I (1g94/95):
1 3 1 - 1 3 8.
'Stand
Barclay, Armiger.
Seven-twenty-eight.r
50 (1910) z
20I_207.
,An Aldershot
Barnham, C.N.
Mystery.'
ZO (:rAgS/gq),
323_326.
rThe
Mysrerious painting.r
19 (Lgg2/93),
752-75g.
'shipprs
Loor.'
1g (1g91/92): 74g-752.
'Scars.,
Baring-Gou1d, SIabine].
15 (1ggg/g9):
502,507.
'The
Barnard, Edith.
Bonds of Freedom: A story of a hlifers Awakenirg.,
49 (1909/10): 381-387.
'Ladybird. '
4 5 ( 1 9 0 7/ i l :
565-570.
'A Mouth
Barr, Matthias.
Harmonica.'
13 (1gg6/g7):
54-5g.
'
T
h
e
Barr, Robert.
Ambassador's pigeons.r
27 (Ig9g/99):
63-70.
'The Bombshell.,
45 egoj/g>t
111_117.
'The
p
o
s
i
r
a
n
o
.
'
Curse of
33 (IgOl/2),
106_I14.
'A Flurrer
of !ilhear.'
30 (1900) :
4l-47.
'The
chosr wirh rhe Club Foor.'
4l (1905/6):
209-223.
' The
Great Mogul. ,
3 0 ( 1 9 0 0) :
2
35-Z4l .
'How Finley
McGillis Held rhe pier.r
27 (lg98/99):
522-527.
tHow
rhe King Drank ro Hirnself .'
39 (1904/il:
74_gO.
'A Lirnping
(
1
9
0
0
)
Revenge. ,
30
r
4g9-495.
'The
Long-distance Telephone.'
30 (1900):
34g-353.
'The
Mill on rhe Kop.'
31 (1900/1):
98-105.
'On
rhe House-top.'
30 (1900) : L46_L52
"'Temporary Insanity.",
30 (1900):
596_603.
Barrett,
Frank.
By llisadventure.
14 (1gg7/gg):
35_44, 9g-10g,
L62-L7L, 193-200, 297-306, 354-363.
'Faithless
Margaret, a christmas story.'
7 (1gg0/g1):
52-56.
Hrrlosers Eelprmate. 12 (1885/86): 4t8-427, 483-492, 547
6 0 9 - 6 1 8, 6 7 4 - 6 8 3 , 7 3 6 - 7 4 4 .
E i d d e n G o l d . 6 ( 1 s 7 9 l 8 0 ) : 3 4 ' 4 2 , 9 4 - 1 0 3 , 1 5 7 - 1 6 5 ,2 t 7 - 2
285-293, 349-356.
'How
Balmat Ascended Mont B l a n c . '
Jacques
5 ( 1 8 7 8 / 7 9 z)
72 6 - t 3 0 .
Eis Faults,
John Ford:
and llhat Came of Them. 10 (1883/84):
4t8-426, 482-49r, 546-555, 610-619, 674-682, 738-747.
llajor Godfroy's Discovery.
7 (1880/81):
416-425, 481-489,
545-553, 609-6L7, 673-682, 737-745.
A tlissing
lJitness:
Frm the Narrative
of Dorothy Eeatherly.
2 2 ( L 8 9 5 / 9 6 ) : 2 9 - 3 9 , 1 4 0 - 1 5 0 , 2 3 7- 2 4 7 , 3 2 7 ' 3 3 7 , 4 0 3 - 4 1 2 ,
495-503.
'A Song without Words.'
3 (L876/77)z 468-472.
Under a Strange Hask.
15 (1888/89): 1-9, 100-107, 129'136,
2 2 7 - 2 3 5 , 2 8 9 - 2 9 7, 3 2 I - 3 2 9 .
'The Little
Barrie, JIames] MIatthew].
Nursery Governess.' 2I (1894/
95): 60-63.
'The Sultan's Adherent. '
Barrow-North, H.
28 ( 1899): 549-552.
'Three Degrees of Love.'
29 (1899/1900): 345-352.
tA t'Free Lancett: The Adventure of the Missing Prince.t
Bateman, May.
38 (1904): 69'76.
'An Idyll of the Slums.'
26 (1898) z 409-4L6.
'Mirandars Engagement.' 39 (L904/5), 31f-313.
'The other side. '
2 8 ( 1 8 9 9) : 3 0 9 - 3 1 2 .
'A Recessional. '
31 ( 1900/1): 523-530.
'A Retrieval.'
33 (l9OL/2) z 205-209.
'The Castle.r
Baumer, Lewis.
31 (fgOO/f) r 298-305.
'The Cutting Off of the
Becke, Louis.
24 (1897):
Queen Gharlotte.r
L99-203.
'In the Kingrs
SomeEpisodes in the Life of a
Service:
Beach Comber.r 24 (L897):436'44I.
'The Slavers.'
24 (L891) z 486-492.
rFirst and Last:
A Work-girl's
Story.'
31
Beerbohm, Constance.
(1901): 2O3-208.
37
"'Only a Hat!'r (Freely Translated from the French).'
( L 9 0 3/ 4 ) : 1 3 4 - 1 3 6.
Beeston, L.J. 'After Seven Years.'
40 (1905): 414-420.
'After the Tunnel.'
33 (1901/2): 353-356.
'The Ascension Tower.'
39 (1904/5): 579-585.
'The AwakenedFury.r
28 (1899): 538-542.
'Awakening.'
375-378.
39 (L904/5) :
'The Bare Chance.'
34 Q9O2)z 551-556.
'The Bell of St. Gildas.r 34 (L902)z 94-100.
'The Burden.'
29 (L899/ 1900) z 620-623.
rThe captain's Lion. '
31 ( 1900/1): 555-558.
'The changed Hour.r
37 (L903/4): 423-43L.
' T h e C o l o n e l ' s c h r i s t m a s D a w n .|
2 7 ( 1 8 9 8 / 9 9) : I 4 2 - 1 4 6 .
'A DeadMan's Bride.'
34 (19O2):311-315.
'The Dead Sentry.r
45 (1907/8): 447-454.
rA Decided Change.' 36 (1903): 98-102.
'Dr. Tredgold's Experiment.'
39 (1904/5)z 82-87.
'A Duel
36 (f903): 427'435.
of Hearts.'
10
'The End of the Gamble.'
42(1906)z 244-253.
'Forestalled.'
38 (1904): 586-590.
' A G a m eo f C h e s s . ' 4 L ( 1 9 0 5 / 6 ) : 1 8 4 - 1 8 9 .
'The Haunted Men.'
29 (1899/ 1900): I47-I52.
'The Hussar's Revenge.' 37 Q903/4): 553-560.
An Instrunent
of Vengeance. 30 (1900): 85-91, 193-200,
3L7-324, 379-385, 538-544, 637-645.
'An rnterest of Tears.'
33 (1901/2)z 85-91.
'The Jest of La Torche.'
4l (L905/6): 329-337.
'A Minister of Wrath.t
32 (1901): 324-329.
'The Missing Guest.'
4I (1905/6): 113-121.
'A Naked Sword.'
32 (1901): 648-652.
' Nathan Snode : Ivleanl,lan. r 33 (I90L / Z) : 694-699 .
I97 -200.
3 2 ( 1 9 0 1) :
"'One Touch of Nature. "r
'The Puma.' 38 (1904)z I74-L79.
'The
35 Q9A2/3)z 111-117.
Queer Case of Judson Trader.r
'A Star Fell.'
38 (1904): 390-396.
'Stolen Vengeance.'
34 (L902) 00t-00+.
'To the Cannonrs Mouth,'
28 (1899): 97-100.
'The vehement Flame.'
35 (L902/3)z 3I4-32I.
'Out of His Reckoning.'
47 (L908/9): 92-100.
Begbie, [Edward] Harold.
'She cambled a Stamp.' 44 (1907): 186-194.
'The Deluded Female.r 50 (19f0): 3-11.
Be11, "rIohn] JIoy].
'The Economisingof Erhel.'
4I (L905/6):27-33.
'The rdea.'
50 (1910): 219-228.
'The Match Makers. I 4I (1905/6): 36-43.
rMr Donald MacDonald.' 45 (L907/8)z 43-48.
'A
50 (1910)z 457-464.
Queer Mixture.r
I 49 ( f 909/10) :
'The Serious Illness
of l"1r Christopher.
78-86.
'The Spectacles. '
43 (1906/7) t 558-562.
See Howard' Keble.
Bel1, John Keble.
'The cub in Trouble.'
49 (1909/f0) z 343-347.
Bell, R.S. lJarren.
'Impressing a Cousin: A Domestic Comedy.' 48 (1909): 587-590.
'The Nineteenth Hat.'
229-233.
43 (L9O6/7)z
BenneEt, IEnoch] Arnold.
'Why the Clock Stopped.r
50 (1910) t 435-443.
'The widow of the Balcony.'
46 (1908) z 283'287.
'An Eye for an Eye: A Story for Men.'
48 (1909):
Benson Claude E.
3 L 7- 3 2 4 .
rPeril. '
43 (19O6/7) z 44L-450.
'The Lesson: A Study in Temptation. I
Benson, EIdward] FIrederic].
(
1
9
0
9
/
1
0
)
:
123-130.
49
'Vocation:
A Story of Misguided Enthusiasm.'
Benson, Rev. Robert Hugh.
48 (1909): 426-43I.
rThe HomewardWay: A Striking
Story of
Bensusan, S[arnuel] Llevy].
49 (1909/10) z 454-462.
Jewish Life.'
rVermutters
Trans. from Italian.
Benvenuto, Ferdinando & M.D. Byrne.
5
9
1
-595.
4
5
F
u
c
i
n
i
.
B
y
R
e
n
a
t
o
Q
9
O
7
/
8
>
:
Inheritance.r
'The Visit of the Prefect.t
By R.
Trans. from Italian.
Fucini . 46 ( 1908): 3-13.
'The Betrothal of King Croker:
A Story for Children.'
Best, Geo[rge] A.
33 (1901/2): ls1-156'
'
' t'Bitter Aloes":
34 (1902):
A C o m e d yo f V i l l a g e L i f e .
490-495.
11
'A Blind Critic.r
37 Q903/4): 468-472.
'The Counterfeit Cashier.'
33 (L90L/2) : 6L6-623.
'The
Duffer.t"
38 (1904): 203-207.
"Litrle
'McNab's Notion: A Story for Boys and
37 (I9M/a):
Others.r
3t2-377.
'Only in Fun.r 40 (1905): 306-312.
' A P o s t h u m o u sP u b l i c a t i o n . '
36 (1903)' 535-540.
' T h e R o m a n c eo f a
4L (1905/6): 607-6L4.
"Curtain Raiser."'
'l/as It a Drearn? The Story
of a Doubtful Nightmare.'
36
( 1903): 596'602.
Black, Hazelton.
See Graham, Scott.
'The Last. Man: A Scientistts
Black, Ladbroke.
Christmas Dream.'
49 (1909/10): I99'202.
'
A
n
Black, W.P.l1.
Imperfect Substitute.t
19 (L892/93): 911-917.
Blackburne, E. Owens. [Pseudonym of Elizabeth Owens Blackburne CaseyJ.
'Miss Honor's Patients.r
L (1874/75): 437-439.
'What Mrs Moran Said:
An Irish Story.'
I (1874/75): 22-26.
'Mr Churchill's Paper.'
Blake, C.J.
19 (1892/93):664-673.
'The Awakening: The Story
B1ake, Emily Calvin.
of an Engaged Girl.r
50 (1910): 93-99.
'Eileen's Lovers.' 50 (f910): 190-194.
Bleackley, Horace. 'A Clerical Error: A Cricket Story.'
32 (1901):
1 0 0 -1 0 s .
'In the Days of Top Hats: A Cricket Story.r
32 (f901):
4 3 7- 4 4 4 .
'The Magic Bat: A Cricket Story.r
32 (1901): 3I2-3L8.
'The Greater Clairn: A
Blind, Harold.
Story of To-day.r
48 (1909):
209-2L4.
'A Bath Road Idyl1.r
Blissett, Nellie K.
2I (L894/95)z 535-537.
Bloundelle-Burton John. 'Lovers Alarm.'
4 5 ( 1 9 0 7/ 8 ) : 2 9 8 - 3 0 4 .
Blyth, James. rAn Awkward Bunker.r
4l (1905/6): 345-355.
tA Case of Thought Transference.r
38 (1904) z 66L-664.
'A Christmas }lasque.'
41 (1905/6): 54-62.
'Dolores.'
38 (1904): 352-357.
'The Ghost and the Exciseman.' 35 (1902/3)t 150-157.
'How Billy Buttle Found His Memory.'
37 Q9O3/4)z 34L-345.
tHow the Plate Got Through: A Story of the Great Rebellion.r
39 (L904/5)z 551-556.
'The Irrevocable.'
37 (1903/4)z 455-462.
'Mine Hosr and rhe wirch.r
35 (L902/3)z 255-259.
'A Poet's Wife. '
36 ( 1903): 89-92.
rThe Revolt of Honesty.'
40 (1905): 186-190.
'The Submarine Smugglers.'
36 (1903): 608-616.
'The Three Blood Spots.'
38 (1904): 313-316.
'r'To Nelson": A Smuggler's Yarn Which Is Based on Truth.t
39 (1904/5): 9I'97.
'Balaam's Baby.'
Boggs, Winifred.
46 (1908): 144-151.
'Love or Pride?r
Boncoeur, Jean.
1 (L874/75): 298-300.
'Teresa.'
2 (1875/76)z 270-273.
'Davenant.t
Bone, S. Southal1.
L9 (1892/93): 483-493.
rThe Fortune of Duitsa and Jacob.r
Bonser, A[lfred]
n.
22 (1895/96):
62-65.
'The queer Passenger's Story.'
20 (L893/94): L43-L45.
'The Convict CaEcher.r
Boothby, Guy.
35 (tgOZ/Z), 395-403.
t2
rThe Lady of the Island.r
35 (1902/3)z L24-I32.
A l{aker of Nations.
28 (1899): 1-16, 115-130, 227-243,
339-353, 45t-467, 563-577.
Hy Indian Queen. 30 (1900): l-I7,
160-175, 260-276, 392-408,
5 0 1 - 5 1 5, 6 L 7 - 6 2 9 .
'The Mystery of Futuleima.'
27 (1898/99): 95-L02.
'Were She But
39 0904/5)z 104-115.
Queen.l
'The Position
Bottome, Phyllis.
47 (1908/9): 101-109.
of Mrs Pegg.'
'The Something
in It.r
45 (L907/8): 662-668.
Boulger, Dora.
See Gift,
Theo.
Bowen, Marjorie.
IPseudonym of Gabrielle Margaret Vere Campbell].
'A Moral Lesson.'
44 (1907): 14-20.
43 (L906/7)z 335-341.
"rGreater Love Hath No Man."'
'My t-ady Played.'
46 (1908): 574-583.
'Colonel Peter Sanders'.
Bower, Marian.
462-469.
43 (1906/7)z
'Sir John Abbacyrs Elder
Son.'
45 (L907/8)z 676-687.
'Veronica's Verdict:
A Story of Love and Hate in a Swiss
Horel.t
49 (1909/10): 6L2-6L9.
'A Woman'sWord.r
46 (1908) z 494-504.
'A Literary
Bowser, Thekla.
Temptation:
A Story of a Girlrs Journalistic
Experiences.r
49 (1909/10): 500-504.
r
T
h
a
n
k
l
e
s
s
Boyd, Mary Stuart.
Parents.r
47 (1908/9): 439-444.
tFor His Son's Sake.'
Braddon, M[ary] fIlizaUeth].
4I (1905/6):
72-79 .
'Bracketed.'
Bradford, Miles.
Sumner Number 1888 (The Crown of
the Year) z 48-52.
'The Black Sheeprs Christmas.'
Brainerd, Eleanor Holt.
45 (1907/8):
t22-L27.
'The Little
W o r n a na n d t h e B u s y M a n , '
50 (1910); 298-302.
rBobbie
Bramah, Ernest.
43 (L9O6/7)z 575-585.
and Poetic Justice.'
'Christmas Alone:
Brewer, J.F.
15 (1888/89): 114-118.
A Phantasy.'
'Under the Moon.' 40 (1905): 511-513.
Bridges, TIhomas] CIharlesl.
rwilliam the
Brown, F. Walworth.
44 (1907): 662-669.
Goat.'
tOne Virginia
Brown, Kenneth.
Night.r
31 (1900/1): 709-712.
Browne, Edith E. 'Helenrs Secret: A Story for Women.' 48 (1909):
149-1ss.
'His Model wife.r
49 (1909/10): 40-49.
Browne, I"lonaltloxon. 'The Herr of Paradise Row.'
42 (1906): 298-306.
'The Great Unknown.'
Buckland, A.R. & Henry Charles Moore.
22 (1895/
96):
566-568
Buckland, E.S. Lang.
See Lang-Buckland, E.S.
'Mr Smith
Bullock, Shan F.
of Hampstead.r 45 (1907/8)r 365-372.
rPtaying the Game: A Cricket Story.'
48 (1909): 522-529.
'Sauce for the
Gander.'
47 (1908/9): 532-540.
'Madamoiselle Parchesi.r
Burgess, IFrank] Gelett.
30 (1900) z 457'463.
rFor the Sake of the Party.r
Burgess, Gilbert.
22 (L895/96)z 543-548.
r A C o r n u r o n p l a cL
Burgin, GIeorge] nIrownl.
eo v e r . ' 5 0 ( 1 9 1 0 ) : 5 0 4 - 5 1 0 .
'Ferguson, of England: A
45 (19O7/8)z
Canadian Story.r
240-250.
2O (L893194)z 776-779.
"'Fuzzles": The Story of a Puppy.I
'The cirl
and rhe Ring.'
43 (L906/7)z 239-246.
'The Half-breed.'
35 (L902/3)z 558-563.
'King o' rhe Gares.r
2L (1894/95): 426-431.
'The Man in the Swamp.' 32 (1901): 360-367.
13
TrMr Pilbeamrs
Love-story: A Foolish Episode Narrated by
Himself.r
12 (1885/86): 690-693.
rMrs Tuxter's
Troubles.'
ZO Q893/94): 590-596.
rThe Professor's
Experimenr. '
2I (L894/95) . 7Zg-733.
A Quaker Girl.
17 (L89O/9L)z 385-395, 487-493, 550-557,
5 7 7 - 5 9 7, 6 7 L - 6 7 9 , 7 3 9 - 7 4 5 .
'A Reckless
Experiment.'
39 (L904/5): 525-530.
'The Romance
of a Poor Young Woman.' 18 (L89I/92)z
307-3L2.
'sunflower
Siding.l
30 (1900): 65L-656.
'The Wooing
of Mary carsrairs.'
1g (LggI/92).92-97.
'Young Mr
Simpson.'
30 (f900): 302-308.
'concerning
Burrow, charles Kennett.
a Boy.'
30 (1900): 182-1g6.
'Julie
and the Impresario:
The Story of a Young Manrs Adventures
near Trouville.'
48 (1gOg): 394-403.
Burrowes, E. rDenis, a Diplomat.'
42 (1906): 609-611.
Burton, John B1oundel1e.
See Bloundelle-Burton,
John.
,Vermutters
Byrne, M.D. & Ferdinando Benvenuto. Trans. from rtalian.
Inheritance. '
By RenaEoFucini .
4 5 ( L 9 0 7/ 8 ) : 5 9 1 - 5 9 5 .
'A Visit of
Trans. from Italian.
the prefect.r
By R.
Fucini.
46 (1908): 3-13.
'
H
o
w
Cairns, Williarn.
an Old Tale CameTrue.'
L9 (I892/9lz
259-263.
'The Mysrery
of Garsrin House.'
f9 (L892/93): 52-56.
'Sir cuy's
Room.t 20 (1593/94)z 347-352.
cambridge, Ada. ily Guardian.
3 (L876/77)z 33-43, 96-r04, r60-16g,
222-23L, 299-296, 351-359, 4L6-422.
Campbell, Gabrielle Margaret Vere.
See Bowen, Marjorie.
'A Double pretender.t
Capes, Bernard.
42 (1906). L69-176.
'The Heroism
cardewe, Emily.
IPseudonym? see also Farmer, Lucyl.
of Herbert stamford (The chronicles
of cardeve lulanor).'
ls (1888/89): 659-663.
Carew, Maud. See King, Florence M.
casey' Elizabeth owens Blackburne.
See Blackburne, E. owens.
'The Great White Deeps.'
Castle, Egerton.
35 (1902/3):1-13.
'
T
h
e
Cecil, Edward.
Black Helmers.t
36 (1903): 60-65.
'The Flocourt Bridge. I
3 2 ( 1 9 0 1) z 4 2 - 4 6 .
Chambers, Robert WIi1liam] .
A Gay Gonspiracy.
29 (lB99ll900) : 2g-42,
2r0-226, 319-337, 394-409, 551-566, 630-645.
'The cod of BaEtles.r
24 (1897)z 25-30.
'The creen
Mouse.r 44 (L907): 451-463.
'The Colonel's
Chapman, E.
Courtship:
An Anglo-Indian Story.'
Zl
Q894 /9s) z 437 -445 .
'Cream Tarts.r
24 (L897): 2I4-2I8.
'The Phantom
Forger-me-nors.r
20 (L893/94). 104-110.
'The Rock
of Kazim. '
18 Q89L/92)z
269-276.
'That
Other Story.'
19 (L892/93):28-36.
tViviani's
Chair. '
2 8 ( 1 8 9 9 ) : L 9 8 - 2 0 7.
Cheeseman, Clara E. On a Lee Shore.
20 (L893/94).
243-253, 332-343,
4L5-426.
'Tommyand the Girl.'
Cheney, Lavon C.
44 (1907): L32-I36.
'The Awakening of Maggie
chichester,
Robert.
Taverner.r
49 (1909/10):
28L-285.
'Livia's
Childar, Catherine.
IPseudonymof Annie C.C. Aldrich].
Misrake.'
10 (1883/84) 73I-734.
tMr Bror.mts Day
among the Ruins in Rome.t
sununer Number
L4
1 8 S 4 ( S u m m e rD a Y s ) : 3 1 - 3 6 .
'A l*{odern Pygmalion. '
10 ( 1883/84 ) : 690'693 .
'A Timely Rescue.'
10 (1883/84): 564'567.
'Sainr Luke's summer.' 46 (1908): 447-46I.
cholmondeley, Mary.
'Elsie Croft: A Love Story.'
2 (I875/76): 363-367.
Clarke, H. Savile.
tA Short Wooing.'
3 (1876/77): 592-594.
Claxton, Elizabeth.
'Love's Triumph.'
43 (L906/7): 714-719.
Julian & Mary.
Clifford,
'
L
u
c
k
22 (L895/96)t 255'263for Him.'
Hrs W.K.
Clifford,
'What the Angel Recorded.' 49 (1909/10):
Clouston, JIoseph] Storer.
33L-342.
'Awr Tom.'
2l (L894/95): 243-25I.
cobban, J. Maclaren.
'Without Irnpediment.'
45 (1907/8): 264'265.
Coffin, Helen Lockwood.
46 (1908): 243-256.
Conrad, Joseph.
"'I1 Conde.t"
'My Oriental Partner.'
45 (L907/S): 227-232.
Cook, F.B.
'The Right Prescription.'
45 (1907/8): 268-270.
Cook, R. Haldane.
'The Greatest Love.r
25 (IB97/98)z 268-270Cooper, Edward H.
'Katharine, Mr Kennard, and the Cobra.'
36 (1903): 524'529.
'Queen Wyemarke: A Story of the Sea-fairies.
For Children.'
27 (1898/99): 488-492.
rThe Solitary Love Story of Mr John Leslie.'
36 (1903):
139-142.
'A Stolen Island.'
34 (1902): 25'30'when the Sea-fairies
27 (1898/
Play: A Story for children.'
265-268.
99):
'Wyemarkeamong the Leaves.r
700-704.
33 (I9Ol/2)t
'Wyemarkeand the Child in White: A Story for Little
Ones.'
37 Q903/4) z L52-r57 .
'I,/yemarke and the Forest Fairies
(l Story for Children). t
31 (1900/1): L52-I57. Unsigned.
'l,Iyemarke and Ehe Mountain-fairies
(a Story for Children).'
3 0 ( 1 9 0 0 )z 2 L 6 - 2 2 I .
'Wyemarkeand the Mountain-fairies'
BaI1.'
30 (1900):
329-333.
' W y e m a r k ea n d t h e S e a F a i r i e s . r
25 (fagZl98):654-659.
'Wyemarke's Christmas Fairies:
A Story for Children.t
3s (1902/3)z 139-145.
'The Adoption.'
Trans. from French by D. I'toore.
Copp6e, Frangois.
26 (1898): 358-361.
'Gotty at Ostend.r 46 (1908)t 37-45.
Copping, Arthur E.
'cotty's Neighbours.'
4 7 ( 1 9 0 8 / 9 ) : 2 2 5 - 2 2 7 , 3 3 6 - 3 3 8' 4 3 2 ' 4 3 4 .
'The Hardy Huntsman.'
49 (1909/10) z 257-263.
C o w h a m ,H i l d a .
Leaves frm
the Notebook of John Carruthers,
Cox, Sir Edmund C., bart.
'The Priest and
Iodian Policeman ('the Fate of Abdullar'
'The Rajapur Caser' 'The Sin of Witchcraftr'
the Parchmentrt
'The Dutch Engineerr'
'The Stolen Despatchr,Romeo
and Juliet, |
'Tantia lulaharajahr' 'The Horns of a Dilemrnar' 'The wheels
37 (1903l4): 185-191,
of the Gods,' 'The Last story').
313-322, 437-442, 568-574, 652-660; 38 (1904): 188-197,
423'432, 494-502; 39 (L904/5)z 219'228, 359-366; 40 (1905):
529-537 .
'The Battle of Forty Fort:
A Tale of lJyoming Valley.'
Crane, Stephen.
(
1
9
0
0/1): s9l-s94.
31
'rr9lr Bennet" and the Indians:
A Tale of hlyorning Valley.'
3l (1900/1): 108-111.
I5
-
'A Lovable Anonaly.'
Creswicke, Louis.
30 (1900): 52-57.
'The Strange Case of Lieutenant ltacgregor:
An Indian Tale.'
28 (1899): 582-590.
45 (1907/8)z 522-53I.
Cross, C. Duncan. 'A Desert }leeting.t
'siddy's Advice. '
Crow, Louisa.
10 ( 1883/84) : 314-375.
Cuthe1l, Edith E. 'A Cast Shoe.' 2L (L894/95)z 829-835.
'In a Fog.'
20 (1893/94): 193-195.
Lady Lorrimer's
542-553, 577-589,
Scheme. 18 (L89L/92):
669-679, 705-716.
'The Yacht in the Bay: A Seaside Story.'
18 (1891/92):
369-375 .
' G r a c e ' s I d e a l . ' 4 5 ( 1 9 0 7 8 ) : 2 5 7- 2 5 8 .
Dark, Richard .
/
'Just Too Late.'
43 (1906/7):675-680.
' I u t yF r i e n d B o b : A S t o r y . I 4 5 ( L 9 0 7
/8) z 58-61.
'The l"lan in Blue . '
Davey, Richard.
32 ( 1901) : 153-156.
'A Weird Witness.'
34 (1902): 88-92.
L2 (1885/86):
Davidson, Lillias
Campbel1. 'Above the Mountain ltist.t
87-90.
rAnid the Ocean Surges.'
S u m m e rN u r n b e r 1 8 8 5 ( n r i g h t D a y s ) : 2 7 - 2 9 .
'Broken Off.'
S u m m e rN u m b e r f 8 8 4 ( S u m m e r D a y s ) : 1 1 - 1 4 .
lCourt Beaucourt's Treasure.'
10 (1883/84): 49-5L, 112-115.
10 (1883/84): 147-f50.
"'Faint Heart Nerer Won Fair Lady."'
'Itis Life one Holiday.r
f0 (1883/84): 668-670.
'One Sprig of Edelweiss.'
S u m m e rN u m b e r 1 8 8 3 ( P a l r n y D a y s ) : 9 ' L 7 .
'out of Pity. I
10 ( 1883/84) : 240'243.
'Poles Apart.'
11 (fBB4/85): 4O7-409.
'The Story of Suliman Shah.'
2 e ( 1 8 9 9/ 1 e 0 0) :
Davidson, Patrick.
360-364.
'The I'1i11 at Sudausques: A Romance without Sentiment.'
Deahl, Ida.
36 (r903): 2BL-287.
'The Prodigalrs Return.'
33 (l9Ol/2)z 589-594.
'The Three Knocks.'
A
ndrew. IPseudonymof Cecily Sidgwick].
Dean, Hrs
2r (L894/95)z 773-774.
De Cordova, Rudolph. 'Coward, V.C.'
42 (1906): 483-491.
'A Crown of Shadows: A Story of the Cuban War Founded on
Fact.'
33 (I9OI/2): 430'434.
'The Ghosr Knighr.r
49 (1909/10): 651-658.
Deeping, warwick.
De la Raniee, llarie Louise.
See Ouida.
Despard, C. The Artist
and the l,l,an. 5 (LB7B/79)z 32-39, 97-L03,
161-168, 224-23L, 290-297, 353-360.
'The Bride of a Day.'
SummerNumber 1883 (ralrny Days)z 29-34.
12
An Old Soldier's
Love-story.
L5rndon of Eigh Cliffe:
(1885/86): 35-44, 98-107, 162-172, 227-236, 290-299' 354-364.
'Maddelena's Lovers.'
10 (1883/84): 432-435.
'A Story about a Farnily Portrait.r
9 (1882/83)z 2I4-2L7.
'The Tables Turned.'
4 ( 1 8 7 7/ 7 8 ) z 5 9 1 - 5 9 5 .
7 (f880/81):
34-42, 96-104, 161-169,
The Trouble It Brought.
224-23L, 288-296, 353-360.
'Those Christmas Voices.I
11 (1884/85): 114-117.
I{hea the Tide Was Eigh.
4 (1877/78):
352-359, 417'424,
480-486, 544-550, 608-613, 671-681, 735-742.
47 (1908/9):
Diver, [Katherine Helen] Maud. 'At the l.Iell's Mouth.'
r 7 8 - 1 8 7.
tFeet of Clay.r
47 (1908/9): 358-367.
16
'What He Lost by It.'
3 QS76/77)t 303-307.
Doudney, Sarah.
'The Wheels of Dr Ginochio
Douglass, Ellsworth & Edwin Pallander.
'
(
3
8
1
3
8
9
'
1
8
9
9
)
:
28
Gvves.
I
'Bridie's
27 ( 1898/99): L94-203.
Star.
Dowie, U6nie Muriel.
,The Earl and Ehe Robins.'
26 (f898): 298-303.
'The Girl who Led the Army.r 32 (1901): 75'79'
'Ac a Distance.r
36 (f903): 651-656'
Downey, Edmund.
'Touch and Go: A l"lidshipman's Story.'
Doyle, A[rthurT Con"n, ]1.8.
(
1
8
8
5
/
8
6
)
:
214'278.
12
'By . Girlrs Hand.'
20 (L893/94):
Dudeney, Hrs Henry [i.e. Alice].
430-435.
'Catching a Professor: A Prize Story.'
Duffert, Bessie E.
932-944.
Ttre Edge of
a PreciPice:
A Svigs Adventure.
20 (1893/94):
20 (L893/94):
5 2 8 - 5 3 8 , 5 7 5 - 5 8 5, 6 5 9 ' 6 6 9 .
The Islaud of Six Shadovs. 19 (1892193): 248-255, 359-365'
4T2-4L8.
See Oxenham, John'
Dunkerley, lrli11iam Arthur.
'A Swift Conversation.'
45 (1907/8): 700-705.
Durand, if"ty.
'The cross Roads.'
44 (1907)z 245'256.
Eardley, Blanche.
,The one Between: A Story of an Eventful Holiday at ostend.'
48 (1909): 363'37I'
'A Problem for Santa ctaus:
The story of a Journalistts
Edgar, George.
49 (1909/10): 176-180'
Christmas Experiences.'
'The Sporting Ch.rr..,
44 (1907)'
A C o m e d yo f E r r o r s . '
587-593.
'Thar's for Remembrance: A Story.'
49 (1909/10): 644-647.
'The Deacon's Enterprise.'.
26 (1898): 652-656'
c
h
a
r
l
e
s
.
Edwardes,
,My Gold Mine in Wales.'
33 (1}OI/2)z 457-461.
'The Lost Gun sights: A Naval Yarn.'
43 Qgo'/t) '
Ellbar, George.
293-299.
'The Professor
of Languages: The Tale of a Naval sPy.'
45 (1907/8) z 4r7-425.
19 Q892/93)z 436-443'
H. 'The Hursts of Hazelwood.'
Elringron,
'London Undermined.'
1-6'
19 Q892/93):
Elsden, Vincent.
'The Black 8a11.'
35 (1902/3)z 213-223'
Eusrace, Roberr & L.T. Meade.
23 (1896/97)z
,The Blue Laboratory: A Story of St Petersburg.'
563-575 .
of John Bel1 - GhostThe Adventures
of uysteries:
A llaster
2
27-237, 388-399,
(
L
8
9
7
)
:
78-gI, 178.187,
24
explorer.
524'534, 619-631.
'The Secrer of Emuplain.'
27 (1898/99): 123'L32.
'A Srrange Insaniry.r
29 (1899/1900) z 282-293.
'e roolls Harvest.'
S u m r n e rN u m b e r 1 8 8 7 : 3 - 5 5 .
Eyre, Kate.
14 (1887/88): 385-394, 482'492'
F
a
u
i
l
y.
t
h
e
o
f
G
o
o
d
t
h
e
For
545-555, 577'585, 675'684, 705-7L5'
'A Glad Surprise.r
15 (1888/89): 52-57.
'In Answer ro an Adverrisement.'
13 (1386/87), 559-563.
'By the Author of "A step in the Dark,t't'A Fool's
signed
I
Harvestrtt erc.
'l,tr Bah pootrs ltanifestations.r
15 (1888/89): 301-307.
(
1
8
9
0
/
9
1
)
:
1-10, 108-118, 129-138'
1
7
E
x
p
e
r
i
e
n
c
e
.
A Sharp
227-237, 257'266'
356-364.
T7
A Step in the Dark. 13 (1886/87): 33-42, 65-74, 161-170,
2 2 6 - 2 3 7 ,2 5 7 - 2 6 7 , 3 5 2 - 3 6 3 .
To Be Given Up. 16 (1889/90): 32-44, 65-76, 159-171, 193-204,
2Bg-299,32L-332, 424-435, 449-460.
E y r e s , A . A . ' A n o l d M a i d ' s F r i e n d s . ' l l ( 1 8 8 4 / g 5 ) : 2 4 7 - 2 5 0 ,3 0 6 - 3 0 9 .
Farmer, Lucy. 'A Bag of Diamonds: A Leaf from the chronicles of
Cardewe
I'Ianor.'
L-4L.
rCaptain
Manor).'
'The
Case
i,:;;
tt
Summer Nurnber
1888
(The
Armstrong's
Probation
12 (1885/86):
531-535.
of
Mr.
Haymann
(The
(The
Crown
Chronicles
Chronicles
of
of
the
of
Cardewe
Cardewe
Year):
Manor).'
12 (1885/86): 598-603.
'The Chronicles
of Cardewe Manor.'
12 (1885/86): Ig-22.
rDoctor
Joliffe's
Queer patient (Frorn the chronicles of
CardeweManor).'
13 ( f886/87): 176-f80.
'Gideon Grasperts
Temptation (The Chronicles of Cardewe
Manor).'
12 (1885/86): 407-4LL.
How captain williamson won His Bride (The chronicles of
C a r d e w eM a n o r ) . ' 1 3 ( 1 8 8 6 / 8 7 ) : 6 9 0 - 6 9 4 .
'The Lucky Bar
of Dunwood Mere (The chronicles
of cardewe
Manor).'
14 (1887/88): 240-244.
'Miss Katiers
Last Engagement (From the Chronicles of Cardewe
Manor). '
13 ( 1886/87): 304-307.
'Miss Roxendalers
Suitors (the Chronicles of Cardewe Manor).'
L6 (1889/90) z 2IL-2L6.
'lulr Barnesrs
Dilemma (the chronicles of cardewe Manor).'
13 (1886/87): 435-438.
'l'1r Hemphill's
Love-story.
A page f ron the Chronicles
o f C a r d e w eM a n o r . '
L2 (1885/86): 147-151.
'A l.lystery
at Cardewe Manor (the Chronicles of Cardewe
I'Ianor).'
14 (1887/88): 370-373.
rThe Mystery
at Broadmead Court.
The Researches of Mary
Arnbush - II.'
20 0893/94)z
B6L-872.
'The I'lystery
of the Martyn-Henrys (the Chronicles of Cardewe
Manor). '
12 ( 1885/86): 304-308.
rThe Mystery
of the Monurnent Room (the chronicles
of Cardewe
M a n o r ) . ' S u u r m e rN u m b e r 1 8 8 9 ( T h e C r o w n o f t h e Y e a r ) : 6 0 - 6 4 .
'The Sacrifice
(the Chronicles of Cardewe
of Mary Somerville
Manor).r 16 (1839/90): 502-506.
'The
Search in the Sawdust.
The Researches of Mary Arnbush
- I.'
20 (L893/94): 646-656.
'Squire Ollifant's
Will (The Chronicles of Cardewe Manor).'
14 (1887/88): 2s-30.
tA Strange
Survival.r
S u n u n e rN u n b e r 1 8 8 6 : 4 6 - 5 2 .
'A Trial
by Fire (the Chronicles of Cardewe lulanor).'
13
(1886/87): s9s-599.
'What Miss
Trusdale Said (the Chronicles of Cardewe Manor).'
14 (1887/88):
604-608.
'The I^Iishing-we11
of Erdstone (The Chronicles of Cardewe
Manor).'
14 (1887/88): 690-694.
'Miss Patterson
Fenn, Clive IRobert].
and Another.'
49 (1909/10): 755-756.
'The
Shadow on rhe Wall.'
49 Q9O9/ 10): 407-40g.
F e n n , G e o I r g e ] M a n v i l l e . ' r ' A s C o m p a n i o nt o a L a d y . r t r 4 ( 1 8 7 7 / 7 8 ) : 4 1 0 - 4 1 3 .
'A Blight
in Summer.' 2 (1875/76)z 595-600.
18
'Check before Mate.'
3 (L876/77), 476.
rDoctor Brown's Prescription.'
9 (1882/83): 630-633.
Signed G. Manville Fenn.
'Edward Brown, Stoker.'
I (I874/75):634-638.
Signed
G. Manville Fenn.
'The First Cloud.t
3 (I876/77)t 237-240.
'The chosts That Walked.t
31 (1900/1): 88-96.
'How I Told Him My Story,'
3 (1876/77)z 2I-25.
'Karets Prince.r
3 (L876/77): 333-335.
'Laura's Doctor.'
3 (L876/77)z 532-535.
rMy Great Trouble.'
2 (L875/76)z 72I-725.
'My Hero.'
I (L874/75)z 553-556.
'Prudence Gray.'
4 ( L 8 7 7/ 7 8 ) : 2 l L - 2 L 4 .
'Ruth's Stepfather. '
1 (1874/75): 492-495.
f Two Cobwebs: An Old Man's Tale.'
3 Q876/77)z 748-752.
'Waiting for an Answer.' 2 (L875/76):401-405.
'Young I'lisrress' Ride.'
7 (1880/81): 533-535.
43 (1906/7):513-517.
Field, Bertram. "'Tangled Wires."'
'A Sudden Changeof Climate.r
pinch-Smiles, Frank.
42 (1906): I25-I27.
gLtzgerald,
See Gerard, Frances A.
Geraldine.
'The Clue of the Crimson Rose.'
42 (f906): 446-449.
Fletcher, J.S.
f For Those Were Stirring
Times. I
37 Q9O3/4) z 241-249.
'The Haunted Studio. l
42 (1906): 692-695.
'Only Just beneath the Surface.r
43 (1906/7)z 595-601.
'Poskitt
the Peacemaker.r 42 (L906)z 182-188.
'Like a Soldier.'
40 (1905): 198-200.
PLower t W I a l t e r ] N e w r n a n .
'The Lone Trail:
A Thrilling
Story of a Redskin's Courage
and Devotion.'
49 (1909/10): 603-610.
S i g n e d N e w m a nF l o w e r .
See Oliver, Owen.
Flynn, Sir Joshua Albert.
'An Autumn Romance.' Trans. from French by Dora
Folej?, Charles.
Moore. 28 (1899): 598-600.
'Brigaut. I Trans. from French by Dora Moore.
26 (1898): 629-63L.
'The Child King: A Story of the Revolution.'
Trans. from
French by Dora Moore.
29 (1899/1900): 484-485.
'A Citoyennets Letter
Trans. from French
to Her Daughter.r
by Dora Moore. 31 (1900/1): 365'366.
tThe Fianc'ets Ruse.t
Trans. from French bv Dora Moore.
27 (1898/99): 258-260.
'Happiness.' Trans. from French by Dora Moore.
27 (1898/99):
585-587.
'The Little
Lackey.'
Trans from French by Dora Moore.
30 (1900): 4L5-4r7.
'The Little
Lad with the Tow-coloured Hair:
A Story of
the War in La Vend'ee.' Trans. from French by Dora Moore.
30 (1900): 99-100.
'The Little
Kingrs Christmas.'
Trans. frorn French by Dora
Moore. 4l (1905/6): 136-138.
'The Moujik.'
Trans. frorn French by Dora lloore .
28 (1899):
526-528.
'Muchet.'
Trans.
702-704.
'The Professional
from French by Dora Moore.
Lover. I
?l $:::i33];.itt;ilk.
Trans.
29 (1899/1900):
from French bv Dora l"loore.
rromFrench
by oo,, r"roo...28
19
( 1 8 9 9) : 1 3 9 - 1 4 1 .
'An Unwelcome Guest: A Story of the I,Jar in La Vend6e.'
Trans. from French by Dora Moore. 30 (1900) z 209-211.
'The Honour
Forbes, Athol.
IPseudonymof Forbes Alexander PhillipsJ.
of a Lady.'
44 (1907): 376-381.
rHow the Bishop Lost His Independence.'
40 (1905): 614-618.
'The Man with the Big Heart.r
40 (1905): 82-86.
rA Valentine Day Episode.r
37 (1903/4)z 356-362.
Ford, T. Murray.
See Le Breton, John and Le Breton, Ihomas.
'A Set of Blouse Buttons.t
Forrest, Mrs lMabel].
46 (1908): 549-550.
'The Spoiling of Spoffkins. '
47 ( 1908/9) : 550-552.
'The Conspiracy of the Clocks.'
Foussier, M.
Trans. from French.
40 ( 1905): 95'97.
Fowler, Ada Dayrel1.
See Trelawney, Dayre1l.
'A Guardian of Honour.r
Fowler, Edith Henrietta.
18 (189L/92): 347-352.
'The Tutor's Engagement.r 19 (L892/93) z
515-521.
'The Mysterious Kit-bag.r
Franks, Arthur.
44 (1907):616-623.
F r a s e r , Agnes.
See Macnab, Frances.
'Bully Bill and rhe Kid.r
Fraser, John Foster.
23 (1896/97)z 381-386.
'The Deputy Collector.'
28 (1899): 363-371.
'Jenkins of the 53rd. (A Fragment).'
22 (1895/96):956-96I.
'The Madnessof Hans Knoll.'
35 (1902/3)z 675-679.
'The Case of Kitty.r
Frazer, Kathleen.
50 (1910): 315-319.
'Other People's Cake.'
Freeman, Mary EIleanor] Wi-ltins.
47 (1908/9):
s9-70.
'Beyond
Freeman, RIichard] Austin.
See also Ashdown, Clifford.
the Dreams of Avarice.'
33 (I9Ol/2)z 685-691.
'A Bird of Passage: A Story
of the Thames.r 38 (1904)z 2L2218.
'Caveat Emptor: The Story of
a Pram.r 30 (1900): 247-252.
tThe Costume lulodel.'
33 (1901/2) z 233-237 .
'The Ebb Tide.'
35 (L902/3)r 352-356.
'The Great Tobacco
33 (L9OI/ 2) : 4I7 -420.
"Plant. "'
'The Resurrection
of Matthew Jephson.'
26 (1898): 534-542.
'A Suburban Autolycus. '
38 (1904): 652-657.
'Victims of Circumstance.'
31 (1900/1): 360-364.
'Ye Olde Spotted Dogge.r
37 (L903/4): 591-598.
'The Best Revenge.' 6 (1879/80): 275-279.
Frith, Henry.
rBlocked in a Tunnel.'
9 (1882/83): 530-534. Signed 'By
the Author of "A Race for Lifer'r etc.'
'A Bunch of Roses.' 4 (L877/78)t
397-400.
11 (1884/85): 274-277.
"'By the Merest Accident.trr
rCharles Down's Ordeal: A Railway Romance.' 18 (1891/92):
723-729 .
'The Courtship of Fireman Deane: A Railway
Romance.'
18
(I89L/92): 660-665.
'The Devotion of Mary Simmons: A Railway Romance.'
18
601-605.
O89I/92):
'In That New World Which Is the Old.r
SummerNumber 1884
(Surmner Days) z 59-64.
'Jack and His Master: A Sea-side Romance.r
L7 (1890/91):
466-413.
'A Modern Galatea.'
S u m r n e rN u m b e r 1 8 8 5 ( B r i g h t D a y s ) :
14-18.
'A Race for Life.'
3 (L876177):400-403.
'Running
4 (1877/78)r 468'47I.
"Pi1ot."'
'snowed Up.'
4 ( L 8 7 7/ 7 8 ) : 1 4 4 - 1 4 8 .
15
Chess Story.
fire Struggles
of Abel Strong: A Living
(1888/89) : 342-347, 437-441, 474-478.
- through Fire."'
10 (1883/84): 658-661.
"'Through Flood
'Walter Blakeneyrs Masterpiece. '
6 (1879/80): 24'27 .
'Why the Light Llent Out.r
3 (1876/77) z 7L6'720.
tVermutters Inheritance.r
by
Renato.
Trans. from Italian
M.D. Byrne & Ferdinando Benvenuto. 45 (1907/8)z 591-595.
tThe Visit of the Prefect.r
Trans. from Italian by M.D.
Byrne & Ferdinando Benvenuto. 46 (1908): 3-13. Signed
R. Fucini.
Futrelle,
Professor yan lhrgen's Problema.
45 (1907/8)z
Jacques.
1-10, 185-194, 3r2-32L, 387-395, 499-509, 6t8-627.
Gallon, Tom. rBonaviars Black Sheep.' 42 (1906): 633-642.
'The Borrowed Uncle.'
35 (1902/3)z 98-105.
rA Bottled Vi1lain.'
35 (1902/3): 508-516.
'The cap of Mr. Tomkinson.t
34 (1902): 423-430.
'The Depraved Half of Mr Flockton.'
45 (1907/8): 537'547.
'The Man and the Mouthpiece.r
40 (1905): 473-479.
'Miss Peatfs Extra Turn.'
36 (1903): 151-157.
'Mr Patten's Little
Murders.'
40 (1905): 585-590.
'Mr Soper's New Sister.'
42 (1906): 44-49.
rA Pantomine Cuckoo.'
4L (1905/6): 482-487.
'A Lost Opportunity.r
Gard, Ste1la St John.
11 (1884/85): L79'L82.
' A W o m a no f F a c u l t y . I
S u m m e rN u n b e r 1 8 8 5 ( n r i g t r t D a y s ) : 6 0 - 6 4 .
rPill Podden's Luck.'
Garland, A.P.
50 (1910)z 320-324.
'Hugh's Wife.'
Garrett, Edward.
S u m m e rN u r n b e r 1 8 8 3 ( P a l m y D a y s ) : 5 9 - 6 3 .
'Compensation. '
Garvice, Charles.
4 5 ( 1 9 0 7/ 8 ) : 7 9 ' 8 6 .
'The Marchesa's Porrrair.r
43 Q906/7) z 4L4-422.
tThe Falling
Gaunt, Mary.
Away of John Sands: An Inspiring
Story
48 (1909): L96-203.
of the South Seas.'
rThe Organist
Gerard, Frances A.
IPseudonymof Geraldine Fitzgerald].
of Abbotstoke.'
17 (1890/91): 434-438.
'The Rev. J. Sturgis's Finds.'
18 (I89L/92): 209-2L4.
'Bailey' s Experiment . '
Gibbon, Perceval.
4 6 ( 1 9 0 8) : 3 3 7- 3 4 3 .
'The Dice: A Complete Story of Revolution in Russia.' 43
(t906/7) z L77-t82.
'Lieutenant
Chartres and the Gun: A Story of the South
Af rican l,lar. |
47 ( 1908/9 ) : 373-383.
'The lJidor^rer.'
47 ( 1908/9 ) : 212-215 .
Pretty
Gift,
Theo.
IPseudonym of Dora Havers, afterwards Boulger].
ltiss Belley: A Tale of Eme Life.
1 (1874/75): 1-16, 97-104,
161-168, 225-232, 289-296, 353-360, 4t7-424, 481-488, 545-552,
609-617, 670-687, 737-75L.
'Cordeliars Conquest.' 44 (1907)z 602-6L0.
Gilmer, J.G.M.
'The Seat by the Door.'
Gissing, Algernon.
46 (1908) z 162'169.
'Miss Delamare and the Middy.'
Gleig, Charles.
49 (1909/10): 537'539.
A Story of Humour and Tragedy in
"tA Square" williams:
48 (1909) z 4I8-42I.
the Royal Navy.'
'The Eternal Feminine.'
Gorst, Harold.
45 (L9O7/8)z 466-468.
Gould, S. Baring.
See Baring-Gould, SIabine1.
20
2L
'Rose petals:
Gourdsbury, cullen.
A Tale of the East African coast.,
46 (1908): 599-602.
Graham, Scott.
'The
IPseudonymof Hazelton Black].
Adventure of
Godfrey Hallerr.'
38 (1904): 436-442.
'The Adventure
of Godfrey Hallett
and the Anbitious Mi11er.t
39 (1904/s)t 669-676.
'The Adventure
of Godfrey Hallett and the French prisoner
of War.' 41 (1905/6): 724-734.
'The Adventure
of Godfrey Hallett and William the Deserter.r
40 (1905): 264-272.
'How Godfrey
H a l l e t t F e 1 1 a m o n gT h i e v e s . | 3 9 ( L 9 0 4 / 5 ) z
428-435.
'The Momenrous
Journey.!
35 (L902/3). 443-452.
'The
strange Story of My Lady Buckenden as Told by Godfrey
Hallett,
clerk in Holy orders.,
37 (1903/4): r42-L47.
'The Temptation
of Barrington, R.A.'
44 (1907):50_57.
'Lady
Graham, Winifred.
Lucy's Masquerade.' 4I (LgOs/6), 697_104.
'The Treachery
of the Hollyhocks.'
35 (1902/3)z 664-66g.
Grainger, Francis Edward.
See Hill,
Headon,
Grand, Sarah.
'The Turning
I P s e u d o n y mo f F r a n c e s E l i z a b e t h M c F a l 1 ] .
of the Worm., 50 (19f0): 325-350.
Green,
:.,:\
.:;!,'
.'"$
.tt
tr.iit
. ;
i { '
"'],
Evelyn
Everett.
llonica:
or,
Stronger
Than D e a t h . L 4 ( 1 8 8 7 / 8 8 ) :
r - L 2 , B 0 - 9 1 , L 2 g _ I 4 0 , 2 2 6 _ 2 3 7 , 2 5 7 _ 2 6 7 ,3 2 L - 3 3 2 ,4 2 0 - 4 3 I ,
449-460.
The Srronger rJill.
1 6 ( 1 8 8 9 / 9 0 ) : 1 _ 1 1 , 9 6 - 1 0 5, r 2 9 - L 3 9 ,
2 2 2 - 2 3 2 , 2 5 7 - 2 6 9 , 3 5 2 _ 3 6 3 ,4 L 4 _ 4 L 9 .
,The Melodramatic
Greenwood, Dorothy.
Touch.r
50 (1910): 177-Lg2.
Greenwood, James. 'In Guy-Faux Guise.'
39 (L904/5)z 474-47g.
'
T
h
e
Greenwood, I'tabel.
Turn in rhe Lane.'
49 (1909/10): 4g1_4g6.
Gregg, Hilda Caroline.
See Grier, Sydney C.
Gribble, Francis.
24 (Lg97):307_313.
_'The King WhoDressed Up.r
Grier, sydney c.
'A six
[pseudonym of Hilda caroline Gregg].
weeksr
I{ooing.'
20 (t893/94)z 831-839.
'Whar
Cameof a Clergymanrs Forrnight.,
L7 (1g90/91):
498-503.
'The Affair
Griffiths,
Hajor Arthur.
of Lines (Founded on Fact).r
38 (1904): 233-239.
'The Ananias
Brothers. '
2 g ( 1 g 9 9) : 4 I 2 - 4 L 7 .
'A Bank
Scandal.'
32 (1901): 27g-2g4.
'A Bank-nore,
in Two Halves.,
5 (LB7g/79): 531-535.
'The Black
Dress-basket.
Two on a Trail:
Somephases
of Private Inquiry.'
27 (I89g/99)z 636-642.
'A Case
for rdenrification
(Two on a Trail).'
29 (lggg/1g00):
581-587.
'The
Congo Bank of Brussels.'
29 (1899/1900): 438-444.
'The Episode
of George Andros. t
27 (1898/99)t 444-449.
'In
the Waste-paper Basket.l
( 1 9 0 5 / 6 )z s 4 7 - s s 4 .
4
I
'The Panel
of Filippo Lippi (Two on a Trail).'
29 (tggg/1900):
6 6 5 - 6 72 .
'The
Secrer of the Lower Lines.'
36 (1903) 17g_1g4.
'The
sequestration of Miss Ferriby (Two on a Trail - rrr).'
2B (1899): 625-63L.
'The
Usherrs Daughter. '
4 0 ( 1 9 0 5 ) : 3 6 L - 3 6 7.
Grogan,
I.lalter E. 'My Governor.'
31 (1900/1): 6g0-6g5.
22
'The Sub's Expedition. '
39 (L904/5) t 233-239.
'Mr Speckley's Playthings:
Grubb, Arthur Page.
A Story of a City
Merchantrs Secret.r
48 (1909): 64I-645.
Haggard, H[enryl
Rider.
Benita: An African
Ro'mance. 4I (L905/O z
11-34, 155-176, 275-296, 395-416, 515-536, 64L-665.
The Brethren:
A Romance of the Crusades.
37 (1903/4):
33-37, t63-L77, 275-290, 387-402, 5Og-527, 669-692; 3g
(1904): 45-6L, 150-165, 279-295, 403-417, 522-536, 629-64L.
'Shadows Before.r
Halifax, Arthur & Stuart Wishing.
44 (1907)z 484-492.
'Relatives
Hamby, Williarn H.
to Let: Being the Inside History of
the Bentley-Carruthers Truce.r
44 (1907)z 629-632.
'The Black Flower of Justice.r
Hamilton, Myra.
25 (1898/99): 330-332.
'A Box of Hints: A
Story for Children.'
27 (L898/99)z
599-603.
rA Cat of Three
Colours.r
36 (1903): 554-557.
'The Cloud Army.'
36 (1903): 107-109.
'The Conclusion-jumper:
A Story for Children.t
33 (L90L/2):
484-488.
'The Deaf
and DumbPrince: A Story for Children.'
26 (1898):
554-556.
rThe Dollsr Romance.r 26 (1898)
z 2L7-220.
'The Elf and
the Pheasant: A Tale for Chidlren.'
28 (1899):
329-332.
'The Faithful
Slave: A Story for the Little
Ones.'
40
( 1 9 0 5 )z 6 6 L - 6 6 5 .
rHow rhe Maiden Saved rhe Earwigs.r
38 (1904) l 554-556.
'King of the Poppies: A
Story for Children.'
26 (1898): 434-437.
'The Larkrs Gift (e
story for Children).'
30 (1900)z 66L-664.
rThe Lost Sound.'
36 (1903): 440-444.
'The Lucky Horse: A
Story for Children.'
35 Q902/3)z 489-492.
'The Mill Fairies:
For Little
Folks.'
24 (1897)z 378-380.
'The Mistake
of Princess Cynthia: A Story for Children.'
27 ( 189B/99): 379-381.
'The Oorwa's Errand.'
33 (L9OI/2)t 376-380.
I T h e O y sr e r I ' l a i d e n . |
24 (1897 ) : 102- 106 .
'The Pangwangda and the Hoohi: A
Story for Children.'
34
( 1 9 0 2 ): 2 L 2 ' 2 I 6 .
'The Prince, the Snail
and the Butterfly:
A Story for the
Little
Ones.'
38 ( 1904): 330-332.
'The Prince's Lesson: A
Story for Children.'
28 (1899)z 2L4-2I6.
'The Princess and
the Wallawoo: A Story for Children.'
2 9 ( L 8 9 9 / 1 9 0 0 ) :5 9 7 - 6 0 0 .
'The
2 9 ( 1 8 9 9/ 1 e 0 0) :
Q u e e n ' s H a n d m a i d( A S t o r y f o r C h i l d r e n ) . '
369-37r.
'The Royal Doves: A Story for Children.'
2s (1897/98) z 442445.
'The Royal Laundry: A Story for
Children.'
37 (L903/4)z 265-269.
tThe Sea-gullrs Love Story: A Story
for the Little
Ones.t
37 (L903/4):486-488.
'The Seeds of Harmony.'
39 (L9O4/5): 600-602.
rThe Silver Tear Drop.'
26 (1898): 95-98.
fA Snail's Love Story: A Story for
Children.'
25 (L897/98)z
218-220.
'The Sorrowful Sye-boo: A Story
for Children.'
45 (1907/8):
23
1 5 0 -1 5 5 .
'The
spotred Robe: A srory for children.'
27 (lg9g/99): t5l-156.
'The Story
of Little
Luck: A Story for Little
Ones.'
39
(tgo+/s),
265-268.
'The Suggestion
Maker: A Story for Children.'
2 9 ( 1 8 9 9 /1 9 0 0 ) :
490-493.
'The Sun-dried
King.,
26 (1898): 329-332.
'Three Kisses (A
Story for Children). '
33 (L9Ol/Z) t, 260-264.
'The Truth
Reader: A Storv for Children.'
28 (1899) z 442-445.
'The way
to Fairyland.'
Lz (1906): 667-670.
'The white princess:
A srory for children.,
34 (tgoz),
105108.
'The wishing
Srone: A Srory for Children.'
39 (1904/5)z 705_70S.
'Aunt
H a m m o n d - s p e n c e r ,H i l d a c .
caroliners
competition.,
40 (1905):
404-407.
Signed Hilda Hammond-Spencer.
'Granfs
D !Lr iLtLtrlse
Dr il rnr n
u
l ee. rr. . r
J3t 7 \( L1>9v 0
J /3
+ /) 4 ) |: 7 0
I V3J -_ 7/0
U9
9 ..
'My
H a m p d e n ,M a r y .
Sister's Secrer.r
L7 (1g90/91): 6g6_6gg.
'Possessed
of a Tirle.'
42 (1906): 372-374.
'The Veaseybridge
Elecrion.'
19 (1gg}/gr:
144_149.
Harlestone, Andrew. 'At the sameTable.r
2g (1g99): 276-2g2.
'A Chiromatic
Episode.'
29 (IBgg/ l90O) z 536-542.
'A
Curring Criticism. |
26 (fg9g): 475-4gI.
'Lord
Doubleday's Dileruna.'
27 ( 1g9g/99): 673-67g.
'A Box
Harris,
Ada Leonora.
on the Ears.'
4g (1909): 215-217.
'The Romance
of a Travelling
Rug.'
4j (l9og/9):
333-335.
'Two from
Toad-in-rhe-hole.'
47 (190g/9): 555-55g.
'
A
I
Harte,
Bret.
Belle of canada city.
zg (Lggg/1900): 163-lgl.
'Lanty
Fosrer's Misrake.r
31 (I900/1): 275-2g4.
'The Man
at rhe Semaphore.r 24 (Lg97):339-34g.
'Salomy
Jane's Kiss. I
2 6 ( 1 S 9 S )z 6 5 - 7 5 .
'See
Yup. '
2 5 ( L 8 9 7/ 9 8 ) z I Z 5 - I 3 2 .
'A Broken
Harwood, John Berwick.
Trust.'
sumrnerNumber lgg3 (talmy
Days): 24-26.
Co-heirs: A Cornish Story.
9 (fgg2/83):
4Ig_427, 4g2_4g},
546-553, 610-619, 674_693, 739_745.
'The Emperor'
'
p
a
r
d
o
n
.
s
rl ( rgg4/g5 ) : 626-629.
signed
J. Berwick Harwood.
'The
culf of Fire.,
2 (Ig75/76): 336-339.
In the Wild ltest: A Srory of Advenrure.
L6 (1g89/90):
48-54, 110-117, 174-181.
Signed J. Berwick Harwood.
'The
Jet-hunrer's Story.,
L (Lg74/75)t 761-763.
'Lost.'
I (L874/75):398-402.
Signed J. Berwick Harwood.
Ttre llerchant Prince.
16 (1839/90):
474-479, 531-536, 627-63I.
Signed J. Berwick Harwood.
'Midsummer
Eve.'
3 (1876/77)t 47g.
'The Mosquiro-cloud.r
8 (1881/81): 560-562. Signed J.
Berwick Harwood.
'My Balloon
Advenrure.'
I (1874/75) r, 6g7-692.
'My First
Holiday.'
Sunrner Number 1884 (Sunurer Days): 49-53.
'our Mr
Jenkins.r
9 (1882/83): 46-49.
Paul Knox, Pitnan.
3 Q876/77):
I-I2,
65-75, L2g-L3g,
L93-202, 257-265, 321-331, 385-393, 449'458, 5r3-52r, 577-584,
641-649, 705-711.
Signed J. Berwick Harwood.
Ralph Raeburnrs Trusteeship.
8 (1881/92):
33-42, 97-105,
1 6 1 - r 6 8 , 2 2 6 - 2 3 4 ,2 9 1 - 3 0 0 ,3 5 4 - 3 6 3 .
' S a v e db y a C y c l o n e . ' 2 ( 1 8 7 5 / 7 6 ) : 5 5 4 - 5 5 5 .
The Tenth Barl. 5 (I878/79)z 1-11, 65-74, I29-L37, L93-203,
2 5 7 - 2 6 9 , 3 2 1 - 3 3 0 , 3 8 5 - 3 9 5 , 4 4 9 - 4 5 8 ,5 1 3 - 5 2 3 , 5 7 7 - 5 9 5 , 6 4 t - 6 4 9 ,
7 0 5 -7 1 0.
r w h a r t h e c o r a l R e e f s G a v eI ' I e . t 1 4 ( r 8 8 7 / B 8 ) : 6 5 - 7 2 ,
175-I7g
2L2-2L4.
Within the Clasp. 10 (1883/84): 1-14, 65-76, I29-L39,
L 9 3 - 2 0 2 ,2 5 7 - 2 6 7 ,3 2 1 - 3 3 0 , 3 8 5 - 3 9 5 , 4 4 9 - 4 5 9 , 5 1 3 - 5 2 2 , 5 7 7 - 5 9 6 ,
64I-65L, 705-7IL. Signed J. Berwick Harwood.
Haswell, Frances. The Clearing of the lr{ist. 20 (fg%/94):
495-505,
6 0 4 - 6 t 4 , 6 9 3 - 6 9 2 ,7 3 I - 7 4 0 , 9 0 7 - 8 1 7 , 8 9 0 - g g g .
' H a r d t o P l e a s e : A H o l i d a y S t o r y . t S u m m eN
r u m b e r1 8 9 3 , 3 - 4 8 .
'You '11 Love lle Yet. ' 18 0891/92). 29-41, 90-102,
129-140,
2t9-23I.
Havers, Dora.
See Gift,
Theo.
Hawkins, Sir Anthony Hope. See Hope, Anthony.
'For A11 Prisoners
Heddle, Ethel FIorster].
and Captives.'
30 (1900):
365-373.
'Shipwrecked on
a Kingdom.r
31 (1900/1): 348-352.
'"waterloo" and t'Trafalgar.
2 8 ( 1 8 9 9 ) : 4 3 L - 4 3 7.
"'
Heddle, Ethel L. 'The Baboo's Earthquake.'
22 (1895/96)z 857-859.
Henderson, Arthur H. 'Arrangement Altered.r
4l (1905/6)z 252-256.
'The Frock
and the Motor-man.'
40 (1905): 544-548.
I rsorta's way.'
46 ( 1908): 391-398.
'The Lone Spor.'
Henham,Ernest G[eorgel.
32 (1901): 4IL-4I7.
rThe l"lystery of
30 ( 1900): 610-616.
"The Firs. "'
'Rain to Order.r
36 (1903)z 48-52.
'which?'
31 (1900/1): 340-345.
'Ex-trooper Tempany.'
Henniker, Eon. Hrs Arthur Ii.e.
Florence].
22 (L895/96):
842-848.
'The Man Who waired.'
24 (1897)z 637-64I.
Henry, Hrs Martyn.
See llartyn-Henry,
llre.
'In Clover: An Australian Idyll.r
Henty, Frank.
49 (1909/10): 742-744.
'The Man Who Knew How: An Australian
Story.'
48 (1909):
515-516.
'The Prince of
the Treasure Trove: A Tale of an Australian
Girl's Romance.' 48 (1909): 634-640.
'A Salute in Passingr A
Case of Mistaken Identity
at a
Fancy Dress Ball - and Its Consequences.' 49(1909/10):
26-28.
'Hubertrs Wife: A
Herbertson, Agnes Grozier.
Single Chapter Story.'
38 (1904): 323-326.
'The Ruby Ring. t 40 (1905): 428-435.
Signed A. Grozier
Herbertson.
'
T
h
e
Hering, Henry A.
Awakening of Pharaoh.'
25 (1897/98)r 638-643.
The Ghroni.cles of the Burglars'
Ctub.
38 (1904) z 33-37,
L23-t28, 247-254, 365-37r, 544-550, 59g-605.
fire Further Chronicleg
of the Burglarg'
club.
40 (1905):
55-61! 174-181, 278-284, 387-394, 4gg-504, 5gg-605.
'The Ingenious Mr Tozer.r
47 (1908/9): 473-480.
Later Chronicles
of the Burglars'
49 (1909/10):
Club.
589-596, 669'676; 50 (1910): L9-25, L24-L32, 251-259,
369-37 6 .
24
25
'Mr John Judets
Diary.'
46 (1908): 629-639.
'Psyche's Experience
Exchange.' 3l (1900/l):
458-463.
'Psyche's
T r e a s u r e Q u e s t : A R o m a n c eo f H i d d e n T r e a s u r e . '
48 (1909):259-266.
'Psychels Vintage
Thoughrs. '
34 (L902): 409-415.
'Silas P.
Cornuts Divining-rod. '
28 (1899), 65-7L.
'Silas P. Cornurs
Sysrem.r 22 (1895/96)z 389-394.
'The Tenth
Immorral.'
37 (1903/D:
229-235.
'Thomas B.
Flint,
Resurrectionist.t
46 (1908) : 29L-29g.
'Two Professors
and One Mummy., 32 (1901): 54I-546.
'The Apotheosis
H e r o n - I v l a x w e 1 1 ,B e a t r i c e .
of Mrs Gentle.'
2g (1g99):
655-660.
'This World's
Maze.' 31 (1900/l): 260-264.
'House-boat
Hewett, Vicror.
Isis.,
26 (1g9g): IZ4-I30.
'The Sleep
of the Angels. '
4 I ( 1 9 0 5/ 6 ) : 4 9 5 - 4 9 8 .
Hewitt, William Graily.
See Viggars, Freke.
'The wives
Hicks, v. crandall.
of caprain shadrach.'
49 (1909/10):
5 0 5 - 51 2 .
tThe Romance
Hickson, llrs Murray Ii.e. t"label].
of Emily philpott:
Housemaid.r 25 (L997/98): 551-556.
Higginbotham, John C. See Agnus, Orme.
Hi11, Headon.
[Pseudonym of Francis Edward Grainger].
By a Irairrs
Breadth:
Being the secret Eistory
of the Tsarts Tour, conpiled
frm
the Records of Paul volborth
(of the r'flrird
sectionr').
24 (1897): 1-16, 146-159, 25I-264, 357-370, 501-514, 589-601.
'Cheque! Mare!t
27 (1898/99): 554-559.
The Iluke Decides.
35 (L902/3), L63-I77, 295-308, 4Og-422,
524-538, 646-659.
'Kirren's
Wedding Day.'
43 (tgOO/l), 662-669.
'La Grande
Capucine.'
40 (1905): 68-75.
'Lord Falconetrs
Despatch-box.,
44 (1907): 165-L72.
Spectre Gold: h Romance of Klondyke.
25 (L897/9il2
72-95,
Lg2-205, 266-279, 412-425, 508-521, 612-626.
'They Landed
the Tubs.'
34 (L90Dz 632-640.
fWho Killed
Hirn?' 47 (1908/9): L4g-t57.
'Mrs Pirkin's
pedigree.,
Hi11, Hilton.
2I (1894/95)t 760-767.
'The Adventures
Hine, Muriel F.
of a waterproof.'
34 (1902): 74-go.
'A Broken
rnstrument.r
30 (1900): 424-429. Signed Muriel Hine.
'The cates
of the Temple.r 4L (1905/6): 676-69g.
'The Ghost
of Dree Hollow: A Story of New year's Eve.l
33 (l9OI/2):
I22-I34.
Signed Muriel Hine.
'Little
Goody No-shoes.'
34 (1902): 322-329. Signed Muriel Hine.
'Pansyrs Knighr,
and rhe Dubbing Thereof.r
40 (1g05): 166-170.
fA
37 Q9O3/Qz 66-79.
Question of Occupation.'
"'Ste1la": A Story of Stars.'
31 (1900/1): 72-gO. Signed
Muriel Hine.
'The Tragedy
of a Tiff.'
32 (1901): 140-f46. Signed Muriel Hine.
tTwo Points
of View.'
35 (1902/3)z 73-78. signed Muriel Hine.
Hocking, Joseph.
Trevanion: A Story of Cornyall.
26 (1898): 26-4L,
L46-L6I, 255-270, 377-392, 4gg-513, 594-599.
Hodgson, JIohn] EIvan], R.A. 'Five-cornered Cottage.'
20 (Lg93/94):
5r 4- 5 2 3 .
'Jack Moxham's
Ho11and, Hubert.
Martyrdom: A Schoolboyrs
in London.r
49 (1909/I0)z 101-107.
Adventures
'Boney's Bonfire: An Instructive
Home, Andrew.
Historical
Narrative
for Young and Old.r
22 (L895/96): 3L6-32I.
'Bryce Major's Love Story - and Others: A
Story for Boys.'
23 (1896/97)z 397-403.
'The Complete Flautist:
A l " l u s i c a l C o m e d y .I
25 ( 1897/98) :
393-397 .
'The Lovers and the Boy.r
22 (1895/96)t 888-896.
'Bellers Return.r
Hooper, Albert E.
19 (1892/93):588-593.
'Ceci1 Chanting.'
20 (L893/94): 566-57I.
rThe Doctorrs Secrer.r
20 (1893/94)z 134-139.
'The Grey
Hope, Anthony.
[pseudonym of Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins].
Flock. 1 27 ( 1898/99): 46-52.
'Pyrrha and Smugg.' 2I (L894/95)z 30-37.
'False Colours.'
Hope, Evelyn.
4 (L877/78): 466-467.
H o p e , G r a h a m . [ P s e u d o n y mo f J e s s i e H o p e J . ' A S k e t c h . '
34 (L902):
64-67 .
llope, Jessie.
See Hope, Graham.
'Anna and Loris: An Episode
tlopkins, Tighe.
War.t
of the Nihilist
42 (L90Oz 5II'523.
' The Bishop' s Coach. '
3 7 ( 1 9 0 3 / 4 ) : 2 Q 0 - 2 0 6.
'The Choir and the LemonCake.'
34 (1902): 155-161.
'Colonel Rose's Tunnel out of Libby: An Escape of Escapes.'
2 6 ( 1 8 9 8 )z 2 2 7 ' 2 3 2 .
rThe Footprints of Princess Trubetskoi.'
26 (1898): 176-181.
'How Fairfax Did Not Escape.'
25 (L897/98)z 534-540.
The Silent Gate.
29 Q899/1900): 72-80, 25I-259, 303-309,
452-463, 522-528, 651-658.
'
A
f
t
e
r a Collision.'
Hopkinson, Arabella M.
16 (1889/90): 83-88.
Barbara lterivale.
18 (1891/92): 385-398, 449-463, 5L3-524,
610-623, 64L-654, 734-744.
'Marie: A Story of the American Civil War.'
10 (1883/84):
2LO-213. Signed 'By the Author of "The Probation of Dorothy
Travers , t' ttPardoned,tt etc. I
'A Mysterious Attraction.'
11 (1884/85): 532-535.
Pardoned.
9 (1882/83): 1-13, 65-77, I29'I40,
193-204,
257-268, 321-333, 385-397, 449-459, 5L3-525, 577-587, 64L-652,
70 5 - 7 1 5.
Ttre Probation of Dorothy Travers.
1-12, 65-78,
7 (1880/81):
L29-L4I, 193-205, 257-270, 321-331, 385-398, 449-459, 5L3-524,
577-585, 64I-649, 705-7t4.
'A Real Gentleman.r
Suumer Number 1885 (nrigtrt Days): 46-50.
Sseet Christabel.
1l (1884/85): 34-42, 98-107, 162'I7L,
227-235, 291-299, 353-361.
Vere Thornleighrs
Inheritance;
Fever.
or, Lifers
Fitful
13 (1886/87): 1-11, 99-110, L29-I39, 193-204, 287'298,
32L-332, 416-428, 449-462.
First
two instalments
titled
Pitful
Fever.
was changed because it
Life's
The title
was identical
to that of a story which had been appearing
for nine months in the Southport
Visitor
092).
'!'Iater-lilies.'
Surmler Number 1884 (Summer Days): 56-59.
'which shall rt Be?'
10 (1883/84): 530-532.
A llman's
15 ( 1888/89 ) : 257 -267 , 354-366 , 418-429 ,
Strength.
449-46r, 544-556, 577-589, 688-699, 705-717.
rA Demonof Revenge: Being a Story
Hornung, EIrnest] W[illiarnJ.
26
27
of Sydney and the Bush.,
24 (tggZ), 54-63.
rn the chains of crime: Being the confessions
of a Late
Prisoner
of the crovn,
aud sometime Accomplice
of the More
Notorious
A.J. Raffles,
cricketer
and Griminal,
whose Fate
Is Unknown. 26 (1898)z l-I2,
190-199, 279-Zgg, 344-352,
45t-458, 608-619.
Irralie's
Bushranger.
ZZ (L895/96): Supplemenr 1-112.
Hough, Lewi.s. 'A Bulgarian Episode.'
3 (Ig76/77)z 54-57.
'Mutiny
on Board.r
I (L874/75)z 602-605.
'Our Mistaken
Generosity.'
3 (Ig76/77)z 2gL-2g4. Signed
L. Hough.
'A River
Srory.'
4 (1877/7$z 376-379.
'Celia's
Howard, Keble.
[pseudonym of John Keble Bell].
Bid for
Freedom: The story of a peacemaker and His Reward.'
50
(1910): 111-117.
tMarrha
and rhe Consrable.' 43 (L906/7):95-101.
'The Salvation
of Editha. '
35 (IgO2/r:
546-550.
'A Touch
of Comedy.' 37 (L903/D: 116-120.
' I u l a d a m eV i e u x Huddleston, E. H.
temps. r
37 (1903 /4) z 3zg-333 .
'Mr Fairleyrs
Hudson, una.
Furniture.'
45 e9o7 /il z 577-5gL.
'The Beauriful
Hughes, L.
Miss Dacre.'
38 (1904): 479-4g4.
'The Baby
Hughes, Spencer Leigh.
of the House.r
30 (1900) z 63-67.
'For
Hughes, Warren.
One Night Only.,
42 (tgOO): 532-537.
'The
Scormy perrel. '
4 5 ( 1 9 0 7/ i l :
3 3 9 - 3 4 1.
Hunt, Beatrice Leigh.
stone steps and l{ooden stairs.
3 (Lg76/77):
480-488, 542-552, 606-616, 670_690, 733_742.
lbo Points of viev.
2 (L875/76)t 33-40, 96-103, 161-169,
224-232, 289-294, 350-360.
'rn rhe G1ass.'
H[unr] , [urs] JIohn] .
7 (1gg0/g1): 344-346.
'The
Hunter, urs Talbot.
unmaking of a self-made Man.'
45 (r907lg):
3 s 3 - 3 61 .
'My Chum.'
Hutchinson, Mary F.
19 (1892/93)z 466-469.
'The rndusrrious
Hyde' A.G.
Apprentice.'
36 (1903): 370-374.
'The Peerage
Exchange. '
4 0 ( 1 9 0 5) : 2 g B - 2 9 6 .
rThe Western
Princess.'
39 (1904/5): 459-467.
'The Blind
Hyne, cIharles]
.rIonn] curcliffe.
skipper.'
2l (Lg94/95):
939-944.
'A Case of Barrarry.'
2I (1894/95)z 460-465.
'The Defier (A
Tale of a West African Colony).'
2 2 ( 1 g 9 5/ 9 6 ) :
300-307.
'The chosr
of crawley's Ghyll.'i
19 (L992/93)z g3g-g4l.
'In Ehe Bay.'
L9 (1892/93)z 864-867.
'The Man
in rhe Mizzen-top.,
L9 egg2/93>,
544-549.
'The Man
who once Made Diamonds.'
2r (rg94/9il2
6g2-6g6.
'The l"lumrny
of Thornpson-pratt. |
26 (1g99) z 244-249.
'The passengers
Hyatt, stanley Portal.
of the Lorunna.,
4g (1909):
302-306.
'
M
r
s
rnce, Gertrude.
Bettsrs suitors.r
49 (1909/10) z 639-643.
'The Heart
rngram, Eleanor M[arie].
of princess Rosario.'
50 (1910):
L 4 0 - L 4 7.
'The Honour
of Valdi.'
50 (1910): 4g2-490.
James, Florence E.
See Warden, Florence.
'The Missing
Jane, Fred T.
Fleet.'
24 (1897): IL5-I22.
'A Man
J"y, Fred.
o' Business.r
43 (L9O6/7)z 729-733.
28
'Mr Minter's Hobby. I 42
288-29I.
0906):
'lulr Parslow's Fellow-traveller:
A Humorous Story.t
42 (1906):
603-608.
'An Old Crome: A HumorousStory.r
43 (L906/7)z 114-120.
'An OId Fool: A Humorous
Story.r
43 (1906/7): 364-369.
'One in a Million:
A Humorous Story.t
42 (1906)z 415-420.
Jephson, Edgar.
The Admirable Tinker.
40 (1905): 101-108, 439-444,
638-644.
'The Adventure of the Blue Posts: Being a Further Adventure
of the Adrnirable Tinker.'
42 (1906): 272-280.
'The Biters Bit: Being
a Further Adventure of the Admirable
Tinker.r
42 (1906)t 404-409.
'The Butcher-boyls Repentance.' 43 (1906/7)z
533-540.
'The Eppstein Emerald.'
46 (f908): 309-317.
'The Triurnph of Mr Oliver
Brown: Being a Further Adventure
of the Adrnirable Tinker.r
42 (1906): 155-162.
tThe Ghost of the Marchioness Appleford.'
Jerome, Jerome K[lapka].
2s (1897/98)z 339-346.
'The
I
Ternptation
of Miss Ramsbotham.
'How
Edward.
Jones Earned the V.C.r
'By
Mutual Consent.'
12 (1885/86):
'The
Bart.
Great Water.'
4L (L905/6)z
Johnstone,
Kea, Anne.
Kennedy,
35 (L902/3): s4'62.
47 (1908/9): s4s's49.
242-246.
3L3-324.
'Through a Night.r 36 (1903): 165-171.
'The Cold Princess: A Story for Children.'
Kennedy, Howard Angus.
3s (1902/3) z 601-604.
'The Joker: A Story for Children.'
30 (1900): 551-553.
Signed H.A. Kennedy.
'Lightning Gold: A Story for Children.'
31 (1900/1): 374-377.
'The SEonish Giants and the Magic Arrow: For Children.'
27 (1898/99): 7I0-712.
'The Story of Kweedas and Kindawuss: A Story for Children.'
30 (1900): 105-108.
'The Three Wishes: A Canadian Tale.r
38 (1904): 96-98.
'At Close
Ker, David.
| (1874/75):
Quarters $rith a Boa Constrictor.t
334-337.
'A Cut in the Dark.'
1 (L874/75)z 467'469.
'The creat Gold Secret.'
| (L874/75)z 273-277.
'In Dangerous Company.' L (1874/75)z 75I'754.
'Racing an Arab: An Adventure in Syria.'
16 (1889/90):
75 0 .
'Those Terrible Six Hours: A Sailor's
86-87.
Keyworth,
2 ( 1 8 7 5 / 7 6 )t
Thomas.
By Word of l,louth: A Story of Adventure.
L 7 ( 1 8 9 0 / 9 1 ')
48-54, 94-101, 175-181.
' A C o m p a n yo f T h r e e . r
13 (1886/87): 247-250.
ComradesOnce. 14 (1887/88): 5L3-523, 616-626, 64I-652, 734-745.
'The Double X Mystery.'
16 (1889/90): L8-25.
'Mistress June.'
S u r n m e rN u m b e r 1 8 8 6 : 1 - 4 0 .
'Never Cleared Up: A l'lystery of the Sea.'
16 (1889/90): 274'28L.
'The Secret of the Eagle's-fate.r
19 (1892/93)z 301-310.
A Treacherous Ga1u. 13 (1886/87): 513'522, 610-619, 641-650,
738-747.
'Waters of Oblivion.'
King,
Storv.l
748-
Florence
M.
[Pseudonym
of
S u m m eN
r u m b e r1 8 9 0 : 3 ' 4 5 .
Maud Carew].
29
rHis
Own Property.t
15 (1888/89): 216-22r. signed 'By rhe Author of
"A Man
of the Name of Johnr" etc.'
'Little
General Scort.'
(
1
g
g
2
/
g
3
)
:
9
60-64. Signed ,By
the Author of ttHis own propertyrrr ttNerrrs NoblemJnrtt etc.t
'King
or protector?r
SummerNumber lggg: 3_4g.
Signed
'By the
Author of ,'A Man of the Name of Johnr" etc.;
A ltan of rhe Nane of John.
13 (1gg6/s7): 3g5-394, 480-4gg,
544-553, 577-596, 674_692, 705_714.
'Ne11's
Nobleman.' 16 (1889/90): 466-470. Signed ,By
the Author of "His Own propertyr"
etc.r
I{omanlike.
L6 (1889/90): 385-393, 496-495, 513-522, 6t4_622,
641-650' 736-744.
signed 'By rhe Aurhor of "A Man of the
Name of Johnrrt ttKing or protector?r, etc.r
'The Wrong
Berrie.'
16 (1889/90): 59g-602. Signed 'By
the Author of "His Own propertyrtr etc.r
'
T
h
e
Kinross, Albert.
chrisrmas cifr. , 47 (1g0g/g): 77-go.
Kip I ing, Rudyard. 'A Deal in cotcon.'
45 (1907/g), 163-173.
Kim. 31 (1900/1): 163-L77, 275-29L, 387-398, 4gg-5l4,
6LL-624; 32 (1901):
3'L7, 115-130, 22i'242, 33g-3s2, 45!-466,
563-576 .
Knowles, Mabel Winifred.
See lrrynne, May.
'under
Kocheli, Joseph.
the canvas: A story of circus Life.'
4g
(1909): 614-620.
'The Mysterious
Krausse, Alexis.
Affair
at Main-Na.r
22 (rgg5/g6):
651-6s9.
'
H
i
s
Lacey, Williarn J.
Guardian Genius.r
14 (1gg7/gg): 560_564.
'In Wayward
Mood.'
15 (lggg/99) z 2g-32.
'A Lost
Key.'
8 (1881/92): ILZ-II4.
Signed W.J. Lacey.
'The Aurhor
Lang-Buckland, EIrnestJ SIegar].
of Tulippa.'
27 (:rggs/99),
4 6 7- 4 7 2 .
'My Brother-in-law.'
26 (lg9g): 523-529.
roff
Lanyer, Louise.
rhe Line.r
43 (1906/7)z 346-355.
'The
Lawson, Henry.
Ghostly Door: A New ZeaLand Story.'
3l (1900/1):
633-635.
Le Breton, John.
[pseudonym of M. Harte potts and r. Murray Ford].
rMy Lord
the Tiger: A strange story of central tniia.'
49 (1909/l-o)z 19-24.
Le Breton, Thomas. [pseudonym of T. Murray Ford].
'His
Japanese
Wife. '
50 ( 1910): 382-388.
'The White
Lee, Charles.
Bonner. |
4 3 ( L g O 6 / 7 ) : 4 76 _ 4 g 3 .
'Bohemian
Legge, Philippa.
Glass.'
sununerNumber 1g95, 3-64.
'The Adventure
Leighton, Marie.
of the Banbury cakes.'
39 ogo+/s),
64-7I.
Lemon, Ida J[ane].
That Little
Wman.
1 7 ( 1 8 9 0 / 9 1 ) : 5 1 3 - 5 2 ,3 6 0 7 - 6 L 7 ,
64L-65I , 705-7 L6 .
r
T
h
e
Le Queux, Williarn.
Avengers.'
3g (1904): 3-10.
The countrs Ghauffeur.
42 (r9oo:
5g-66, Lg5-204, 323-331,
432-439, 559-567, 677_686.
'The Game
of Love.'
3l (1900/1): LL7-I26.
'The Lady
of the Great North Road: A Mystery of christmas
Eve.'
39 (1904/5), tZ4-I3t.
'The Man
with rhe Black Spectacles.r
37 (:rg}3/4): 49_56.
'Princess
Narcisse. '
3 2 ( 1 9 0 1 ): 6 0 9 - 6 1 3 .
'The princess's
Escapade.r 47 (190g/9): 131-140.
30
The Spiderrs Eye' 40 (1905): 3'18, 115-129,227-242,339-354,
45L-466, 563-578.
of Antoiue
Being the Reniniscences
of llonte carlo:
stories
of the Gercle
Departnent
Chief of the Surveillance
llartin,
des Etrangers de Honaco. 27 (1898/99): 78-85, 223-229,
346-353, 431-438, 538-545, 650-658.
The Uunamed. 33 QSOI/2) : 1-16, 163-178, 292-305, 399-4L4,
522-537, 630-646.
'Pots and Pans.'
50 (1910) z 37-44.
Le Sage, Anna.
'A Grey Story Which Ends in Gold.|
40 (1905):
Letts, Winifred.
625-630.
'The
29 (1899/1900): 1-16.
Levett-Yeats, S.
Queen's Roses.'
'Borrowed Plumes.'
20 (L893/94)t 784'79I.
Leys, John K[irkwoodJ.
'The Doctor's Blunder.'
18 (189f/92): 473-478'
.
'A Runaway Match.'
38 (1904) z 265'270.
'The Squirefs Entanglement"
19 (1892193): 265-270'
'Cynthia's Tea-man (A New England Story)'1 18
Lucy Cecit.
Lillie,
(L89L/92) z L8-24.
'Their secret code.'
35 Q9O2/3)z 633-639.
Lincoln, Hugh.
'Jerry's Wife.r
41 (1905/6): 564'568'
Lindsay, Mayne.
'Confession. '
47 ( 1908/9) t 422-429'
London, Jack.
'The Fuzziness of Hoockla-heen.'
42 (1906): 25-30
' T h e N a t u r e l ' l a n .t 4 7 ( 1 9 0 8 / 9 ) : 5 1 - 5 8 .
' Trus t . I 45 (1907 / 8) : 282'290 .
' A I " l o n kW a s H e . '
45 (1907/8)z 87'96'
Long, Lily A.
'Bella Lisa:
A Story of Lake Maggiore.' 35 (1902/3)t
N
o
r
n
a
.
Lorrimer,
200-205.
'Vi-yun's Vow: A True Tale of Korean Revenge.' 38 (1904):
Lynch, George.
458-463.
Maarten. IPseudonym of Joost ]larius l.li1lern van der Poorten'Antiques:
47 (1908/9):
A Modern Incident.'
schwarEz].
33-43.
See Grand, Sarah.
McFal1, Frances Elizabeth.
'Through the Wal1.'
47 (1908/9): 274'284'
Mackay, Isabel Ecclestone.
'Mr Stork's Miscalculation:
A Story about a Burglar,
Ilackay, William.
48 (1909)t 621-626'
a Ghost and a Motor Car.'
tA Successful Deal.' 35
Maclaren, Ian.
I P s e u d o n y mo f J o h n W a t s o n ] .
(r9o2/3),
16-24.
'A Voice from the Dead.'
L68'L72.
22 (1895/96):
Macmahon,Ella.
rMuster Dow: or, A
MacNab, Frances.
lPseudonym of Agnes Fraser].
S u m m e rN u m b e r 1 8 9 5 ' 7 2 - 7 4 '
Village Mystery.'
'The Schoolmistress at Thatchamlet.'
2L (L894/95) t
l"lacnamara, T.J.
Maartens,
604-607 .
'For a Hero's Sake.'
488-495.
47 (1908/9):
Macnaughron, SIarah].
'Tell Me, Where Is Fancy Bred.'
46
I,tacquoid, Katharine S[arah].
( 1908): 383-390.
'An Unsensational Ghost Story.'
15 (1888/89): 91-93.
l"lagnus, K.
'A Broken Engagement.' 16 (1889/90):
401-405.
Malpas, Henry.
'Mr simperson's Story. |
15 ( 1888/89) : 533-537.
'The Eerie.'
47 (1908/9): L95-2O2'
Mann, Mary E.
rHector Alexander.r
48 (1909): 572'579.
'The Ignorance of Sybi1la.'
28 (f899) z 484-490'
Mansergh, Jessie.
'Rejecred Addresses.r
365-371. Signed ltrs
33 (1901/2):
George de Horne Yaizey, her married name'
31
Marbury, Mary. 'The Broken Heart:
2 (I875/76): 112-116.
'Gone
Away -
No Trace!
A Tale Told over a
Told
over
a Counter.l
Counter.
2
I
(L875/76) z
4 6 7- 4 7r .
"'Grey, But Not with years": Told over a Counter.r
2 (Lg75/
76) z
3 0 6 -3 1 0.
rLost
or Stolen? Told over a Counter.,
2 (Ig75/76)z 656-660.
'The Man
of My Choice: My Story, Told over a Counter.'
2 (I875/76) z 249-2sI.
'My Discovery:
A story Tord over a counter.r
z (rg75/7oz
75I-7 54.
'My Own
Story: Told over a Counter.r
2 (Ig75/76)z 1g4_lgg.
'Old
Moneybags' Will: A Story Told over a Counter. |
3
(I876/77):
182-184.
'
A
Marchrnont, Arthur l,I[williarns].
christmas Eve at Lanston Grange.'
33 (L90I/2)z 25-33.
'The
Chrisrmas Masqueat Alburton.,
35 (1902/3): g4-g2.
'A close
g2-gg. signed A.w. Marchmont.
ca11. |
37 o9o3/4)t
'A Courier
of Fortune.'
33 (lgOI/2).
50g-5f3.
'The Hands
of rhe philisrines.r
47 (190g/9): 4OO-407.
The ltan lJtro IJas Dead. .43 (L906/7):
L2g -L52, 252-273,
374-394, 491-5r0, 616-635, 736_754.
'Our Bucker
Shop.'
39 (I904/il:
299-304.
'The
"queenrs Niche" at Lutworth.|
4I (1905/6):593-601.
'
E
1
s
i
e
Marriott,
Charles.
R a e b u r n . r 3 4 ( 1 9 0 2 ) : 5 7 0 - 5 7 7.
Marris, Nora M. "A Faulry Heroine.'
L9 (Lgg2/93). 222-23L.
Marsh, Richard.
Adventures
of Angus short:
firings tttrich r Eave Done
for Others, and Wish I Hadnrt.
32 (1901): 26-34, 164_I7L,
265-272, 375-383, 486_492, 596-602.
'The
Colonel's Cane. ,
27 ( 1899/99): 4L2-4Ig.
'Cupidrs
Messenger.' 34 (1902)z 347-355.
'Miss
Waring's Elopement.' 47 (190g/9): 244-255.
'On
the Jury.'
46 (1908): 264-216.
Marshal1, Archibald.
tTonyts
I P s e u d o n y r n o f A r t h u r H a m m o n dM a r s h a l l ] .
Friend.r
47 (1908/9): 526-528.
Marshal1, Arthur Hamrnond. See Marsha1l, Archibald.
tAfter
Marsland, Clement.
Long years:
A portsmouth Story.'
9 (1882/
8 3 ) : 5 9 8 - 6 0 1, 6 8 9 - 6 9 I .
'
Martley, Henry.
Hands Alr Round.'
46 (190s) z 404-410.
'colonel
Martyn-Henry, llrs.
stormer's Mistake (the chronicles of
cardewe Manor).'
15 (1888/s9): 15g-163. see also cardewe,
EmiIy and Farmer, Lucy for further
chronicles
of cardewe
Manor,
'How Barrington
Mason' A.E.w.
Returned to Johannesburg.'
23 (1896/97)z
49-54.
'The Princess
'
Joceliande.
23 (1g96/97) z 233-246.
'Some Fisher
Mathers, Helen.
Folk.,
23 (L596/97)z
256_264.
'A Sumrner
Girl. ,
46 (1908): 257-262.
'
T
h
e
M a u g h a m ,W [ i 1 1 t a m ] S o m e r s e t .
Happy Couple.'
45 (I9Ol/g):652-656.
Maxwell, Beatrice Heron.
See Heron-Maxwell, Beatrice.
'Jack
Maxwell, W[i1liam] BIabingron].
and Dick.'
4L (1905/6): L95_202.
rWhar
M"y, Jane.
Tom Thoughr.'
L2 (18g5/g6): 372-376.
32
M e a d e , L . T . I i . e . E l i z a b e t h Thornasina].
(1883/84): 22-25.
'Behind the Tapestry-'
10
15 (f888/89):
A Story of To-day.
Be llarried:
6
4
1
6
4
9
,7 3 8 - 7 4 8 ,
6
0
8
6
1
7
,
5
L
3
5
2
2
,
4
8
5
4
9
5
,
385-395,
2 (L895/96): 204-216,480-490,
Fight.
of the
In the Thick
tL8-729.
(hrt of the Fashion. f8 (1891/92): 1-9, 65-73, 176-184'
193-20r, 257'264, 356-364.
Ttre voice of the Ghamer. 2L ( 1894/95) , 1- 16 , 93- 107,
r 6 8 - 1 8 2, 2 7 7 - 2 9 2 ,3 4 3 . 3 5 8, 4 o 8 - 4 2 2 , 5 0 0 . 5 1 4 , 5 6 9 - 5 8 3 , 6 9 8 . 7 L 2 ,
7 4 0 - 7 5 4 ,8 5 1 - 8 6 7 , 9 1 7 - 9 3 0 .
'The Black 8a11.' 35 (1902/3)z 213-223.
M e a d e ,L . T . & R o b e r t E u s t a c e .
'The Blue Laborarory: A Story of St Petersburg.r 23 (L896/97)z
Engaged
to
563-575.
of John Bell
fire Adventuree
of llysteries:
fire llaster
388-399'
(
1
8
9
7
)
z
2
2
7
2
3
7
,
78-91, 178-187,
24
choat-explorer.
524-534, 619-631.
'The Secret of Emu Plain.'
27 (1898/99): L23'132'
.
'A Strange Insanity.r
29 (L899/ 1900)z 282-293'
.
Huan. 'The Czar's Diamond.' 2L (L894/95): 907-913'
28 (1899) z 79'86, 150-158, 261'268,
lfman.
A Diplonatic
.
.
Mee,
396-403, 504-511, 606-613.
'The Fairy Ghost: A Christmas Fanrasy.'
4L (1905/6): 90-99.
'Fool's Mate.'
23 (L896/97), 160-168.
'The Man Who Always Had Money: A Modern Fairy Tale for
38 (1904):
people Who Pretend not to Believe such Things.'
.
.
.
339-344.
'The Odessa Deal.'
339'347 '
23 0896/97).
'Phantom Death. |
29 ( 1899/1900) : 470'476.
,Rosa's Mendacity: An Almost Impossible Story.'
.
.
454-464.
'A Society Passport.'
37 (L903/4)z 634'642'
,The Uncertainty of Humour: A Christmas Story.'
4l
(rgos/0),
39 (1904/5):
49-55.
,Within Touch of the Hangman.r 40 (1905): 206'211.
'The Voice: A Story of a woman's Disillusion.'
48
Mendl, Gladys.
( 1909) :
218'220.
'The Doll in the Pink silk Dress.'
49 (1909/10):
Merrick, Leonard.
ILz-L22.
'Why Billy Went Back.'
47 (1908/9): 165'L72'
'In the
[Pseudonym of Hugh Stowell Scott].
Merriman, Henry Seton.
Valley of Repose.' 25 (1897/98)z 45L'457'
'Lady Best' s Mistake. '
10 ( 1883/84) : 84-87 .
Middlemass, Jean.
'wild Grapes.r
14 (1887/88): 279'283.
'With the Camel Convoy: A Story of the Soudan.' 34
Mi11ar, Frank.
( 1902): 398-403.
'His Majesty's Friend.r
44 (1907):234-238.
Miln, Crichton.
'Anorher Indian Tale.'
18 (L89L/92): 682-686.
Milton, Arrhur.
'The Bald-headed Boy: An Indian Ta1e.'
19 (L892/93)z L94-196.
'Fatima and the Calf.'
22 (1895/96): 537-538'
fThe Partnership.r
L9 (1892/93)z 388-390'
'The Tail0r:
19 (1892/93)z 677'681.
An Indian Tale.'
'An Error in Diagnosis.'
36 (1903): 311-316.
l"loberly, L.G.
tThe Black Tragedy: A Story of Old Drury Playhouse"
I,lontagu, Arthur.
33
35 (1902/3)z s93-s97,
tBy Grace
Montgomery, L.M.
of Julius Caesar.,
46 (190g): 4Ig-423.
'An Unpremeditated
Ceremony: A Canadian Story.' 49 (1909/10):
443-448.
'The Butterworth
l4oore, Brinsley.
Scandal.'
44 (1907):194_20L.
'Miss
Letiriars
Aunr. '
4 6 ( 1 9 0 8 ): 3 6 0 - 3 6 g .
Moore, Dora. Trans. 'The Adoption.' By Frangois copp-ee. 26 (1g9g):
358-361.
'An Autumn
Trans .
R o m a n c e. '
By Charles Fole! .
2 g ( 1 g 9 9) :
598-600.
rBrigaur. t
Trans.
By charres Forey .
26 ( rggg) : 59g-600.
'The child
Trans.
King: A story of the Rebellion.r
By
Charles Fotey.
29 QSgg/LgO})z 484-4g5.
'A citoyenne's
Trans.
Lecter to Her Daughter.r
By charles
Foley.
31 (1900/1): 365-366.
t
T
h
e
Trans.
Fianc6's Ruse.' By charres Fole!.
27 (Lg9g/9g),
258-260.
'Happiness-'
Trans.
By charres Foley.
27 (1g9g/99):
585-587.
'
T
h
e
Trans.
Little
Lackey.'
By charres Foley.
30 (1900):
4 t 5 - 4 L 7.
Trans. 'The Little
Lad with the Tow-coloured Hair: A story
of rhe tlar in La vend6e.'
By charles Foley.
30 (1900):
99-100.
,The Little
Trans.
King's Christmas.'
By Charles Foley.
4I (1905/6): 136-138.
'The Man
wirh rhe Green Eyes.' 29 oggg/1900): 376-3g0.
'The Moujik.r
Trans.
By charles Foley. 2g (1g99): 526-52g.
Trans. 'Mucher.t
By charles Foley.
29 oggg/1900) z 702-704.
'
T
h
e
Trans.
Professional Lover.' By Charles Foley.
27
( 1 8 9 8 / 9 9) :
4si -4sg .
'
A
Trans.
Repentance.r By Charles Foley.
2g (1g99):
1 3 9 -1 4 1 .
'An Unwelcome
Trans.
Guest:
A Story of the War in La
Vend6e.' By Charles Fole|.
30 (1900) z 209-2tI.
!'loorsorn,
M. "The Voice in rhe Woods., 16 (lgg9/90): 34I-345.
Morgan, W. Henry. 'The Butterfly.t
49 (1909/10): 75I_753
Morrah, Herbert. 'Fortuna.r
36 (1903): 4g5-492'Buskers
Morrison, Arthur.
at Bay.'
29 (1ggg/1900) t 236-244.
Moser, oswald. 'The Demonof Ten candles (t'Jan Gant y Tan"):
A Tare
of Brirrany.r
46 (1908): 610-613.
'Boys (and
I'lountmorres, Lady.
a Story for Them).'
2 9 ( r 8 e 9 /1 e 0 0 ) :
709-7 L2 .
'
R
o
b
b
e
r
y
Mountmorres, Lord.
No Crime.'
30 (1900) z 73-7g.
'The Sphinx:
Munro, J.
A l " l y s r e r y . I 4 ( L g 7j / ] g ) z 2 1 5 - 2 7 9 .
'The Boys
Munro, John.
Who Saved India (Founded on Fact).'
29 (1g99/f900):
676-680.
'A Heroine
of the Telegraph.'
2g (1g99): 640-647.
'How I Discovered
the North pole. I
20 (]rgg3/g4)t 4g3_4g9.
Signed J. Munro.
'A Long
Farewell (Founded on Facr).'
33 (r90r/2):59g-601.
'A Message
from Mars.'
2L (Lg94/95): zg2-2gg. signed J.
Munro, C.E.
'The Mirror
of Hachida.'
40 (lgO5), 652-654.
34
38 (1904): 84-87'
,The Wire and the Bear.'
'
'The Silver Drum' '
3
5
QgOZ/l) ' 186- 193
l'Iunro, Neil.
22 Q895196)z
'The Case of Inlichael sanfora.'
I"lurray, David Christie.
702-7 lL .
'A Woman'sWay.'
26 (1898) z 425-429'
Murray, n. ;oyce.
46 (1908):
'His r'""t otit'e: A Golf Story"
wallis'
Myers, A[rthur]
39 (1904/5): 203-208An Episode.,
Romanric Girl:
Myers, ur"ill.totrn"
s
u
m
m
erNumber 1884
'The crew t;-;;t
C"trlt.l
Neal, EIlizabeEh].
'By the Author of "witness
i
i
g
"
t
a
(summer Days): 1-8'
Yt"":;":;.i'oo'""'
'
s Trvs t '
(Palmv Davs ) :
Sumrner Number 1883
signed "Bv
'
!2 (18s5 lSOz 433-437'
the Pilgrirn'
t'Witness My Hand"' etc.|
'Bv the
the Author of
Signed
,l"larie,s Bridegroom.," ;i iiiiaSlagl z 79-82'
etc.'
Authoi of "Witiess My Hand"'
16 (1889/90) z 691'696'
'l"lrs Montgomerie'" lt""o"tt""".'
(1883/84): 505-507. Signed
,on the Deck of .h.;;;;;:;--10
'BytheAuthorof,,t,adyGilendolin.'"T'y"t,''witnessMyHand,''
1;l;.,
etc'r
Ifitness
'
HY Eand:
^--r'ira
Fenshire
A^ D
sStorY'
tnrv'
r0 (1883/84):
34-43'
'
' zso- zss' - 3s4- 363
98 -10; ; t loz- it o, 226- 235
,WhoWasElaine?'11-i1884/85):560-563.Signed'Bythe
ttwitness My Hand""'For
CeciLts Sake"t etc.'
Author of
544-555' 577-589'
(1889/90):
c
h
r
i
s
r
a
b
;
;
:
'
1
6
o
f
The rJooing
673'684, 705-7L5 '
'The Girl at the window: A Story of Art students
Nesbit, Eldith]'
'
49 ( 1909/10): 155-161. _
in paris.
48 (1909): 99-105'
'The Luck of tttt'ii*ptt"
Neuman, B.P.
H
'
See Barrov-North'
North, H. Barrow.
4 1 1 8 7 7/ 7 8 ) :
Time shall Try.
.
Notley, Flrancesl EI tiza] uti.rrittl
1-11,65-75,12g-r3g-'-tgl-zoz',z57-267',321-333'385-394'
705'720'
44g'Loo, 5L3- 524,st i- saa' 64L'650' ( 1 S 8 4 / S 5 ) : 1 - 1 3 ' 6 5 - 7 6 ' ,
11
ti" ioogt.
i
n
D
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a
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A
A
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.
ofHanlon,
| 2 g - | 4 o , I g 3 . 2 o 4 , z s t - i i e , g i t - l l s , 3A 8l i c5e . 3 9o r7H ,a 4
49-46l-'513-525,
nlon"Author
577'588,
signed
705'7L7''
64I'652'
Places'''
in Strange
of a Search
A Story
Mclean:
,t' & c.'
6
Places'
Strange
of a
A Story
llcl,ean:
-269
!11r"1^io
of "Horace
t'No Proof
Horace
Oliver,
257
' 321'333 '
( 1 8 7 g l 8 0 ) : 1 - 1 1 , O S - i ' s, - t z g - 1 3 9 ' - l g 3 - 2 0 3 '
3 8 5 . 3 g g , 4 4 9 . 4 6 0 , s t l . s 2 s , , 5 7 7 . 5 8 7 , 6 4 | - 6 5 4 , 7 0 5 - 7r 9137-.2UOn4s' ,i g2n5e7d- 2. 6 8 ' ,
65-76' lzg-l4L'
s (1S81/sil'-r-r:',
No Proof.
641'653' 705-717'
t
r
+
g
+
A
o
'
5
L
3
'524' 577-588'
321-331' 385-396'
Unsigned.
Joshua Albert F1ynn1'
owen. IPseudonym of-Sir
244-247'
'S"a'Mt"-i.""..a.'
39 (1904/5):
'ft,e neggarman.' 47 (1908/9): 3'12'
'The Black Shadow"
35 QgO2/3) t 280-286'
'r,o"i'g
42 (1906) z 391-397 '
F
i
n
d
i
n
g
.
'
and
'
;
46 1908) : 348-355
,The Lover, s Lookirg-gf""..
-(
at Sea'l
C
h
r
i
s
t
m
a
s
a
o
f
'l"liss l"lasonts tartyi
it'" stoty
43 Q906/7)z 49-56'
'Rache1.'
5 O ( 1 9 1 0 ): 3 0 - 3 6'
35
!
'The
,:-9O4/5):
Secrer of rhe Emperor.,
39
4L4-4L9.
'The
Thief .'
43 (woe/7). 54s_553'Tomtin. ,
43 (L906/7) z 203_209.
'A
Onions, Oliver.
Girl of Gaul.,
47 (LgOg/g)t 3Ll_323.
'The
Third Boar. , 44 (1907): fSf-iSA.
Onley, I'1. 'The Cruise of the Jeuina.'
9 (1gg2lg3): 502_505.
'The
Oppenheim, EIdwardJ enittips.
Three ffri.eves. , 47 (I9Og/9):
387-393.
orczy,
Baroness.
The Adventures
of Lady Holly
yard as
of scotland
Related by Eer Friend Lady Granard.
4g (1909):
LI2_L26,
223-233, 340-35L' 463'474, 559-57r
; 49 (r909lr.0): 55-66,
287-299, 303-3L3, 4rL-422, 569-581;
7Lg-730; 50 (1910):
78-89 ( Second Series ) .
'
,
M
r
orpen, A[dela] E.
Adolf.'
2r (LBg4/g5): 2L4-222, 260-26g.
'Limpy,
Osborne, Maitland le Roy.
Bachelor of Love.,
45 (LgO7/g).
375-377.
'
T
h
e
Osbourne, Lloyd.
Kitten That Did.r
49 ( 1 9 0 9 / i 0 ) : 2 O g - 2 3 2 .
Oscar, Alan.
'A Race
I P s e u d o n y r no f W . B . W h a l 1 ] .
for Market.r 39
(L904/ 5) | 648-652.
Ouida.
lPseudonymof Marie Louise de la Ram6e]. ,Gerry,s
Garden:
The srory of a child.'
29 (r}gg/r900):
L32-L45.
'Mary
Owen, Catherine.
Holt's Engagement: An American Story.,
L2
( 1885/86):
470-474.
'Mrs
John A1len, of Ridge View.'
l1 (1gg4/g5): 596_601,
689-693.
oxenham, John'
IPseudonym of l'Iilliarn Arthur Dunkerl"y].
,An Active-passive
Regisrer. '
46 ( 1909): gZ_94.
'Janaway,s
Ups and Downs., 4I (L905/6). 421-435.
'The
oyen, Henry.
Graft and the craft.'
46 (rgoa): 55-63.
'Camphor:
Pain, Barry.
A Tale of the Ciry.,
25 (lgg7/gg)z 47_54.
It'Ifr':
A Sketch.'
47 (IgOg/g): 505_506.
Pallander, Edwin & Ellsworth Douglass.
,The wheels
of Dr Ginochio
Gyves.' 28 (1899): 381-399.
'The Litrre
Palrner, EIdward] Vance.
Typewriter Girl.r
44 (1907): 657-660.
'My
Panting, JIames] HIarwood].
chum xate.'
22 (Lggs/96):'44L-44g.
'At the
Parry, D.H.
Third pass: A Story of Artist Life in paris.,
23 (1896/97), L-Lz.
A Conscript Love Story.r
"'Babille":
22 (1g95/96)t 2g3_2gg.
'The
Buried Treasure on the Moscow Road.'
44 (1907)z 327-333.
rCaprain
Chrisrmas.,
3l (LgO3/4): 1-9.
'The Defence
of rhe ChAteau.,
25 (Lgg7/gg)z I6g_L77.
A Gentleman of Devon. 33 (I90I/2):
67-76, 2L6-227, 32g-337,
467-477, 574-592, 669-678.
'The Holsters
of Monsieur le Colonel.,
31 (f900/l):
406_4L3.
lAn Independent
Command., 3l (I901): 5g3-5gg.
'The Jusrice
of Napoleon.'
26 (fggg), f3g_143.
'The Srranger
ar Angers.'
30 (1900): 569-575.
"'That Bad Business of.Blenkinsop's.',,
31 (1900/1): 642_650.
'Under
rhe ltoon.,
25 (1997/gg): 5g9-595.
'
T
h
e
Parry, Eis Eonour Judge.
Fairy Ring.,
47 (190g/9): 113-120.
Pel1, B. Birkbeck. 'Eldengarr.'
35 (Lgor/r.
364-37L.
'Margarerra.'
37 (lg}3/4) z 2L4_220.
rBeatrix
Pemberton, Max.
of the pool House: A story of a Bicycrist.r
24 (1897): 462-470.
36
T h e D i a m o n ds h i p . 4 2 ( L 9 O o z 9 7 - 1 1 8 , 2 1 7 - 2 4 I , 3 3 7 - 3 5 8 ,
457-477, 517-600, 697'724.
tThe Ghost in the Domino and the True Account of the Duel
29 (1899/ 1900)z 82-93.
aE Boulogne.'
The Giantrs Gate- 31 (1900/1): I-17, 214-226, 328-338,
437-45O, 568-583, 658-672 32 (1901): 52-65, 175-188, 289-304,
391-404, 505-520, 618-631.
A Story of an undergraduate'
the Red Eair:
The Girl yith
by llax Pemberton.
Related by one of Eis set, and Edited
49 (1909/10): 543-560, 681-703; 50 (1910): 49-70, 151-171'
275-293, 404-416, 532'540.
to a Great B.omance. 39 (1904/5):
The Euudred Days: A Footnote
1-20, 163-r82, 275-292, 387-406, 499-518' 611-628.
on a lfinter sea. 25 QS97/98)z 1-11, 141-151, 248-258,
363-374 , 47 7'488 , 567-57 8 .
rPhantom Plumes. t
33 (I9AL/ 2) z I87'L97 '
22 (1895/96): 515'529, 604'6L9,682-697,
A Puritanrs lfife.
790-804, 866-881, 922'937.
36 (1903)t l-2L, 115-132, 227-245,339-360'
Redllorn.
459-478, 571-588.
'The Shadowof a Name: An Episode.'
387'392'
33 090I/2):
'The sword and rhree. '
22 (rcgS /90) ' L25-134'
as Recited
The story of an Assassin
wtreels of Anarchy:
of Eis Secretary'
lfarrative
frm
the Papers and the Personal
44 (1907): 76-96, 202'22L, 276-293'
llr Bruce Ingersotl.
4r1-430, 520-538,636-651.
'Yerut the Dwarf.' 24 (L897)z 123-133.
Pendlebury,
Marian.
'In
Rotha
Chester's
Honeymoon.'
12 (1885/86):
Unsigned.
209-2I3.
'A Record of one Day.'
Signed
13 (1886/87): 494-497.
t
' Author of
" I n R o t h a C h e st e r ' s H o n e y m o o n . "
l"larian pendlebur y ,
'The Intrusion of llaifez Effendi.'
23 (L896/97)z
pendleron, John.
620-625.
'The Duke.'
2L Q894/95) z 54L-544'
Penrose, llrs H.H.
'Lady Mary's Boarder.'
S u m m e rN u m b e r 1 8 9 3 , 5 8 - 6 3 '
'
20 ( 1893/94) I 546-549 '
penrose, I"1. 'Getting Even with Uncle I'lose.
38 (1904): 302-306.
Perrin, A. 'Dhulia.'
See Forbes' Athol'
Forbes Alexander.
Phillips,
'The church in the wilderness:
Marjorie LIowry] c[hristie].
Pickthall,
49 (1909/10), 252-256'
A Canadian story.'
'How I Captured Furruk Ali.'
26 (1898) z 570-574.
piffard,
Hamilron.
'Nancy.' 44 (1907): 509-516.
Potter, M.E.
See Le Breton, John.
PoEts, lvl. Harte.
'In the Hour of Need.'
38 (1904): 102-109.
power, A.R. & E.M.
'The colonetts Bone.'
power, p.n.
S u m r n e rD a y s 1 8 8 3 ( P a l m y D a y s ) : 1 8 20.
'That odd Man.'
18 (189L/92): 499-503.
Arrhur T.G.
S
ee Warden, Florence'
Price, Florence E.
40 (1905): 250'255.
pryor, F.R. & Lancelot Speed. 'Manuela.'
'Borrowed Plumes.r
34 (1902)z 142'L49'
ru!n, Edwin.
' The Braggart. '
3 2 ( 1 9 0 1) : 2 5 0 ' 2 5 6 '
'The coward.'
27 (1898/99): 2rr-216'
'The Poor Idealist.'
2 3 ( 1 8 9 6 / 9 7 )z 4 5 8 - 4 6 8 '
'Queen o' the Poppies.'
31 (1900/I)t 420-426'
price,
37
-!
'Redernprion: A
Skerch.,
36 (1903): 640-644.
'The Seal
of the Church.'
39 (L904/5): 637-642.
'A Stolen
Identity.,
4I (L905/6)z 574_5g4.
'The srory
of Hannahwray.'
23 (rg96/97):365-370.
'The Vengeance
of the Dago., 42 (1906): 7g-g4.
'The Brantingham
Punshon, EIrnestJ RIobertson].
Ghost.r
3 7 ( 1 9 0 3/ 4 ) z
96-100.
'Making
'
Friends.
49 (l9}g /Lil : 46g-473.
rpriscilla
and the Duke: A Story of To_day.' 36 (1903):
s 4 7- s 5 0.
'Professor
K e n y o n r s E n g a g e m e n t s .'
43 (L906/7) z l}l_7Tl .
'Two Gentleman
in Armpur.r
3g (1904): 5lL_577.
'The Vandermann
Diamond.'
44 (tgOl)z 471-47g.
Arthur Thornas].
Qfui1ler-Couch,
The Adventures of f,arry Revel. 35
(1902/3)z 3L-46, 233-247, 336-351,
460-475, sit-sgo,
687-703.
'The capture
of the Burgomeister van der werf: A Reported
T a l e o f a D u r c h m a na n d a p r i v a r e e r . '
33 (rgoL/2)t io-sg.
'The Lady
of the ship.'
Trans. from cornish.
29 (Lggg/ 1900):
52-67.
Signed A.T. Quiller-Couch.
'Margery
of Lawhibber: A story of L644.1 3I (1900/r):
27-37.
Quiller-Couch, Mabe1. tJust That Difference.'
32 (1901): 637_642.
tphylris. '
Raine ' william Macleod.
50 ( r910) : 263-210.
'rn the
Ralph, Julian.
Grip of rhe Tsar.,
2g (1g99); 26-32.
Rambout, A. Beatrice.
See Romney, A.B.
'
A
Ransome, Arthur.
Financial proposition:
A sentirnental story.'
44 (1907): s44-547 .
Raphael,
John
NIathaniel].
'Father
4L7-4L9 .
Wisdomrs
Advice.'
36 (1903):
rThe poet
and rhe Queen.' 37 (LgO3/4): 5g3_5g5.
Rattray,
L. Frost.
Ruha: A Tale of Adventure in the lraori IJar.
1 9 ( 1 8 9 2 / 9 3 ) : 5 2 7 - 5 3 4 , 5 77 - 5 8 4
, 6 8 6 - 6 9 3.
Reid, rlsa.
Is My only Joy.", 20 (Ig93/94): 356_364.
"'phyllis
'A Manrs
Reynolds, llrs Baillie
Ii.e. Gertrude].
Strategy.'
47 (190g/
9):
298-306.
Richardson,
Frank.
'The
Ex-citizen:
A Humorous
1 0 5 -1 0 9 .
sEorv.l
4 3 ( 1 9 0 6 / 7 )z
'An Ideal
Christmas.'
45 OTOT/il: 3g-43.
'Afrer
Ridge, w[i1liam] pett.
rhe Facr.'
2g (1s99): 472-476.
'Dangerous
Complaints. r 43 (1906/7). 34-39.
'Experiment
at Kearsley's.'
4I (L905/6): 23g-243.
'The Happy prisoner.r
32 (1901): gg-g2.
'Me and
My Dury.'
40 (1905): 137-141.
'Medlockrs
Reputarion. , 4I (tgOS/O, 307-31I.
'The Popular
Vote (A Diverting
Study in Rustic Cleverness).,
48 (1909): 1s6-161.
'Railway
Man's Wife.'
39 (1904/5): 29-32.
rReconstituting
the circumstances.'
30 (1900) r 24-2g.
rRepairing
a Breach.'
32 (1901): 474-479.
'Tria1
and Verdicr.'
3l (f900/f):
lg4-190.
'The Word
o f a W o m a no r T w o . r
34 (1902): 459_461.
'
K
a
i
s
e
r
Rittenhouse,
Maud.
Krum.'
summer Number 1g94, 66-72.
'The Crowd.'
Roberts, Morley.
25 (Lg97/9$:237-242.
'The Docror
of the Swamp.' 2g (1g99): 250_254.
38
'The Luck of Captain Spink.'
43 (1906/7)z 80-90'
'The setElemenr wirh shanghai smith.'
34 (1902)z 646-657.
'The Skipper of the s.S. Ringdove.'
45 (1907/8):97-108'
'The Ark of rhe Jamrachs.'
2l (1894/95): 69L-697.
Robertson, w.B.
'Under the Southern Cross.'
46 (f908) t L79'218.
Robins, Elizabeth.
'Black Magic: The Story of the Spanish
Robinson, BIertram] Fletcher.
28 (1899): 178-189.
Don.'
'The Laughter of Dr Marais: A Study of the Breton Coast.l
33 (1901/2): 653-661.
'The Blue Fan.'
47 (1908/9): 222-224'
Robinson, E.S. Kemp.
'The Card-house.' 4l (1908/9): 552-554.
'Theodora's Bangle.r
47 (1908/9): 430-431.
rAunt Susan.'
7 (1880/81): 467-47I'
Roche, Katharine.
'Dear Mr Morton. '
1 3 ( 1 8 8 6 / 8 7) : 7 2 2 ' 7 2 6 .
'Aunt Hawkins.'
Romney, A.B. lPseudonym of A. Beatrice Rarnbaut].
SummerNumber 1894' 3-51.
'False Premises.r
46 (1908): 532-535.
Rook, Clarence.
'Joseph's Coat.'
43 (L906/7)z 428'432.
'Tony's Walk.'
42 (L906)z 499-505.
'Dobsonts Plots.r
28 (1899): 18-20.
Roose, David C.
'An Artistic
20 Q893/94): 508-511.
Burglar.'
Russe1l, Charles C.
'The Autobiography of Mr Joshua Jerkinson.'
40 (1905):
Russell, Fox.
5L9'522.
'Befogged.'
36 (r903) : 660'664.
'An Enterprising Yankee.' 4I (f905/6): 7L3'7L8'
'The Jester.'
4L (1905/6): 124-L29.
tKing Tuttlebury
I: The Story of the Strange Exaltation
49 (1909/10): 265'270'
of a Baronet.'
'A SecondMarriage.r
34 (1902): 38-45.
'The Sorrows of an Amateur Actor.t
35 (1902/3)z 431'436'
'Two Innocents Abroad.'
36 (1903): 406-410'
'The Acapulco Galleon.'
20 (1893/94)t 403-407'
Russe1l, Herbert.
,The Bell Buoy of rhe llanacles.'
344-35L.
33 (l9OI/2),
'Chased by a Lion: A Story of Aldershot Camp.' L7 (1890/91):
480-483.
tThe Doctorrs Daughter.'
5 3 3 - 5 3 7'
22 Q895/96):
Clara.
Savile-Clarke,
'Heart o' I"loonlight.'
48 (f 909): 12'20.
Scheffauer, Herman.
'Two in the Temple: A Tale of Love and Hatred among the
48 ( 1909): 480-488.
Chinese. |
See Merriman, Henry Seton.
Scott, Hugh Stowel1.
'A Millionaire
3 0 ( 1 9 0 0 ):
for Five l'linuEes.'
scully, William charles.
r24-L30.
Summer
Senior, W. "'By the Sweat of His Brow": A Colonial Yarn.'
Number 1883 (PalmY DaYs): 47-50.
'The l"laid of Tarragona.'
50 (1910) z 357-369.
Shaw, Captain F.H.
'The old and the New.'
44 (1907): 397-405.
'Revelation.'
Signed Frank H' Shaw'
46 (1908) z 482-489.
'The Harper P. Todd Family.'
45 (1907/8)z 552-557'
Shelley, Bertha.
'The Battle of Waterloo: A Comedy Adapted from the Norwegian
Shiel, M.p.
33 (L901/2): 560-566.
of Kielland.'
'The Spectre-ship.'
22 (1895/96): 755-764'
'Wayward Love.'
22 (1895/96): 355-362.
rA Dreamer.'
30 (1900)z 282-291'
Shorter, Mrs Clement Ii.e. Dora].
'The Mysrery of a Lonely cottage.'
45 (1907/8)z 477-486.
39
'The
O r h e r W o m a n ' sC h i l d . ,
2g (fg99): 165_170. Signed
llrs Clement K. Shorter.
'The
Srrange Voice.,
30 (1900): 3g-40.
'The Temptation
of John Johnson.,
28 (1g99): 40-47. signed
Hrs Clement K. Shorter.
'The Village policeman.'
42 (1906) r 42I_424. Signed Dora
Sigerson Shorter.
Sidgwick, Cecily.
See Dean, HrB Andrew.
'A Breach
sladen, Douglas.
of courtship: A story of sicily.r
32
( 1 9 0 1 ): 2 0 8 - 2 t 6 .
'Brigands
v Mafia: A Story of l,Iodern Sicily.,
34 (L902):
288-296.
,The British
Minister's
Spanish Niece: A Story of Japan.'
37 (L903/4): 298-305.
'The Burglary
at the British
LegaEion: A Story of Japan.'
37 (L903/4)z L26-L34.
fChiquita's
Japanese Lover.r
39 (1904/5)t 191_f9g.
'Fair
in Love and War: A Story of Japan.,
37 (L903/4):
6L9-626.
'In Taormina
Town: A Story of Sicily.'
33 (L90L/2): 245-253.
'A Japanese
Knighr-Errant . | 46 ( fgb8 ) , 370-379.
'Lydia,
rhe Maid.'
50 (tgfO), n4-242.
'The
Mercy of a Sicilian.,
3 4 ( 1 9 0 2 ) : 524-533.
'The
Missing Bandsman: A Story of High Life
in Palermo.r
33 (L9OL/2), 44I-450
'si
J'6rais Roi.'
(
1
9
0
2
)
:
34
16g_177.
Smi les , Frank Finch.
See Finch-Smiles, Frank.
'
A
Smi th, M' Payne.
Broken colrar-bone.'
14 (1gg7/gg): 1rg-121.
'Christina's
Guardian. '
17 ( 1g90/91): 309_3f3.
'The
Clarkes' Cousin. '
l6 (Iggg/gil:
30g_311.
'cross-currents:
A story of Match-making. '
15 (rggg/g9):
3 7 L - 3 74 .
'Miss
Lucretiar s Mistake. '
20 (L893/94)z 746-749. Signed
M. payne-Srnith.
'An
'
old Love.
t3 (18g6/87): 623_627.
'Manuela.'
Speed, LanceloE & F.R. pryor.
40 (1905): 250-255.
Spencer, Hilda C. Hammond. See Hamrnond-Spencer,
Hilda C.
'
s
i
g
r
i
d
'
s
speight, EIrnesr] nIawin].
Avaianche.,
46 (190g): L27-r34.
'The
speight, T[homas] w[ittinson].
Belr of Diamonds., 23 (rg96/97)z
311-321.
'on
rhe Road to Gretna Green.'
31 (1900/1): 599-604.
'From
spender, EIdward] Harold.
sunset to sunrise.r
32 (1901): 424-432.
'How
Toppler Threw for Rorhenburg.,
26 (1g9g): 3L5-326.
Signed Harold Spender.
tl-ucile:
An Incident of the Commune., 32 (1901): 5Zg_532.
Signed Harold Spender.
'The
Spielmann, Hrs Mabel H.
Cloud.r
4L (L905/6)t 4 7 I - 4 7 9 .
'My
Sonfs Morher.,
40 (1905): 4g5-49I.
Signed ltrs I"1.H.
Spielmann.
Stables, IWil1iam] Gordon, l.l.D., R.N. tAll Like
a Dream.' 10 (1g83/g4):
368-370.
rFourth
Cousins: A Shetland story. '
1 1 ( 1 8 8 4 / 9 5 ) , 2 8 3 _ 2 8-5
'Frank
de Vaud: A Story of S w i s sL i f e . '
1t (1884/85):
220-222.
40
'Gretty's
T r u s t : A R o m a n c eo f t h e S w i s s M o u n t . a i n s . '
10
657-660.
A Han in a ltillion:
A Tale of the Indian Ocean.
15 (1888/89):
560-568, 624-63I, 61O-679.
'Monsieur Albano: A
Story of Pride and Arnbition.r
12 (1885/
86):
503-505.
rNeptune: A Story
of Strange Meetings.r
10 (1883/84): 560-562.
rOld Doddie.l
SummerNumber 1384 (Summer Days) : 43-46.
'A Tale Told under
the Snow.' 11 (1884/85): 368-371.
47 (1908/9):
'
Stacpool-e Hfenry] de Vere. The Adventures of Lavenne.
82-86, 203-208, 289-293, 4I3-4I7,
496-499; 48 ( 1909) : 42-46.
'Miss Barbertonts
I P s e u d o n y mo f B . l ' 1 . W a r d J .
Stanhopd ' G i l b e r t .
Parrot.r
38 (1904): 511-516.
Eliza Vaughan. See Winter, John Strange.
StannarJ, Henrietta
A[nniel.
The Gift of the Gods. 23 (1896/97)z 23-37,
sreel, f[lora
I9g-2L3, 295-297, 420-434, 533-547, 637-65t.
rAbsent-minded.'
46 (1908) z 414-418.
S t e v e n s , , E tr hAe l S t e f a n a .
Second Proposal.'
46 (1908) t 646-653. Signed Ethel Stevens.
'Kate Moorers Wedding
Trip,'
17 (1890/91):
Stevenspn, Edward Irenaeus.
24L-246.
'The wolf's Mourh. '
15 ( 1888/89) t 466-469.
'Extracts from
the Diary of a Millionaire.'
S t r e e t .' G I e o r g e ] S [ l y t h e ] .
33 Q90r/2)z
36-45.
'
M
a
n
a
g
e
d
at Ramsgate.'
L8 (189I/92)t 437-44L.
Srreer, Lilian.
rMy Lady Gadfly.'
46 (tgOg)' 523-526.
Srrurhers, L. Fleming.
'Crossing the Park: A Story
Robert.
about the Hallucinations
Stuart,
of a NewM.P.r 48 (1909): 494-501.
'Mr Penburyrs Puppets.r
19 (1892/93): 406-410.
S u l l i v a n , J' T. Fh .e
Mutuality of Phillisrer
and Brunron.r
19 (1892/93):
6 1 3 - 61 8 .
'The Usurper.'
L9 (1892/93)z 780-785.
Ha11iwe11. 'The Family Spirit.'
23 (1896/97)z 72-80.
Surcliffe, 'K
ate of the To1l-house.'
29 Q899/ 1900)t 685-695.
'Kitty
Leigh. '
25 (L897 /98) : 288-296.
fA Lady's llonour.'
4L (L905/6)z 365-37A.
'A Little
Entanglemenr.'
26 (1898): 80-88.
'Love's Labourrs Hired.'
22 (L895196)z 94L-948.
'The Maid of
22 (1995/96)z 159-166.
"The Merman."'
'Ilatchmaker Jack.'
29 (1899/1900): 422-430.
'Mrs Davenanr.'
27 (1898/99): 113-121.
'My Troublesome prot'eg6s.'
27 (1398/99) z 687-695.
:
'Nancy Waynfleete.r
48 (1909) z 539-546.
'Nick o' Desperares '
3 5 ( L 9 0 2 / 3 ) : 3 2 4 - 3 2 7.
.
'An old-time Tavern Tale.'
35 Q902/3) z 6L7-624.
:
'The Two Romeos.' 24 (1897):
407-415.
Under the Ilhite
Gockade: Being Episodes
in the Gareer of
Haurice
Anstruther,
a Jacobite
Gentleman of Fortune.
31
(1900/1): 56-69, 246-255, 313'322, 466-475, 539-547, 694-702.
rWhat the Cookshelves
Hid.'
30 (1900): 583-590.
rThe Will-power of Carlotta.r
H
a
m
i
l
t
o
n
.
45 (1907/8): 600-602.
Taber.
'A Can of Peaches.'
22 (L895196)z 54-60.
TanquereY, K.
'The rrThingrrat Boggart's End.t
Taroev, JIessie] TIorer] Kingsley.
2o (L893/94): 726'728.
'A Tragedy
20 (1893/94): 824-826.
of Duty.r
(1883/84):
4T
'Flossie's
Terriss, Ellaline.
christmas Fairy.'
43 (1906/7). 5g-61.
'ELizabeth
Thompson, Vincent stanley.
Bids.'
46 (190g) z 659-662.
'Lady Hungerford's
Tibbits, Annie o.
Vi1lain.'
39 (1904/5): 695-699.
'The Srrange
Case of rhe Stolen Rubies.'
39 (L904/il2
347-352.
'
"
L
u
c
k
y
"
Tibbits,
Charles.
cale.'
49 (fgOg/fO), 3gg-402.
'The cuinea
Tiddeman, Lfizziel
E[1len].
Stamp.' 42 (1906): 309-315.
'A December
Tree, Elizabeth.
Evening.,
43 (1906/7)z 369-372.
' T h e D r e a m .'
44 (1907) : 553-555.
'A Study
of Emotions.'
47 (1908/9): 331-333.
'chick.,
Tregarrh, John.
L9 (1992/93):, 723-726.
rour over. I
L 7 ( 1 8 9 0 / 9 1 ) : 5 6 5 - 5 6 7.
'The Revolt
Trelawney, Dayrell.
Ipseudonym of Ada Dayrell Fowler].
of Daphne.r 22 (1895/96)z 636-642.
'The Robbery
of rhe pink Diamond.'! 24 (rg97)z 53g-547.
'The secrer
of rhe Haunted Road.'
24 (1997)z 563-572.
'A Backward
Trevor, Hajor Philip.
Forward: A Football Storv.r
45
(L907 /8) z 2L4-220
r
T
h
e
True, James.
Luponi Strad.'
44 (I907)t
332-333.
Tuite, Hugh. 'A Man Proposes.'
36 (1903): 269-272.
'Checkmared.'
Turner, Alice Jane.
7 (1880/gl): 591-595.
'The Great
Turner, Ethel S.
Third llave.,
2L (L894/9il2 47-52.
'
A
Tynan, KaEharine.
Bir of Scandal.'
46 (190g): 593-599.
'In the Blue
Room.' 4L (t905/6): 44I-449.
'The Ref
lection in the Mirror.,
37 e9O3/D z 256-261.
'The Rich Mrs peppercorn.'
50 (1910) : 444-450.
'sr Mary
of the Isles.'
33 (1904) z L37-L42.
'The Boy
upward, Allen.
who played rhe Violin.'
34 (lgoz).
234-240.
'The Chaperone.'
Urch, Mabel C.
48 (1909): 246-252.
'Lewis Duva1,
Accompanist., 42 (1906): 731-732.
'Only a Pupil:
The Last of the Incidents Related to Stafford
Dane, Musician.'
46 (1908): 67-74.
'sir Timothy
Jenkins: A story with a Moral.'
4g (1909):
433-440.
'The Workings
of Fare.'
45 Q9O7/il:
433-440.
'A classical
urquhart, Paul.
catastrophe:
A story of coverly Gutch
and a Lead Mine.,
50 (1910): 520-526.
'coverly Gutch
of the stock Exchange, London.'
4g (1909):
4 4 2 - 4 5 5, 6 0 4 -6 L r .
' T h e D e a dC o n r r o l . ' 4 9 ( 1 9 0 9 / 1 0 ) :
7OB-7L4.
'A Matter of Hope: Another
Coverley Gutch S t o r y . ' 5 0
( 1 9 1 0 ): 3 0 3 - 3 0 9 .
tRed Rubber: Another Coverly
Gutch Story.r
49 (1eOel10):
625-63t.
V a c h e 1 1 , H o r a c e A n n e s l e y . ' A n A m a z i n g C h r i s t m a s E v e . ' 2 5 ( L 8 9 7/ 9 8 ) :
63-67.
'An Experimenr.,
44 (L907)z L37-L44.
rMessiterrs
S i s r e r . I 4 5 ( L 9 0 7/ 8 ) : g L 7 - 9 2 7.
Yaizey, Hrs George de Horne.
See Mansergh, Jessie.
'Private
vandercook, John.
Foret's rnfernal Machine.'
3g (1904):
642-645.
Van der Poorten-Schwartz,
Joost Marius Willem.
See Maartens, Maarten.
rA Pink Sun-bonnet.r
Vaughan, Gertrude E.M.
28 (1899): 32r-324.
'The strong-room
ar the Abbey.'
32 (1901): 659-661. signed
G.E.M. Vaughan.
42
rA I'Bad'l
Freke.
I P s e u d o n y mo f W i l l i a m G r a i l y H e w i t t ] .
20 (L893/94)z 460-464.
Life.'
'The Cinnabar Death-trap.'
45 (1907/8). 327-334.
Wallie, A.
Ward, B.M. See StanhoPe, Gilbert.
IPseudonym of Florence E. Jarnes]. But for Ilion.
[Warden, Florence].
(1878/7il: 4L7'425,482'489,
543'549, 606-615, 671-678'
5
Unsigned.
735-74I.
9 (1882/83): 33'4L, 98-105, I62-17L,
Dosn in the lforld.
Signed 'By the Author of "But
226-234, 2gO'298, 354-362.
t Halkett
t
t
H
o
w
V i c k e r s c r o f t W a s R e d e e m e d r t te t c .
for Ilionrt'
and Laing give Florence Warden as the author of Dosn in
Viggars,
the lforld.
417-424, 48L'489,
6 (L879/80):
lJas Redeened.
f,ou Vickerscroft
544-552, 609-618, 673'68r, 737-745.
'Breaking Cups and Mending Hearts.'
47 (1908/9):
Warner, Anne.
26L-264.
'His Family's Feelings and His.'
44 (1907): 178'185.
'The Potted Palm Speaks.' 45 (1907/8): 140-143.
'The Unexpectedness of Winifred.'
46 (1908) z 62L-624'
t A W e a k M o n e y , a S t r o n g C a t t s P a \ ^ r ,a n d a C h e s t n u t . |
46
( 1908): 115-120.
'The wedding-present Problem.'
46 (1908): 513-517.
'Her
19 0892/93)z 59'65'
wassermann, Lillias.
"study from Life.''r
'The Only Resource.r L7 (1390/91): 595-601.
'Village Politicians.'
2l (1894/95). 519-527.
See Maclaren, Ian.
Watson, John.
'The Little
Mother of l"laryrs Ferry: A Story
Weaver, Ernily P[oynton].
of Western Canada.r 49 (1909/10): 371-380.
'The Heroism of Mark Leslie.'
L7 (1890/91):
Weigall, cIonsranc"] E.c.
728-735.
19 (1892/93)z 10-18, 124-132, 200-2L0'
A Roance of llan.
276-284, 326-335, 448-455.
20 (L893/94>: 15-28, 119-131, 169-181.
The sleeve of Gare.
30'42'
17 (1890/91):
fire Temptation of Ihrlcie Carruthers.
65-77, 158-169 , 193'204, 295'306, 32L-332, 4L6'427 ' 449-460.
'Her Prisoner.'
49 (1909/10) t 734-741.
Wells, Leila Burton.
Whall, W.B. See Oscar, Alan.
'The Aposrtes of Progress.'
47 (1908/9): 510-519.
whishaw, Fred.
'A Ghostly Duel.'
32 (1901)z 494-498r A S c o u t ' s R o m a n c e .'
3 4 ( 1 9 0 2 ) : 4 3 7- 4 4 0 .
'Serfs and Lords.'
34 (L902): 513-518.
'A Matter of Skill.'
S u m r n e rN u m b e r 1 8 9 1 ( T h e
whitby, Beatrice.
Crown of the Year) z I'52.
'on the Lake of Lucerne.r
L7 (1890/91): 341-348.
tWhat Can a Man Do More? A Story of the Frozen North.l
White, Arno|d.
27 (1898/99): 358-363.
'A White Nighr.'
25 (L897/98)z 428-434.
'A Feline Hostage.'
44 Q907) z 496-503.
White, E.
rDust (neing an Adventure of Drenton Denn,
White, Fred l,l[errick].
29 (1899/1900): 506-514.
Special Cournissioner).'
'A Friendly Call.'
50 (1910)z 473-48L.
'An Object Lesson.'
46 (1908) z 225-235.
'The orpheusia.'
36 (1903)z 252-26L'The Red Speck (Oeing an Adventure of Drenton Denn, Special
43
28 (1899): 295-302.
Comrnissioner).'
'A Table Tragedy.'
45 (1907/8): 402-4L2.
'Two of Them.' 37 (1903/4): 536-543.
'The white Geranium.r
29 (L899/ 1900)z LI2-L20.
'The Poetrs Dream.' 43 (1906/7)t 125-128.
White, Percy.
'T' Other Side o' rh' Beck.t
23 (1896197)z 588-598.
'The Stockings:
A Tale of the Last Election.'
4L (1905/6):
635-640.
'The Dragon's
Roma. IPseudonym of Blanche Oram, later l^Iinder] .
Jewe1.'
22 (L895/96): 662-666.
'The DreamPicture: For Children.'
23 (1896/97)z 98-102.
'The Warning Crystal: A Fairy Idyll
for Young-hearted People.'
22 (L895/96)z 4L8-42I.
' T h e C o m e d yo f K i L i r s B e t r o t h a l :
A Tale of
Whitfield,
Percival.
39 (1904/5): 537-545.
Australia.'
the Northern Territory,
'A Lesson from the Chinese.' 4L (L905/6):4L'46.
'A Pearl of Price.'
40 (1905): 376-382.
'The Proving of Rodney Parkes.'
42 (1906): 361-369.
'A Little
Misunderstanding.t
20 (1893/94)z
Whiting, Mary Bradford.
759'7 68.
lMy Aunt's House.'
16 ( 1889/90): 608-611. Signed M.B.
Whit ing.
'A Desperate Venture. I
18 (I89L/92): s60-566,
Wickham, Annie E.
6 2 7- 6 3 2 .
18 (L891/92)z 286-299, 321-33I, 42I-432,
Formed for Conquest.
Winter,
John Strange.
IPseudonym of Henrietta EIiza Vaughan Stannard].
'For the Sake of Old Love.'
27 (f898/99): 23B-248.
'A Pair of Young Things.'
31 (1900/1): 482-488.
'Shadows Before.r
Wishing, Stuart & Arthur Halifax.
44 (L907): 484-492.
'Personally Conducted: A CrickeE
Wodehouse, PIelham] GIranvi1le].
Story. |
44 (1907): 113-120.
Wood, Stanley L. 'An Arizona Nerve Destroyer.r
45 (L907/8): 2OL-209.
tcoldy Locks and a Broncho: The Story of a Cowboy's Horse.'
White,
Williams,
484-494. Unsigned.
2I (L894/95)z 545-553,
Time.
Loveday: A Tale of a Stirring
Signed A.E. Wickham.
6L9-632, 650'666, 780-792, 809'824, 890-902.
20 (1893/94): 43-52, 86-98, L99-2I3, 293-305,
uargaret's l{ay.
374-385, 44t-448.
Neil Wynn. 'Coxswain Swaints Story: A Remarkable Tale
3 1 ( 1 9 0 0 /I ) : 2 3 2 ' 2 3 7 .
of the Coast. '
'The Guard and Ehe Big Gun: The Story of a Scaport Battery.l
39 (1904/5): 334'340.
'The Man and the Monument.r 36 (1903): 204-2L2.
tThe Master's Choice: Resignation or Scandal?'
36 ( 1903):
323-328.
'The Strange Story of a Business Start.'
30 (1900): 472'482.
'The Story of Private Passmore and the Express.r
33 (L901/2)l
546-s51.
'A Christmas Novelty.'
Williarnson, Hrs C.N. Ii.e. Alice Muriel].
43 (1906/7): 3-18.
'Colone1 Cayley's Tea Party.t
46 (1908): 557'563.
47 (fgOS/g)r 233-243, 343-353' 453-463.
The Corboy Countess.
Haid of
Eer Adventures
lltrile
Ed.
The Covboy Countess:
Told in Letters
to Eer Late Governeas.
Hooour to the Qqeen.
48 (1909): 65'77, L67-176, 285-301.
'A Cure for Wealth.r
4 5 ( L 9 0 7/ 8 ) : 6 5 - 7 4 .
'The HoodedChair.'
36 (1903): 30-38.
Ed.
'How I Made My Fortune.r
42 (1906)z 129-L31.
Willoughby, Clarence.
'The safe side.'
43 (L906/7)z 321-328.
wilson, Theodora wilson.
'The I.Iar in Fardale.'
44 (1907): 62-67.
rHis Own Shadow.' 8 (1881/82): 658-663' 723-727.
Wimpole, Walter.
11 (1884/85) :
Winter, Elizabeth Campbe11.'Grandmamma's Valentine.'
147-r50.
44
\
I
)
I
4 6 ( 1 9 0 8 )z 4 6 7 - 4 7 7.
'A Military
Wood, Irtalter.
llooligan.'
34 (1902): 303-309.
Workman, James. 'The Beacon Fire.'
33 (I90L/2)z 3I4-32L.
'The ChrisEmasPresent.'
31 (fgOO/f), 131-138.
rA Happy Christmas.'
37 Q903/4): 101-108.
rThe Postern Door: A Story of the Great Rebellion.'
36
( 1903): 498-504.
'The
30 (1900): 138-145.
Queen's Ring.'
'The Silver Lute.'
30 (1900)z 521-528.
'The Hound of Time.'
Worne, John.
46 (1908): 151-158.
rOf Kindness to Crocodiles.'
44 (L907)z 40-47.
'On the Plains: A Stirring
Wyllarde, Dolf.
Story of the hlest Indies.I
48 (1909): 375-381.
rQuarantine: A Story of the West Indies.l
48 (1909): L32-I42.
'The Sermon: A Christrnas Story.t
49 (1909/10): 240-247.
'After A11: A Christmas Story.r
Wynne, J.K.
39 (1904/5): 150-156.
'King Mandrin:
Wynne, llay.
IPseudonym of Mabel Winifred Knowles].
The Robin Hood of France.r
49 (1909/10): 355-362.
Won from the Brigands.'
50 (fgLO): 4Il-424.
YarcotE, W.G. 'An Altered Programme.' 46 (1908): 98-103.
'An Incident of the Night: A Humorous Story.'
43 (1906/7)z
190-194.
'InEerference.'
43 (1906/7) z 605-609.
' R e l a t i v e V a 1 u e .'
5 0 ( 1 9 1 0 )z 2 L 2 - 2 L 6 .
'The Devilrs Manuscript.'
22 (1895/96): fl-20.
Yeats, S. Levett.
'The Lace Kerchief.'
33 (L9OL/2): 93'99.
Signed S. LevettYeats.
The Lord Protector.
34 (1902): 1-15, I22-L34, 249-263,
358-372, 469'482, 610-623.
Signed S. Levett-Yeats.
SIGNED
\
J
STORIES
-
AUTHOR UNTRACEABLE
'Mr Marris's Window.' 19 (L892/93): 822-826.
A., A.M.
'The Missing Dean.'
A., C.
15 (1888/89): 596-603.
'Corresponding $rith the Planets.r 19 (1892/93):403-405.
Aleriel.
'Letters from the Planets.r
13 (1886/87): L2I-L23, 311-313,
556-558, 688-690; 16 (1889/90) t 285'287.
'The Portals of the King of Day: A Journey to the Regions
of the Sun.'
14 (1887/88): 96-98.
rA Trip to Jupiterts Moonlet.r
18 (1891/92): 55-56.
'A Little
Author of 'A Broken EngagemenErl etc.
Love-affair.'
I7
( 1890/91):404-408.
Author of rThe Dingy House at Kensingtonrr etc.
| (I874/75): 606-608.
45
'Bibbs: A Love-story.'
tFor l"loney- for Love.'
Signed
7 (1880/81): 250'251.
'By the Author of
"The
"The Dingy House at Kensingtonr"
r
Bridge Between,tt ttTheir SummerDayrtt etc.
'By the
'Gold and Gilr.'
3 (1876/77)t 108-111. Signed
Author
Author
Author
Author of "The Dingy House at Kensington"'
"The Bridge
Between,Itetc. t
'Kitty.'
2 (L875/16): 44-46.
'By
'Proud Mrs Brandleth.'
2 ( I 8 7 4 / 7 5 ) z 4 0 7 - 4 1 0 . Signed
the Author of "The Dingy House at KensingEonrrt "The Bridge
Betweentr, etc. I
'By
'Without a Pigtail.'
3 (1876/77)z 367'371. Signed
t'A Dingy House at Kensingtonrtt ttBibbsrrr etc.t
the AuEhor of
A Eard Gase. 2 (L875/76): 415'424, 48I'487,
of tA Hard Case.'
Unsigned.
544-550, 608-616, 671-678, 736-744.
'How He Found His Wife.'
9 (L882/83)z 402-405. Signed
'By Ehe Author of
" A H a r d C a s e r " " w a s I t W i s e t o C h a n g e ?"
etc. t
S u s p e n s e . 4 ( L 8 7 7 1 7 8 ) : 3 1 - 3 9 , 9 6 - 1 0 4 , 1 6 1 - 1 6 7 ' 225-232,
of
Author
of
L-rz, 65-74, r29-r39, 193-203, 257'267, 32L-33L, 3 8 5 - 3 9 6 ,
449-460.
tLady Cathcart's Confession.
tLucia,
etc.
Hugh and Anotherrt
11 (18s4/85): 659'663.
rlulr
of
Author
( L 8 7 4 / 7 5 ) :s 5 7 - s s 9 .
287-29L.
tJas It llise to Ghange? 8 (1881/82): 417-424, 482-490,
547-555, 611-619, 614-681, 738-746.
' 12
r T h e E v i l Ornen.
'The Impression of a Noticing Eye.'
of
( 1885/86): 757-760.
2 ( I 8 7 5 1 7 6t)
etc. Caught in the Briars.
of rl,ost in the Winning,'
Author
Author
'A Swim
for Life: A Western Episode.r
7 ( 1 8 8 0 / 8 1 ) :6 9 I - 6 9 4 .
U n si g n e d .
r r r W h e nG r e e n
L e a v e s C o m eA g a i n . f r r 9 ( 1 8 3 2 / S 3 ) : 2 7 6 - 2 7 9 .
'A Rank
F., W,J.
Swindle.'
19 (1892/93)z B3Z-942.
'Queer Little
Gwendoline.
Me.1 5 (I878/7D:
474-479.
lEdithrs Faith.'
H.
9 (L882/83):339-341.
Signed'By rhe Aurhor
o f " G o u r l a y B r o t h e r s , t t t t M a d g i et s H e r o , t t e t c . t
'A Foolish Mistake.r
7 (1880/81): 727-730. Aurhor of
tGourlay Brothersr t tMadgiets
Herort etc.
'Gourlay Brothers.r
6 (L879/80)t 168-171.
'Madgie's Hero.'
6 (1g79lg0): 661-665.
'Miss Britmanls
Last Lesson.t
Signed 'By the Author of
t t G o u r l a y B r o t h e r s t t t t l , l a d g i e,
s
H
ero rrr etc.
,
'A
K.
Strange Fellow-voyager.'
6 (1879/8il r, 244-246.
K., D. rA Nightrs Work in the Chinese War: A Veteran's Story.'
1
Kewthorpets
'
10
Paris.
Accidentr,
( 1883/84) :
etc.
tttl-a Filomela":
t
A Story
628-631.
'Miss Saxelby's Work of Art.'
9 (f882/83): 242-246. Unsigned.
tMr Kewthorpe's Accident.t
S u n r m e rN u m b e r 1 8 8 4 ( S u r n m e r
Signed 'By the Author of "Miss Saxelby's
18-23.
Days):
Work of Art."'
'The Fair }Iaid of Cherbury.'
&c.
of 'A MoonbeamTriangle.'
9 (r882/83): 564's67.
'Thousands and Thousands! 9 (1882/83): 20-23.
rJust Like Argentina. r
I
of 'Mrs Twiggitts l"lint Sauce, etc.
12 (1885/86): 182-186.
rI'Irs Twiggit's
S u r n m e rN u m b e r 1 8 8 5 ( n r i g t r t
Mint Sauce.r
D a y s) z 4 0 ' 4 3 .
tThe
rPembertonts Piecert tA Bolt from the Bluert etc.
2I (1894/95): 367'376.
Mysrerious House at Copington.r
'The Scotchman:
Voice in the Woodsr' etc.
Author of 'She's ComingrilThe
L7 (1890/91): 275-279A Railway Story.'
8., F. 'Checkmated.' 8 (1881/82): 595-598.
4 (1877/78)z 687-690.
C., B. 'His Strange Infatuation.'
17 (1890/91): 538-544.
C., E. rA Guinea Guest.r
L9 (1892/93): LLZ'LL7.
D., H.B. 'Lady Janers Rebellion.'
rJanetrs Forgeries.'
11 (1884/85): 342'346.
E., A.A.
'Prince Lollipop's
Search for Love: A Story for Little
F., D.L.
Ones.t 37 (I9O3/4): 603-605.
'At Cross-purposes.'
Author of 'A Swim
8 (1881/82): 25'38.
F.' H.
Author of
for Life.'
46
'Running the
Gauntlet of the Dardenelles:
An Episode of
the Russo-Turkish I^Iarof 1770.,
4 (I877 /79): 156-159.
'
G
e
o
r
g
e
L., H.
Fenwick's Schoolfellow.'
1l (1884/85): 20-24.
'Her Brother
Ephraim.t
L2 (1885/86): 118-121.
'His Son's Wife.r
11 (1884/85): gZ/86.
1An I11-timed Proposal.'
S u n n u e rN u m b e r 1 8 8 3 ( p a h o y D a y s ) :
40-44.
'Mary Cotterellrs
Visiror.'
11 (fAA+/gS), 495-499.
'A Uatrimonial
Schemer.'
L2 (1885/86): 660-663.
'Mr Daly's Sitter.r
SummerNumber l8S4 (Summer Days):
36-40.
'Our Irrepressible
Tenor.'
6 (1879/S0): 75L-754.
'Signorina Lessie.r
9 (1882/83): 147-150.
10 (1883/84): 274-277. Signed 'By the
"'Sister Eyes."'
Author of "So Blue; the Story of a Girton Girl."r
'so Blue!
A story of a Girron Girl.'
8 (L881/82)z 2LL-2L5.
tTrusted Too
We11.' 9 (1882/83): 662-664.
'
L
a
d
y
L. , M.R.
Angelars Laresr Lion. '
16 (1889/90) z 246-249.
rMilly's Dowry.'
12 (1885/86): 47-5I.
rMrs Van Koert's
Teapor.r
14 (1887/88): 437-44I.
rNinette's Ideas.'
16 (1889/90): 44O-443.
rA Point of Honour.'
11 (1884/85): 52-55.
'Sornebodyrs
.
Secret.r
13 (1886/87): 276-279.
'Their Mysterious
.
Business.r
L7 (1890/91): 87-90.
'"Those Dreadful
.
Girls. "'
15 ( 1888/89) : 692-695.
'A Brave Deed.'
L . W.J.
8 (faaf/gZ),
404-407. Signed 'By rhe Author
of ttA Lost Keyrtt etc. t
tHow He Was Thwarted.'
.
Sunrner Number 1883 (falmy Days):
5f-53.
Unsigned.
'How She Saved
.
Him.r
11 (1834/85): 2IO-213.
Signed W.J.L.,
Author of "A Wayward Ward.tt'
'our Duplicate
,
Story.'
14 (1887/88): 472-475.
'Vincent Romneyfs Recompense.'
.
Signed W.J.L., rAuthor
of ttA Brave Deed.tt'
'A WaywardWard.r
10 (18S3/S4): 753-755.
Signed 'By rhe
Author of "How He Was Thwarted.t'l
M.,A. tOne Hundred pounds Reward.r 7 (1880/81): 116-119.
M., R. 'Mr Brome's Heiress.r
10 (f8S3/84): 402-406.
47
'How Harry WinsomeWon His Epaulets.'
A Naval Surgeon.
2 7 7- 2 8 L .
'A chaprer of Accidents.r
L7 (1890/91): 16'23.
P., A.
2 (1875/76):
signed 'By
etc.
Suitorsr"
the Author of "who Is Sylvia?" "Miss Hilary's
'The
"Crabs" at Caisterby: A Story of the Eastern Counties.'
Days): 53-58.
S u m m e rN u m b e r 1 8 8 5 ( f r i g n t
'By
'Discovered in Time. '
10 (18S3/84) z 599-602. Signed
etc.'
the Author of "Who Is Sylvia,"
' I v a ' s F i r s t D a y - d r e a m .'
9 ( 1882/83): 722-724. Signed
'By the Author of
"Who Is Sylvia?" "why Those Sketches
9 (1882/83): 722'724.
Were Unfinished," etc.'
11 ( 1884/85 ) : 4L8-426 , 482-489 '
I{y Nanesake }larjorie.
'By the Author
Signed
546-554, 610-618, 675'682, 739-746.
etc.r
of "who rs sylvia?"
rMysterious Miss Alister.'
Signed
14 (1887/88): f50-154.
'By the Author of "A Wilful
Young Woman."'
'only a Tenth.l
13 (1886/87): 34L-344. signed'By the
Author of "A Wilful Young Womanr" etc.'
L7 (1890/91): 143-151.
"'only Just!"r
'Sybilrs Second Cousins, and i{hat They Did for Her.'
13
'By the Author of "A Wilful Young
(f8S6/87): L8-22.
Signed
rrA Rustic Maidrtt etc. t
womanrttttwho Is Sylvia?rr
tTheir Cunning Device.r
SummerNumber 1884 (Summer Days):
Signed 'By the Author of "Who Is Sylvia?"r
26'30.
'A Very Strange Affair.'
Signed
15 (1888/89): 723-733'
'By Ehe Author of
Suitorsr"
"who Is Sylvia?" "Miss Hilary's
etc. t
'Why Those Skerches Were Unfinished.'
9 (1882/83): 369-370;
'By the Author of "Who Is Sylvia?"
435-438. Signed A.P.,
etc. I
Young lJoman. L2 ( 1885/86): 1-10, 65-77 , I29-I4L,
A l{ilful
Lg3-204, 257-269, 321-332, 385-396, 449-460, 5L3-524, 577-587,
Signed 'By the Author of "Who Is Sylvia?"
641-651, 705-7L5.
t
t t i l l u l yN a m e s a k e M a r j o r i e , t t
etc.
"A Rustic Maid,
10 (1883/84): 335-338.
R., H.H. 'Ludwig's Jealousy.'
'
470'473.
R., K. 'The chimney at Lisgarvan 1"1i11. 6 (f879/80):
5 (1878/79)z 43'47, 108-112,
Frank Ross at Oxford.
A Resident M.A.
L47-153, 298-302, 437'442, 556-560, 624-627' 720'723.
rMy Aunt's Matchmaking.' I Q874/75): 4I'47 S., F.M.
'Two Pounds Ten.'
42 (1906): 493-494.
S. , R.l'I.
'Jack and Jill:
19
A O n e C h a p t e r S t o r y i n H u m a nN a t u r e . '
V., A.
(L892/93)z 166-170.
' 1 " 1 yw i f e t s s t i t c h i n T i m e . '
6 (1879/80): 410-414.
w. , J.F.
'what's in a Name?' 2 (1875/76)z 690-693.
L7 (1890/91): 2L5'22I.
w., I"l.B. 'That Black Lace Bonnet.r
'His Philosphy.'
20 (L893/94)r 672-674.
x.
'The Enchanted Ass: From the Arabic of "The Accursed Donkey."'
Zara.
24 0897) z 610-611.
'I"lere Temperament.' 3I (1901): 551-556.
Zed.
ANONYI"IOUS STORIES
'Across
the River.r
9 (1882/83):
466'469.
48
'An Adventure by Express.'
24 (1897)z 280-283.
'An Adventure
in Formosa.'
5 (1878/79), 5g7-590.
tAn Alpine
Adventure.r
22 (1895/96). 457-460.
'A11 Souts'
Night.'
13 (1886/g7): 663-667, 753-756.
'Among
the Downs.'
25 (fggZ/98)r
316-32I.
"Anner: A West Country Tragedy.'
2I (1894/9il2 328-338.
'Anthony
selwyn's l^/ooing.'
summer Number 1885 (rri.gnt Days) : 32-36.
'As Paying
Guests.'
2O 0893/94):
284-289.
'Bang.'
3 (I876/77)z 434-435.
'Beyond Reca11.'
5 (L878/79): 596-598.
rBlazing
Gulch. '
15 ( 1888/89): 27g-293.
'BossfTec
at Oldby.'
2I (L894/95):187-193.
'The Buried
Bungalow.' 4 (L877/78)z 20-22.
'Captain
Miles Barnicott. I
SummerNurnber 1885 (nrigtrt Days) : 22-25.
'Christmas
Eve.'
3 (1876/77): 89.
'The Cobweb
of a Lonely Spider.'
14 (1887/88): 338-342.
'A corrected
Error.'
20 (Lgg3/94).265-275.
'Cousin Ne11.'
3 (I876/77): 90.
tCrosiettefs
Betrothal: A Story of Brirtany.t
L9 (1892/93)t 346-354.
'Cur
Of f Lrith a Shilling.l
S u m r n e rN u m b e r 1 8 8 6 : 5 7 - 6 I .
'Dickrs wife.,
1t (1gg4/g5): 725-730.
tA Doctor's
lloliday. '
3 (L876/j7). 729-73L.
'Dona Ferentes.l
23 (1896/97): 5L6-52I.
'The Empty
House on the Goswold Road.,
37 (LgO3/4)z 690-694.
'Felicia.'
9 (1882/83): L77-L78.
'A Forlorn
Hope.'
17 (1890/91): 659-666.
'A Freak
of Nature.'
12 (1885/86): 562-565.
'From
the First.'
summerNumber 1888 (The crown of the year): 56-60.
'Gerald's
F o u r - l e a v e d S h a m r o c k .'
7 (1880/81): 173-176.
'Gladys:
A Tale of a summer wedding.'
s u m r n e rN u m b e r 1 g g 5 ( n r i g t r t
D a v s) : 1 - 1 1 .
'A Good Deal
Abroad.r
18 (L89I/92):
4lO-4L7.
'coss
and Sons.'
12 (1885/86): 339-342.
'A Great
Mistake.r
4 (L877/78):240-246.
f,ad Ee Knoun: A Story of lfev Zealand Gold firirst.
r 8 ( 1 8 9 1 / 9 2:)
45-54, 106-115, 152-163, 236-246.
'Hard Pressed:
A Wolf-story.r
L (L874/75)z 565-570.
'The Heiress
of Garden Court.'
8 (1881/82): 146-150.
' H e r T o m .'
1 4 ( 1 8 8 7 / 8 8) : 4 9 8 - 5 0 1 .
'The Hermir
of Dundoyne., 13 (fgg6/g7):
2Lz-2I7.
'The House
on the Hill. '
9 (f882/83): 752-755.
'How He Learnt
His Lesson.'
6 (1879/g0): gg-91.
'In the
Course of One Evening.r
20 (L893/94). 2L6-222.
'Inkinsfell:
An Alpine Village Srory.r
11 (1884/g5): 757-760.
'Ir'ry.'
4 ( L 8 7 7/ 7 8 ) : 3 4 0 - 3 4 4 .
'A Jeweller's
Story.r
7 (1880/81): 752-754.
rJosephine's
Dream.' 8 (1881/82): 274-277.
'June Daisies:
A Kensington Rornance.' 11 (1884/85): 430-434.
'Lady Bensonrs
House-parry.'
22 (1895/96): BL2-821.
'The Little
Dressmaker.' 3 (1876/77): 477.
fA Lucky Tumble.'
4 (L877/78):110-111.
'Madamers
Little
Plot.'
5 (I878/7il2
ZI8-223.
'Madge's
Cousin.r
5 (L578/79)t L76-I79.
'Miss Cynthia. I
2O (L893/94) : 924-929.
49
'The Missing Witness.r
8 ( 1 8 8 1 / 8 2 ) : 6 2 4 - 6 2 7.
rl'1r Dalbyrs }lonth of Probation.'
12 (1885/86): 623-626.
'Mr I'leakin's Looking-glass.'
19 (1892/93). 98-104.
fThe Mortgage-money.'
4 (L877/78)z 622-628.
'Mrs Penleathrs Strategem.r 40 (1905): 148-157.
'Muriel's Two llidsummers.' 3 (L876/77)z 479.
'lnly Stepmother.'
3 (L876/77): 688-694.
fThe Mystery of the Tall Grey Man.r I (L874/75)z 2L8-222.
'Ne1ly's Mistake: A Love-story.'
7 (1880/81): 2L6-220.
'
|
1 5 ( 1 8 8 8 / 8 9) : 4 0 1 - 4 0 5 .
"Nobles se Oblige. "
'The Old l"lanor House.'
3 (L876/77): 339-343.
'On the Road to Siberia: The Story of a Polish Prisoner.'
15 (1888/B9):
750-752.
'One Good Turn Deserves Another.'
14 (1887/88): 750-754.
'Only a Miner.'
8 (1881/82): 75L-754.
'Only Just Saved.' 4 (L877/78):730-733.
'The Other Aileen.'
S u m m e rN u m b e r 1 8 9 0 : 5 4 - 5 8 .
'Our Mysterious Neighbour. |
15 ( 1888/89) : 24I-245.
'The Panic in the Desert: A Tale of Seven Years Since.'
5 (1878/79):
660-663.
'A Passing Acquaintance.r
7 (f880/81): 406-410.
'The Professor's Blunder.'
3 (1876/77)z 91.
'The Purse Pocket-book.'
19 (L892/93)z 563-570.
'Racing the Midnight Express.'
26 (1898) z 487-489.
'A Real Black Bogey!'
3 (L876/77)z 92.
L79'I87.
Richard Jeukins, ltaster.
19 (1892/93): 4l-49,85-92,
'A Ruler of Princes.'
19 QB92/93) z 505-511.
'The Schoolmistress at Skerne Dun.'
4 (1877/78)t 84-88.
'separated: A Divided Story.'
2O (L893/94): 1-8.
13 (1886/87): 150-154.
" ' S h e ' s C o m i n g ! r rA N o r t h - c o u n t r y S t o r y . '
' Shooting the Rapids. '
4 ( 1 8 7 7/ 7 8 ) t 5 2 8 - 5 3 I .
'The Silver Lock.f
4 (1877/78)t 300-304.
'The Sisters: A Love-tale of Japan.'
13 (1886/87):470-474.
19 (1892/93) t
So Very Connnonplace: A Romance of lhis
lforkaday lforld.
733-745, 849-860, 922-934.
'Some Doubtful Acquaintances:
A Sea-side Story.l
7 (r880/81): 663'667.
'A Sorry Joke.'
16 (1889/90): 37I-376.
'spring-time: A Painterrs Story.'
10 (1883/84): 307-310.
'The Story of a Chase.'
26 (1898)z 637-643.
'Supplanted.'
8 (188f/82): 472-475.
'Three Hundred Gold Pieces: An Arab Yarn.'
22 (1895/96)z 608-610.
'Three Old Maids.'
13 (1886/87): 530-534.
'The Thunderers:
A Canadian Fairy Tale.'
30 (1900) z 439-441.
'Told by Her Sister.r
3 (1876/77)z 268-273.
'A Troublesome Charge.'
3 Q876/77) z 275-278.
'A Trying Position.'
19 (L892/93) t 370'377 .
fTwenty Pounds.r 3 (1876/77): 2I2-2L5.
'Twice Dead.'
13 (1886/87): 82-86.
'Under Suspicion: A Market-day Story.r
16 (1889/90): 147-151.
'what Happened at Ridger./ay-on-Sea. '
16 ( 1889/90): 721-729.
'Who Took It?r
5 (1878/79): 339-343.
'The Widow's Portion.r
L7 (1890/91): 748-752.
'The Woes of Mrs Caractacus Brown.r
18 (I89I/92)z
L2-I5.
'The wooing of Victoria
19 (1892/93): 883-893.
Cross.f
50
'The
Wrong Bag.,
2L (Ls94/95): 488-494.
'The
Lrlrong Number: A S t o r y f o r
rhe Oldish and the Youngish.'
22
( 1 8 9 5 / 9 6 ) : 5 7 7- 5 8 L .
'Young
R o m e o : A S t o r v for Readers Who
Are S t i l l Y o u n g . f 2 2 ( L 8 e 5
/e6) :
9 7 I _ 9 75 .
CHRONOLOGICAL
INDEX
The volume number headings in this index refer to the third British
series.
Beginning wiEh volume 10, comparaEive volume numbers for
the fourth series in the American edition
are also supplied.
(oec l-B7A-Nov 1875)
Pretty ltiss Bellou: A Tale of Eone Life,
By Theo Gift.
1-16, 97-L04,
1 6 1 - 1 6 8 ,2 2 5 - 2 3 2 , 2 8 9 - 2 9 6 ,3 5 3 - 3 6 0 , 4 L 7 - 4 2 4 , 4 8 1 - 4 8 8 , 5 4 5 - 5 5 2 ,
6 0 9 - 6 L 7 , 6 7 0 - 6 8 7 ,7 3 7 - 7 5 r .
'What Mrs Moran Said: An Irish Story.r
By E. Owens Blackburne. 22-26.
f M y A u n t r s M a t c h m a k i n g . I B y F . 1 1 .S . 4 L - 4 7 .
The llanchester
llan.
By Xrs G. Linnaeus Banks.
65-76, t29-L40, L93-204,
2 5 7 - 2 6 8 , 3 2 1 - 3 3 1 , 3 8 5 - 3 9 6 , 4 4 9 - 4 6 0 , 5 L 3 - 5 2 5 ,5 7 7 - 5 9 I , 6 4 L - 6 5 5 ,
70 5 - 7 2 0 .
'The Mystery of the Tall Grey Man.l
2L8-222.
'The Great Gold Secret.'
By David Ker.
273-277.
'Love or Pride?'
By Jean Boncoeur.
298-300.
'At Close
By David Ker.
334-337.
Quarters \47itha Boa Constrictor.'
'Lost.'
By J. Berwick Harwood. 398-402.
'Miss Honorrs Patients.t
By E. Owens Blackburne.
437-439.
'A cut in the Dark.'
467-469.
By David Ker.
'Ruthrs Stepfather.'
492-495.
By Geo. Manville Fenn.
'My Hero.'
By G. Manville Fenn.
553-556.
'A Nightrs Work in the Chinese War: A Veteranrs Story.'
By D.K.
5 5 7- 5 5 9 .
'Hard Pressed: A Wolf-story. |
565-570.
'Mutiny on Board.r
By Lewis Hough. 602-605.
'Bibbs: A Love-story.r
By the Author ofrThe Dingy House at Kensington,r
etc.606-608.
'Edward Brown, Stoker.'
By G. Manville Fenn. 634-638.
'IIy Balloon Adventure.r
By John Berwick Harwood.
687-692.
'In Dangerous Company.' By David Ker.
75L'754.
'The Jet-hunterts
By John Berwick Harwood. 76L-763.
Story.'
2
(Dec
1875-Nov
1876)
By the Author of rl,ost in the Winning,'
etc.
the Briars.
L-tz, 65-74, L29-r39, 193-203, 257-267, 321-331, 385-396,
449-460, 5L3-524, 577-586, 64L-65L, 705-714.
Ttro Points of Vies.
By Beatrice Leigh Hunt.
33-40, 96-103, 161-168,
224-232, 289-294, 350-360.
fKitty.'
44-46.
By the Author of'The
Dingy House at Kensington.'
'Those Terrible
By David Ker.
86-87.
Six Hours: A Sailorts Story.r
'The Broken Heart: A Tale Told over a Counter.r
By Mary Marbury.
112-116.
Caught in
51
I
Told over a Counter'
Own StorY:
'Tire Man of l1y Choice:
Told
My Story,
'My
By Mary l"larburY.
over a Counter.r
184- 188 '
BY MarY MarburY'
249'25L 'Teresa.'
270'273'
B y J e a n B o n c o e u r'
277-2BI'
By a naval surgeon'
'How Harry WinsomeWon His Epaulets.'
I By Mary Marbury'
,,,Grey, but nOt with Yearstt: Told over a cOunter.
306-310.
,The Gulf of Fire.'
By John Berwick Harwood' 336-339'
363'367'
'Elsie Croft, e totu Story"
By H' Savile Clarke'
401-405'
'I^Iaiting for an Answer.'
By Geo' Manville Fenn'
Dingy House at Kensington'r
,proud Mrs Brandleth.'
By the Author of'The
'The Bridge Between' I etc'
407-410'
67I.678' 736-744.
,A Hard Case.,
415-424, 48|-487, 544-550, 608-616,
467-47L'
'Gone Away - No Trace! Told over a Counter" By Mary Marbury '
'The Blind Spinner-'
By B' Leith-Adams' 494-499'
,savedbyaCyclone.'ByJohnBerwickHarwood.554.555.
595-600'
'A Blight in Summer.' By Geo' Manville Fenn'
656-660'
fLost or stolen? Told over a counter.r By }lary Marbury'
'what's in a Name?' By J'F'w'
690-693'
721'725'
'My Great Trouble.'
ny Ceo. I"lanville Fenn'
By l"lary l"larbury' 751-754'
,My Discovery: A Story Told over a counter.'
3
(Dec.
IB76-Nov.
fB77 )
PaulKnox,Pitman.ByJ'BerwickHarwood'l'L2'65'75'129-138'
Ig3-202,257-265,321.331,3B5-393,449-458,513.521,577-584'
641-649, 705'7LL.
2L-25'
'How I Told Him My Story"
By Geo' Manville Fenn'
lrlyGuardian.ByAdaCambridge'33-43'96-104'160-168'222-23L'
289-296, 351-359' 4L6-422'
'A Bulgarian Episode.'
By Lewis llough. 54-57.
'christmas Eve.'
89.
'Cousin Ne11.' 90.
'The Professorrs Blunder'|
91'
'A Real Black BogeY!' 92'
Dingy House at Kensington'l
'Gold and GiIt.t
By rhe Author of'The
'The Bridge Betweenrr etc' 108-111'
By l"lary llarbury'
,Old l,loneybags'Will:
A Story Told over a Counter'r
182'184.
tTwenty Pounds.'
2lz'215'
237-240'
,The First Cloud.'
By Geo. Manville Fenn'
'Told by Her SisEer' |
268-273'
28L-284'
,Our I"listaken Generosi-ty.r
By L. Hough.
'What He Lost by It.'
By Sarah Doudney' 303-307'
333-335'
rKate,s prince.'
By Geo. llanville Fenn.
'The Old llanor House.'
339'343'
'A Dingy House at Kensington'l
twithout a Pigtail.'
By the Author of
'Bibbs,' etc. 367'371'
400-403'
rA Race for Life.'
By Henry Frith'
'Bang. |
434-435.
468'472'
'A Song r/ithout Words.'
By Frank Barrett.
Fenn . 47 6 '
, Check bef ore l"late. '
By Geo. Manville
'The Little
477'
Dressmaker"
478'
'Midsummer Eve.r
By John Berwick Harwood '
'Murielrs
Two }lidsunrners.|
479.
Stone Steps and l{ooden Stairs.
By Beatrice Leigh Hunt.
4B0-488,
542-552, 606-6L6, 670-680, 733-742.
'Laurats Doctor.r
By Geo. Manville Fenn. 532-535.
fA Short Wooing.'
By Elizabeth Claxton.
592-594.
'My Stepmother.'
688-694.
'Why the Light Inlent
out.r
By Henry Frith.
7L6-i20.
'A Doctorrs Holiday.'
729-73I.
rTwo cobwebs: An
old Man's Tale.'
By Geo. Manville Fenn.
749-752.
4
(Dec.
IB77-Nov.
1B7B)
Tine Shall
Try.
By F.E.I'I. Norley.
1-11, 65-75, 129-L39, L93-202,
257-267, 321-333, 385-394, 449-460, 5L3-524, 577-588, 641_650,
705-720.
'The Buried Bungalow.,
20-22.
Suspense. By the Author of rA Hard Case.'
31-39, 96-104, L6I-I67,
2 2 5 - 2 3 2, 2 8 7- 2 9 I .
'The Schoolmistress
at Skerne Dun.'
84-88.
'A Lucky Tumble.'
110-111.
'Snowed
Up.'
By Henry Frith.
L44-L48.
'Running
the Gauntlet of the Dardenelles: An Episode of the Russo-Turkish
War of L770.'
By D.K.
156-158.
'Prudence
Gray. t
By Geo. I'Ianville Fenn. 2LI-2I4.
rA Great Mistake.'
240-246.
'The sphinx: A llystery.t
By J. lulunro. 275-279.
'The Silver
Lock.'
300-304.
'Ivy.'
340-344.
Wtren the Tide Was Eigh.
By C. Despard.
352-359, 417-424, 480-486,
544-550, 608-613, 67I-68L, 735-742.
'A River Story.'
By Lewis Hough. 376-379.
'A Bunch
of Roses.'
By Henry Frith.
397-400.
'
"As Companion to a Lady.rrr
By Geo. l.Ianville Fenn. 410-413.
'False
Colours.'
By Evelyn Hope. 466-467.
'Running
By Henry Frith.
468-47I.
"Pilot."'
'Shooting
the Rapids.'
528-531.
'The TabLes
Turned.l
By C. Despard. 591-595.
'The l"lortgage-money. '
622-628 .
By Henry Frith.
"'Through Flood - through Fire.'
658-661.
'His Strange
Infatuation.'
By B.C. 687-690.
'Only Just
Saved.'
730-733.
5
(Dec
lB7B-Nov
IB79)
The Tenth Earl.
By John Berwick Harvood.
1-11, 65-i4,
I29-L37,
193-203, 257-268, 321-330, 385-395, 449-458, 513-523, 577-585,
6 4 L - 6 4 9 , 7 0 5 -7 1 0 .
'Old Elspa.'
B y l { r s G . L i n n a e u s B a n k s.
L8-22.
fire Artist
and the Han. By C. Despard.
32-39, 97-103, 161-168,
224-23t, 290-297, 353-360.
Frank Ross at Oxford.
By a Residenr M.A.
43-47, 108-112, L47-I53,
2gg-302, 437-442, 556-560, 624-627, 720-723.
'lladge '
s C o u si n . '
1 76 - 1 7 9 .
'Madame's
Little
Plot. '
218-223.
53
52
'A Troublesome Charge.'
275-278.
'Who Took It?r
339-343'
482-489' 543-549'
4I7-425'
[ey rlorence Wardenl'
But for Ilion.
606-615, 67L-678, 735-74L'
474-478'
'Queer Little
By Gwendoline'
Me.i
rABank-note,inTwoHalves"ByArthurGriffiths'531-535'
'An Adventure in Formosa.'
587-590'
'Beyond Reca11.' 596-598'
660-663'
'the Panic in the Desert: A Tale of Seven Years Since.'
726-730'
By Frank Barrett '
'How Jacques Balmat Ascended MonE Blanc.'
(Dec
6
Ilorace
IB7g-Nov
llcl.ean:
fBB0)
A Story
of
a Search
in
Strange
Places'
[By
Alice
6 5 - 7 5 , L 2 g - 1 3 g , 1 9 3 - 2 0 3, 2 5 7 ' 2 6 9' 3 2 1 ' 3 3 3 '
O'Hanlonl. t-tt,
385-399,449'460',5L3'525,577-587,64L-654',705'717'
2 4 - 2 7'
'walter Blakeney's Mastetpiece.' By Henry Frith '
garrett.
34'42, 94-1b3, 157-165, 2I7-225' 285-293'
Hidden G o l d , F r a n k
349-356.
'How He Learnt His Lesson"
88-91'
'Gourlay Brothers.'
168-171'
By H'
'A strange Fellow-Voyager.'
By K' 244-246'
275'279'
'The Best Revenge.' By Henry Frith'
4Lo-4r4'
'My wife's Stitch in Time. '
By J'F'w'
Bv the Author.of ll:t I:: Il:o""
#l ;t;"'""'"ii'^"""r F 1 - - ^i"I""'"a"
-^^
r.r^-,r^^ 1
t ' 11 - L ) t L
4 8 1 - 4 8 9 . 5 4 4 - 5 5 2 ', 660C9 - 6 1 8 ,
4L7'424, 481-489'
etc.
I F l o r e n c e W a r d e n ].
6 7 3 - 6 8 1, 7 3 7 - 7 4 5 .
470-473'
'The chimney at Lisgarvan Mill.'
By K'R'
'Madgie' s Hero. '
6 6 1 - 6 6 5'
BY H751-754'
'our rrrepressible Tenor.'
By H'L '
7
(Dec
lBBO-Nov
IBBI)
By the Author
A story of ltaitingof Dorothy Travers:
The probation
65-78 '
l-Lz'
'In a ltino-r Key'
[Arabella M. Hopkinson] '
of
449.459, 5L3-524'
L2g.l4L, Lg3-205, 257-270, 321-331, 385-398,
577-585, 64r-649, 705'714'
34'42, 96-104, 161-169'
By c.E. Despard.
The Troubre rt Brought.
224-23L, 288-296' 353-360'
52'56'
By Frank Barrett '
,Faithless llargaret: A Christmas story.'
f16-11B'
'One Hundred Pounds Reward.'
By A'M'
'Gerald's Four-leaved Shamrock"
I13-176'
216-220.
'Ne1lyrs l"listake: A Love-story. |
'TheDingyHouse at Kensington,l
,For Money. for Love.t
By the Author of
250-251'
'The Bridge Betweenr' 'Summer Day" etc'
344-346'
'In the Glass-r
llrs J[ohn) H[untl'
'A Passing Acquaintance'r
406-410'
416-425' 481-489'
By Frank Barrett '
Itiscovery'
t":"t-*iitoy;"
5 4 5 ' 5 5 3n 6 0 9 ' 6 1 7 , 6 7 3 - 6 8 2 , 7 3 7 ' 7 4 5 '
467'471'
rAunt Susan.'
By Katharine Roche.
533-535'
'Young l'Iistress'
By Geo' Manville Fenn'
Ride.'
591-595'
'Checimated.'
By Alice Jane Turner'
663-667'
'Some Doubtful Acquaintances:
A Sea-side SEory.'
69I-694'
'A Swim for Life: A Western Episode' |
54
'A Foolish MisEake,r By H. 727-730.
'A Jeweller's Story.r 752-754.
B
(Dec lB8I-Nov
No Proof.
By
the
I8B2)
Author
Strange
of
Places,'
tHorace
etc.
Ify
Mclean:
elice
A Story
OtHanlon]
of
a
Search
1-13,
in
65-76,
L29-r4I, 193-204, 257-268, 321-331, 385-396, 449-460, 5t3-524,
5 7 7 - 5 8 8 , 6 4 t - 6 5 3 , 7 O 5 - 7 t 7.
'At cross-purposes.'
By H.F.
25-28.
Ralph Raeburnrs Trusteeship.
By John Berwick Harwood.
33-42, 97-105,
161-168, 226-234, 291-300, 354-363.
'A Lost Key.'
By W.J. Lacey.
112-114.
'The Heiress of Garden Court.'
146-150.
'So Blue! A Story of
By H.L. 2Il-2L5.
a Girton Girl.'
r J o s e p h i n e ' s D r e a m .'
2 7 4 - 2 7 7.
'A Brave Deed.'
By the Author of rA Lost. K"y,'
etc.
404-407.
IJas It lJise to Change. By the Author of 'A Hard Case,' etc.
4L7-424,
482-490, 547-555, 611-619, 674-68L, 738-746.
' Supplanted. |
472-475.
tlnliss Britmanrs Last. Lesson.t
By the Author of tGourlay Brothers, I
'Madgie's Hero,' etc. 532-534.
'The Mosquito-cloud.'
By J. Berwick Harwood. 560-562.
r C h e c k m a t e d .I
By F.B.
595-598.
'The Missing Witness.!
624-627.
' H i s O r ^ mS h a d o w . ' B y h l a l t e r W i m p o l e . 6 5 8 - 6 6 3 , 7 2 3 - 7 2 7 .
'Only a Miner.r
751-754.
9
(Dec
l882-Nov
IB83)
By the Author of 'In a Minor Key.' 'The Probation of Dorothy
Travers, I etc. IArabe1la M. Hopkinson].
l-13, 65-77, L29-I40,
t93-2O4, 257-268, 321-333, 385-397, 449-459, 513-525, 577-597,
64L-652,705-7t5.
'Thousands and Thousands! I By the Author of 'A MoonbeamTriangle, I
erc.
20-23.
'How Vickerscroft
Dosn in the ttorld.
By the Author of 'But for llion,'
I , l a s R e d e e m e d t, e t c . I F l o r e n c e W a r d e n ] .
33-41, 98-105,
I62-L7L, 226-234, 290-298, 354-362.
'Our Iulr Jenkins. I
By John Berwick Harwood.
46-48.
'Little
'Ne11's
By the Author of 'His Own Property,l
General Scott.'
Nobleman,' etc. IFlorence I'I. King] .
60-64.
'Signorina Lessie.r
I47-L50.
By H.L.
'Felicia. I
L77-178.
'A Story about a Family Portrait.'
By C. Despard.
214-217.
'Miss Saxelby's Work of Art.'
242'246.
By H.F.276-279.
" ' W h e n G r e e n L e a v e s C o m eA g a i n . " r
rEdithrs Faith.r
'Madgiets
By the Auttror oftGourlay
Brothers,t
339-341.
Hero, I etc.
'Why Those Sketches Were Unfinished.r
By A.P. 369-370, 435-438.
rHow He Found His Wife.t
By the Author of rA Hard Case, | 'hlas It
402-405.
Wise to Change?' etc.
Co-heirs:
A Cornish Story.
By John Berwick Harwood.
418-427, 482-490,
546-553, 610-619, 674-683, 738-745.
Pardoned.
s5
'Across the River.r
466'469'The Cruise of the Jemima.'
502-505'
By M. Onley'
'A Race for Lifer'
etc.
'Blocked in a Tunnelr'
By the Author of
'Frith]
530-534.
.
IHenry
' A M o o n b e a mT r i a n g l e , '
'The Fair Maid of Cherbury.'
By the Author of
erc.
564-567.
598-601'
'After Long Years: A Portsmouth Story.l
By Clement Marsland.
6 8 9 - 6 91 .
,Doctor Brown's Prescription.r
By G. Manville Fenn. 630-633.
fTrusted Too Well.'
662-664.
By H.L.
'Why Those
'Who Is Sylvia?'
'Iva,s Day-dream.'
By the Author of
7
2
2
7
2
4'
e
t
c
'
I
A
'
P
'
]
U
n
f
i
n
i
s
h
e
d
r
'
W
e
r
e
Sketches
'The House on the Hill.'
752-755.
Summer
number
PaImY
DaYs
'Lady Gwendolen's Tryst-'
1-5'
IBy E. Neal]'
'one Sprig of Edelweiss,'
9'L7.
Campbell Davidson.
By Lillias
'The Colonel's Bone.'
By P.B. Power. 18-20'
'A Broken Trust. I
24'26'
B y J o h n B e r w i c k H a r w o o d'
'The Bride of a D.y.'
By C. Despard. 29'34'
'An I11-timed Proposal.'
By H.L. 40'44'
47'50'
By W. Senior.
Yarnr'
"'By the Sweat of His Brow:i' A Colottial
'How He Was Thwarted.r
51-53'
Isy tu.J.L.].
'Hugh's Wife.'
59-63'
By Edward Garrett.
l0
(nec
IBB3-Nov
1BB4)
[American
ed'
s'4,
v'l]
1-14, 65-76, L29-|39,
By J. Berwick Harwood.
the Clasp.
Ig3-2o2, 257-267, 321-330, 385-395, 449-458, 5I3-522, 577-586,
64r-651 , 705-7 L5 .
'Behind the Tapestry.'
By L.T. Meade. 22'25'
'Lady Gwendolen's
By the Author of
Witness lly Eand: A Fenshire Story.
2
26'235, 290'299,
34-43, 98-107, L62-I10,
Trysr'
IE. Neal] .
354-363.
'one sprig of Edelweissr'
,courE Beaucourt's Treasure.'
By the Author of
1
12-115'
4
9
'
5
1
,
Il,i11ias Campbell Davidson] .
' L a d y B e s t ' s l l i s t a k e . t B y J e a n M i d d l e m a s s'
84-87 '
Campbell Davidson'
By Lillias
"'Faint Heart Nerer Won Fair Lady."'
1 4 7- 1 5 0 .
'Una and the Lion.'
t75-178.
By E-M. Bainbrigge'
'The
'Irlarie: A Story of the American Civil
By the Author of
War' '
'Pardonedr'
e
t
c
.
I
A
r
abe1la
T
r
a
v
e
r
s
r
'
Probation of DorothY
2LO-2I3.
M. Hopkinsonl.
'Out of Pity.'
240-243.
Carnpbell Davidson'
By Lillias
'So Blue; The Story of a Girton
By the Author of
Eyes."'
"'Sister
etc. IH.L. ]. 274'277.
Girl,'
|
307-310'
A Painterrs Story.
"'Spring-time":
'Ludwig's Jealousy.r
By H.H.R. 335-338'
'A11 Like a Dream.'
By Gordon Stables, l{'D.' R.N. 368-370.
' Siddy I s Advice. '
374-37 5 '
By Louise Crow'
'Mr Browne's Heiress.t
By R.M- 402-406'
By Frank Barrett.
and lltrat Care of Ths'
John Ford: Eis FauLts,
4L8-426, 482'491, 546-555, 610-619' 674-682, 738-747.
Withio
56
'Maddalena'
432'435 .
By C. Despard .
s Lovers. '
' V i n c e n t R o m n e y ' s R e c o m p e n s e '. B y w . J . L .
466-469.
'on the Deck of the Osprey.r
By the Author of'Lady
Gwendoline's
'!'/itness My Hand,' etc.
Tryst,r
In. uealJ. 505-507.
'which Sha11 Ir Be? By A.M. Hopkinson.
530-532.
'Neptune: A Story
'By Gordon Stables, l{.I).,
of Strange Meetings.'
R.rr.
560-562.
'A Tirnely Rescue.'
By Catharine Childar.
564-567.
'Discovered in Time.'
By the Author of'Who Is Sylvia?r
599-602.
Filomelatt:
A Story of Paris.t
I
Accident,
etc.
628-63I.
tGrettyts
Trust:
A Romance of the
"'La
By the Author
Swiss
Mountains.
etc.
[A.P.].
of
tMr Kewthorpe's
t
By Gordon Stables,
l r . D . , R . N . 6 5 7- 6 6 0 .
'His Life's
668-670.
By Lillias
Campbell Davidson.
One Holiday.'
'A Modern Pygmalion.'
690-693.
By Catharine Childar.
'Liviafs Mistake. I By Catharine Childar.
73I-734.
'A WaywardWard.'
By the Author of "How He I,IasThwartedrr etc. [W.J.L.]
753-7 55 .
Summer
number
Summer
Days
'The Crew of the Curlew.'
By the Author of 'Witness My Hand' [E.
Neall.
1-8.
rBroken Off.'
By Lillias
Caurpbell Davidson. 1 1 - r 4 .
'Mr Kewthorpe's Accident.t
By the Author of 'Miss Saxelby's Work
18'23.
of Art.'
'Their Cunning Device.r
By the Author of 'who rs Sylvia?'
[A.P.].
26-30.
'Mr Bror.m's Day among the Ruins in Rome.' By Catherine Childar.
31-36.
'Mr Dalyrs Sitter.r
By the Author of 'So Blue' [H.L.]. 36'40.
'old Doddie.'
43-46.
By Gordon Stables.
rMy First Holiday.'
By John Berwick Harwood. 49'53.
'Water-Lilies.'
By A.M. Hopkinson.
56-59.
'In Thar World Which is the old.'
59-64.
By Henry Frith.
ll
(Dec
lBB4-Nov
lBB5)
[American
ed.
s.
4,
v.2l
A Diaoond in the Rough. By Alice O'Hanlon. 1-13, 65'76, I29'I40,
L93-2O4, 257-268, 32L-333, 385-397, 449-46r, 513-525, 577-588,
641-652, 705-7L7.
'George Fenwick's Schoolfellow.'
By H.L.
20-24.
34'42, 98-107, 162-17I'
Sveet Ghristabel.
By Arabella M. Hopkinson.
227-235, 29r-299, 353-361.
'A Point
By I"I.R.L. 52-55.
of Honour.'
'His Son's $/ife.'
By H.L.
82-86.
'Those Christmas Voices.r
114-117.
By C. Despard.
' G r a n d m a m m a ' sV a l e n t i n e . '
By Elizabeth Carnpbell Winter. L47-150.
'A Lost Opportuniry.r
179-182.
By Stella St John Gard.
'How She Saved Him.'
By W.J.L.
2LO-2L3.
'Frank de Vaud: A Story of Swiss Life.'
By Gordon Stables.
220-222.
rAn Old llaidrs Friends.r
247'25O, 306-309.
By A.A. Eyres .
By Henry Frith.
274'277.
"'By the l"Ierest Accident."'
57
fFourth Cousins: A Shetland Story.'
283-285.
By Gordon Stables.
'Janet's Forgeries.'
342-346.
By A.A.E.
'A Tale Told under the snow.'
368-371.
By Gordon Stables.
'Poles Apart.'
4O7-409'
Campbell Davidson.
By Lillias
'
W
h
o
etc. tA.P.l
Is Sylvia?'
By the Author of
lly Namesake ltarjorie.
418-426,482-489,546'554,610-618,675-682,739-746'
'June Daisies: A Kensington Romance.t 430-434'
'Mary cotterellrs
495'499.
By H.L.
visiEor. '
t
'A Mysterious Attraction.
532'535.
B y A r a b e l l a 1 " 1 .H o p k i n s o n .
'For Cecil's
'Who Was Elaine?'
lly Handr'
By the Author of'Witness
560-563.
Sake,r etc. In. Neal].
'l'Irs John A1len, of Ridge View.'
By Catherine Owen. 596-601 ' 689-693.
'The Emperor's Pardon.t
By J. Berwick Harwood. 626-629'
'Lucia, Hugh, and
'Lady Cathcart's Confession.'
By the Author of
659'663.
Another,' etc.
'Dick's wife.'
725-730.
'Inkinsfell:
An Alpine Village Story.r
Summer
number
Bright
757-760'
DaYs
'Gladys: A Tale of a Sunmer Wedding.r
1-11'
'A Modern Galatea.r
14-18.
By Henry Frith.
'Captain }liles Barnicott. |
22-25'Amid the ocean surges.'
27-29.
Campbell Davidson.
By Lillias
'Anthony Selwyn's Wooing.'
32-36.
'Mrs Twiggit ' s lulint Sauce. |
40-43 .
'A Real Gentleman.I By A.M. Hopkinson.
46-50'
'The
By
"Crabs" at Caisterby: A Story of the Eastern Counties.'
A.P.53-58.
'A womanof FacultY.'
L2
(Dec
lBB5-Nov
By Stella
1886)
60-64.
St John Gard.
[American
ed.
s.
4,
v'
304-308.
By Luey Farmer.
'Goss and Sons.'
338'342rWhat Tom Thought.'
372'376'
By Jane May.
58
Summer
number
'Mistress June.t
By ThomasKeyworth.
'A Strange Survival. I By Lucy
Farmer.
'Cut Off with a Shilling.r
57-6L.
13
(oec
1BB6-Nov
IBBT)
1-40.
46-52.
ed.
[American
s.
4,
v.
4]
Fitful
Fever (title
changes to Vere ltornleighrs
Inheritance;
orr tLifets
Fitful
Feverr with 3rd. instalment).
By Arabella
M. Hopkinson.
1-11, 99-110, I29-L39, 193-204, 287-298,
32L-332, 4L6-428, 449-462.
'Sybi-lrs Second
Cousins, and What They Did for Her.r
By the Author
o f r A W i l f u l Y o u n g W o m a n irl W h o I s S y l v i a ? t ' A R u s t i c M a i d , l
erc.
8-22.
[A.P.].
A Step in the Dark.
By Kate Eyre.
33-42, 65-74, 161-170, 226-237,
257-267, 352-363.
tA Mouth llarmonica.r
By Matthias Barr.
s4-58.
'Twice Dead. I
82-86.
tLetters from the Planets.r By Aleriel.
L 2 L - I 2 3 , 3 1 1 - 3 1 3 ,5 5 6 - 5 5 8 ,
Lifets
3]
'A Rustic
'who Is sylvia?r
Young lfoman. By the Author of
' M y N a m e s a k eM a r j o r i e , r e t c . [ A . P ' ] '
1
1
0, 65'77,
MaiJ,'
L}}.L4:I, |93-204, 257-269, 32L-332, 385.396, 449-460, 5|3.524,
577-587, 64r'65L, 705-7L5.
'The Chronicles of Cardewe Manor.'
18-22.
By Lucy Farmer.
By C. Despard.
Love-atory.
an o1d soldier'a
L5rndon of Eigh cliffe:
35-44, 98-107, 162'172, 227'236, 290-299, 354'364'
'uilly's
By I'1.R.L. 47'5LDowry.'
'Above the l,tountain }list.r
87-90.
Campbell Davidson.
By Lillias
tHer Brother Ephraim.r
118-121.
By H.L.
'Mr Hemphillts Love-story:
A Page from the Chronicles of Cardewe
147-151.
BY LucY Farmer.
llanor.'
rMrs Twiggitrs l"lint Sauce, I
rJust Like Argentina.t
By the Author of
etc.183-186.
'In Rotha Chester's Honeymoon.t By llarion Pendlebury.
209-213'
'By I'Iutual Consent. I
242-246.
By Anne Kea.
274-278'
'Touch and Go: A }lidshipman's Story.'
By A. Conan Doyle' l{'B'
tThe l"Iystery of the }lartyn-Henryt s (The Chronicles of Cardewe Manor).'
A lJilful
'Gideon Grasper's
Temptation (The Chronicles of Cardewe }Ianor).'
By Lucy Farmer.
407-4IL.
f,arlove's
Eelpmate.
By Frank Barrett.
418-427
483-492, 547-554,
609-618, 674-683, 736-744.
'Love, the Pilgrim.'
'
l
n
;
By the Author of
itness M y H a n d , '
etc.
[E.
Neall .
433-437.
'Mary Holtfs Engagement: An American
Story.'
By Catherine Owen. 470-474.
'Monsieur Albano: A
Story of Pride and Arnbition.f
ly GorCon Stables,
H.D., R.N. 503-505.
'Captain Armstrong's Probation (The
Chronicles of Cardewe I'Ianor).'
By Lucy Farmer. 531-535.
'A Freak
of Nature.'
562-565.
tThe case of Mr Haymann (the
Chronicles of Cardewe Manor).'
By Lucy
Farmer.
598-603.
'Mr Dalbyrs Month
of Probation.'
623-626.
'A Matrimonial
Schemer.' By H.L. 660-663.
'l'lr Pilbeam's Love-story:
A Foolish Episode Narrated by Hinself .'
By George B. Burgin. 690-693.
'Ennui House.'
By Fay Axtens .
726-730.
'The Evil Omen.' By
the Author of'The
Impressions of a Noticing
Eye.'
757-760.
688-690.
: North Country Story.'
" ' S h e r s C o m i n g r rA
'Doctor
Joliffets
Queer
Patient
(From
the
150-154.
Chronicles
of
Cardewe Manor).'
By Lucy Farmer.
176-180.
'The Hermit
of Dundoyne.t
212-217.
'A Company of Three.'
By Thomas Keyworth.
247-250.
'Somebodyrs Secret.r
By l'I.R.L. 276-279.
tMiss Katiers Last Engagement (From
the Chronicles of Cardewe M a n o r ) . '
By Lucy Farrner. 304-307.
'Only a Tenth. t
By the Author of tA hlilful
Y o u n g W o m a n r ' e t c . l a . r . 1.
34L-344.
A llan of the Nameof John.
By Florence l,I. King.
59
385-394, 480-488,
544-553, 577-586, 674-692, 705-7L4.
'Miss
400-405.
Chance.' By E. Adair.
'I'lr Barnes's Dilemma (Ttre Chronicles of Cardewe Manor). '
By Lucy
Farmer .
435-438.
'The Sisters: A Love-Eale of Japan.'
470'474.
'A Record of One D.y.'
By Marian Pendlebury.
494-497.
A Treacherous Calm. By Thomas Keyworth.
513'522, 610-619 , 64L-650,
738-747.
'Three O1d I'laids.'
530-534.
'An Answer to an Advertisement.'
By the Author of 'A Ship in the
'
A
Darkr'
Fool's Harvestr' etc. ltcate Eyrel.
s59-563.
'A Trial
by Fire (the Chronicles of Cardewe I'lanor).'
By Lucy Farmer.
595-599.
'An old Love.'
By M. Payne Smith.
623-627.
'A11 souls' Nighr.r
6 6 3 - 6 6 7, 7 5 3 - 7 5 6 .
r H o w C a p t a i n W i l l i a m s o n [ ' J o nH i s B r i d e ( T h e c h r o n i c l e s
of Cardewe
I'lanor).'
By Lucy Farmer .
690-694.
'Dear Mr Morton.'
By Katharine Roche. 722-726.
Summer
number
'A Foolrs Harvest.'
14
(Dec
18
7-Nov
By Kate Eyre.
tB88)
3-55.
[American
ed.
S.4,
v.
5l
By Evelyn Everett Green.
I'12,
orr Stronger Than Death.
80-91, 129-140, 226-237, 257-267, 321-332, 420-43L, 449-460.
Ollifantrs
Will (the Chronicles of Cardewe Manor).r By Lucy
Farmer.
25-30.
By Hisadventure.
By Frank Barrett.
35-44, 98-108, 162-L71, 193-200,
297-306, 354-363.
I{hat the Coral Reefs Gave He.
By John Berwick Harwood.
65-72, L75'L79,
2r2-2I4.
'The Portals of the King of Day: A Journey to the Regions of the
Sun.'
By Aleriel.
96-98.
'A Broken Collar-bone.r
By M. Payne Srnith.
118-121.
'Mysterious Miss Alister.'
By the Author of 'A Wilful Young Woman.'
Honica:
'Squire
le.r.1. 1so-154.
'The Lucky Bar of Dunwood Mere (the Chronicles of Cardewe Manor).'
By Lucy Farmer.
240-244.
'Wild Grapes.'
By Jean I'liddlemass.
279-283.
'The Cobweb of a Lonely Spider.'
338-342.
tA Mystery at Cardewe Manor (the Chronicles of Cardewe llanor).'
By
Lucy Farmer.
370-373.
For the Good of the Family.
By Kate Eyre.
385-394, 482'492, 545-555,
577-585, 675-684, 705-715.
'Oliver and I.'
Probation of Dorothy Travers,'
By the Author of'The
etc. lArabella M. Hopkinson].
4I0'4I4.
'Iulrs van Koert' s Teapot. '
By M.R.L. 437 -44I .
'Our Duplicate Story. '
B y W .J . L . 4 7 2 - 4 7 5 .
rHer Torn.' 498-501.
734-745.
513-523, 616'626, 64I-652,
By Thornas Keyworth.
Cmrades Once.
'His Guardian Genius. I By I'lilliam J. Lacey.
560-564.
'What Miss Trusdale Said (the chronicles
By
of Cardewe Manor).'
60
Lucy Farmer.
604-608.
'The Wishing-we11
of Erdstone (The Chronicles
By Lucy Farmer.
690-694.
'One Good Turn Deserves
Another.'
150-754.
Summer
Number
-
The
Crown
of
the
Year
'A Bag of Diamonds:
A Leaf from the Chronicles
By Lucy Farmer.
1-41.
'Bracketed. '
By Miles Bradford .
48-52.
'From the First.'
56-60.
15
(Oec lBB8-Nov
lB89)
[american
of Cardewe Manor).'
ed.
of
Cardewe
s.
4,
v.
Manor.t
6]
Under a Strange Haek.
By Frank Barrett.
1 - 9 , 1 0 0 - 1 0 7, r 2 9 - t 3 6 ,
2 2 7 - 2 3 5 , 2 9 9 - 2 9 7, 3 2 L - 3 2 9 .
'Dobsonrs Plots.r
By David C. Roose. 18-20.
'In Wayward l,lood.'
By William J. Lacey.
28-32.
Hr Trench of Braeenose:
By I'lary
The Romance of a Long Vacation.
L. Armitt.
35-44, 65-73, L70-I79, L93-203.
'A Glad Surprise.'
By Kate Eyre.
52-57.
'Marie's Bridegroom.'
By the Author of 'Witness My Handrr etc. [A.P.]
79-82.
'An Unsensational Ghost
Story.'
By K. Magnus. 9L-93.
'Christmas Alone: A Phantasy.'
By J.F. Brewer.
114-11B.
'Colone1 Stormer's Mistake (the
By
Chronicles of Cardewe l{anor).'
Hrs Martyn-Henry.
15B-163.
' H i s O r ^ mP r o p e r t y . r
By the Author of rA Man of the Name of John,r
etc.
2L6-221.
[Florence M. King].
tOur Mysterious Neighbour. I
24I-245.
A Womanfs Strength.
By Arabella M. Hopkinson.
257-267, 354-366,
4IB-429, 449-46I, 544-556, 577-589, 688-699, 705-7L7.
'Blazing Gulch.'
279-283.
'Mr Bah Pootrs ManifesEations.r
By Kate Eyre.
301-307.
The Struggles
By Henry Frith.
of Abel Strong:
A Living
Cheee Story.
342-347, 437-44t, 474-478.
'Cross-currents:
A Story of Match-making.t
By M. Payne Srnith. 37L-374.
Engaged to be l{arried:
A Story of To-day.
By L.T. Meade. 385-395,
485-495, 5t3-522, 609-617, 64L-649, 739-748.
'
401-405.
"Noblesse Oblige.t"
'The lrrolfrs Mouth.'
By Edward Irenaeus Stevenson.
466-469.
'Scars.'
By S. Baring-Gould, lt.A. 502-507.
'Mr Sinpersonts
Story.'
By Henry Malpas.
533-537.
A l"lan in a Million:
A Tale of the Indian Ocean. By Gordon S t a b l e s ,
H.D., R.N.
'The Missing Dean.r By
C.A.
596-603.
'The Heroism of Herbert Stamford (The
Chronicles of Cardewe Manor). I
By Emily Cardewe.
659-663.
By M.R.L.
682-685.
"'Those Dreadful Gir1s. "'
'A Very Strange Affair. I
rMiss
By the Author of 'Who Is Sylvia?'
'
Hilary's Suirors.
723-733.
etc. [A.f.1.
'On the Road to
The Story of a Polish Prisoner.r
750-7 52.
Siberia:
61
Siumme:: t{umber
-
The
Crown
of
the
Year
By the Author of 'A llan of the Nane of Johnr'
or Protector?'
3-49.
etc.
[Florence M. King].
'The Mystery of the Monunent Room (the chronicles
of Cardewe Manor).t
60'64.
Bv Lucv Farmer.
'King
16
(Dec
i8Eg-lJov
lB90)
[i\merican
ed.
s.
4,
v.
7l
1-11, 96-105, L29-L39,
By Evelyn Everett Green.
The Stronger lfi1l.
222-232, 257-268, 352-363, 4L4'4r9.
'The Double X Mystery.'
18-25.
By ThomasKeyworth.
32-44, 65-76, 159-171' 193-204, 288-299'
To Be Giveu Up. By Kate Eyre.
32L-332, 424-435, 449-460.
By J. Berwick llarwood.
In the Ilild lJest: A Story of Adventure.
48-54, 110-117, r74-181.
'After a Collision.'
By Arabella M. Hopkinson. 83-88.
'Under Suspicion: A }larket-day Story.'
147-15f.
'Itiss Roxendale's Suitor (The Chronicles of Cardewe l"lanor). '
By
2Il-2L6.
Lucy Farner.
'Lady Angela's Latest Lion. I By 11.R.L. 246'249.
'Never Cleared Up: A lulystery of the Sea.'
2 74 - 2 8 I .
By Thomas Keyworth.
I By Aleriel.
'Letters
285-287.
from the Planets.
'The Clarkes' Cousin.r
308-311.
By M. Payne Smith.
'The Voice in the Woods.' Bv II. Moorsom. 34L-345.
'A Sorry Joke.'
37L'376.
'King or
'A l"lan of the Name of Johnr'
By the Author of
tJonanlike.
385-393' 486-495,
Protector? I etc.
IFlorence l'1. King] .
513-522, 614-622, 64r-650, 736'744.
'A Broken Engagement.' By Henry l"lalpas. 401-405.
'Ninette's rdeas.'
By 11.R.L. 440-443.
'lJell's Nobleman.' By the Author of'His
OwnPropertyrr etc. lFlorence
466-470.
M. Kingl.
474-479r 531-536' 627'63L.
By J. Berrsick Harwood.
The Dlerchant Prince.
'The Sacrif ice of lulary Sornerville (the Chronicles of Cardewe I'lanor).r
502-506.
By Lucy Farmer.
544-555, 577'589, 673-684,
By E. Neal.
The Wooing of Christabel.
705-715.
'The WrongBertie.'By
OwnPropertyrretc.
[Florence
the Author of'His
598-602.
I'I. Kingl.
'My Aunt's House.' By 11.B. Whiting.
60B-611.
't'lrs l'lontgomeriers l{anoeuvres.'
691'696.
By E. Neal .
'What Happened at Ridgeway-on-sea.'
72L-729.
'Racing an Arab: An Adventure in Syria.t
748-750.
By David Ker.
Sumrner
nurnber
'Waters of oblivion.'
'The other Aileen.'
L7
(Dec
ltj90-l.lov
By ThomasKeyworth.
54-58.
ltigt)
[American
By Kate Eyre.
A Sharp Experience.
257-266, 356-364.
1-10,
62
3-45-
ed.
s.
4,
v.
8]
108-118, 129-138, 227-237,
'Miss
'l^IhoIs Sylvia?',
'A Chapter of Accidents.'
By the Author of
liilary's Suitorsr , etc. Ie.p. ] . L6'23.
30-42,
By C-E.C. Weigal1.
The Temptation of Ilulcie Carruthers.
65-77, 158-169, 193-204, 295-306, 32L'332, 4L6-427, 449-460.
48'54,
By Thomas Keyruorth.
By Word of llouth: A story of Adventure.
9 4 - I 0 1 , 1 7 5 -1 8 1 .
'Their l,lysterious Business.'
By l'l.R.L. 87-90.
'Miss Hilaryts Suitorsr'
the Author of'Who Is Sylvia?',
"Only Just!"rBy
143-151.
erc. IA.P.].
'That Black Lace Bonnet.t
By M.B.W. 215-22L.
'Kate Moore's Ltedding Trip.'
24I'246.
By Edward Irenaeus Stevenson.
'She's Coming',
'The Scotchman: A Railway SEory.r
By the Author of
'The Voice in the Woods,' etc. 275-279.
'Christina's
309-313.
By 11. Payne Smith.
Guardian.'
'On the Lake of Lucerne.'
341-348.
By Beatrice Whitby.
385-395, 487-493' 550-557'
A Quaker Girl.
By George B. Burgin.
577-587, 67r-679, 739-745.
'A Broken Engagementr'
'A Little
By Ehe Author of
Love-affair.'
404-408.
etc.
'The Organist of Abbotstoke.'
434-438.
By Frances A. Gerard.
'Jack and llis Master: A Sea-side Romance.t By Henry Frith.
466'473.
'Chased by a Lion: A Story of Aldershot Camp.' By llerbert Russell.
480-483.
'What Cameof a Clergyman's Fortnight.'
498-503.
By Sydney C. Grier.
That Little
Wonan. By Ida J. Lemon. 5L3-523, 607-617, 64L-65L' 705-7L6.
'A Friend of the Jintons.t
529-533.
By John Anderton.
'A Guinea Guest. I
By E.C.
538-544.
'Out Over. '
565-567 .
By John Tregarth .
'The only Resource.'
Wassermann. 595-601.
By Lillias
'A Forlorn Hope.r
659-666.
'lIy Sister's
Secret. I By }tary Hampden. 686-688.
'The Heroism of }lark Leslie.'
728-735.
By C.E.C. hleigall.
'The widowrs Portion. '
748-752.
Summer
A llatter
IB
l{umber
of
(oec
Skill.
189I-Nov
By Beatrice
Whitby.
L'52.
l-B92)
[American
ed.
s.
4,
v.
9]
By L.T. Meade. 1-9, 65-73, 176-184, 193-201,
the Fashion.
257-264, 356-364.
'The woes of Mrs Caractacus Brown.'
12-15.
'Cynthia's Tea-man (A New England Story).r
L8-24.
By Lucy C. Lillie.
'Your11 Love Xe Yett.
29-4I, 90-102, 129'l4O'
By Frances Haswell.
219-23r.
45-54, 106-115'
Had Ee Knosn: A Story of lfew Zealand Gold Thirst.
L52-L63, 236-246.
rA Trip to Jupiter's Moonlet.'
By Aleriel.
55-56.
'The Wooing of Mary CarsEairs.r
82-87 By George B. Burgin.
'The Rev. J. Sturgis's Finds.'
209-2L4By Frances A. Gerard.
'The Rock of Kazim.'
By E. Chapman. 269-276.
286'299, 321-331 , 42L-432,
Formed for Conquest.
Iny Annie E. ]'Iickhaml .
orrt of
484-494.
63
u!-
'The
'A
Romance
of
a Poor
young
Woman.,
By George
B.
Burgin.
307-3L2.
of Honour.'
By Edith
Henrietta
Fowler.
3 4 7- 3 5 2 .
'The Yacht
in the Bay: A Seaside Story.'By
E d i t h E . C u t h e 1 1 .3 6 9 - 3 7 5 .
Barbara Herivale.
By Arabella M. Itopkinson.
3 8 5 - 3 9 B , 4 4 9 - 4 6 3, 5 t 3 - 5 2 4 ,
Guardian
6t0-623, 641-654, 734-744.
tA Good Deal
Abroad.r
4L0-4I7.
'Managed
at Ramsgate.t 437-441.
rThe Doctor's
Blunder.'
By John K. Leys.
473-478.
'That Odd
Man.r By ArEhur T.G. price.
4gg-503.
rCrooked
Cronies.r
By John Anderton.
530-536.
Lady Lorrimer's
Scheme. By Edith E. Curhell.
5 4 2 - 5 5 3 , 5 7 7- 5 8 9 ,
669-679, 705-7L6.
'A Desperate Venture.r
B y A n n i e E . W i c k h a r n . 5 6 0 - 5 6 6 , 6 2 7- 6 3 2 .
'The Devotion
of }lary Simmons: A Railway Romance.' By Henry Frith.
601-605.
'The CourEship
of Fireman Deane: A Railway Romance.l By Henry Frith.
660-665.
'Another
Indian Tale.'
By Arthur Milton.
682-686.
'Charley Downrs
Ordeal: A Railway Romance.' By Henry F r i t h .
723-729.
'Shipp's
Loot. I
By C.N. Barham. 749-752.
l9
( Dec
IB92-Nov
IB93 )
[Arnerican
ed.
s.
4,
v.
64
llummer
Hyne. 544-549.
number
'Hard
to Please: A Holiday Story.'
By Frances Haswell,
'Lady I'lary's
B o a r d e r . I B y l l r s I I. H . p e n r o s e . 5 8 - 6 3 .
I0 ]
'London Undermined.I
By Vincent Elsden.
1-6.
A Romance of Han. By c.E.c. weigall.
10-18, L24-132, 2oo-2L0, 276-294,
326-335, 448-455.
'That Other
Story.'
B y E . C h a p r n a n .2 g - 3 6 .
Richard Jenkins, Haster.
4I-49,
t35-92, 17g-L87.
'The llystery
of Garstin House.'
By William Cairns.
52-56.
'Her
By Lillias
"Study from Life.'rr
Wassermann. 59-65.
'l'{r Meakinrs
Looking-g1ass.'
98-104.
'Lady Jane's
Rebellion.'
By H.B.D.
ll2-LL7.
'The Veaseybridge
Election.r
By Mary Hampden. 144-149.
'Jack
and Jill:
A one-chapter study in Humanl,lature.'
By A.v.
166-170.
'The Bald-headed
Boy: An rndian Tale.'
By Arthur Milron.
r94-196.
'A Faculty Heroine.'
By Nora ll. Marris.
222-23I.
The rsland of six shadovs.
By Bessie E. Duffetr.
248-255, 359-365,
4I2-4L8.
.
'How
an Old Tale CameTrue.'
By William Cairns.
258-263.
'The
Secret of Eagle's-fate.'
By Thomas Keyworth.
301-310.
rCroisetters Betrothal:
A Story of Brittany.'
346-354.
'A Trying Position.'
370-377.
'The Partnership.'
By Arthur I'li1ron.
388-390.
'Corresponding
with the Planers.r
By A1erie1.
403-405.
'Mr Penbury's Puppets.'
By J.F. SuIlivan.
4O6-4L0.
'The Hursts
of Hazelwood.'
By H. Elrington.
436-443.
'The
Squirer s Entanglement. '
By John K. Leys .
424-43L.
'l'Iy Chum.'
By Mary F. Hutchinson.
466-469.
fDavenant.r
By S. Southall Bone.
493-493.
'A Ruler
of Princes.'
505-511.
'The Tutorts
Engagement.' By Edith llenrietta Fowler.
515-521.
Ruha: A Tale of Adventure
in the Haori IJar.
By L. Frost Rattray.
527-534, 577-584, 686-693.
' T h e l n l a ni n t h e M i z z e n - t o p . ' B y
C.J. Cutcliffe
'The Purse
Pocket-book.'
563-570.
'tle1le's
Return.r
By Albert E. Hooper. 588-593.
'The llutuality
of Phillister
and Brunton.r
By J.F. sullivan.
613-618.
'1.1r
Churchill's paper.'
By C.J. Blake.
664-6i3.
'The Tailor:
An Indian Tale.'
By Arrhur Milton.
677-681.
'Chick.'
By John Tregarth.
723-726.
so very cmonplace:
A Ror'.nce of the lJorkaday world.
733-745, 849-860,
922-934.
'The I'Iysterious
PainLirg. '
By C.N. Barham. 752-758.
'The Usurper.'
By J.F. Sullivan.
780-785.
'Mr llarris's
Window.'
By A.M.A.
822-826.
'A Rank
Swindle.r
By I.I.J.F.
832-842.
'rn rhe
Bay.'
By C.J. Cutcliffe Hyne. 864-867.
'The Wooing
of Victoria Cross,'
883-893,
'An Imperfect
Substitute. I
By W.P.M. Black.
9IL-9L7.
'The Ghost
of Crawley's Ghyl1.t
By C.J. Cutcliffe Hyne. g3g-94I.
20
(Dec
1893-Nov
lB94)
[American
ed.
s.
4,
3-48.
v.
11]
'separated:
A Divided Story.'
1-8.
The Sleeve of Care.
By C.E.C. Weigall.
l5-ZB, 119-131, 169-181.
Margaret'a IJay. By Annie E. I{ickharn. 43-52, 86-98, Igg-2I3,
293-305,
374-385, 44I-448.
'The Phantom
Forget-me-nots.1
By E. Chapnnan. 104-110,
'The Doctorrs
Secret.t
By Albert E. Hooper. 134-139.
'The
By A.E. Bonser. 143-145.
Queer Passenger's Story.'
'In a Fog.'
By Edith E. Cuthell.
193-195.
'In the
Course of One Evening.f
2L6-222.
On a Lee Shore.
By Clara E. Cheeseman. 243-253, 332-343, 415-426.
'A Corrected
Error.r
265-275.
'As Paying
Guests. |
284-289.
'An Aldershot
l'lystery.'
By C.N. Barham. 323-326.
'Sir Guy's
Room.' By l,filliam Cairns .
347-352.
Is My Only Joy."'
"'Phyllis
By Ilsa Reid.
356-364.
'The Acapulco
Ga1leon.'
By Herbert Russe1l.
403-407.
'By . Girlrs
Hand.'
By ltrs Henry E. Dudeney. 430-435.
rA t'Badfr
Life.'
By Freke Viggars .
460-464.
'How I Discovered
the North Pole.'
By J. Munro.
483-489.
fire Cleariug of the Hist.
By Frances Haswel1.
495-505, 604-614,
693-692, 73r-740, 907-817, gg0-ggg.
'An Artistic
Burglar.'
By Charles C. Russell.
508-511.
'Five-cornered
Cottage.r
By J.E. Hodgson, R.A.
5L4,523.
The Edge of the Precipice:
A ssiss Adventure.
By Bessie E. Duffett.
528-538, 575-585, 659-669.
'Getting
Even with Uncle Mose.t
By U. penrose.
546-549.
'Cecil Chanting.'
By Albert E. Hooper. 566-57I.
'Mrs Tuxter's
Troubles.t
By G.B. Burgin.
590-596.
'The
search in the Sawdust: The Researches of Mary Ambush - r.'
By Lucy
Farmer.. 646-656.
65
'His Philosophy.'
By X.
672-674.
'The
By J.T. Kingsley Tarpey. 726-728.
"Thing" at Boggart's End.'
'Miss Lucretia's }listake.r
By M. Payne-Srnith. 746-749.
'A Lictle Misunderstanding.'
759-768.
By Mary Bradford Whiting.'
776-779.
By G.B. Burgin.
"'Fuzzles": The Story of a Puppy.'
'Borrowed Plurnes.' By John K. Leys.
784-79L.
'A Tragedy of Duty.r
824-826.
By J.T. Kingsley Tarpey.
'A Six Weeks' Llooing.'
83l-839.
By Sydney C. Grier.
tThe t'lystery of Broadmead Court: The Researches of Mary Ambush - II.
86I-812.
By Lucy Farmer.
'Barbarars Secret.t
9L4'919.
Bv A.11.Avenell.
'l'liss CynEhia. I
924-929.
'Catching a Professor: A Prize Story.' By Bessie E. Duffett.
932-944.
Summer
number
(Dec
I894-Nov
lB95)
[American
ed.
s.
4,
v.
12]
By L.T. I'Ieade. 1-16, 93'107, 168-1B2'
The Voice of the Charmer.
277-292, 343-358, 408-422, 500-514, 569-583, 698-7L2, 740-754,
851-867, 917-930.
'Pyrrha and Smugg.' By Anthony Hope. 30-37.
'The Great Third tr'Jave.' By Ethel S. Turner.
47-52.
'
'The Little
60-63.
By J.M. Barrie.
l{ursery Governess.
'Leon and Leonie.'
81-85.
By Grant Allen.
'The Purple Death.'
LI2-IL9.
By W.L. Alden.
,A Black Sheep.' By the Author of 'A Day of I'Iy Life at Etonr' rAcross
131-138.
France in a Caravan,t etc' [George Nugent Banks].
'Boss 'Tec at Oldby.'
187-193.
'Joe's Rascality.'
By Grant A1len. 203'205.
'Mr Adolf.'
By A.E. orpen. 214'222, 260-268.
'Awr Tom.' By J. Maclaren Cobban. 243-25I.
'A Message from Mars.
By J. Munro' C.E. 292'298.
'A },lodern Vampire.'
304-307.
By iJ.L. Alden.
'Anner: A West Country Tragedy.'
328-338.
rThe llysterious House at Copington.r
367-376.
'Cecca's Choice.'
387-391.
By Grant A1len.
'King o' the Gates.r By G.B. Burgin. 426'43L.
'The Colonel's Courtship: An Anglo-Indian Story.'
By E. Chapman.
4 3 7- 4 4 5 .
'Carterrs Incandescent Cats.'
450-454.
By t{.L. Alden.
'A Case of Barratry.r
Hyne. 460-465By C.J. Cutcliffe
'The I'lrong Bag.'
488-494.
'Village PoliEicians.'
Wassermann- 519-527.
By Lillias
'A Bath Road ldyl1.'
535-537By Nellie K. Blissett.
'The Duke.'
54I-544.
By ttrs H.H. Penrose.
Time.
By A.E. Wickharn. 545'553,
Loveday: A Story of a Stirriug
619-632, 650-666, 780-792, 809-824, 890-902.
'Fogo Skerries.r
59I-596.
By Grant A1len.
tThe Schoolmistress at Thatchamlet.r By T.J. IlacNamara. 604'607.
'Louise.r
By W.L. A1den. 67L-674.
66
682-686.
''fhe Professor's Experirnent.' By G.B. Burgin.
728-733.
'l'irs Pitkin's Pedigree.r By Hilton Hi11. 760'767.
By llrs Andrew Dean. 773'774.
"fhe Three Knocks.'
'A
829-835.
By Edith E. CuEhell.
Cast Shoe.'
'one of Life's
845'847.
By Elizabeth L. Banks.
Mockeries.'
'ily Trials as a Housekeeper.' By Elizabeth L. Banks. 903-906.
' ' fh e C z a r t s D i a r n o n d . '
By Huan }iee.
9 0 7- 9 1 3 .
'The Blind Skipper.'
llyne.
939-944.
By C.J. Cutcliffe
liummer
nurnber
'Bohemian Glass.' By Philippa l'1. Legge. 3-64.
'l'luster Dow: or, A Village Iniystery.l
By Frances }facNab.
(Dec
rAunt Hawkins.r
By A.B. Romney. 3-5f.
'Kaiser Krum.'
66-72.
By }laud Rittenhouse.
2L
fe Hyne.
By C.J.
Cutclif
I'he }lan Who Once Made Diar.ronds.t
69L'697.
Bv W.B. Robertson.
r'he Ark of the Jamrachs.'
lB95-Nov
1896)
[American
ed.
s.
4,
v.
f3]
'The Devil's llanuscript.' By S. Levett Yeats.
II-20.
of Dorothy Eeatherty.
Frm the Narrative
A Hissing Hitness:
Barrett.
By Frank
2 9 ' 3 9 , 1 4 0 - 1 5 0 ,2 3 7 - 2 4 7 , 3 2 7 ' 3 3 7 , 4 0 3 - 4 L 2 ,4 9 5 - 5 0 3 .
'A Can of Peaches.'
54-60.
By K. Tanquerey.
'The Fortune of Duitsa and Jacob.'
By A.E. Bonser.
'The Sword and Three.'
L25-I34.
By llax Penberton.
'The l,laid of
sutclif fe.
By Halliwell
"The llernan. "'
'A Voice from the Dead.'
By Ella Macmahon. 168'172.
62-65.
r59-166.
2 0 4 ' 2 1 6 , 4 8 0 - 4 9,0 7 L 7- 7 2 9 .
By L,T. l'leade.
In the Thick of the Fight.
'The Fatal Ears.'By W.L. Alden.225-229.
'Luck for Him.'
255-263.
By Hrs W.K. Clifford.
By D.lI. Parry. 283'288.
A Conscript Love SEory.r
"'Babille'r:
'The Defier: A Tale of a West African Colony.'
By C.J. Cutcliffe
llyne.
300-307 .
'Boney s Bonfire: An Instructive
Historical llarrative for Young and
Old. I
By Andrew Home. 3L6-32r.
'WaywardLove.'
355-362.
By M.P. Shiel.
'Silas P. Cornu's System.r By llenry A. Hering.
389-394.
'The Warning Crystal: A Fairy Idyll
By
for Young-hearted People.'
4LB'42L.
Roma I'/hite.
' I I y C h u mK a t e . '
44L-448.
By J.H. Panting.
'An Alpine Adventure.'
457-460.
By ]{ax PemberEon.
5L5-529,604-619, 682-697,
A Puritanrs
lJife.
790-804, 866-881, 922-937.
'The Doctor's Daughter.'
533-537.
By Clara Savile-Clarke.
'Fatima and the Calf.'
537-538.
By Arthur llilton.
'For the Sake of the Faririly. I
Burgess. 543-548.
By Gilbert
'The Great Unknown.'
566-568.
By A.R. Buckland & llenry Charles lloore.
'The l,Irong l{unber: A Story for the Oldish and the Youngish.r
517-5B1.
'Three Hundred Gold Pieces: An Arab Yarn.' 608-610.
'The Revolt of Daphne.r By Dayrell Trelawney.
636-642.
'The Mysterious Affair
By Alexis Krausse. 651-659.
at llain-na.r
'The Dragon's lJheel.'
662-666.
By Roma White.
'The Case of lulichael Sanford.'
By David Christie Murray. 702-7Ll' C a p ' n T o r nW o o l l e y . '
By Grant Allen. 737-741.
'The Spectre-ship.t
755-764.
By I4.P. Shiel .
67
'Lady
Benson's House-party.r
By Andrew Home. 812-B2L.
'Ex-trooper
Tempany.'
By Eon. l{rs Arthur Henniker. 842-849.
'The Baboo's
Earthquake.'
By Ethel L. Heddle. 857-g59.
'The Lovers
and the Boy.'
By An<lrew llome. 8BB-896.
'Love's Labour's
Hired.'
By Hal1iwe11 Sutcliffe.
94L-948.
'Jenkins
of the 53rd (A Fragment).'
By John Foster Fraser.956-96L.
'Young
young.'
g7L-g75.
Romeo: A Story for Readers Who Are Still
Supplement
Irraliers
23
Bushranger:
1 - 1 1 2.
(Dec
IB96-it{ay
A Story
of Australian
1897)
[Arnerican ed.
Adventure.
s.
4, v.
By E.hl. Hornung.
14 ]
'At
Lhe Third Pass: A Story of Artist
Life in paris.
By D.II. Parry.
L-12.
The Gift of the Gods. By F.A. Sreel.
2 3 - 3 7, L 9 9 - 2 I 3 , 2 8 5 - 2 9 7 , 4 2 0 - 4 3 4 ,
533-547, 637-65I.
'How Barrington
Returned to Johannesburg.'
By A.E.W. Inlason. 49-54.
'The Family
Spirit.r
By Ha11iwe11Sutcliffe.
72-90.
'The Dream Picture:
For Children.'
B y R o m aI , I h i t e .
98-102.
'One Adventure
Too Many: A Story of San Francisco.'
By Gertrude
Atherton .
125-L36.
'Fool ' s l.{ate. I
By Huan }Iee. 160- 168.
'The Camisard's
Bride. '
By Grant Allen.
183-189.
'The Princess
Joceliande.'
By A.E.W. llason.
233-246.
'Some Fisher Folk.'
By Helen }lathers.
256-264.
'The Belr of Diamonds.r
By T.W. Speight.
311-321.
'The Odessa Deal.'
By Huan llee. 339-347.
'The Story
of Hannah Wray.'
By Edwin Pugh. 365-370.
'Bully Bill
and the Kid.' By John Foster Fraser.
381-386.
'Bruce Major's
Love Story - and Ochers: A Story for Boys.t By Andrew
Hone.
397-403.
'The Poor Idealisr.'
By Edwin Pugh. 45B-468.
fA Lady of Florence.t
By Grant Allen.
483-49I.
'Dona Ferentes. t
516-52I.
'The Blue Laboratory:
A Story of St Petersburg.'
By L.T. lleade &
Robert Eustace.
563-575.
'T' Other Side
o' th' Beck.'
By percy White.
5BB-598.
'The Intrusion
of lla ifez Effendi.'
ny ;onn pendleton.
620-625.
24
(June-Nov
By a Eairrs
1897)
[American
ed.
s.
4,
v.
15]
Breadth:
Being the Secret Eistory
of the Tsar's
Tour,
(of the rThird
Gonpiled from the Records of Paul Volborth
Section').
By Headon Hi11.
1-16, 746-T59, 251-264, 357-370,
501-514,589-601.
'The God of Battles.'
By Robert If. Chambers. 25-30.
' A D e m o no f R e v e n g e : B e i n g a S t o r y
of Sydneyand the Bush.'
A xaster
199-203.
'i'ire
307-3f3.
By Francis Gribble.
King l{ho Dressed Up.r
339-348.
Ilan at the Sernaphore.' By Bret Harte.
''l'he
378-380.
By Myra Hamilton.
Folks. '
l,Ii1l Fairies:
For Little
407'4I5.
l n e Two Romeos.'
By Hal1iwe11 Sutcliffe.
S o r n eE p i s o d e s i n t h e L i f e o f a B e a c h C o m b e r . '
l n the Kingrs Service:
By Louis Becke. 436'441.
'lJeatrix
By l{ax Pemberton.
of the Pool House: A Story of a Bicyclist.'
462-470.
''lhe Slavers.'
486-492.
Bv Louis Becke.
'The Robbery aE the Pink Diamond.l
538'547.
By Dayrell Trelawney.
''fhe Secret of the Haunted Road.r
563-572.
By Dayrell Trelawney.
'The Enchanted Ass: From the Arabic of
By
"The Accursed Donkey."'
610-611.
Zara.
637-64I .
" I h e I n 1 a nW h o W a i t e d . r B y H o n . l l r s A r t h u r H e n n i k e r .
'The Tapestry of a Night. I By Gertrude Atherton.
653-661.
''r'he
)5
(oec
1897-May
I89B)
[american
ed.
s.
4,
v.
f6]
1-11' 141-151, 248-258, 363-374'
On the lJinter Sea. By Max Pemberton.
477-488, 567-578.
'The Greatest Love.t
By Edward H. Cooper. 33-40.
'Camphor: A Tale of the City.'
47-54.
By Barry Pain.
'An Amazing Christmas Eve.'
63'67.
By Horace Annesley Vachell.
72-85' 192'205'
By Headon Hill.
Spectre Gold: A Romance of Klondyke.
'See Yup.'
266-279, 412-425, 508-521, 612-626.
By Bret Harte. 125'132.
'The Defence of the Chateau.r
t6B-L77.
By D.H. Parry.
'A Snail's Love Story: A Story for Children.'
By Myra Harnilton. 2IB-220.
'The Crowd.'
237'242.
By Morley Roberts.
'Kitty Leigh.'
288'296.
By Hal1iwe11 Sutcliffe.
'Among the Downs.r
316'32I.
'The Black Flower of Justice.
330-332.
By I'lyra Hamilton.
'The Ghost of the Marchioness of Appleford.'
By Jerome K. Jerome.
339-346.
'The Complete Flautist:
A llusical Comedy.' By Andrew Home. 393'397.
'A White Night.r
428-434.
By Arnold White.
'The Royal Doves: A Story for Children.'
By Myra Hamilton.442-445.
'In the Valley of Repose.'
45L-457.
By Henry Seton }lerriman.
rHow Fairfax Did not Escape.r
534-540.
By Tighe Hopkins.
'The Romance of Ernily Philpott:
By Hrs }turray Hickson.
Housemaid.'
551-556.
'Under the Moon.'
By D.H. Parry. 589-595.
'The Awakening of Pharaoh.'
638'643.
By llenry A. Hering.
'Wyemarke and the Sea Fairies.r
654-659.
By Edward H. Cooper.
By E.W.
Hornung.
54-63.
of uysteries:
Ttre Adveutures
of John Bell - Ghost- explorer.
B y L . T . l . l e a d e& R o b e r t E u s r a c e .
78-91, 178-187, 227-237,
388-399, 524-534, 619-631.
68
' Ilre
102-106.
By }4yra Hamilton,
O y s t e r l " l a i d e n .'
'l'lre
By Fred T. Jane. IL5-I22.
Missing Fleet.'
' r't,rut
By Max Pemberton. 123-133.
the Dwarf .r
't'lre
By Louis Becke.
Cutting Off of the Queen Charlotte.t
' ( :r e a m T a r t
B y E . C h a p m a n.
2I4'2L8 .
s. I
',\rr Adventure by Express. |
280'283.
26
In
(June-Nov
the
Chains
of
1898)
Crime:
s.
4,
Confeseions
of
[American
Being
the
ed.
v'
f7]
a Late
Prisoner
of the more Notorious
of the Croun, and Sometime Acconplice
Raffles,
Wtrose Fate is Unknorn.
A.J.
Cricketer
and Criminal,
I-L2, 190-199, 279-288, 344'352, 451-458,
By E.W. Hornung.
608-619.
Trevanion:
A Story of Cornsall.
By Joseph Hocking.
2 6 - 4 L , 1 4 6 - 1 6I ,
255-270, 377-392, 49B-513, 584-599.
'Gotty at Ostend. '
B y A r t h u r E . C o p p i n g.
3l-45.
'Salomy Jane's Kiss.'
By Bret Harte.
65-75.
'A Lictle Entanglernent.r By Hal1iwe11 Sutcliffe.
a0-BB.
'The Silver Tear Drop.'
By llyra }lamilton.
95-98.
'House-boat Isis.'
By Victor Hewett.
124-L30.
fThe Justice of Napoleon.'
138-f43.
'The Footprint of Princess Trubetskoi.'
176-181.
By Tighe Hopkins.
'The Do1ls' Romance.' By Myra Hamilton.
217-220.
'Colonel Rosets Tunnel out of Libby: An Escape
By Tighe
of Escapes.'
ilopkins .
2 2 7- 2 3 2 .
'The }Iummy
By Cutcliffe
Hyne.
244-249.
of Thompson-Pratt.l
'The Earl
B y I ' 1 6 n i el l u r i e l D o w i e .
298-303.
and the Robins.'
'Ilow Toppler Threw for Rothenburg.'
By Harold Spender. 3L5-325.
'The Sun-dried King.'
By l"lyra Hamilton.
329-332
'The Adoption.r
Trans. from the French of Franqois Copp6e by D.
' The Fianc'e' s Rtrse.' By Charles Foley.
Trans. f rom French by Dora
258-260.
Moore.
'when the sea-fairies
By Edward H.
Play: A SEory for children.'
265'268.
Cooper.
'The Yankee and the Don.'
282-292.
By Gertrude Atherton.
'The Buried Treasure on the }loscow Road.'
327-333.
By D.H. Parry.
'What Can a Man Do More? A Story of the Frozen North.'
By Arnold
358-363.
White.
'The I"listake of the Princess cynthia: A story for children.'
By
lvloore. 358-36f.
'An Idyll
of the S1ums.' By IIay Bateman. 409-4L6.
' A W o r n a n s' W a y . '
By E . Joyce I'lurray .
425-429 .
'King of the Poppies: A Story for Children.'
By l.lyra Hamilton.
434-437 .
'A Cutting Criticism.'
By Andrew Harlestone.
475-48L.
' Racing the Midnight Express. '
4 8 7- 4 B 9 .
rlly Brother-in-1aw. '
By E. S. Lang-Buckland.
523-529.
'The Resurrection of l'latthew Jephson. I
By R. Austin Freeman.
534-542.
'The Deaf and Dumb Prince:
A Story for Children.'
By Myra Hamilton.
554-556.
'How I Captured Furruk Ali.'
By Harnilton Piffard.
570-574.
'Brigaut.'
By Charles Fole!.
Trans. from French by Dora lloore. 629-63L.
'The Story of a Chase.l
637-643.
'The Deaconrs Enterprise. I
By Charles Edwardes. 652-656.
585-587.
'A Box of Hints: A story
'The Black Dress-basket.
27
(oec
IBgB-lrlay l-899)
[emerican
ed.
s.
4,
v.
1B]
'The Grey Frock.'
By Anthony tlope.
46-52.
'The Ambassador's Pigeons. I
By Robert Barr.
63-70.
Being the Reminiscences
Stories
of Dloute Carlo:
of Antoine Hartin,
Department of the Cercle des
Chief of the Surveillauce
Etrangers de Honaco. By William Le Queux. 78-85, 223-229,
346-353, 431-438, 53B-545, 650-658.
'The l'lystery of Futuleima. r By Guy Boothby.
95-L02.
'Mrs Davenant.'
By Ilal1iwell Sutcliffe.
113-121.
'The Secret of Emu Plain.r
By l{rs L.T. Meade and Robert Eustace.
L23-r32.
'The Colonel's Christmas Darrm.' By L.J. Beeston. 142-L46.
rThe SpotEed Robe: A Srory for Children.
151-156.
By I'Iyra llarnilton.
'Bridie's
By l"I6nie l,turiel Dowie.
194-203.
Star.'
'The Coward.'
By Edwin Pugh.
2lL-2I6.
rFor the Sake of Old Love.'
238-248.
By John Strange llinter.
70
379-381.
Myra Hamilton.
'The Colonelt s Cane. t By Richard l"larsh.
4L2-419 .
'The Episode of George Andros.'
444-448.
By Hajor Arthur Griffiths.
'The Professional
Trans from French
By Charles Foleli.
Lover.'
457-459.
by Dora Moore.
'The Author of
467'472.
By E.S. Lang Buckland"Tulippa."'
'Queen Wyemarke: A Story of the Sea-fairies
By Edward
for Children.'
488-492.
H. Cooper.
'How Finley McGillis Held the Peer.r
5 2 2 - 5 2 7.
By Robert Barr.
'Cheque! llate!r
554-559.
By HeadonHi11.
'Lady Anne and the Virginian,t
566-578.
By Gertrude Atherton.
'Happiness,t
Trans. from French by Dora Moore.
By Charles Fole!.
599-603.
By Myra Hamilron.
for children.'
Some Phases of Private
Two on a Trail:
636-642.
By Hajor Arthur Griffiths.
Inquiry.'
'Lord Doubleday's Dilemma.r By Andrew Harlestone.
673-679.
'My Troublesome erot6g6s.'
687-695.
By Halliwel1 Sutcliffe.
'The Stonish Giants and the llagic Arrow: For Children.t
By Howard
710'7 L2.
Angus Kennedy .
28
(June-Nov
lB99)
[American
ed.
s-
4,
v.
f9]
1-16, 115-130, 227'243, 339-353'
By Guy Boothby.
A Haker of Nations.
451-467, 563-571.
'In the Grip of the Tsar.r
26-32By Ralph Julian.
'The Temptation of John Johnson.r
40-47.
By llrs Clement K. Shorter.
'Silas P. Cornu's Divining-rod.'
65-7I.
By Henry A. Hering,
79-86, 150-158, 26I'268, 396-403,
By Huan Mee.
Hman.
A Diplooatic
504-511, 606-613.
'To the Cannonts llouth. '
97-100.
By L.J. Beeston.
'A Repentance.'
Trans. from French by Dora Moore.
By Charles Foley.
139-141.
'The Other Woman's Child.'
'Black llagic: The Story of
165-170.
By llrs Clement K. Shorter.
By B. Fletcher Robinson.
the Spanish Don.'
17 8 - 1 8 9.
'Vivianifs
By E' Chapman. l9B'207.
Chair.'
'The Prince's Lesson: A Story for Children.'
By Myra Hamilton. 2L4'216.
'The Doctor of the Swamp.' By l"lorley Roberts 250'254.
'At the Same Table.' By Andrew Harlestone.
276'282.
'The Red Speck (neing an Adventure of Drenton Denn, Special Comrnissioner).'
295-302.
By Fred M. White,
'The Other Side.'
By May Bateman. 309-312.
'A Pink Sun-bonnet.r
By Gertrude E.M. Vaughan. 32L'324.
'The Elf and the Pheasant: A Tale for Children.'
By Myra Harnilton.
329-332.
7L
'Tbe
'The Deputy
Collector.'
By John Foster Fraser.
363-37L.
'The lllheels
of Dr Ginochio Gyves.r By Ellsworth Douglass & Edwin
Pallander.
381-389.
'The Ananias Brothers.'
By Hajor Arthur Griffiths.
4L2-4L7.
By Ethel Forster Heddle.
"'Waterloo" and "Trafalgar".'
43I-437.
rThe Truth Reader: A
Story for Children.'
By Myra Hamilton.
442-445.
'After
By W. Pett Ridge. 472-476.
the Fact.'
'The Ignorance of
Sybilla.r
By Jessie Mansergh. 484-490.
'The lulouiik.r
By Charles Fo1ey. Trans. from French by Dora Moore. 526-528.
'An AwakenedFury.'
By L.J. Beeston.
538-542.
'The Sultanis Adherent.'
By H. Barrow-North.
549-552.
'The Strange Case
of Lieutenant I'lacgregor: An Indian Tale.'
By Louis
Creswicke.
582-590.
'An Autumn Romance.t
By Charles Foley.
Trans.
from French
bv Dora
Moore.
598-600.
'The Sequestration
|
- III)
of Miss Ferriby (Two on a Trail
By I'Ia-ior
Arrhur Griffirhs.
625-63L.
'A Heroine of Ehe Telegraph.'
By John }tunro.
640-647.
'The Apotheosis
of I'Irs Gentle.'
By Beatrice Heron-Maxve11. 655-660.
29
(oec
189g-Irlay 1900 )
ed.
[American
s.
4|
v.
20]
'The
By S. Levett-Yeats.
1-16.
Queen's Roses.'
A Gay Conspiracy.
By Robert lt/. Chambers. 28-42, 2L0-226, 3L9-337,
394-409, 551-566, 630-645.
'The Lady of the Ship.'
Trans. from Cornish by A.T. Quiller-Couch.
5 2 - 6 7.
The
'The
Silent
Gate.
By Tighe
Hopkins.
72-80, 25I-259r 303-309, 452-463,
522-528, 651-658.
Ghost
in the Domino and
By Max Pemberton.
the
True
Account
82-93.
of
the
Duel
at
Boulogne.'
'The Junction Gang.r
By S.R. Crockett.
100-110.
'The l,ilrite Geranium. I
By Fred M. White.
Ll2-I20.
'Gerryrs Garden: The Story
of a Child.'
By Ouida.
r32-r45.
'The Haunted I'len.' By
L.J. Beeston.
L47-L52.
'The Belle of Caffada
City.'
By Brer Harre.
163-181.
'Buskers at Bay.'
By Arthur Morrison.
236-244.
'A Strange Insanity.t
B y L . T . I - l e a d e& R o b e r t E u s t a c e .
282-293.
'Three Degrees
of Love.r By H. Barrow-North.
345-352.
'The Story of Suliman
Shah.'
By Patrick Davidson.
360-364.
'The queen's Handmaid (A
Story for Children).'
By llyra Hamilton. 369-37I.
'The Man with the Green
Eyes.'
By Dora Moore.
376-380.
'Matchmaker Jack.r
By Ha11iwe11 Sutcliffe.
422-430.
'The Congo Bank of Brussels. I
By Hajor Arthur Griffiths.
438-444.
rPhanlom Death.r
By Huan Mee. 470-476.
'The Child King: A Story
of the Revolution.'
By Charles Foldy. Trans.
from French by Dora Moore.
484-485.
'The Suggestion Maker: A
Story for Children.'
By Myra Hamilton. 490-493.
'Dust (neing an Adventure
of Brenton Denn, Special Commissioner).'
By Fred M. White.
506-514.
'A Chiromatic Episode.'
By Andrew Harlestone.
536-542.
'A Case for Identification
(Two on a Trail).r
By Hajor Arthur Griffiths.
581-587.
72
Princess
and
the
Wallawoo:
A Story
for
Children.'
By I'lyra Hamilton.
597-600.
'The Burden.'
By L.J. Beeston.
620-623.
'The Panel
of Filippo Lippi (Two on a Trail).'
By llajor Arthur Griffiths.
665-67 2 .
'The Boys who
saved rndia (Founded on Fact).'
By John Munro.
676-690.
'Kate
of the To1l-house.'
By Ha1liwe1l Sutcliffe.
6g5-695.
'Muchet.' By
charles Foley.
Trans. from French by Dora Moore.
702-704.
'Boys (end
a Story for Them).'
By Lady Mountmorres. 7Og-7L2.
30
(June-Nov
1900)
[American
ed.
s.
4,
v.
2l-]
a Record of the Adventures
of sir Gharles
Queen (leing
Verrinder,
Baronet,
in the Eaet Indies.
By Guy Boothby.
L-I7, 160-175, 260-276, 392-408, 501-515, 6L7-629.
'Reconsrituting
the Circumstances.r
By W. pett Ridge.
24-28.
'The Strange Voice.'
By ltrs Clement Shorter.
38-40.
'A Flutter
in Wheat.'
By Robert Barr.
4I-47.
'A Lovable Anomaly.'
By Louis Creswicke.
52-57.
'The Baby of
the House.r By Spencer Leigh Hughes. 63-67.
'Robbery No
Crime.'
By Lord Mountmorres. 73-78.
An IustruDent of Yengeauce. By L.J. Beeston.
85-91, 193-200, 3I7-324,
379-385, 538-544, 637-645.
'The Little
Lad r{ith the Tow-coloured Hair: A Story of the l^lar in
La Vend6e.'
By Charles Foley.
Trans. from French by Dora
Moore. 99-100.
'The Story
of Kweedassand Kindawuss (A Story for Children).'
By
Howard Angus Kennedy.
105-108.
'A I'{illionaire
f or Five Minutes. t By william charles scully .
124-130.
'The
By James Workman. 138-145.
Queen's Ring.'
'On
the House-top. I By Robert Barr.
146-152.
'Concerning a Boyr'
By Charles Kennett Burrow.
182-186.
'An Unwelcome
Guest: A Story of the War in La Vend6e.' By Charles Fole!.
Trans. from French by Dora Moore.
209-211.
'Wyemarke
(A Story for Children).'
and the Mountain-fairies
By Edward
H. Cooper, 216-22I.
'The Great Mogul.'
By Robert Barr.
235-24L.
'Caveat Emptor:
The Story of a Pram.'
By R. Austin Freeman.
247-252.
'A Dreamer.'
By ltrs Clement Shorter.
282-29L.
'Young
Mr Simpson.'
By G.B. Burgin.
302-308.
'Wyemarke
and the Mountain-fairies'
8a11.'
By Edward H. Cooper.
329-333.
'The Long-distance
Telephone.'
By Robert Barr.
348-353.
'For A11 Prisoners
and Captives.'
By Ethel F. Heddle.
365-373.
rThe Little
Lackey.'
By Charles Foley. Trans. from French by Dora
Moore.
4L5-4L7.
'A Broken Instrument.'
By Muriel Hine.
424-429.
'The Thunderers:
A Canadian Fairy Tale.'
439-44L.
'Madamoiselle Parchesi.'
By Gelett Burgess.
457-463.
'The Strange Story
of a Business Start.'
By Neil Wynn Williams.
47 2-482.
'A Limping Revenge.f
By Robert Barr.
489-495.
'The Silver Lute.'
By James l,Iorkamn. 52L-528.
'The Joker: A
Story for Children.'
By If.A. Kennedy. 551-553.
l{y rudian
73
!,
'The Stranger at Angers.l
By D.H. Parry.
569-575.
rWhat the Bookshelves Hid.'
By Halliwe11 Surcliffe.
583-590.
'"Ternporary Insanity."'
By Robert Barr.
596-603,
rThe Mystery of The Firs.'
By Ernest G. Henham. 610-616.
'Sunflower Siding. '
By G.B. Burgin .
65L-656.
'The Larkrs
Gift (A Story for Children).'
By Myra Hamilron.
66I-664.
31
(Oec 1900-May
1901)
[Amerj-can
ed.
s.
4,
v.
22)
The Giantrs Gate.
By Max Pemberton. 1-17, 214-226, 328-338, 437-450,
568-583, 658-672.
'Margery at Lawhibbet: A Story
By Q. 2l-37.
of 1644.t
'Charlie is My Darling.'
By S.R. Crockett.
39-47.
Under the Ilhite
Cockade.
Being Episodes
in the Gareer of llaurice
Austruther,
a Jacobite G€Dtleuan of Fortune.
By Halliwell
Sutcliffe.
56-69, 246-255, 313-322, 466-475, 539-547,
694-702.
'"Stella:"
A Story of Stars.I
By Muriel Hine.
72-80.
'The Ghosts That
Walked.'
By Geo. Manville Fenn. 88-96.
'The Mill on
the Kop.'
By Robert Barr.
98-105.
rrrOl' Bennetrr and the Indians:
A Tale of Wyoming Valluy.t
By Stephen
Crane. 108-111.
'The came of Love.'
By William Le Queux. II7-L26.
'The Christmas Present.'
By James Workman. 131-138.
'Wyemarke and the Forest-fairies
(A Story for Children).'
IBy Edward
H. Cooperl.
I52-L57.
Kiu.
By Rudyard Kipling.
L63-L77, 275-291, 387-398, 499-5L4, 6LL-624.
'Trial and Verdict.r
By W. Perr Ridge.
184-190.
'First
and Last: A Work-gir1's Story.'
By Constance Beerbohm. 203-208.
'Coxswain Swain's Story: A
Remarkable Tale of the Coast.'
By Neil
Wynn !{i1liams .
232-237 .
'This World's Maze.'
By Beatrice Heron-Maxve11. 260-264.
rLanty Foster's Mistake. I
By Bret Harte.
275-284.
'The Castle.'
By Lewis Baumer. 298-305.
'Which?'
By ErnesE G. Henham. 340-345.
'Shipwrecked
on a Kingdom!r By Ethel F. Heddle.
348-352.
'Victims of Circumstance.'
By R. Austin Freeman. 360-364.
'A Citoyenne's Letter
to Her Daughter.r
By Charles Foley.
Trans.
from French by Dora Moore.
365-366.
'Lightning
Gold (A Story for Children).'
By Howard Angus Kennedy.
374-377.
'The Holsters of Monsieur
le Colonel.r
By D.H. Parry.
406-413.
'Queen
o' the Poppies.'
By Edwin Pugh. 420-426.
'Psyche's Experience
Exchange.'
By Henry Hering.
458-463.
'A Pair of Young Things.'
By John Strange Winter.
482-488.
'A Recessional.'
By May Bateman. 523-530.
'The Captain's Lion. '
By L.J. Beest.on. 555-558.
'The Battle of Forty Fort:
A Tale of Wyoming Valley.'By
Stephen
Crane. 59L-594.
'On the Road
to Gretna Green.'
By T.W. Speight.
599-604.
'The Ghostly Door: A New Zealand
Story.'
By Henry Lawson. 633-635.
By D.H. Parry.
642-650.
"'That Bad Business of Blenkinsopts."'
'My Governor.t
By l.lalter E. Grogan.
680-685.
'One Virginia
Night. I
By Kenneth Brown.
709-712.
74
(June-Nov 1901)
lAmerican ed.
s.
4, v.
23]
Kin (cont. ).
By Rudyard Kipling .
3-L7, lt5-130 , 227-242, 339-352,
45r-466 , 563-57 6 .
Adventures
of Angus short:
Things lJhich r tfave Done for others,
and lJish I Eadnrt.
By Richard llarsh.
26-34, L64-L7L,
265-272, 375-383, 486-492, 596_602.
'The
Flocourt Bridge.'
By Edward Cecil.
42-46.
The Giantrs Gate (cont.).
By Max pemberton.
52-65, 175-188,289-304,
39I-404, 505-520, 618-631.
'The
Girl Who Led the Army.,
By M5nie Muriel Dowie.
75-79.
'The
gg-g2.
Happy Prisoner.r
By W. pett Ridge.
'A clerical
Error: A cricket story.t
By Horace Bleackley.
1 0 0 -1 0 5.
'The
Tragedy of a Tiff.l
By Muriel Hine.
140-146.
'The
Man in Blue.'
By Richard Davey.
153-156.
"'one Touch of Nature.r't
By L.J. Beeston.
Ig7-200.
'A Breach
of courtship: A story of sicily.'
By Douglas sladen. 20g-216.
'The
Braggart.'
By Edwin pugh.
250-256.
'A
Bank Scandal.'
By Major Arthur Griffiths .
27g-2g4.
'The
Magic Bat: A cricket story.'
By Horace Bleackley.
312-31g.
'A Minister
of Wrath.'
By L.J. Beeston.
324-329.
'The
l"lan in the Swamp.' By G.B. Burgin.
360-367.
'The
Lone Spot.'
By Ernest G. Henharn. 4IL-417.
'Frorn
Sunset to Sunrise.l
By E. Spender.
424-432.
'rn
the Days of Top Hats: A cricket story.t
By Horace Bleackley.
4 3 7- 4 4 4 .
'Repairing
a Breach.r
By Ll. pett Ridge.
474-479.
'A Ghostly
Due1.'
By Fred Whishaw. 494-4gg.
'Lucille:
An rncident of the commune.' By Harold spender.
529-532.
'Two
Professors and one Mummy.' By Henry A. Hering.
54L-546.
'Mere
I
Temperament.
By Zed. 551-556.
'An Independent
Command.' By D.H. parry.
5g3-5gg.
'Princess
Narcisse.r
By William Le Queux. 609-613.
'Just
That Difference.'
By Mabel Quiller-Couch.
63j-642.
'A Naked
Sword.r By L.J. Beeston.
648-652.
'The
strong-room at the Abbey.'
By G. E. M. Vaughan. 65g-661.
33
(Dec
l90J--l{ay
1,902)
lRmerican
ed.
s.
4,
v.
241
Unnaned. By William Le Queux.
1-16, 163-178, 292-305, 399-414,
522-537, 630-646.
'A Christmas
Eve at Lanston Grange.'
By Arthur W. Marchmont.
25-33.
rExtracts from
t By G.S. Street.
the Diary of a Millionaire.
36-45.
'The Capture
of the Burgoneister
van der lferf: A Reported Tale of
a Dutchman and a Privateer. t
By Q. 50-59.
A Gentlenan of Ilevon.
By D.H. Parry.
67-76, 216-227, 328-337,
467-477, 574-582, 669-678.
'An Interest
of Tears.r
By L.J. Beeston. 85-91.
'The
Curse of Positano.'
By Robert Barr.
106-114.
'The
Ghost of Dree Hollow: A Story of New Year's Eve.'
By l'lurie1
Iline.
L22-L34.
'Nuria.'
By S.R. Crockett.
t36-r46.
'The Betrothal
of King Croak: A Story for Children.'
By Geo. A. Best
151-156.
The
75
rPhantom Plumes. '
By Max Pemberton .
187-L97 .
'A Retrieval.'
By l"lay Bateman. 205-209.
'The Costume Model.'
By R. Austin Freeman. 233-237.
' I n T a o r m i n a T o r , r n :A S t o r y o f S i c i l y . I
245-253.
By Douglas Sladen.
'Three Kisses (^l Story for Children).'
260-264.
By Myra Hamilton.
'The Beacon Fire.r
By James Workman. 3I4-32L.
'The Bell Buoy of the l"lanacles. '
By Herbert Russell.
344-351 .
'After the Tunnel.' By L.J. Beeston. 353-356.
'Rejected Addresses.'
365-37L.
By ltrs George de Horne Yaizey.
'The Ootwars Errand.t
376-380.
By Myra Hamilton.
'The Shadow of a Name: An Episode.'
3 8 1- 3 9 2 .
By l'Iax Pemberton.
'The Great Tobacco
By R. Austin Freeman. 4I7-420.
"Plant."'
'A Crown of Shadows: A Story of the Cuban War Founded on Fact.'
By
Rudolph de Cordova.
430-434.
'The Missing Bandsman: A Story of High Life in Palermo.'
By Douglas
441-450.
Sladen.
'My Gold Mine in Wales.'
By Charles Edwardes. 457'46I.
'The Conclusion-jumper: A Story for Children.'
By Myra Hamilton.
484-488.
'A Courier of Fortune.'
By Arthur W. Marchmont. 508-513.
'The Story of Private Passmore and the Empress.'
By Neil Wynn Williams.
546-55r.
' T h e B a t t l e o f W a t e r l o o : A C o m e d yA d a p t e d f r o m t h e N o r w e g i a n o f K i e l l a n d . '
By M.P. Shie1. 560-566.
'The Prodigal's
Return. I By Ida Deahl .
589-594.
'A Long Farewell (Founded on FacE).r
By John Munro. 598-601.
'The Counterfeit Cashier.'
6L6-623.
By Geo. A. Best.
'The Laughter of Dr l"larais: A Story of the Breton Coast.'
By B.
Fletcher Robinson. 653-661.
'Beyond the Dreams of Avarice.'
By R. Austin Freeman. 685-69L.
'Nathan Snode: Mean I'lan.'
694'699.
By L.J. Beeston.
'Wyemarke Among the Leaves.r
700-704.
By Edward H. Cooper.
34
(June-Nov
1902)
lAmerican
ed.
s.
4,
v.
25]
1-15, I22-I34, 249-263,
By S. Levett-Yeats.
The Lord Protector,
358-37 2 , 469-482 , 610-623 .
'A Stolen Island.'
25-30.
By Edward H. Cooper.
'A Second Marriage.'
38-45.
By Fox Russell.
54-62, 185-194,
Ashdown.
By Clifford
The Adveutures of Ro ey Pringle.
27r-279, 380-389, 503-512, 590-598.
'A
By Graham Hope. 64-61.
Sketch.'
'The Adventures of a Waterproof.'
74-80.
By Muriel F. Hine.
'A weird Witness.' By Richard Davey. 88'92.
'The Bell of St Gildas.r
By L.J. Beeston. 94-100.
'The l,Ihite Princess: A Story for Children.'
105-108.
By Myra Hamilton.
'Borrowed Plumes.'
By Edwin Pugh. I42-I49.
'The Choir and the Lemon Cake.'
155-161.
By Tighe Hopkins.
'Si J'6tais Roi.'
By Douglas Sladen. 168-177.
tThe Pangwangda and the Hoohi: A Story for Children.'
By Myra Hamilton.
2L2-2L6.
'The Boy Who Played the Violin.'
234-240.
By Allen Upward.
' B r i g a n d s v I n l a if a : A S t o r y o f M o d e r n S i c i l y . I
By Douglas Sladen.
288-296.
76
'
',\ l'lilitary
By Walter Wood. 303-309 '
Hooligan.
'A Dead llan's Bride.'
By L.J. Beeston. 311-315'
'
'l,ittle
3 2 2 - 3 2 9'
By Muriel Hine .
Goody No-shoes.
'Cupid' s lleslenger, A One-Chapter Story. t By Richard Marsh '
3 4 7- 3 5 5 '
't^/ith the Camel Convoy - A Story of the Soudan.'
By Frank Millar'
398-403.
'l,sychers Vintage Thoughts. '
409'4L5.
By Henry A. Hering .
'The Cap of Mr Tomkinson.r By Tom Gallon.
423-430'
' A S c o u t ' s R o m a n c e .'
4 3 7- 4 4 0 .
B y F r e d W h i s h a w' T h e W o r d o f a W o m a no r T w o . '
459-46L'
B y l . l. P e t t R i d g e .
490-495'
By Geo. A. Best.
" ' B i t t e r A l o e s " : A C o m e d yo f V i l l a g e L i f e . '
'Serfs and Lords.'
By Fred Whishaw. 513-518.
'The Mercy of a Sicilian.r
524-533'
By Douglas Sladen.
'The Bare Chance.' By L.J. Beeston. 551-556.
'E1sie Raeburn. '
5 7 0 - 5 7 7.
By Charles Marriott.
'They Landed the Tubs.'
632'640'
By Headon Hill.
'The settlement with shanghai snith.'
646-657.
By Morley Roberts ' S t o l e n V e n g e a n c e . ' B y L . J . B e e s t o n- 6 6 L - 6 6 4 .
l5
(lec
LgO2-May 1903)
lAmerican
ed-
s.
4,
v'
261
'The Great White Deeps.' By Egerton Castle.
1-13.
'A Successful Deal.'
L6-24.
By Ian Maclaren.
'Ihe
3L-46, 233'247, 336-351, 460-475,
By Q.
Adventures of Earry Revel.
5 7 1 - 5 8 6, 6 8 7 - 7 0 3 .
' T h e T e m p t a t i o n o f M i s s R a m s b o t h a m .I B y J e r o m e K . J e r o m e .
54-62'Two Points of View.'
73-78.
By Muriel Hine.
'The Christmas l,lasque at Alburton.'
By Arthur W. I'larchmont. 84-92'
'The Borrowed Uncle.' By Tom Gallon98-f05.
'The
By L.J. Beeston. 111-117.
Queer Case of Judson Trader.!
'The Lady of the Island.'
124'132'
By Guy Boothby'Wyemarke's Christmas Fairies:
By Edward
A Story for Children.'
139-145.
11. Cooper.
'The Ghost and the Exciseman-'
150-157'
By James Blyth.
163-177, 295-308 , 409-422, 524-538'
By Headon ltill.
The lhrke llecides.
646-659.
'The Silver Drum.'
186-193.
By Neil Munro.
'Bella Lisa: A Story of Lake llaggiore.'
2OO'205'
By Norma Lorrimer.
'The Black Ball.'
By L. T. Meade& Robert Eustace. 213'223.
'Mine Host and the Witch.t
255-259'
By James Blyth.
'The Black Shadow.'
280-286.
By owen oliver.
'The
314-32I'
By L.J. Beeston.
Vehement Flame.r
'Nick o' Desperates.'
3 2 4 - 3 2 7'
By Ha1liwe11 Sutcliffe .
'The Ebb Tide.'
By R. Austin Freeman. 352'356'
'Eldengart.r
364'37LBy B. Birkbeck Pell.
'Bought and Sold.'
B y E d r n u n dD o w n e y - 3 7 5 - 3 8 0 .
'The Convict Catcher.'
395-403.
By Guy Boothby.
'The Sorrows of an Arnateur Actor.r
43t-436.
By Fox Russell'
'The Momentous Journey.t
By Scott Graham. 443-452'
'The Lucky Horse: A story for children.'
489-492.
By l"lyra l{amilton.
'A Bottled Villain.'
508-516.
By Tom Gallon.
'The Salvation of Editha.r
By Keble Howard. 546-550'
'The Half-breed.'
558-563.
By G.B. Burgin.
77
t
I
Id
'The Black
Tragedy: A Story of old Drury Playhouse.'
By Arthur Montagu.
593-597 .
'The
cold Princess: A Story for children.'
By Howard Angus Kennedy.
601-604.
'An Old-time
Tavern Tale.'
By Halliwe11 Sutcliffe.
617-624.
'The
Secret Code. I By Hugh Lincoln .
633-639 .
'The Treachery
of the Hollyhocks.'
By llinifred
Graham. 664-669.
'The Madness
of Hans Knoll.'
By John Foster Fraser.
675-619.
36
(June-Nov
1903)
lamerican
Red Horn.
ed.
s.
4,
v.
27]
By Max Pemberton. r'21, 115-132, 227-245, 339-360, 459-478,
571-588.
'The Hooded
Chair.'
By llrs C.N. williamson.
30-38.
'Rain
to Order.'
By Ernest G. Henham. 48-52.
'The Black
Helmets.'
By Edward Ceci1.
60-65.
The Further
Adventures of Rooney Priugle.
By Clifford
Ashdown.
73-80 ( 'The Submarine Boat' ) , 190-197 ( 'The Kimberley Fugitive' ) ,
295-303 ('The Silkworms of Florence'),
390-397 ('A Box
of specier), 508-516 ('The silver rngors'), 623-631 ('the
House of Detention').
rA Poetts
Wife.r
By James Blyth.
89-92.
'A Decided
Change.' By L.J. Beeston. 98-102.
'The
Cloud Army.'
By Myra Hamilton.
107-109.
'The Solitary
Love Story of Mr John Leslie.'
By Edward H. Cooper.
t39-L42.
'Miss Peatts
Extra Turn.'
By Tom Gallon.
151-157.
'Through
a Night.r
By Bart Kennedy. 165-171.
'The
secret of the Lower Lines.r
By llajor Arthur Griffirhs.
178-194.
'The l"lan
and the Monument.I By Neil Wynn Williams.
204-ZLZ.
'The Orpheusia.'
B y F r e d I " 1 .W h i t e .
252-261.
'A Man Proposes.'
By Hugh Tuite.
269-272.
'The Mill
a t S u d a u s q u e s : A R o m a n c eW i t h o u t S e n t i m e n t . r
By Ida Deahl.
28r-287.
'An Error
in Diagnosis.'
By L.G. Moberly.
311-316.
'The Masterrs
choice: Resignation or scandal?'
By Neil wynn williarns.
323-328.
'The Industrious Apprentice. I
By A.G. Hyde.
370-374.
'Two Innocents Abroad. I
By Fox Russell.
406-4L0.
'Father Wisdomrs
Advice.'
By John N. Raphael.
4L7-419.
'A Duel
of Hearts.r
By L.J. Beeston.
427-435.
'The Lost
Sound.'
By Myra Hamilton.
440-444.
'Fortuna.'
By Herbert Morrah.
485-492.
'The Postern Door:
A Story of the Great Rebellion.'
B y J a m e s Workman.
498-504.
'Katharine,
Mr Kennard, and the Cobra.r
By Edward H. Cooper.
524-529.
rA Posthumous Publication. I
By Geo. A. Best.
535-540.
'Priscilla
and the Duke: A Story of To-day.'
B y E . R . P u n s h o n . 5 4 7- 5 5 0 .
'A Cat of Three
Colours.'
By Myra Hamilton.
554-557.
rWas It a Dream? The
Story of a Doubtful Nightnare.r
By Geo. A .
Best.
596-602.
'The Submarine Smugglers.'
By James Blyth.
608-616.
fRedemption: A Sketch.'
By Edwin Pugh.
640-644.
'At a Distance. I
By Edmund Downey. 651-656.
78
r,l,rgg€d.r By Fox Russell.
660-664.
(Dec 1903-May 1904) lAmerican ed.
',
.rlrtain Christmas. I
1-9.
By D.H. Parry.
t'lrr. Brethren:
A Rooance of the Crusades.
By
s.
H.
4, v.
Rider
2Bl
Haggard.
33'47,
L63-177, 275-290, 387-402, 508-527, 669-682.
'llrc
Man with the Black Spectacles.'
By William Le Queux. 49-56.
' \ (luestion
By I'Iuriel F. Hine.
66-79.
of Occupation.r
'\
Close Cal1.'
By A.W. l4archmont. 82-89.
'
llre Brantingham Ghost.t
By E.R. Punshon. 96-100.
,\ Happy Christmas.'
By James Workman. 101-108.
',\ 'touch
of Comedy.r By Keble Howard. 116-120.
'llre
Burglary of the British
By Douglas
Legation: A Story of Japan.'
Sladen.
126-133.
'llre
Strange Story of My Lady Buckenden. As Told by Geoffrey Hallett,
Clerk in Holy Orders.'
By Scott Graham. 142'147.
"'{)nly a Hat!" (Freely Translated from the French).'
By Constance
Beerbohm. 134- 136.
'iiyemarke
and the Child in White: A Story for Little
Ones.'By Edward
H. Cooper. L52-157.
l.r:aves Frou the lfotebook of John Garruthers,
Indian
Policeman.
By
Sir EdmundC. Cox, bart.
185-191 ('The Fate of Abdulla'),
3L3-322 ('The Priest and the ParchmenE'), 437-442 ('The
Rajapur Case'), 568-574 ('The Sin of Witchcraft'),
652-660
( ' T h e S t o l e n D e s p a t c h r) .
''l'he
Bishop's Coach.'
By Tighe Hopkins.
200-206.
' i'largaretta. I
By B. Birkbeck Pe11. 2I4-220.
''l'he
Tenth knmortal. I By Henry A. Hering.
229-235.
'lior
241-249.
Those Were Stirring
Times. I
By J.S. Fletcher.
'lhe
256-261.
Reflection in the Mirror.r
By Katharine Tynan.
''fhe
265-269.
Royal Laundry: A Story for Children.'
By Myra Hamilton.
''fhe
British Minister's
Spanish Niece: A Story of Japan.' By Douglas
298-305.
Sladen.
' l"ladame
Vieux-Temps . I By E. H. Huddleston.
329-333.
'How
Billy
By James Blyth.
341-345.
Buttle Found IIis Memory.r
'A
Valentine Day Episode.'
By Athol Forbes.
356-362.
'l'lcNabrs
Notion: A Story for Boys and Others. I
By Geo. A. Best.
372-377.
'The
Obscure Port.r
By ltrs Henry Dudeney. 412-4L8.
'The
Changed Hour.r
By L.J. Beeston.
423-43I.
'The Irrevocable.'
By James Blyth.
455-462.
'A Blind Criric.r
By Geo. A. Best.
468-472.
'The
By Myra
Sea-gull's Love Story: A Story for the Little
Ones.'
Ilamilton.
486-488.
'Two
of Them.'
B y F r e d 1 " 1 .W h i t e .
536-543.
'The Hussar's Revenge.' By L.J. Beeston.
553-560.
'The Poet
By John N. Raphael. 583-585.
and the Queen.'
'Ye Olde Spotted Dogge.'
By R. Austin Freeman. 591-598.
'Prince
By
Lollipopfs
Ones.'
Search for Love: A Story for Little
D.L.F.603-605.
'Fair
By Douglas Sladen.
619'626.
in Love and War: A Story of Japan.'
'A
Society Passport.'
By Huan Mee. 634-642.
'The Empty House on
690'694.
the Goswold Road.'
79
;9
'(;r:rn's
3B
l,iLLle
Dinner. I
(June-Nov I904 )
By Hilda
C. Hammond-Spencer.
lAmerican
ed.
s.
4t
v.
703-709.
Zg!
'The Avengers.'
By William Le Queux. 3-10.
The chronicles
of the Burglars'
crub.
B y H e n r y A . H e r i n g-.
33-37,
r23-t28, 247_254, 365_371, 544_550, 59g_605.
The Brethren:
A Romance of the Crusades (cont.).
By Rider Haggard.
45-6L, 150-165, 279_295, 403_4L7, 522_536, 629_64L.
'A
"Free Lance": The Adventure of the t"tissing prince.t
By l'lay Bateman.
69-t 6.
'The
Wire and the Bear.,
g4-g7.
By John Munro.
'The
Three wishes:
A canadian Fairy Tare.'
By Howard Angus Kennedy.
96-98.
'In
the Hour of Need.r By A,R. and E.M. power. 102-109.
'St
Mary of the Isles. I
By Katharine Tynan.
L37-L42.
'The Puma.'
By L.J. Beeston.
174-L7g.
'Romeo
and Juliet:
Leaves from the NoEebook of John carruthers,
rndian
Policeman.'
B y S i r E d r n u n dC . C o x , b a r t .
lgg-197.
'The
Duffer."t
"Little
By George A. Best.
203_ZO7.
'A Bird
of Passage: A story of the Thames.' By R. Austin Freeman.
2I2-2L8.
'The
Affair
of Lines (Founded on Fact).'
By lrajor Arthur Griffiths.
233-239.
'A Runaway
I
Match.
By John K. Leys.
265-270.
'Dhulia.'
By A. perrin.
302-306.
'The
Three Blood Spots.'
By James Blyth.
313-316.
'Hubert's
l,Iife: A Single chapter story.'
By Agnes Grozier HerberEson.
323-326.
'The Prince,
the Snail, and the Butterfly:
A Story for the Little
Ones.'
By Myra Hamilton.
330-332.
'The
Man Who Always Had l"loney: A l"lodern Fairy Tale for People
Who
Pretend Not to Believe Such Things. '
By Huan Mee.
339-344.
'Dolores. '
By James Blyth .
352-351.
'A
Star Fell.'
By L.J. Beeston. 390-396,
'The
Dutch Engineer: Leaves from the Notebook of John Carruthers,
Indian policeman. I
By Sir Ednund C. Cox, bart.
423-432.
'The
Adventure of Godfrey Haltett.'
By Scott Graham. 436-442.
'Vi-yun's
Vow: A True Tale of Korean Revenge., By George Lynch.
458-463.
'The
Beautiful Miss Dacre.r
By L. Hughes.
47g-4g4.
'Tantia
Maharajah: leaves from the Notebook of John Carruthers,
Indian
Policeman.'
By Sir EdmundC. Cox, bart.
494_502.
'Miss
Barberton's parrot.r
By Gilbert stanhope. 5r1-516.
rHow
the Maiden Saved the Earwigs. r By Myra Hamilton.
554-556.
'Two
Gentlemen in Armour.t
B y E . R . p u n s h o n.
57L-577.
'Forestalled.'
By L.J. Beesttn.
5g6-590.
'The
Bellows lvlaker. I By llrs Henry Dudeney .
6L3-620.
rPrivate
Foret's
rnfernal
Machine. '
ny .llnn vandercook.
642-645.
'A suburban
Autolycus.'
By R. Austin Freeman. 652-657.
'A case
of Thought Transference.'
By James Blyth.
66L-664.
1905)
[American
ed.
s.
4,
v.
30]
By Max Pemberton.
The Eundred Days:
A Foottrote to a Great Rouance.
1-20, 163-182, 275-292, 387-406, 499-5L8, 611-628.
'Railway
By W. Pett Ridge.
29'32.
Man's Wife.'
'The
By Huan I'lee. 49-55.
Uncertainty
of Humour: A Christmas Story,'
'The Adventure of
64-7L.
By Marie Leighton.
the Banbury Cakes.r
'How
74-80.
By Robert Barr.
the King Drank to Himself.'
'Dr Tredgold'
82-87 .
By L. J. Beeston .
s Experiment . I
By James
"'To Nelson": A Srnugglerrs Yarn Which is Based on Truth.t
Blyth.
9I-97.
'Were She But
By Guy Boothby.
104-115.
Queen!'
'The Lady of
the Great North Road: A Mystery of Christmas Eve.' By
William Le Queux.
I24-L31.
Frm a Surgeon's Diary.
By Clifford
Ashdown. 139'146, 253-26I'
32L-329, 442-450, 563-571, 683-690.
'After A11: A
By J.K. Wynne. 150-156.
Christmas Story.r
'Chiquitars Japanese Lover.'
191-198.
By Douglas Sladen.
'The Romantic
203-208.
By Violet Myers.
Girl: An Episode.'
'The Horns of a Dilemma: Leaves from the Notebook of John Carruthers,
219-228.
Indian Policeman.r
B y S i r E d r n u n dC . C o x , b a r t .
'The
By Walter E. Grogan. 233-239.
Subrs Expedition.'
'Bad Mrs Bennett. I By Owen Oliver.
244-247.
'The Story of Little
By l"lyra Hamilton.
Ones.t
Luck: A Story for Little
265-268.
'Our Bucket Shop. I
299-304.
By Arthur W. Marchmont.
' M i r a n d a ' s E n g a g e m e n t .'
By May Bateman. 311-313.
'The Guard and the Big Gun: The Story of a Seaport Battery.'
By
Neil Wynn Wi1liams.
334'340.
'The Strange Case of the Stolen Rubies.'
By Annie O. Tibbits.
347'352.
'The hrheels
of the Gods: Leaves from the Notebook of John Carruthers,
Indian Policeman.r
B y S i r E d r n u n dC . C o x , b a r t .
359-366.
'Awakening.'
By L.J. Beeston.
375-378.
'The Secret of the Emperor.'
By Owen Oliver.
4I4-4I9.
'How Godfrey Hallett
Fel1 among Thieves.'
By Scott Graham. 428-435.
'The western Princess.'
By A.G. Hyde.
458-467.
'In Guy-Faux Guise.f
By James Greenwood. 474'478.
'A Reckless Experiment.'
By G.B. Burgin.
525-530.
'The Comedy of Ki Lirs Betrothal:
A Tale of the Northern Territory,
By Percival Whitfield.
Australia.r
537-545.
rHow the Plate Got through: A Story of the Great Rebellion.'
By
James Blyth.
551-556.
'The Ascension Tower: t
579-585.
By L.J. Beeston.
'The Seeds of Harmony.'
By Myra Hamilton.
600-602.
'The Seal of the Church.'
By Edwin Pugh.
637-642.
'A Race for Market.'
By Alan Oscar.
648'652.
'The Adventure of Godfrey Hallett
By
with the Aurbitious I'liller.'
Scott Graham. 669-676.
'Lady Hungerford's Villain.'
695'699.
By Annie O. Tibbits.
'The wishing Stone: A Story for Children.'
By Myra Hanilton.
705-708.
40
lte
80
(Oec 1904-May
(June-Nov
Spider's
Bye.
1905)
[emerican
By William
ed.
Le Queux.
81
s.
3-18,
4,
v.
3I]
LI5-L29,
227-242,
339-354, 45r-466, 563-578.
Ghronicles
of the Burglarst
club.
By Henry A. Hering.
55-61, 174-191, 278-294, 397-394, 4gg_504, 5gg_605.
'La Grande
Capucine.'
By Headon Hill.
6g-75.
tThe Man
with the Big Heart. I
g2_g6.
By Athol Forbes.
'The conspiracy
of the clocks.r
By M. Foussier.
Trans. from French.
95-97 .
lte Adnirable
Tinker.
By Edgar Jepson.
l0l-Log,
439-444, 63g-644.
'Me
and My Dury.r
By W. perr Ridge.
137-L4L.
'Pansy's
Knight, and the Dubbing ihereof.'
By Muriel F. Hine.
166-170.
'The Revolr
of Honesty. I
By James B1yth.
fg6-igO.
'Like
'
a Soldier !
B y I , l . N e w m a nF l o w e r .
19g-200.
'within
T o u c h o f t h e H a n g m a n . ' B y H u a n M e e.
206-2IL.
'Manuela:
A story.'
By Lancerot Speed and F. R. pryor.
250-255.
'The Adventure
of Godfrey Hallett and william the Deserter.'
Bv
Scott Graham. 264-272.
'The Peerage
Exchange.'
By A.G. Hyde.
2gg-296.
'Only
in Fun.'
By Geo. A. Best.
306-3L2.
'The
usher's Daughter.r
By llajor Arthur Griffiths .
36r-367.
'A Pearl
of Price.'
By percivrf Wnitfield.
376-3g2.
'Aunt
I
caroline's
competition.
B y H i l d a H a m m o n d - s p e n c e r . 404-407.
'After
Seven years.'
By L.J. Beeston.
4L4-420.
'The
Ruby Ring.'
By A. Grozier Herbertson.
42g-435.
'The
Man and the Mouthpiece.'
By Tom Gallon.
473-479.
'My
Sonts Mother.t
B y l { r s I " 1 . H .S p i e l m a n n .
4g5-4gI.
'Under
the l"loon.r By T.C. Bridges.
511-513.
'The Aucobiography
of Mr Joshua Jerkinson.
By Fox Russell.
5L9-522.
'The Last
SEory: Leaves from the Note-book of John Carruthers.
Indian
Policeman.r
By Sir EdmundC. Cox, bart.
529_537.
'The Frock
and the Motor-man.'
By Arthur H. Henderson.
544-54g.
'Mr Patten's
Little
Murders.'
B y T o r nG a l r o n .
5g5-590.
tHow the
Bishop Lost His rndependence.,
By Athol Forbes.
614-6rg.
'A Grey
story which Ends in Gold.'
ny winifred Letts .
625-630.
'The Mirror
of Hachida.r
By John Munro .
652-654.
'The Faithful
Slave: A Story for the Little
Ones.r By Myra Hamilton.
66L-665.
The F u r t h e r
41
(Dec
1905-May
1906)
[American
Beuita:
ed.
s.
4,
v-
32]
An African Romance. By H. Rider Haggard.
11-34, L55-L76,
275-296, 395-416, 515_536, 64I-665.
'The Economising
of Ethel.'
By J.J. Bell.
27-33.
'The Match
Makers.'
By J.J. BeI1.
36-43.
'A
Lesson from the chinese.r
By percival whitfierd.
4L-46.
'A Christmas
Masque.'
By James Blyth.
54-62.
'For His
Sonrs Sake.'
By M.E. Braddon. 72-79.
'The Fairy
Ghost: A christmas Fantasy.r
By Huan Mee. go-gg.
'The Missing
Guest.' By L.J Beeston.
113-121.
fThe Jester.r
By Fox Russell.
LZ4-I2}.
'The Little
King's christmas.t
By charles Foley.
Trans. from French
by Dora Moore.
136-138.
'Mrs Penleathts
Stratagem.'
14g-157.
'A Game
of Chess.'
By L.J. Beeston. lg4-1g9.
'Jack
and Dick.'
By W.B. Maxwell.
Lg5-202.
82
'The chosr
with the Club Foot.'
By Robert Barr.
ZO9-223.
'Experiment
at Kearsley's.'
By W. pett Ridge.
238-243.
'An Arrangement
Altered.'
By Arthur H. Henderson.
252-256.
'Medlock's Reputation.'
By lrl. pett Ridge. 307-31f .
'The Great
'
Water.
By Bart Kennedy.
313-324.
'The
Jest of La Torche.'
By L.J. Beeston.
329-337.
'An Awkward
Bunker.t
By James Blyth.
345-355.
'A Lady's Honour.'
By Halliwell
Sutcliffe.
365-370.
'Janaway's
Ups and Downs.'
By John Oxenham. 427-435.
'In the Blue
Room.' By Katharine Tynan.
44L-44A.
'Rosa's
Mendacity: An Almost rmpossible story.'
By Huan Mee. 454-464.
'The
'
Cloud.
By llrs l"Iabel H. Spielmann .
47L-479.
'A Pantomine
Cuckoo.'
By Tom Gallon.
492-487.
'The Sleep
of the Angels.'
By Victor Hewetr.
495-49g.
'rn the waste-paper
Basket.r
By Hajor Arthur Griffiths.
547-554.
'Jerryfs
Wife.r
By Mayne Lindsay.
564-568.
'A Stolen Identity.'
By Edwin pugh.
5i4-584.
'The
By Archur w. Marchmont. 593-601.
"queen's Niche" at Lutworth. I
'The Romance
of a "Curtain Raiser."'
By Geo. A. Best.
607-614.
'The stockings:
A Tale of the Last Election.'
By percy white.
635-640.
'The Gates
of the Temple.'
By Muriel F. Hine.
616-689.
'Lady Lucy'
'
s Masquerade.
B y l , I i n i f r e d G r a h a m.
6 9 7- 7 0 4 .
'An Enterprising
Yankee.'
By Fox Russel.l.
713-718.
'The Adventure
of Godfrey Hallett
and the French prisoner of war.l
By Scott Graham. 724-734.
42
(June-Nov
1906)
[american
ed.
s.
4,
v.
33]
'The Fuzziness
of Hoockla-heen.'
By Jack London. 25-30.
'Mr Soper's
New Sister. rt
By Tom Gallon.
44-49.
Ttre couut's ghauffeur.
By william
Le Queux. 58-66, Lg5-204, 323-33!,
432-439 , 559-567 , 677-686.
'The Vengeance
of the Dago.'
By Edwin pugh.
7g-84.
The Diamond ship.
By Max Pemberton. 97-118, 217-24r, 337-358, 457-477,
6
0
0
577
, 6 9 7- 7 2 4 .
'A
Sudden Change of Climate.'
By Frank Finch-Smiles.
L25-L27.
'How I
Made My Fortune.r
By Clarence Willoughby.
129-131.
'The Triumph
of Mr oliver
Brown: Being a Further Adventure of the
Adnirable Tinker.'
By Edgar Jepson.
155-f62.
'A Double
Pretender.r
By Bernard Capes. L6g-176.
'Poskitt
the Peacemaker.' By J.S.
Fletcher.
182-188.
'The End
of the Gamble.'
By L.J. Beeston.
244-253.
'The Adventure
of the Blue Posts (Being a Further Adventure of the
Adrnirable Tinker). '
By Edgar Jepson .
272-280.
'Mr Minter's
Hobby.'
By Fred Jay.
288-29L.
'The Herr
of Paradise Row. I
By l'lona Moxon Browne.
298-306.
'The cuinea
Stamp.'
By L.E. Tiddeman. 309-315.
'when in Doubr.r
By M.A. Balliol.
333-335.
'The Proving
of Rodney Parkes.r
By percival whitfield.
361-369.
'Possessed
of a Title. I
By Mary Hampden. 372-374.
'Losing
a n d F i n d i n g . r B y O r ^ r e nO l i v e r .
391-397.
'The Biters
Bit (Being a Further Adventure of the Adnirable Tinker).'
By Edgar Jepson.
404-409.
'One in
a Million:
A Humorous Story. I By Fred Jay.
415-420.
83
'The
Village Policeman.'
By Dora Sigerson Shorter.
42I-424.
'The
Clue of the Crimson Rose.'
By J.S. Fletcher.
446-449.
'Coward,
V.C.'
By Rudolph Cordova.
4g3-4gl.
'Two pounds
Ten.r By R.M.S.
493-494.
'Tony's Walk.'
By Clarence Rook. 4gg-505.
'Anna
and Loris: An Episode of the Nihilist
War.'
By Tighe Hopkins.
511-523.
'For
One Night Only.'
By Warren Hughes. 532-537.
'Mr Parslow's
Fellow-traveller:
A Humorous story.'
By Fred Jay. 603-60g.
'Denis,
a Diplomat.'
By E. Burrowes. 609-611.
'Bonavia's
Black Sheep.t By Tom Gallon.
633-642.
fMaster
Loggattts Waterloo.'
By OrmeAgnus.
649-656.
'The
Way to Fairyland.'
By Myra Hamilton.
661-670.
'The
l
Haunted Studio.
By J.S. Fletcher.
692-695.
'Lewis
Duva1, Accompanist.'
By Maber c. urch.
73L-732.
43
(Dec
1906-!Iay
1907)
[American
ed.
s.
4,
v,
34]
'A
Christmas Novelty.'
By llrs C. N. Williamson.
3_lg.
'Dangerous
Complaints.'
By W. pett Ridge.
34-39.
'Miss
Masonrs Party: The story of a christmas at Sea.r
By owen oliver.
49-56.
'Flossie's
1
christmas Fairy.
By Elrarine Terriss.
5g-61.
'The
Silver F1ask.'
By A.E.W. Mason. 69-74.
'The
Luck of Captain Spink.'
g0_90.
By Morley Roberts.
'Martha
and the Constable.'
By Keble Horvard. 95_101.
'The
Ex-citizen:
A Humorous Sttry.'
By Frank Richardson.
105-109.
'An
Old Crome: A Humorous Story.i
By Fred Jay.
lI4-L20.
'The
p
e
r
c
y
Poet ' s Dream. '
By
White .
I25-L2g.
The l{an who l{as Dead.
By Arthur w. Marchmonr.
L2g-L52, 252-273,
374-394, 491_510, 616_635, 736_754.
'The Dice:
A complete story of Revolution in Russia.'
By percevar
Gibbon.
L77-tgz
'An
rncident of the Night: A Humorous story.r
By w.G. yarcott.
190-194.
'Tomlin.'
By Owen Oliver.
ZO3-20g.
'Superannuated. I
By Fred Jay.
2I4-21g.
'The Nineteenth
Hat.'
By Arnold Bennett .
229-233.
'The
cirl
and rhe Ring.,
By c.B. Burgin.
239-246.
'The Lost
Gun sights: A Naval yarn.'
By George Ellbar.
2g3-2g9.
'Mala Pasqua:
A Tale of the Romagna.' iy nicilard Bagot.
307-313.
'The
Safe Side.'
By Theodora Wilson Wilson.
32I-32g.
r'Greater
Love Hath No Man."'
By Marjorie Bowen. 335-34r.
'Off
the Line.'
By Louise Lanyer.
346-355.
'An
Old Fool: A Humorous Story.'
By Fred Jay.
364-369.
'A December
Evening.'
By Elizabeth Tree.
369-372.
'The
Marchesa's portrait.r
By charles Garvice.
414-422.
'Josephfs
Coat. '
B y C l a r e n c e R o o k.
42g-432.
'Peril.'
By Claude E. Benson. 44I-450.
'colonel
Peter sanders' wife.'
By Marian Bower.
462-469.
'The white
Bonnet.r
By Charles Lee.
476-4g3.
"'Tangled Wires. "'
By Bertran Field.
513-517.
'The Butcher-boyts
Repentance.t
By Edgar Jepson. 533-540.
'The Thief.'
By Owen Oliver.
54g-553.
'The
Spectacles., By J.J. Bell.
55g-562.
84
'Bobbie
and Poetic Justice.'
By Ernest Bramah. 575-5g5.
'only
Just Beneath the surface.'
By J.s. Fletcher.
595-601.
'Interference. '
By W.G. yarcott.
605-609.
'Kittenr
'
s Wedding Day.
By Headon Hill.
6 6 2 - 6 6 9.
'Just Too
Late. I
By Richard Dark.
675-6g0.
'Behind
the Mill.'
By l{rs Henry Dudeney. 6g7-694.
'Professor
Kenyon's Engagement.' By E.R. punshon. 7oL-707.
'Love's Triumph.'
By Mary & Julian Clifford.
7L4-7Lg.
'A Man
o' Business.r
By Fred Jay.
72g-733.
'A Sea Breeze.'
By May Adlington.
756-757.
44
(June-Nov
1907)
lAmerican
ed.
s.
4,
v.
35]
rA l,Ioral
Lesson. '
B y M a r j o r i e B o w e n.
I4-ZO.
'Of Kindness
to Crocodiles.r
By John Worne. 40-47.
'The
Temptation of Barrington, R.A.r By scott Graham. 50-57.
'The
war in Fardale.'
By Theodora I.Jilson wilson.
62-67
tlheels of Anarchy:
The Story of an Assassiu.
By Max pemberton.
76-96, 202-22I, 276-293, 411_430, 520_53g, 636_651.
'Personally
conducted: A cricket Story.r
By p.G. wodehouse. 113-120.
'Tommy
and the Girl.'
By Lavon C. Cheney. l3Z-L36.
'An Experiment.'
By Horace Annesley Vachell.
I37-L44.
'The
Third Boat.'
By Oliver Onions.
151-15g.
'Lord
I
Falconet's Despatch-box.
By Headon Hi11.
L65-L12.
'His
Family's Feelings and His.r
By Anne warner.
17g-rg5.
'She
cambled a Stamp.'
By Harold Begbie.
lg6-194.
'The
Butterworth scandar.'
By Brinsley Moore.
L94-20L.
'His
Maiestyrs Friend. t By Crichton Miln .
234-23g.
'The
Cross Roads. I
By Blanche Eardley .
245-256.
'Tides
of Fortune.'
By Alice & Claude Askew. 299-329.
'The
Luponi Strad.'
By James True.
332-333.
'The
Honour of a Lady.'
By Athol Forbes.
376-3g1.
'The
old and rhe New.'
By captain F.H. shaw, F.R.A.S397-405.
'There
and Back.r
By F.M. Wickham. 436-437.
'The
Green Mouse.'
By Robert W. Chambers. 45I-463.
'The
V a n d e r m a n nD i a m o n d . '
By E.R. punshon.
47L-41g.
'shadows
Before.'
By stuart tlishing and Arthur Harifax.
4g4-492.
'A Feline
Hostage.'
By E. White.
496-503.
'Nancy.'
By M.E. porter.
509-516.
'A Financial
Proposition:
A sentimental story.r
By Arthur Ransome.
544-547 .
'The Dream.'
By Elizabeth Tree.
553-555.
'The
sporting chance: A comedy of Errors. I
By George Edgar.
5g7-593.
'Cordelia's
C o n q u e s t .'
By J.G.M. Gilmer.
602-610.
'The
Mysterious Kit-bag.'
By Arthur Franks .
616-623.
'Relatives
to Let: Being the Inside History of the Bentley-Carruthers
Truce. '
B y W i l l i a r n H . I l a r n b y.
629-632.
'The
Little
Typewriter Girl.r
By E. Vance palmer.
657-660.
'William
rhe Goat.t
By F. Walworth Brown.
662-669.
45
(oec
Professor
1907-Iday
I90B )
[emerican
ed.
s.
4,
van Ilusenrs problems.
By Jacques Futrelle.
3I2-32I,
387-395 , 4gg-509, 6tg_627 .
85
v.
36 ]
l-10,
1g5-194,
'llessiterrs Sister.r
L 7 - 2 7By Horace Annesley Vachel1.
'An Ideal Christmas.r
38-43.
By Frank Richardson.
'Mr Donald MacDonald.' By J.J. Bel1.
43-48.
'My Friend Bob: A Story. I By Richard Dark.
58-6I'A Cure for Wealth.'
65-74.
By Hrs C. N. Williamson.
'Compensation. '
79'86.
By Charles Garvice .
'A Monk Was He.r
87-96By Lily A. Long.
'The Skipper of the S.S. Ringdove.'
97-108.
By Morley Roberts.
'The Bombshell.'
111-117.
By Robert Barr.
'The Black Sheep's Christmas. '
I22-L2l .
By Eleanor Holt Brainerd .
'The Potted Palm Speaks.'
140-143.
By Anne warner.
'The sorrowful Sye-boo: A story for children.'
By l"lyra Hamilton.
1 5 0 - 1 5 5.
'A Deal in Cotton.r
163-173.
By Rudyard Kipling.
'An Arizona Nerve Destroyer.'
By Stanley L. Wood. 2Ol-209'A Backward Forward: A Football
By ltajor Philip Trevor. 214-220
Story.'
'My Oriental Partner.'
By F.B. Cook. 227-232.
'Ferguson, of England: A Canadian Story.'
240-250By G.B. Burgin.
'Grace' s ldeal. '
2 5 1- 2 5 8 .
By Richard Dark .
'Without Impediment. '
264-265.
By Helen Lockwood Coffin .
'The Right Prescription.'
By R. Haldane Cook. 268'270'Trust. '
282-290.
B y J a c k L o n d o n.
'Love's Alarm.'
298-304.
By John Bloundelle-Burton.
'The Cinnabar Death-trap.'
327-334.
By A. I^Iallie.
'The Stormy Petrel. I
By Warren Hughes. 339-347.
'The Unmaking of a Self-made Man.'
353-36f.
By llrs Talbot Hunter.
'Mr Smith of Hampstead.' By Shan F. Bullock.
365-372.
'Limpy, Bachelor of Love.'
By Maitland LeRoy Osborne. 375-377.
'A Table Tragedy.'
402-412.
By Fred M. White.
'The Professor of Languages: The Tale of a Naval SPy.'
By George
E11bar. 4L7-425.
'The Workings of Fate.'
433-440.
By Mabel C. Urch.
'The Dead Sentry.'
By L.J. Beeston. 447-454.
'The Eternal Feminine.'
466-468.
By Harold Gorst.
'The Mystery of a Lonely Cottage.'
477-486.
By llrs Clernent Shorter.
'A Desert l'leeting. I By C. Duncan Cross .
522-531 .
'The Depraved Half of Mr Flockton.
537-547.
'The Harper P. Todd Family.'
552-557.
By Bertha Shelley.
'Ladybird.'
565-570.
By Edith Barnard.
'
'Itr Fairley' s Furniture .
577'581 .
B y U n a H u d s o n.
'Vermutre' s Inheritance . '
Trans . b y I'1.D. Byrne
By Renato Fucini.
& Ferdinando Benvenuto. 591-595.
'The Will-power of Carlotta. I By Harnilton Taber.
600-602.
'Gotty in France: The Undelivered Message.'
By Arthur E- Copping.
636-646.
rThe llappy Couple.'
By W. Somerset l"laugham. 652'656.
'The Something in It.'
662'668.
By Phyllis Bottome.
'Sir John Abbacy's Elder Son.'
676'687.
By Marian Bower.
'A Swift Conversation. I
700-705.
By Mary Durand.
46
(June-Nov
'The visit
1908)
[American
ed.
s.
4,
v.
37]
Trans. from Italian
By R. Fucini.
of the Prefect.'
3-13.
M. D. Byrne & Ferdinand Benvenuto.
'The Antecedents of Captain Jinks.'
26-32.
By Elizabeth Banks.
'The Graft and the Craft.'
55-63.
By Henry oyen.
'Only a Pupil (The Last of the Incidents Related by Stafford Dane,
67-74.
By Mabel C. Urch.
Musician).'
'An AcEive-passive Resister. I
By John Oxenhaur. 82-94.
'An Altered Programme.' By W.G. Yarcott.
98-103.
'A Weak Monkey, a Strong Cat's Paw, and a Chestnut.r
By Anne Warner.
115-120.
'Sigrid's Avalanche. '
L27'I34.
By E.E. Speight .
'Balaam's Baby.'
By Winifred Boggs. 144-151.
'The Hand of Time.'
By John Worne. 15f-158.
'The Seat of the Door.'
L62-169.
By Algernon Gissing.
'Under the Southern Cross.'
L79-2L8.
By Elizabeth Robins.
'An Ob5ect Lesson.'
225-235.
By Fred M. White.
243-256.
By Joseph Conrad.
"'I1 conde."'
' A S u m m e rG i r l . '
257-262.
By Helen Mathers.
'On the Jury.'
By Richard Marsh.
264-276.
'The Widow of the Balcony.'
283'287.
By Arnold Bennett.
'Thomas B. Flint,
29L'298.
By Henry A. Hering.
Resurrectionist.r
'An Anglo-American Courtship. I
299-304.
By Elizabeth Banks.
'The Eppstein Emerald.'
309-317.
By Edgar Jepson.
'Elizabethrs Lover: A Novelette.'
By Alice & Claude Askew. 318-333.
'Bailey's Experiment.'
337-343.
By Perceval Gibbon.
'The Loverts Looking-glass. '
348-355.
By Owen Oliver.
'l"liss Letitiar s Aunt.'
By Brinsley Moore. 360-368.
I By Douglas Sladen.
'A Japanese Knight-Errant.
370'379.
'Tell Me, Where is Fancy Bred.'
383-390.
By Katharine S. llacquoid.
'Isotta's
Way.'
By Arthur H. Henderson. 391-398.
'Hands All Round.'
404-410.
By Henry Martley.
'Absent-minded.'
ls14-418.
By Ethel St,efana Stevens.
'By Grace of Julius Caesar.'
By L.M. Montgornery. 419-423.
'Saint Luke's Summer.r By Mary Cholmondeley.
447'461.
'Goldy Locks and a Broncho: The Story of a Cowboy's Horse.'
A Stanley
L. Wood. 467'477.
'Revelation.'
By Frank H. Shaw. 482-489.
' A W o m a n r sW o r d . '
By Marian Bower. 494-504.
'The Wedding-present Problem.'
By Anne Warner. 513-517.
'My Lady Gadfly.t
523'526.
By L. Flerning Struthers.
'False Premises. I
B v C l a r e n c e R o o k.
532-535.
rHis Last Drive: A Golf SEory. r
By A. Wallis l"tyers. 54t-544.
'A Set of Blouse Buttons. I
549-550.
By ltrs Forrest.
'Colonel Cayley's Tea Party. I
557-563.
By ltrs C.N. Williamson.
tMy Lady Played.r
By Marjorie Bowen. 574-583.
'A Bit of Scandal.'
By Katharine Tynan. 593-598.
tRose Petals: A Tale of the East African CoasE.' By Cullen Gouldsbury.
599-602.
'The Demonof Ten Candles ("Jan Gant Y Tan"): A Tale of Brittany.l
By Oswald Moser. 610-613.
'The Unexpectedness of Winifred.'
62I'624.
By Anne Warner.
'Mr John Juders Diary.r
629-638.
By Henry A. Hering.
'A Second Proposal.'
By Ethel Stevens.
646-653.
rElizabeth Bids.r
By Vincent Stanley Thompson. 659-662.
by
87
86
47
(Dec
f908-Apr
1909)
[American
ed.
s.
4,
v.
38]
'The Beggarman.' By Owen Oliver.
3-I2.
'How I Eloped with My Lady Bishop.r
By S.R. Crockett.
17-24.
'Antiques: A Modern Incident.r
By Maarten Maartens.
33-43.
'The Nature Man.r By Jack London.
51-58.
'Other People's Cake.'
By Mary E. Wilkins Freeman. 59-70.
'The Christmas Gift.'
By Albert Kinross.
77-80.
Ttre Adventures of Lavenne.
By H. de Vere Stacpoole.
82-86, 203-208,
289-293, 4t3-4L7 , 496-499.
'Out of His Reckoning.'
By Harold Begbie.
92-100.
'The Position
of Mrs Pegg.'
By Phyllis Bottome.
101-109.
'The Fairy Ring.'
By Judge Parry.
113-120.
'The Princess's Escapade.'
By William Le Queux. 131-140.
'Who Killed Him?'
By Headon Hill.
149-157.
'Why Billy Went Back.'
By Leonard Merrick.
L65-I72.
'At rhe Well's
Mouth.'
By Maud Diver.
178-187.
'The Eerie.'
By Mary E. Mann. 195-202.
'The Widower.'
By Perceval Gibbon.
2I2-2L5.
'The Word of Praise.'
By Elizabeth Banks.
218-22I.
'The Blue Fan.'
By E.S. KempRobinson. 222-224.
'cottyrs Neighbours.'
By Arthur E. Copping. 225-227, 336-338, 432-434.
The Covboy Countess.
By llrs C.N. Williamson.
233-243, 343-353,
453-463.
'Miss Waring's Elopement. I
By Richard Marsh.
244-255.
'Breaking Cups
and Mending Hearts.'
By Anne Warner.
26L-264.
'Through the Wal1.'
By Isabel Ecclestone Mackay. 274-284.
'A Man's Strategy.'
By llrs Baillie
Reynolds. 298-306.
'The Wound
of the Marquis.'
By Orme Agnus. 312-316.
'A cirl
of Gaul.'
By Oliver Onions. 3L7-323.
'A Study in Emotions.'
By Elizabeth Tree.
331-333.
'The Romance
of a Travelling
Rug.'
By Ada Leonora Harris.
333-335.
'Feet of Clay.'
By Maud Diver.
358-367.
'Lieutenant Chartres
and the Gun: A Story of the South African War.'
By Perceval Gibbon
373-383.
'The Three Thieves.r
By E. Phillips
Oppenheim. 387-393.
'The Hands
I
of the PhilisEines.
By Arthur W. l,larchmont. 400-407.
'Confession. '
By Jack London .
422-429.
'Theodora's Bangle.'
B y E . S . K e r n pR o b i n s o n .
430-431.
'Thankless Parents.r
By Mary Stuart Boyd,
439-444.
'The Ingenious
Mr Tozer.'
By Henry A. Hering.
473-480.
'For a Hero's
By S. I'lacnaughton. 488-495.
Sake.'
I trlf'f : A
Sketch. I
By Barry Pain.
505-506.
'The Apostle
of Progress.t
By Fred Whishaw. 510-519.
'Tonyrs Friend. I
By Archibald Marshall.
526-528.
'Sauce for the Gander. I
By Shan F. Bullock.
532-540.
'How Jones Earned
the V.C.r
By Edward Johnstone.
545-549.
'The Spoiling
of Spoffkins.'
By llrs Forrest.
550-552.
'The Card-house.'
By E.S. Kemp Robinson.
552-554.
'Two from Toad-in-the-hole.r
By Ada Leonora Harris,
555-558.
48
(May-oct
'Heart
o'
1909)
Moonlight.'
lAmerican
ed.
s.
By Herman Scheffauer.
88
4,
v.
inl
L2-20.
42-46'
By H. de Vere Stacpoole'
lte Adventurea of Lavenne (cont.)'The Big House.'
By Alice & Claude Askew. 5l-57 '
65-77, L67-I76'
Ed. ltrs C.N. Williamson.
The Covboy Gountess (cont.).
285-301.
'The
By B-P. Neuman. 99-f05'
Luck of the Simple.'
of Scotland Yard as Related by Eer Friend
of LadY ltollY
Adventures
lte
223-233, 340-351'
Ll2-I26,
BY B a r o n e s s O r c z y .
Lady Granard.
463-474, 559-571.
rQuarantine: A Story of the West Indies. '
I32'I42.
By Dolf Wyllarde.
tHelen's Secret: A Story for Women.t By Edith E. Browne. 149-155.
'The Popular Vote (A Diverting
By
Study in Rustic Cleverness).'
156-161.
w. Pett Ridge.
'The
Away
Falling
Seas.'
of John Sands:
By MarY Gaunt.
An
Inspiring
Story
of
the
South
196'203.
'The Greater Claim: A Story of To-day.'
209-2L4.
By Harold B1ind.
'A Box on the Ears.'
215-217.
By Ada Leonora llarris.
'
'The Voice: A Study of a lrloman'sDisillusion.
By Gladys Mendl.
218-220.
'The chaperone.'
246-252.
By l"label c. urchtPsychets Treasure
By Henry
Quest: A Romance of Hidden Treasure.
259-266.
A. Hering.
'The Passengers of the Lorunna.'
302-306.
By Stanley Portal H y a t t .
'An Eye for an Eye: A Story for Men.'
By Claude E' Benson. 3I7-321.
I By
'The One Between: A Story of an Eventful
at Ostend.
lloliday
Blanche Eardley.
'on the Plains: A Stirring
363-371.
I
Story of the West Indies.
By Dolf Wyllarde.
375-381.
a n d t h e I m p r e s a r i o : T h e S t o r y o f a Y o u n gM a n ' s A d v e n t u r e s
By C. Kennett Burrow. 394-403'
near Trouville.t
'Julie
A Story of Humour and Tragedy in the Royal
"'A Square" Williams:
4L8'421.
By Charles Gleig.
Navy.'
rVocation: A Story of l4isguided EnEhusiasm.'
By the Rev. Robert
Hugh Benson. 426'43I.
'Sir Timothy Jenkins: A Story wiEh a }loral.
By M a b e l C . U r c h .
433-440.
'Coverley Gutch of the Stock Exchange, London'
442-455, 604-611.
,Two
in
the
Temple:
A Tale
of
Love
and
Hatred
By Paul Urquhart.
among
the
Chinese.
480-488.
By Herman Scheffauer.
'crossing the Park: A story about the Hallucinations
of a New
494'50L.
By Robert Stuart .
' T h e A m e n d m e n to f M . d e C h i r a c . '
509-514'
By H.C. Bailey'
'The Man Who Knew How: An Australian
515-516.
By Frank Henty.
Story.'
'playing the Game: A Cricket Story.'
522-529.
By Shan F. Bullock.
'Nanty Waynfleete.'
539-546'
By Halliwe11 Sutcliffe.
'Hector Alexander.'
By Mary E. Mann- 572-579'
'Impressing a Cousin: A Domestic Comedy.' By
Warren 8e11.
587-590.
'The Jilting
the Value of Artfulness
A Story Exhibiting
of l"liss Attridge:
598-603'
By A.E. Ashford.
Aided by Imagination.'
'Under the Canva", e Sioty of Circus Life.'
By Joseph Kocheli' 614-620'
'l'1r Storkrs Miscalculation:
a Ghost and
A Story about a Burglar,
621-626'
By I'Iilliam l'lackay '
a Motor Car.'
'The Prince of the Treasure Trove: A Tale of an Australian
Girl's
'Mr
49
Romance.' By Frank Henty.
634-640.
speckley's Playthings: A story of a city Merchantfs secret. I
By Arthur Page Grubb.
64L-645.
(Nov
1909-Apr
1910)
[american
ed.
s.
4,
v.
40]
'My
Lord the Tiger: A Strange story of central
rndia.'
By John Le
Breton.
19-24.
'A salute in Passing:
A case of Mistaken rdentity
at a Fancy Dress
Ball - and Its Consequences.' By Frank Henty.
26-29.
'His Model
wife.t
By Edith A. Browne.
40-49.
yard ae Related bn/ her priend
Adveutures
of r,ady ltolly
of scotland
l{ary Grauard (cont.).
By Baronees Emmuska orczy.
55-66,
287-299, 303-313, 4Lt-422, 569-591, 7Lg_730.
'The Serious
Illness of Mr Christopher.r
By J.J. Bell.
7g-g6.
'Jack Moxhamrs
Martyrdom: A Schoolboyrs Adventures in London.'
By
Hubert Holland.
101-107.
'The Doll
in the Pink silk Dress.r
By Leonard Merrick.
Llz-122.
'The
Lesson: A study in Temptation,t
By E.F. Benson. 123-130.
'cancelled:
A christmas story.r
By A. st John Adcock.
L36-r44.
'The
Girl at the t{indow: A story of Art students in paris.'
By E.
Nesbit.
155-161.
'A Problem
for santa claus: The story of a Journalistrs
christmas
Experiences. I
By George Edgar.
176-180.
'The Last
Man: A Scientist's
christmas Dream.'
By Ladbroke Black.
L99-202.
'The Kitten
That Did: A complere Novel.'
By Lloyd osbourne.
zog-232.
'The Sermon:
A Christrnas Story.r
By Dolf Wyllarde.
240-247.
'The church
in the wilderness: A canadian story.r
By Marjorie L.
c. Pickrhall.
252-256.
'The Hardy
I
Huntsman.
By Hilda Cobham. 257-263.
'King
Tuttlebury I: The Story of the Strange Exaltation of a Baronet.l
By Fox Russell.
265-210.
'The Awakening
of Maggie Taverner.'
By Robert chichester.
2gL-2g5.
'Hunger
and Two Golden Salvers.r
By Warwick Deeping.
314-32I.
'W-hac
the Angel Recorded.r
By J. Storer Clouston.
33I-342.
'The
Cub in Trouble.'
By R.S. Warren Bell.
343-347.
'King
Mandrin: The Robin Hood of France.'
B y M a y w y n n e.
355-362.
'The
Little
Mother of Mary's Ferry: A story of western canada.'By
Ernily P. Weaver. 371-380.
'The
Bonds of Freedom: A Story of a Wifers Awakenirrg., By Edith
Barnard.
381-387.
'The questing
of Mr McMunn.t By A.E, Ashford.
393-398.
By Charles Tibbits.
"'Lucky'' Gale.'
399-402.
'The
Shadowon the Wall.'
By Clive R. Fenn.
407-409.
'The
By ltrs Henry Dudeney. 430-436.
"Ghost."'
'The unpremeditated
ceremony: A canadian story.t
By L.M. Montgomery.
443-448.
' T h e H o m e w a r dW a y : A
Striking
454-462.
Story of Jewish Life.'
By S.L.
Bensusan.
'Making Friends.'
By E.R. punshon.
468-473.
'A Literary
Temptation: A Story of a Girl's
Journalistic
Experiences.l
By Thekla Bowser.
500-504.
The Girl vith the Red hair.
Ed. Max Pemberron.
543-560, 691-703.
90
'Veronica's
Verdict.r
By Marian Bower. 6L2-6I9.
'Red Rubber.'
By Paul Urquhart.
625-63L.
'The Dead
Control.r
By Paul Urquhart.
108-jL4.
'Her Prisoner.'
By Leila Burton Wells.
134-14L.
'The Butterfly.'
By W. Henry Morgan. 75L-153.
'Miss Patterson
and Another.r
By Clive R. Fenn. 755-756.
'The Turn
in the Lane.'
By Mabel Greenwood. 48I-486.
'The wives
of captain shadrach.'
By V. crandall Hicks.
505-512.
'Miss Delamare
and the lliddy.'
By Charles Gleig.
537-539.
Later chronicles
of the Burglars'
club.
By Henry A. Hering.
669-676.
'The Lone
Trail:
A Thrilling
Story of a Redskinrs Courage and Devotion.'
B y N e w m a nF l o w e r .
603-610.
fMrs Betts's
Suitors. '
By Gertrude Ince ,
639-643.
'Thatts
f o r R e m e m b r a n c e :A S t o r y . t
By George Edgar.
6 4 4 - 6 4 7.
'The Ghost
Knight.r
By Warwick Deeping. 65f-658.
'In Clover:
An Australian Idyll.r
By Frank Henry.
74 2 - 74 4 .
50
(May-Oct
19I0)
[American
ed.
s.
4
v.
411
'The Deluded
Female.' By J.J. Bel1.
3-11.
Chronicles
of the Burglars'
Club (cont. ) .
By HenryA. Hering.
tg-25, L24-L32, 25L-259, 369-376.
'Rachel. '
By OwenOliver.
30-36.
'Pots and Pans.'
By Anna Le Sage. 3j-44.
The Girl nith the Red Eair (cont.).
Ed.
Max Pemberton.
4 9 - 70 ,
151-171, 275-293, 404-4L6, 532-540.
Adventures of Lady llolly
of Scotland yard as Related by Her Friend
llary Granard (cont.).
By Baroness O r c z y . 7 8 - 8 9 .
'The Awakening:
The Story of an Engaged Girl. '
By Emily calvin Blake.
93-99.
'celiars
Bid for Freedom: The story of a peacemakerand His Reward.'
By Keble Howard. 111-117.
'The Heart
of Princess Rosario.'
By Eleanor M. rngram.
L40-r47.
'The Melodramatic
Touch.'
By Dorothy Greenwood. I77-I82.
'Eileen's
'
Lovers.
By Emily calvin Blake.
190-f94.
'Srand
Seven - Twenty-eight.' By Armiger Barclay.
2OI-207.
'Relative
Value.'
By W.G. yarcott.
212-216.
'The rdea.'
By J.J. Bell.
2L9-22g.
'Lydia,
the Maid.'
By Douglas Sladen.
234-242.
'Phyllis. I
By I,iilliam Macleod Raine .
263-270.
'The Little
W o m a na n d t h e B u s y M a n . r B y E l e a n o r H o y t B r a i n e r d .
298-302.
'A Matter
of Maps.'
By paul Urquhart.
303-309.
'The Case
of Kitty.'
By Kathleen Frazer.
315-3f9.
'Bill Podden's
Luck.'
B y A . p . G a r l a n d.
3ZO-324.
'The Turning
of the Worm.' By Sarah Grand. 325-350.
'The Maid
of Tarragona.'
By Captain F.H. Shaw. 351-369.
'His Japanese
Wife.r
By ThomasLe Breton.
382-388.
'The Battle
In/on.r By Alice & Claude Askew. 389-399.
'Won from
the Brigands.'
B y l " l a y W y n n e. 4 L 7 - 4 2 4 .
'Why the
Clock Stopped.'
By Arnold Bennett.
435-443.
'The
Rich Mrs Peppercorn: A Short story.'
By Katharine Tynan.
444-450.
'A
By J.J. Bell.
457-464.
Queer Mixture.'
'A Friendly
Call.'
By Fred M. White.
473-4g1.
'The Honour
of Valdi.'
By Eleanor M. Ingram.
482-490.
Later
.trnt of or
, In:u o m
monplace
o"Y". '
^tff 4e7-so:
i,
;i';i:l"i:tiz
.
.
;,
:iil*l;
j: ";:j,';lf;".,sr-';,,,,,,
ly.":;f;
rd
,tl"t
?
i :i
.
A NOTE ON
PSEUDONY}fS
AND ATTRIBUTIONS
Unless oth
Sli,uoonr"';-";;^';;:':;.:lfJ:ij;:
:::
sourcesfo
j,'"t""fl,:*:"1^:;::lTll::#::ii&::
:j:Iiiti:lH:'$"il*
;#:'ff
orso,,tniffi
australian
Liter
,-ifl
VFRG I2: Csssell's Family Magazine
I The untraceable
author"Aleriel" is the pseudonymof the ReverendW.S. LachSzyrma,authorof Aleriel: Or a troyageto Other Wrylds(1883);seepp. 45, 59, 60,
62,63,64.
2 The anonymousstory"The Schoolmistress
at SkerneDun" is bv Marv Linskill
(pseud StephenYorke); seep 50.
92
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