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Pulp Fiction, 1938 · page 40 of 116

10-Story Detective Magazine Cover — page 40: what you’re looking at

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10-Story Detective Magazine Cover — page 40: Pulp Fiction, 1938

What you’re looking at

# Page Analysis: 10-Story Detective This is an interior story page from a pulp detective magazine, featuring both prose narrative and a black-and-white illustration. The text depicts a hardboiled crime scenario in which characters pursue a fugitive named Ray Natto through city streets and an empty store after a radio dispatch identifies him as wanted for murder. The illustration shows three men in profile—one holding a revolver, appearing to illustrate a confrontation scene from the narrative. The story involves police action, suspects being apprehended, and apparent gunfights at establishments like the Sunrise Bar.

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Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.

5 c Alp ay ve" As WAM RV Ace aT A Y r af f RA ‘y Ae ; Raed aie % - A PRAT AGS ay Pw ak SAA ” MOO Reece * WERT Oh Haat ~ ‘ AA « te SOP De a ey), A Pa, = 3 < y ? é coat, snatched off the hat. He touched the switch of the radio and kept the car rolling rapidly while Brown sat breathlessly. “Calling all cars!” The radio twanged. “Calling all cars. Pick up Ray Natto. Use caution; he may re- sist, Calling all cars to pick up Ray Natto, last seen escaping his apart- ment on Plaza Street and Fifth. Code thirteen. Code thirteen.” Code thirteen, in the lexicon of the police radio system, meant, “Wanted for murder.” Brown swung the car sharply to the curb a block from the store at 1010 10-STORY DETECTIVE - They groped through black rooms to a back entrance. across a bleak yard, swung over a board fence, Once in the car, Webster drove with a slowness that was: tor- ture in his anxiety. He kept listen- ing to repeated radio alarms for Ray Natto. When he turned into his ga- rage, he saw a shadow moving in the light on the stairs, and rushed up. Mae Gary went into his arms and sobbed. In dismay the girl examined Webster’s wounds; she forced him to submit while she dressed them. It was not until they were cleaned and bound that the dance music on the radio Wharton Street. Brown hurried with him along the dark alley while he grimaced with pain, carrying Natto’s coat and hat bundled against his throbbing side. They darted to the entrance of the empty store and shoul- dered in. Together they bent over Natto. Natto was squirming in the dark, squealing behind his gag of adhesive tape. Webster ripped off, pinioned him, stripped the bands from his ankles and wrists. .As Natto struck wut, Webster’s fist drove him flat ugainst the wall, Brown whirled with Webster toward the rear of the store. Behind them Natto’s coat and hat lay on the littered floor, ha > S - 2 , ail ; rae eee SS Bo eaas ee ee = = ~ a . , ied . % i re 2 an oS wo ee ae tems ra ceased playing and an announcer’s voice followed the clang of a bell. “A special news dispatch, ladies and gentlemen. Ray Natto has just been picked up by the police. He was found by squad car men and is now being taken to headquarters for ques- tioning by Inspector Mattison, who saw him escaping the scene of a mur- der. “A second flash, ladies and gentle- men, ‘Slick’ Perles, underworld hench- man of Natto, is dead as the result of a gun-fight with police who closed in on him at the Sunrise Bar a few mo- — They darted — ments ago. A charge of attempted _ = | murder of Jack Webster, district at- torney, was about to be lodged against oe Ne in mene