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Pulp Fiction, 1938 · page 114 of 116

10-Story Detective Magazine Cover — page 114: what you’re looking at

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10-Story Detective Magazine Cover — page 114: Pulp Fiction, 1938

What you’re looking at

This page is primarily **advertising and story prose** combined on a single page from a pulp magazine. The left two-thirds features a large advertisement for Frederick Palmer's writing course, promising to teach aspiring authors how to write saleable fiction. The right side continues a detective story (from page 110) in which a newspaper reporter discovers a typewritten manuscript at a crime scene involving cyanide poisoning. The story apparently involves Dr. Klausman, a scientist, and a victim named Volner, with the reporter suggesting Volner poisoned himself to become a martyr for science.

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

| Let Frederick Palmer Show You How to Write Stories That SELL... . Never before was there such an opportunity in the story writing field! Hundreds of editors are clamor ing for good stories . . j » &@ rich reward awaits the writer who can produce acceptable fiction material. " 3 If you can write plain English and have a spark of imagination , Frederick Palmer can show you the way to successful authorship ation, circle of successful authorship. For 35 years Frederick Palmer has stood at the top of his profession as a writer and teacher of the a writing art. Time and again he has proved that <s exceptional talent is not essential. Given an ability } to write plain English, and a fair amount of imagin- has, through his’ unique ability, brought hundreds of aspiring beginners into the charmed The NEW Frederick Palmer Course and Service in Modern Authorship This fascinating Course is the result of continual, intensive work since 1918, checked and analyzed against the progress of many students. You learn he how to dissect a story and discover exactly how the : author created it—you are taught the basic story- telling principles used by every writer since the dawn of history—you become adept in recognizing pulsing, dramatic material in everyday life and weaving it into an acceptable story sequence. These ee and a thousand other secrets of the writing profes- ete * sion are brought to you in a form that assures quick 4 progress toward your goal. ae If You’re Seriously Interested, We’ll Send the First | a Division of the Course FREE ae It is utterly impossible to condense a complete de- 553 # seription of the Course into this limited space. We eae haven’t said a word about the Academy Writers’ d Guild which renders invaluable service to members ee in marketing their stories, or innumerable other en features. So we have decided to let the Course speak 7, for itself. We’ll send you, free of all cost or obliga- =: tion, the first one of its fifteen divisions, together a Pes = Ae —— ae (Continued from page 110) ord of the experiments in one of the drawers in this lab. I’ve got a re- write man working on the story right now and if I find these papers and — they check up all right, the stuff’s off for you, doc. The AP will have that yarn in the morning papers all over the world.” Peering and poking in the drawers of a cabinet against the outer wall, he triumphantly held up a type- written manuscript. “Got it! You’re sunk, Dr. Klausman.” “Yeah,” broke in the detective, “‘he slipped up there. He should have burned up that paper before he snuffed this Volner out. The police physician looked up from the body of the assistant. ‘““Some- thing funny here, Burke. This man was poisoned with cyanide. Look at the spot on his lips.” “Poison?” echoed the sergeant. “Wait a minute, you birds.” The reporter swayed dramatically on his heels, fanning himself with the manu- script. “Give me a chance to explain. I told you, sarge, I thought there was trouble up here, but I didn’t say what because I didn’t want the other news hawks to get the story. Volner took that cyanide himself—he told me so on the phone. Know what martyrs are? Guys that die for science and things. It’s usually a sure shot to fame. Isaac Volner made himself a martyr so the whole world would know the facts about Dr. Klausman - - 4 o o w ; S racen with Assignment No. 1. Thus you'll be able to and so the Vitamin K would be known Re eee four, fret lemon and obtein | Frederick as the Volner Vitamin instead of the teres r your work, exact . P : 3 Sate the same as an enrolled student. Klausman Vitamin. It was the only peat : Mail the Coupon Now h Id ”? : way out he could see. as Remember, this first st ts bsolutel ° . . er Sete ate Po ave our method ‘of ‘convincing you of the Simultaneous with a flutter of his a ua and co t i ia Pakner Goarne and Sevsive. Bo ake the first side heart, Dr. Klausman felt all the glory = _ toward successful authorship now. Mail the Coupon. and exaltation of his pseudo -achieve- ae = : Frederick Palmer Academy of Creative Writing tive sergeant was snorting ° — Academy Buliding, Dept. ° fi é © ’ oS - Bole eeat, batiest Sramerey Place, : Well, tie that to a mule! All over Ry = = 5 ion, ; ; . oe « . : r ss 3 : Without, cost OF obligation, pisase send me - something to ee vitamins gee = _ Course in Modern Authorship, together with » poisoned himself! Well—never mind, ate @ ‘Lesson No. 1. It is understood that I may complete this first K : ; s vee Cae ean, dividual report on my work, slo 4 | doc, if they don’t name a vitamin after as " in’ i d will get a SE eerie nee ce eR OSes s | you. Tryin’ to kill a dead man ees : 7] NAME eeeeeee Tee ee Pee eee eee eee eee ee) e* B 1 f bli 2 h 1] — , ity. Maybe they ae is ADDRESS errr rere eee eee eee Pee eee Pee eee eee ee eee eee B you a ot 0 pu 1c Sort : = All inquiries confidential—no salesman will call 4 name that the Klausman system.” eR Se Please mention Aca FIcTION Group when answering advertisements 22 | COMME NOOKSe( COMM Sih = ss