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Pulp Fiction, 1941 · page 110 of 116

10-Story Detective, March 1941 — page 110: what you’re looking at

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10-Story Detective, March 1941 — page 110: Pulp Fiction, 1941

What you’re looking at

# Page 108: Story Prose with Advertisements This page contains story prose from a detective fiction narrative alongside vintage advertisements. The visible text shows dialogue from a character named Clark investigating a case involving Doris Adair, who must retrieve her husband's will from a Downtown Bank vault and present it in court by 10 a.m. to prevent his first wife from filing a competing will for probate. The narrative involves a criminal named Pete Lynch and suggests Clark is contemplating a dangerous situation. The left margin contains period advertisements for various products and services (asthma relief, songwriting, food assortments, etc.), typical of pulp magazine layouts.

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

108————— CHILDLESS Wives | WHO WISH BABIES! Doctor’s Information SENT FREE! way Tollowed at home by Oanseraine simple which the female organs in relievable func- tional sterility may be assisted so that motherhood may thes so often be easily pos- sible!YOU AND YOUR HUSBAND MAYLATER THANK THE DAY YOU SENT FOR THIS FREE INFORMATION. vomen from over the Nation write us of their joy in becomin mee at last! FOR FREE COPY write to Warner Cov, ‘317 W. Lake St., Minneapolis, Minnesota, ASTHMA "nn FREE TRIAL OFFERS If suffer from Asthma Paroryems, from coughs, gasping, whees- ing write quick for darin ig FREE TRIAL OFFER of ama relief, pet = oe so-called ‘‘hopeless’’ cages especially coh pees Write NACOR, N, State Life Building, Indianapolis, SONGWRITERS Original songs and song poems wanted. ae CHARGE FOR MELODIES. Monthly acta Free Examinat HOLLYWOOD RECORDING STUDIOS DEPT. H3, Box 87, Preuss Sta. LOS ANGELES FEY $6°9.Full Size: FOOD E- HOUSEHOLD SEND NO MONEY! ment of FOOD —full size e packages, worth rong Biche egal a ROCERS Ee SOAPS big As » ETC., worth $6.00. ’ Yours FREE! Show these products te for FREE 86. 0O Assortmen ef Products NOW. ZANOL, 3703 aan ewtht: Cincinnati, Ohio. EPILEPSY -EPILEPTICS! Detroit lady finds relief for husband. She will tell Bog how. All letters answered. Mrs. Geo. Dempster, Apt. 6906 ei Ad Blvd. w Detroit Mich, Pic = u RE RING AKRY Saranes OR PiCTooe ae on finge r for 8 oto returne Ly are Site tment Diy dey plas fom Vo oe posters, dhe PICTURE RING CO., gnoy .e Dept. B-87,, ar far 0. Send for my 50c book, howto asalae STRONG ARMS and BROAD SHOULDERS for 25c coin or 30c U.S. Stamps Contains 20 pages of illustrations showing and fully describing exercises that will develop, and make you gain strength in your Shoulders, Arms, Wrists, Hands and , “2 Bingers. Without apparatus This is really a valuable course of exercises. ANTHONY BARKER doing etl aes at this address ag over 20 years) ve., Office D, N. Y. C Please mention ACB FICTION Group when answering 10-‘STORY DETECTIVE fluence. But I managed to keep him at a distance. Then he succeeded in re- leasing me when those who desired my imprisonment were too strong for my lawyers. So, in a burst of eon- fidence, I told him about the key, told him how I’d read about you in the papers and sent it to you. “I explained it was the key to my vault. I told him I have there the fina] will and testament of my husband, proving me his sole heir. It is this will my husband’s first wife—an adven- turess whom he soon divorced—wish- es to destroy. It is she who hired Lynch and his cheap toughs. But to get back to Drake. “Wilson Drake was a rotter. He in- tended to force me to his will with the power of the key—the power of the will in the vault.”’ She glanced at her wrist watch suddenly. “It’s almost eight,”’ she exclaimed in alarm. “I must produce the will in court by ten this morning! What will I do?” “Where is the vault?” Clark asked easily. “At the Downtown Bank,” she re- plied. “And the court?” “It’s in Fordham, at the other end of town.” LARK looked thoughtful. He real- ized that by keeping Doris Adair away from court till after ten o’clock, her husband’s first wife would file the will—the one leaving everything to herself—for probate. Clark guessed that as soon as Pete Lynch had seen the adventuress conclude her busi- ness in court, the thug would come here, do away with Clark, and get the key from Doris or kill her. And even if the actress were to leave at once, she would barely make it in time. To sit quietly while his two hours of grace ebbed was not Clark’s inten- tion. What good was two hours’ res- pite? Better even a bullet in an at- tempted escape, since there was at least the possibility of winning free. onercrticome‘ats Ccomiclbooks CO