Pulp Fiction, 1926 · page 12 of 114
The Frontier, May 1926 — page 12: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
This is an advertisement page from a pulp magazine announcing upcoming stories in the next issue of *The Frontier*. The page features an illustration of cowboys on horseback herding cattle, depicting the Western genre. The main advertisement promotes "The Jaybird Flies" by J.E. Grinstead, described as a novel about Texas cattle country, cattle-rustlers, and range war. Additional stories advertised include "Red Butte" (an Anthony M. Rud tale), works by Ernest Haycox, August Eberhardt, and Alanson Skinner, among others. The page promises these stories will be "Ready for You on May 20th."
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
I pital oes GRINSTEAD again! Another great novel of the Texas cattle country—of cattle-rustlers, of range war, and of the days when the Law first came to the West— in the next issue of THE FRONTIER. THE JAYBIRD FLIES By J. E. GRINSTEAD It is Grinstead at his best! And RUD again! A Western novelette that is action from start to finish. We predict that the many Rud fans will be delighted with REID BUTTE The latest Anthony M. Rud tale—and one he may be proud of! And also: ERNEST HAYCOX with ‘‘The Code,”’ a crackerjack short story of the uproarious early days in Dodge City. AUGUST EBERHARDT with another fine novelette of Alaska. ALANSON SKINNER with the last of the Winking Bear Indian tales. WARREN HASTINGS MILLER — J. R. JOHNSTON — HENRY HERBERT KNIBBS and others. READY FOR YOU ON MAY 20th GoOmicbooks CO)