Pulp Fiction, 1953 · page 73 of 116
Fifteen Western Tales, January 1953 — page 73: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Pulp Magazine Preview Page This is a preview page from *Fifteen Western Tales*, published January 2nd, featuring four black-and-white illustrations with accompanying text blocks. The page previews Philip Ketchum's next month's western story about Jeff Cannard, a man falsely accused of raiding an Oregon-bound wagon train. The narrative follows Cannard as he flees an angry mob, hunts for the real culprit (supposedly-dead outlaw Lem Potter), and encounters a woman from his past in Westport—her father then brands him a criminal. The full story, titled "Oregon Trail Outcast," will apparently appear in the January 2nd, 1953 issue.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
ay ithe ES “ ga" CMG EMO = §% a = Hs , y EF ts Er a F Ss We SE EM a SZ Wh Fy SW” Ga yaatt Published FerrTreen w'Z Ss Zs 4 99, Wea SAS, January 2nd Rest your saddles, friends, while we give you a short preview of next month’s feature story by Philip Ketchum; the action-packed tale of Jeff Cannard, whose wayside visit with some friendly emigrants, bound for the Oregon territory, was destined to leave him a hunted outcast... . | ddan ayes). Jeff made his rendezvous with Sam Shem, his hardbitten sidekick and veteran scout, who revealed to him in strictest confidence his belief that a murderous ratd on an Oregon-bound wagon train had been the work not of hostile Indians, but of white marauders! The situation tightened when another acquaintance pointed Jeff out as the man who'd raided their camp. Jeff escaped the angry crowd, and then began his desperate and perilous hunt for the leader of the shadowy raiders—Lem Potter, a man sup- posed to have been buried in an unmarked trail- side grave! | Later, when Jeff rode into Westport, starting point for the West-bound caravans, he met Hilda Weatherby, the girl he’d made a futile trip back East to find. Then things began to pop, for there, on the main street of that seething town, Hilda’s father branded him a cutthroat and killer! One night, crouched beside a lonely cabin, Jeff tensed to hear his name mentioned as a man to be hunted down and killed on sight. Jeff’s great two- way battle to stay alive and to clear his name, makes a powerful and suspenseful story, called “Oregon Trail Outcast,” published in the next issue, out January 2nd, 1953. 73 CO DOO C©