comicbooks.com Join Free

Pulp Fiction, 1953 · page 98 of 116

Fifteen Western Tales, January 1953 — page 98: what you’re looking at

📖 Open the full issue in the page-flip reader →
Fifteen Western Tales, January 1953 — page 98: Pulp Fiction, 1953

What you’re looking at

This is a story page from a 1934 pulp magazine featuring "Injun List" by Walt Coburn. The page includes an illustration showing a man with a rifle near a saloon bar, with shadowy figures visible through a doorway. The text introduces a character called "the Judge," a man living in a log cabin behind the Last Chance Saloon in Enright, Montana, where he works as a swamper for the saloon owner Pete Enright. The story's epigraph suggests the Judge has lost his pride and faces a grim fate.

📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)

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

By WALT COBURN jee ray ae ; a. p : A. $ £g Injun List He had only his pride left. When that was gone, the Judge knew, it was time to die. The Judge set down his buckets and mop and slipped along the bar. ” me a6 oe +f 4 Preise 5 too fay ee par NE Fateh tad 3°SX! = ARE . wes HEY called him the Judge. He lived in a little log cabin behind the Last Chance Saloon. It might have been big Pete Enright who started calling him that, because he worked for Pete, swamping in the saloon. Pete owned the Last Chance. Nobody seemed to remembered when the Judge had drifted into the httle mining camp of Enright, Montana. Pete always claimed that the Judge had been around Copyright 1934 by Popular Publications, Inc. . cCOmiclbooks CO