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1903
- Argosy (November, 1903) "Car No. 1297" A short story. "The extraordinary trip of a New York trolley car and its important bearing on a love affair." Not indexed in PULP. p 754-761. [ARGOSY]
1905
- Argosy (September, 1905) "The Guide to Book-Agenting" An Eliph' Hewlitt story. Not indexed in PULP. "How a harking back to the past provided a boomerang for the present." p 238-242. [ARGOSY]
1918
- Argosy (May 18, 1918) "Below Zero" A short story. German spies during the First World War launch a plot to lower New York City's temperature to far below freezing. p 70-75. Not indexed in PULP. [ARGOSY]
1922
- Argosy (August 26, 1922) "Flora" A novelette. Not indexed in PULP. One illustration. p 180-207. [ARGOSY]
1923
- Argosy (July 14, 1923) "The Extroducer" A story. One illustration. p 957-60. [ARGOSY, PULP]
1924
- Argosy (October 25, 1924) "Kakaua the Unconquered" A story. p 70-80. [ARGOSY, PULP]
1925
- Argosy (January 3, 1925) "Thinner and Thinner" A story. Think self-help diet books are a new phenomenon? Think again. Not indexed in PULP. p 732-739. [ARGOSY]
1931
- Argosy (July 18, 1931) "Borrowed Money" A short story. "New York wealth meets New England pride." [ARGOSY, PULP]
- _____ (August 8, 1931) "Kidnaping Insurance" A short story. "A surprising form of protection." One illustration. And, yes, it was published as "kidnaping" not "kidnapping." p 91-100. [ARGOSY, PULP]
- _____ (August 8, 1931) "The Men Who Make the Argosy" A profile. Includes a photograph of the author. [ARGOSY]
1932
- Argosy (January 16, 1932) "Ullamully!" A story. "What Orion Clancy meant by his drunken battle-cry when he hit the town banker puzzled all Riverbank -- and especially Orion Clancy." p 107-116. [ARGOSY, PULP]
- _____ (March 19, 1932) "Mr. Klinsky's Even Mind" A story. Volume 228. Number 3. One illustration. "A quick temper is a risky asset." p 105-112. [ARGOSY, PULP]
- _____ (September 17, 1932) "Pollywog Pearls" A story. "River treasure sets a thief trap." One illustration. "Fate had delivered Jim the Dip to the river, but the river was to make the most startling delivery of all." Volume 232. Number 5. p 81-87. [ARGOSY, PULP]
- _____ (November 5, 1932) "Dum-Fool" A short story. "Dum-fool sat staring at his stranded steamboat." "Fat old Cass Allen looked like easy pickings to the sharpers of that Mississippi river town." Illustrated. Volume 233. Number 6. [ARGOSY, PULP]
1933
- Argosy (August 12, 1933) "The Horned Woodchuck" A story. One illustration. "The mystery of the game warden's murder." Volume 240. Number 4. p 85-92. [ARGOSY, PULP]
1934
- Argosy (February 10, 1934) "For Mayor of Dog Bite" A short story. "A six-gun election out West. Frisco Bill fired, and the feud was on. Why waste time on ballots when bullets are so much quicker?" [ARGOSY, PULP]
- _____ (March 31, 1934) "The Bloodhounds! The Bloodhounds!" A short story. "A novelty in Uncle Tom's Cabin." Illustrated. [ARGOSY, PULP]
- _____ (July 14, 1934) "Bigger and Better" A short story. "Master minds run a barnyard racket." Illustrated. [ARGOSY, PULP]
1935
- Argosy (March 9, 1935) "Murder Money" A short story. "A careful clueless murder. A murderer often leaves behind a clue for the law -- but in this clueless crime the law unwittingly provided its own solution." One illustration. [ARGOSY, PULP]
- _____ (September 21, 1935) "The Prodigal's Return" A short story. "A family black sheep returns home in a strange way." Volume 258. Number 5. "The dusty remains of Henry Okth arrived at the old homestead in a candy box, but the funeral was postponed indefinitely." One illustration. [ARGOSY, PULP]
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