The FictionMags Index


Magazine Contents Lists: Page 1261


PreviousMagazine Issue IndexTable-of-Contents

    Every Week: A First Class Journal of General Literature [v6 #10, April 11, 1870] (Horning & King, 6¢, 16pp, 11″ x 15¾″) []
    Details supplied by Morgan Wallace.
    • 145 · Naomi; or, The Persecuted Maiden [Part 5 of 8] · Gertrude F. de Vingut, uncredited · sl John Bradburn, 1864, as “Naomi Torrente: The history of a woman”
    • 148 · The Splendid Stranger [Part 1 of 2] · M. E. Braddon, uncredited · ss (r)
    • 150 · Barbara Claxton’s Love · [uncredited] · ss (r)
    • 150 · Isla Bendita: A Legend of the Times of the Buccaneers · [uncredited] · ss (r)
    • 151 · The Gipsy’s Sacrifice · [uncredited] · vi (r)
    • 153 · Dove-Eye, the Girl Captive; or, Life Among the Maories [Part ? of ?] · [uncredited] · sl (r)
    • 155 · The Mistake of a Night · J. · ss (r)
    • 157 · Kitty Clover · [uncredited] · vi (r)












    Everybody’s (UK)   (about)
    Everybody’s was a general weekly magazine that began life in 1913 as The Competitor’s Journal. Everybody’s Weekly was incorporated into the title in 1925 and dominated from 1927; the Competitor’s Weekly element of the title was dropped in 1928. As Everybody’s (although it remained weekly), it ran until 25 April 1959.












    Everybody’s [February 11, 1950] (Everybody’s Publications Ltd., 3d, 40pp, tabloid, cover by photo) []
    listing fiction, poetry, and selected articles. Details supplied by Steve Holland.




    Everybody’s [March 4, 1950] (Everybody’s Publications Ltd., 3d, 40pp, tabloid, cover by photo) []
    listing fiction, poetry, and selected articles. Details supplied by Steve Holland.


    Everybody’s [March 11, 1950] (Everybody’s Publications Ltd., 3d, 40pp, tabloid, cover by photo) []
    listing fiction, poetry, and selected articles. Details supplied by Steve Holland.


    Everybody’s [March 18, 1950] (Everybody’s Publications Ltd., 3d, 40pp, tabloid, cover by photo) []
    listing fiction, poetry, and selected articles. Details supplied by Steve Holland.




    Everybody’s [April 8, 1950] (Everybody’s Publications Ltd., 3d, 40pp, tabloid, cover by photo) []
    listing fiction, poetry, and selected articles. Details supplied by Steve Holland.



    Everybody’s [June 3, 1950] (Everybody’s Publications Ltd., 3d, 40pp, tabloid, cover by photo) []
    Details supplied by Steve Holland.








    Everybody’s [April 26, 1952] (Everybody’s Publications Ltd., 4d, 36pp, tabloid, cover by photo) []
    Details supplied by Steve Holland.


    Everybody’s [June 21, 1952] (Everybody’s Publications Ltd., 4d, 36pp, tabloid, cover by photo) []
    Details supplied by Steve Holland.






    Everybody’s [August 16, 1952] (Everybody’s Publications Ltd., 4d, 32pp, tabloid, cover by photo) []
    Details supplied by Steve Holland.



    Everybody’s [September 27, 1952] (Everybody’s Publications Ltd., 4d, 36pp, tabloid, cover by photo) []
    Details supplied by Steve Holland.









    Everybody’s [May 28, 1955] (Everybody’s Publications Ltd., 4d, 48pp, tabloid, cover by Critchlow) []
    listing fiction, poetry, and selected articles. Details supplied by Steve Holland.










    Everybody’s Magazine   (about)
    Everybody’s Magazine was initially standard format, became a big slick with the November 1917 issue but reverted to standard size in 1921 and eventually became a pulp in 1927. According to Frank Luther Mott, “more than half the contents of Everybody’s in its first year was purchased directly from the Pearson Publishing Co. of London, and consisted of serials, short stories, articles and poems, with illustrations that had already appeared in the Royal Magazine”.

    After Volume 60, #3 (March 1929), Everybody’s combined with The Ridgway Company’s Romance.

    Index for Volume 1 through Volume 45 was compiled by Virgil Utter; issue-by-issue of fiction, verse, drama, music and lyrics. (Cartoons, articles, humorous fillers and photographs are not included.) Compiler’s note: in all cases, publisher-bound copies of the magazine were used, obtained mostly from the California State Library. In the case of some early volumes, only the Volume Index was bound-in, rather than the Table of Contents pages. However, each item in each magazine was viewed, and in some cases cases read, to determine whether it was fiction of non-fiction. If there was doubt as to the status, it was usually listed as fiction. Index for Volume 46 through Volume 60, #3, was compiled by Victor Berch and Virgil Utter using only Tables of Contents, rather than the magazines. All information in the Tables of Contents is listed, including articles. The Boston Public Library’s complete run of the magazine was used to gather these Tables of Contents. The Library file is in library binding, sometimes losing the name of the cover artist in the edge-trimming process.






















    Everybody’s Magazine [v4 #21, May 1901] (John Wanamaker, 10¢, 125pp, 6½″ x 9″) []
    Details supplied by Jeff Kaylin.
    • 418 · “There Was Something Like a Suspended Pout on Her Lips”: Frontispiece for “The Making of a Country Home” · [uncredited] · fp
    • 419 · The Making of a Country Home [Part 4 of 10] · J. P. Mowbray (“J. P. M.”) · sl
    • 430 · Terror. The Story of a Deer’s Life · Maximilian Foster · ar
    • 441 · Making Rain by Electricity. The Remarkable Discoveries of Elmer Gates—How Showers and Thunderstorms Are Made in the Laboratory—A Notable Advance Promised in Predicting Weather Changes · Clifford Howard · ar
    • 448 · The Voice of Slang · William J. Lampton · pm
    • 449 · Buldy Jones, Chef de Claque · Frank Norris · ss
    • 460 · A Good Lie Gone Wrong · Eleanor Hoyt · ss
    • 466 · How to Go on the Stage. A Consensus of Opinion from Our Most Famous Actors and Managers · Franklin Fyles · ar
    • 473 · Adventures in News-Getting. The Mystery of Russell Sage’s Assailant—His Identity Discovered from a Single Button by a New York Reporter—“Nero,” the Great Nubian Lion, and His Famous Outbreat—Getting an Account of the Loss of the “Victoria”—How Two Newspaper Men Reformed the Pest Hospital on North Brother Island · Allen Sangree · ar
    • 479 · A Ballad of Charlie’s Men · Sharlot M. Hall · pm
    • 480 · Photography as a Fine Art. III.—Mrs. Gertrude Kasebier and the Artistic-Commercial Portrait · Charles H. Caffin · ar
    • 496 · A Court-Martial Extraordinary · Katharine H. Brown · ss
    • 501 · Edward F. Croker, “Chief.” A Character Study of the Chief of the New York Fire Department · Lindsay Denison · ar
    • 511 · The Emigrant Banshee · Gertrude Henderson · ss
    • 519 · A Most Remarkable “Medium”—Mrs. Piper, of Boston · Mary C. Blossom · ar
    • 525 · Fortunes for the World’s Benefactors. A Swedish Millionaire Who Left $350,000 Each Year for the Five Men Who Have Done Most for Humanity During the Preceding Twelve Months · Eugene P. Lyle, Jr. · ar
    • 528 · Joscelyn Cheshire [Part 6 of 7] · Sarah Beaumont Kennedy · sl
    • 528 · “I Have Seen No Human Being Save Our Party of Three.”: Illustration for “Joscelyn Cheshire” · [uncredited] · il


    Everybody’s Magazine [v4 #22, June 1901] (John Wanamaker, 10¢, 125pp, 6½″ x 9″) []
    Details supplied by Jeff Kaylin.
    • 546 · “Halloran, Seizing His Bag, Fled Unsteadily to the Edge of the Tote-Road and Turned, Wild and Malevolent as Ever.”: Frontispiece for “Black Murchison” · [uncredited] · fp
    • 547 · Alone Up Mt. Katahdin · A. Radclyffe Dugmore · ar
    • 559 · “And Then Above the Many Voices of the Pent-Up Stream They Heard the Clipping Strokes of His Axe.”: Illustration for “Black Murchison” · [uncredited] · il
    • 560 · Black Murchison · Maximilian Foster · ss
    • 572 · Fighting Pests with Insect Allies. How the Entomologists Saved the California Orange-Growers from Ruin—“Ladybirds” Imported from Australia to Kill Off the White Scales—Each Ladybird Produces Seventy-Five Billion Others in Six Months, and All Feed on Nothing but White Scales—Grass-hoppers Kept Down by a Fungus—One Big Industry Created by an Imported Insect—The Whole World Searched for Enemies of Special Pests · L. O. Howard · ar
    • 578 · A Son of the Border · E. C. Little · ar
    • 588 · “When de Angels Call” · Howard Weeden, music by H. T. Burleigh · sg
    • 590 · Joscelyn Cheshire [Part 7 of 7] · Sarah Beaumont Kennedy · sl
    • 609 · The Making of a Country Home [Part 5 of 10] · J. P. Mowbray (“J. P. M.”) · sl
    • 621 · The Voice of Matrimony · William J. Lampton · pm
    • 622 · The Tenth of June, 1715 · Andrew Lang · pm
    • 624 · Firing at an Approacing Hail-Storm: Illustration for “Shooting Away Hailstorms” · [uncredited] · il
    • 625 · Shooting Away Hailstorms · Eugene P. Lyle, Jr. · ar
    • 637 · Photographing the Sun. How and Why the Scientists Study the Sun’s Corona · Maximilian Foster · ar
    • 645 · On the Stroke of Nine · Charles Major · ss
    • 650 · Vicissitudes of the Wheel · Eleanor Hoyt · ar
    • 653 · The Study of Children. Interesting Results Obtained by the Investigation of Large Numbers of Children—Relation of Mental and Physical Powers to Birth, Sex, and Nationality—Valuable Lessons for All Parents and Teachers · Arthur MacDonald · ar
    • 662 · The Laying of the Pipe · Theodore Waters · ss
    • 667 · The Truth About “Christian Science.” A Psychopathic Study · Thomson Jay Hudson, LL.D. · ar


    Everybody’s Magazine [v5 #23, July 1901] (John Wanamaker, 10¢, 125pp, 6½″ x 9″) []
    Details supplied by Jeff Kaylin.
    • 2 · “That Arrant Little Rebel, Mistress Phyllis Westmacott.”: Frontispiece for “From the Chops of the Lion” · [uncredited] · fp
    • 3 · Photography as a Fine Art. IV—Methods of Individual Expression · Charles H. Caffin · ar
    • 17 · Sabe Hike? The Life of Our Soldiers in the Philippines · Oscar King Davis · ar
    • 27 · Legs · Maximilian Foster · ss
    • 37 · The Real Abdul Hamid. A Character Sketch of the Mysterious and Terrible Sultan of Turkey · Eugene P. Lyle, Jr. · ar
    • 44 · Ole Miss an’ de Yankee · Mrs. W. A. Leland · ss
    • 48 · What to Eat to Live Long · Dr. H. W. Wiley · ar
    • 55 · The Truth About “Christian Science.”—A Psychopathic Study. II.—An Explanation of Mental Healing · Thomson Jay Hudson, LL.D. · ar
    • 61 · Christian Science Is the Truth. A Reply to “The Truth About ’Christian Science.’” · W. D. McCrackan · ar
    • 65 · The Making of a Country Home [Part 6 of 10] · J. P. Mowbray · sl
    • 77 · A Marquis in the Bad Lands · G. W. Ogden · ar
    • 90 · At the Inner Gate of Tien-Tsin · Adachi Kinnosuké · ss
    • 96 · An Evening Near Athens · Lloyd Mifflin · pm
    • 97 · From the Chops of the Lion · William MacLeod Raine · ss
    • 105 · Where Earthquakes Write Their Autographs · Ludlow Brownell · ar
    • 113 · The Old Gray Eagle · Booth Tarkington · ss
    • 117 · Is There a Dramatic Profession? · Franklin Fyles · ar
    • 123 · Uninvented Inventions · Francis F. Coleman · ar; subtitled “Some Unsolved Problems Which Offer Great Fortunes to Any One Who Can Master Them”.


NextMagazine Issue IndexTable-of-Contents