The FictionMags Index


Magazine Contents Lists: Page 1801


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    Lincolnshire Echo [July 31, 1950] (newspaper) []
    Details supplied by Steve Holland.
    • · Sylvia’s Savings · John Brophy · ss The (London) Evening News October 3 1949


    Lincolnshire Echo [August 7, 1950] (newspaper) []
    Details supplied by Steve Holland.
    • · Echo of a Jest · Robert Dennis · ss The (London) Evening News November 18 1949




    Lincolnshire Echo [October 16, 1950] (newspaper) []
    Details supplied by Steve Holland.
    • · Sign, Please · Trevor Allen · ss The (London) Evening News August 18 1949



    Lincolnshire Echo [November 6, 1950] (newspaper) []
    Details supplied by Steve Holland.
    • · Dressed to Kill · Eric Allen · ss The (London) Evening News July 6 1949


    Lincolnshire Echo [November 13, 1950] (newspaper) []
    Details supplied by Steve Holland.
    • · Lightheaded · Alan Hyder · ss The (London) Evening News July 28 1949


    Lincolnshire Echo [November 20, 1950] (newspaper) []
    Details supplied by Steve Holland.
    • · Fifty Years Dead · H. A. Manhood · ss The (London) Evening News May 18 1949







    Lion Library   (about)
    Publisher: James Henderson.
    Run: May 1909-Nov 1909 (28 issues).
    Incorporated into: Nugget Library.
    Frequency: 4 per month.
    Comments: The Maxwell Kean adventures are believed to be reprints of American dime novels featuring Nick Carter.






























    Lippincott’s Magazine:   (about)
    Lippincott’s was at one time a major magazine, then in 1914 was sold to McBride, Nast & Co. (according to John Tebbel in “The American Magazine”) which changed its title to McBride’s Magazine (also in 1914, according to Tebbel—he’s wrong, of course, since I have the bound volume, etc.) and within a relatively short length of time sold again to Scribner’s.

    In its heyday, Lippincott’s first published “The Picture of Dorian Gray,” “The Sign of the Four,” the first novel by Mary Roberts Rinehart, etc., etc. Not many articles, not many illustrations, though the line cuts they occasionally used were quite good.

    Under McBride ownership, the lead novel was usually reprinted from a McBride book. Probably the same thing when owned by Lippincott.




































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