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The Frontier [v 5 #2, November 1926] ed. Harry E. Maule (Doubleday, Page & Co., pulp) from TOC only. [JL]


The Frontier (UK)


The Frontier [v1 #2, November 1925] (World’s Work, pulp, cover by James McKell) [MA:2631]


The Frontier [March 1926] (The World’s Work, 1/-, 176pp, pulp, cover by James McKell) from my copy. [RH]


The Frontier [April 1926] (The World’s Work, 1/-, 176pp, pulp, cover by Paul Strayer) from my copy. [Rick Hall]


The Frontier [v5 #3, April 1927] (World’s Work, pulp, cover by O. F. Schmidt) [MA:2631]


Frontier Stories [December 1927] (World’s Work, pulp, cover by Ralph Kiefer) [MA:2631]


The Frontier: A Magazine of the Northwest [v13 #3, March 1933] ed. Harold G. Merriam (State University of Montana at Missoula, 40c, xii+165-266pp, 6.5"x9.5") [PSP]


Frontier Stories


Frontier Stories [v 5 #3, December 1926] ed. Anon. (25¢, cover by R. Farrington Elwell) Details taken from eBay listing. [PSP]


Frontier Stories [v 5 #4, January 1927] ed. Harry E. Maule (Doubleday, Page & Co., Inc., 20¢, 176pp, pulp, cover by Allen Store) Associate editor A. H. Bittner. [BK]


Frontier Stories [v 5 #5, February 1927] ed. Harry E. Maule (Doubleday, Page & Co., Inc., 20¢, 176pp, pulp, cover by Remington Schuyler) [BK]


Frontier Stories [v 5 #6, March 1927] ed. Harry E. Maule (Doubleday, Page & Co., Inc., 20¢, 176pp, pulp, cover by R. Farrington Ewell) [BK]
  • 3 · The Phantom Rustlers of San Pedro · J. E. Grinstead · n.; “Ghosts!” said the Mexican vaqueros, when cattle disappeared without a sign, but Bob Slater sought a more earthly solution.
  • 56 · Breachin’ Bill · James K. Waterman · ss; Terror of the seas was Breachin’ Bill, to whom the whalers’ boats were but cockleshells for his amusement.
  • 67 · The Hermit of Tigerhead Butte · Eugene Cunningham · ss; It looked like a plain case of murder—until Ware’s Kid, the Texas Ranger, began to look around.
  • 75 · The Cave Gods · Evan Anglesea · ss; Deep in the Borneo jungle the head-hunters conducted their rites—rites that demanded a living white sacrifice.
  • 89 · The Waters of Malcala · Edwin Hunt Hoover · ss; Unusual indeed was the posse that relentlessly herded Rusted into the Canyon of Malcala.
  • 102 · Killers Both · Paul Annixter · ss; In the wilds of the North Woods they roamed, each a killer for the sheer joy of killing.
  • 111 · Let the Liar Beware! · Jack Whitman · ss; A fertile imagination is a great thing, but sometimes it leads one into complications—especially in the cow country.
  • 118 · The Ontario Stampedes · Roderick O’Hargan · ss; Millions of dollars the Porcupine Lake region has yielded—yet for years nobody could be interested in it.
  • 123 · Cinderface · Charles Gilson · ss; Tough odds an American engineer faces in China—and not the least of them is white treachery.
  • 138 · The Dawn Wind · Rollin Brown · ss; On the dawn wind depended the fate of a great forest—and with it the fate of a grim fire-fighter.
  • 141 · The Coup of the Burma Crown Jewels · Warren Hastings Miller · ss; The disappearance of a poor native ferryman hardly seemed connected with the missing crown jewels—but Bruce Romney missed no chances.
  • 149 · The Challenge of the Range · Allan Vaughan Elston · nv; Luke Conway’s determination to run his ranch without six-guns was made to order for his crooked JJ neighbors.
  • 174 · The Trading Post · The Readers · lt


Frontier Stories [v 6 #1, April 1927] ed. Harry E. Maule (Doubleday, Page & Co., Inc., 20¢, 176pp, pulp, cover by William Reusswig) [BK]


Frontier Stories [v 6 #2, May 1927] ed. Harry E. Maule (Doubleday, Page & Co., Inc., 20¢, 176pp, pulp, cover by A. H. Bittner) [BK]


Frontier Stories [v 6 #3, June 1927] ed. Harry E. Maule (Doubleday, Page & Co., Inc., 20¢, 176pp, pulp, cover by Ralph Keifer) [BK]
  • 3 · The Great Red Border · J. E. Grinstead · na; Paradise of rustlers and killers was the Great Red Border—to which Ray Pickett came to put an end to Texas cattle thievery.
  • 55 · Ground Tackle · Millard Ward · ss; Fog and tide unite to complete the undoing of John Clayton, but it took fire to put him to the test.
  • 67 · Whitewash [Dynamite Drury] · L. Patrick Greene · ss; Whitewash may cover a multitude of sins, but to Trooper Dynamite Drury the concealed knavery was all too apparent.
  • 84 · The Cross-Draw Decoy · Anthony M. Rud · ss; To a debt of vengeance Bibbs Traill dedicated his life—a debt that would take him, crippled, against a deadly killer.
  • 93 · Let ’er Buck · F. Douglas Hawley · pm; The spirit of the West.
  • 94 · The Castaways · Charles Gilson · ss; Shipwreck held little terror for Cinderface—but that was not all that eventful trip to Japan held in store for him.
  • 105 · The Hammer-Thumb · Eugene Cunningham · ss; A great night the gunmen and tinhorn gamblers of Las Tunas planned for themselves—but that was before Ware, of the Texas Rangers, took a hand.
  • 115 · Whalemen’s Fortune · James K. Waterman · nv; A fortune in ambergris—and Captain Savage decided it would be his no matter how he got it.
  • 130 · The End of Harvey Logan · Edgar Young · ss; Far from the scene of his Western exploits Kid Curry lived true to type to the end.
  • 133 · Enter, Lord Tiger · Warren Hastings Miller · ss; Trouble in heaps it meant for Bruce Romney, of the Burma Secret Service, when Seyin Buddha wept.
  • 142 · Sheep Smith’s Daughter · William Crump Rush · ss; Len was a cowboy; she a sheepman’s daughter—and the code of the range decreed nothing but war between them.
  • 151 · The Foreign Legion Way · J. D. Newsom · nv; A scheming woman and an ambitious native kaid—a combination that pitched the Foreign Legion into a bitter struggle.
  • 174 · The Trading Post · The Readers · lt


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