Subtitled A Magazine of Hair-Trigger Hombres; announced title change to Outlaws of the West. Details supplied by John Locke. |
Title changed from Western Outlaws. |
Issue not found. |
Issue not found. |
Incomplete Data - Issue not found. |
Incomplete Data - Issue not found. |
Issue not found. |
Incomplete Data - Issue not found. |
Incomplete Data - Issue not found. |
Issue not found. |
Details taken from Table of Contents. |
Issue not found. |
Issue not found. |
Details taken from Table of Contents. |
Details supplied by John Locke. |
Details supplied by Steve Miller. |
Details taken from Table of Contents. |
Incomplete Data - Issue not found. |
Issue not found. |
Issue not found. |
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Details supplied by John Locke. |
Details taken from library catalogue of the National Cowboy Museum. |
Details supplied by John Locke from Table of Contents. |
One story was announced for the unpublished February-March 1939 issue. Details taken from The Pulp Magazine Index by Len Robbins. |
Title changed from The Western Raider. A villain-oriented character pulp. James Van Hises Pulp Heroes of the Thirties attributes the authorship of the Dr. Skull stories to Edith and Ejler Jacobson. |
Details supplied by John Locke from Table of Contents. |
Title changed from The Octopus. The lead novel features the same hero as The Octopus, but a different villain, after whom the magazine is titled. James Van Hises Pulp Heroes of the Thirties attributes the authorship of the Dr. Skull stories to Edith and Ejler Jacobson. |
Details supplied by John Locke from Table of Contents. |
Details supplied by John Locke from Table of Contents. |
Issue not found. |
Details supplied by John Locke from Table of Contents. |
Issue not found. |
Details supplied by John Locke from Table of Contents. |
Details supplied by John Locke from Table of Contents. |
Details supplied by John Locke from Table of Contents. |