The Wide World (US) v46n271 [1920-11] (-rear ads, ibc, bc)
Item Preview
Share or Embed This Item
texts
The Wide World (US) v46n271 [1920-11] (-rear ads, ibc, bc)
- Publication date
- 1920-11
- Usage
- Public Domain Mark 1.0
- Collection
- pulp_misc_adventure; pulpmagazinearchive; additional_collections
- Language
- English
The Wide World (US) v46n271 [1920-11].
American edition for November 1920.
Cover artwork by The Wide World's longtime cover artist W. C. Nicolson.
The scan is missing the rear ads, inside back cover, and back cover.
CONTENTS:
The Wide World (US) [v46, #271, November 1920] (The International News Company for George Newnes, Ltd., 20¢, 88pp, 7½" x 9¾", cover by W. C. Nicolson)
3 · Our Hunting Trip In Brazil · Captain F. A. M. Webster · ar; illustrated by Warwick Reynolds
8 · A Remarkable Snapshot Of A Sulphur Bottom Whale · Anon. · ms
9 · Stalked By A Mountain Lion · C. J. Lincke · ar; illustrated by A. G. Small
14 · The Leaf-Wearers Of Orissa · B. Craven · ar; illustrated from photographs
20 · My Adventure In Sing-Sing · Harwood Koppel · ar; illustrated by Ernest Prater
27 · "Silk Mask Jim" · Geoffrey Johns · ar; illustrated by W. C. Nicolson ("A Jekyll and Hyde case in real life.")
31 · "My Strangest Experience"—
_31 · I. My Evening Out · E. W. · ar; illustrated by John de Walton
_34 · II. In The Tiller-Room · Thomas Neill · ar; illustrated by E. S. Hodgson
_36 · III. The Old Shaft · Louis Allen · ar; illustrated by Fred Holmes
39 · A Fight On A Mountain Top · Colonel John White · ar; illustrated by Leo Bates
47 · Into The Unknown: Chasing Mountain Outlaws In New Guinea [Part 1 of ?] · Lieut. E. W. P. Chinnery · ar; illustrated by Stanley L. Wood
54 · The "Pinto" Of Great Black Pine Mountain · B. C. d'Easum · ar; illustrated by Lionel Edwards
57 · The Lifted Veil: The Story Of An Amazing Deception [Part 5 of ?] · Lieut. E. H. Jones · ar; illustrated by Edward Elcock
63 · Where No Writ Runs: Life In The Highlands Of Kurdistan · The Revd. W. A. Wigram · ar; illustrated by T. Somerfield
74 · The Ghost Of The "Lycaon" · A. W. Spencer · ar; illustrated by E. S. Hodgson
78 · Wolves In Sheep's Clothing: The Policeman As Criminal · C. O'Mahony · ar; illustrated by A. Ferrier
85 · The Rector's Story · "Nemo" · hu; illustrated by G. Soper
88 · Odds And Ends · Anon. · pi
About The Wide World magazine:
The Wide World magazine was a British monthly illustrated publication which ran from April 1898 to December 1965. For a time, there were also American and Australian editions.
The magazine was founded by well-known publisher George Newnes, also famous for Tit-Bits, The Strand Magazine, Country Life, and others. It described itself as "an illustrated magazine of true narrative" and each month purported to feature "true-life" adventure and travel stories gathered from around the world. Its motto was "Truth is stranger than fiction".
The magazine chronicled the adventures of two-fisted, manly men: adventurers to hidden lands who sailed through arctic seas or fought their way through lush jungles, heroic soldiers, sailors, and aviators, and the hunters who, like the intrepid "Bungalow Bill" of the Beatles song (though "Bill" and his real-life inspiration were American), went out with their elephants and guns to vanquish horrible wild beasts. Sometimes these tales beggared belief: the eagle-eyed aviator who claimed to have shot out the lens of a German sub's periscope from his airplane, armed only with a revolver; the man who choked a crocodile with his bare hands; the man who fought an ostrich; etc.
The May 1913 issue contained the first reports of the death of notorious outlaw Butch Cassidy in Bolivia.
American edition for November 1920.
Cover artwork by The Wide World's longtime cover artist W. C. Nicolson.
The scan is missing the rear ads, inside back cover, and back cover.
CONTENTS:
The Wide World (US) [v46, #271, November 1920] (The International News Company for George Newnes, Ltd., 20¢, 88pp, 7½" x 9¾", cover by W. C. Nicolson)
3 · Our Hunting Trip In Brazil · Captain F. A. M. Webster · ar; illustrated by Warwick Reynolds
8 · A Remarkable Snapshot Of A Sulphur Bottom Whale · Anon. · ms
9 · Stalked By A Mountain Lion · C. J. Lincke · ar; illustrated by A. G. Small
14 · The Leaf-Wearers Of Orissa · B. Craven · ar; illustrated from photographs
20 · My Adventure In Sing-Sing · Harwood Koppel · ar; illustrated by Ernest Prater
27 · "Silk Mask Jim" · Geoffrey Johns · ar; illustrated by W. C. Nicolson ("A Jekyll and Hyde case in real life.")
31 · "My Strangest Experience"—
_31 · I. My Evening Out · E. W. · ar; illustrated by John de Walton
_34 · II. In The Tiller-Room · Thomas Neill · ar; illustrated by E. S. Hodgson
_36 · III. The Old Shaft · Louis Allen · ar; illustrated by Fred Holmes
39 · A Fight On A Mountain Top · Colonel John White · ar; illustrated by Leo Bates
47 · Into The Unknown: Chasing Mountain Outlaws In New Guinea [Part 1 of ?] · Lieut. E. W. P. Chinnery · ar; illustrated by Stanley L. Wood
54 · The "Pinto" Of Great Black Pine Mountain · B. C. d'Easum · ar; illustrated by Lionel Edwards
57 · The Lifted Veil: The Story Of An Amazing Deception [Part 5 of ?] · Lieut. E. H. Jones · ar; illustrated by Edward Elcock
63 · Where No Writ Runs: Life In The Highlands Of Kurdistan · The Revd. W. A. Wigram · ar; illustrated by T. Somerfield
74 · The Ghost Of The "Lycaon" · A. W. Spencer · ar; illustrated by E. S. Hodgson
78 · Wolves In Sheep's Clothing: The Policeman As Criminal · C. O'Mahony · ar; illustrated by A. Ferrier
85 · The Rector's Story · "Nemo" · hu; illustrated by G. Soper
88 · Odds And Ends · Anon. · pi
About The Wide World magazine:
The Wide World magazine was a British monthly illustrated publication which ran from April 1898 to December 1965. For a time, there were also American and Australian editions.
The magazine was founded by well-known publisher George Newnes, also famous for Tit-Bits, The Strand Magazine, Country Life, and others. It described itself as "an illustrated magazine of true narrative" and each month purported to feature "true-life" adventure and travel stories gathered from around the world. Its motto was "Truth is stranger than fiction".
The magazine chronicled the adventures of two-fisted, manly men: adventurers to hidden lands who sailed through arctic seas or fought their way through lush jungles, heroic soldiers, sailors, and aviators, and the hunters who, like the intrepid "Bungalow Bill" of the Beatles song (though "Bill" and his real-life inspiration were American), went out with their elephants and guns to vanquish horrible wild beasts. Sometimes these tales beggared belief: the eagle-eyed aviator who claimed to have shot out the lens of a German sub's periscope from his airplane, armed only with a revolver; the man who choked a crocodile with his bare hands; the man who fought an ostrich; etc.
Some
famous names occasionally wrote for the magazine (such as Arthur Conan
Doyle, Henry Morton Stanley, Douglas Reeman, future film director James
Whale, etc.), and it was copiously illustrated with photographs, as well
as black and white drawings by such artists as Terence Cuneo, Cecil
Stuart Tresilian, Alfred Pearse, Charles Sheldon, Paul Hardy, William
Barnes Wollen, John L. Wimbush, Charles J. Staniland, Joseph Finnemore,
John Charlton, Warwick Goble, Tom Browne, Ernest Prater, Gordon Browne,
Edward S. Hodgson, Norman H. Hardy, Inglis Sheldon Williams, and Harry
Rountree.
The Times of London summed up the magazine rather nicely in an article in 2004: "The Wide World
unapologetically celebrated brave chaps with large moustaches on stiff
upper lips, who did stupid and dangerous things. Sometimes they
survived. Quite often, they didn’t. To the editors of The Wide World,
either outcome was acceptable, so long as the stories were true,
exhilarating and extremely unlikely."
- Addeddate
- 2020-08-31 21:33:11
- Identifier
- the-wide-world-us-v-46n-271-1920-11
- Identifier-ark
- ark:/13960/t9x158767
- Ocr
- ABBYY FineReader 11.0 (Extended OCR)
- Page_number_confidence
- 86.60
- Scanner
- Internet Archive HTML5 Uploader 1.6.4
- Year
- 1920
comment
Reviews
There are no reviews yet. Be the first one to
write a review.