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All-Around Magazine; Bill Barnes Air Adventures [1] Do and Dare Weekly; Movie Action Magazine; New Story Magazine; Pete Rice Magazine [2] Red Raven Library [3] Sea Stories Magazine; The Skipper; The Wizard; Tiptop Weekly; Top-Notch Magazine
Street & Smith composing room circa 1905-1910. Street & Smith or Street & Smith Publications, Inc., was a New York City publisher specializing in inexpensive paperbacks and magazines referred to as dime novels and pulp fiction. They also published comic books and sporting yearbooks.
Smith's Magazine was a Street & Smith magazine published monthly from April 1905 to February 1922. [1] Created for the "John Smiths" of the world, Theodore Dreiser was its initial editor; after a year, he moved to Broadway Magazine. [2] By the time Dreiser departed, the magazine had a circulation of 125,000. [3]
S&H Green Stamps Booklet covers. S&H Green Stamps was a line of trading stamps popular in the United States from 1896 until the late 1980s. They were distributed as part of a rewards program operated by the Sperry & Hutchinson company (S&H), founded in 1896 by Thomas Sperry and Shelley Byron Hutchinson.
The payment rate at the time was one cent a word, and Street & Smith agreed to let Campbell pay a bonus of an extra quarter-cent a word to the writer whose story was voted top of the list. [42] Unlike other editors Campbell paid authors when he accepted—not published—their work; publication usually occurred several months after acceptance.
Tip Top Weekly was a magazine, published by Street & Smith, which ran for more than 800 issues. It began April 19, 1896 with an August 12, 1912 title change to New Tip Top Weekly . Making a 1915 transition from a story-paper tabloid to a standard pulp magazine format, it was retitled Tip Top Semi-Monthly and then became Wide Awake Magazine from ...
The Shadow was an American pulp magazine that was published by Street & Smith from 1931 to 1949. Each issue contained a novel about the Shadow, a mysterious crime-fighting figure who had been invented to narrate the introductions to radio broadcasts of stories from Street & Smith's Detective Story Magazine.
Western Story Magazine was a pulp magazine published by Street & Smith, which ran from 1919 to 1949. [1] It was the first of numerous pulp magazines devoted to Western fiction. In its heyday, Western Story Magazine was one of the most successful pulp magazines; in 1921 the magazine was selling over half a million copies each issue. [ 2 ]