Fantastic Novels - 1941.04 - April.pdf
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.MAGAZINE
THE
«
DWELLERS
IN
THE
••'Nm^m^WS'
I
* # ••
i^m
MIRAGE
£1/
A.Merritt
strangest
of all fantastic
adventures
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1
PRODUCED BY UNZ.ORG
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VM
JoeL.in the HOSPITAL?...
why, he only had the sniffles when
we went dancing Saturday!
l o u h a \ <• |)rol)al)ly k n o w n
several cases like t h a t . . . the
medical records report lots of
theiii. And they all leaf! up to
this warning:
D o n ' t take a cold lifjhtiy. Don't ncfjlcct it.
T a k e care of it a t once.
HELP NATURE EARLY
pects of a cold. Tests showed germ reductions
on tissue surfaces ranging to !)(i.7% fifteen
minutes after t h e Listerine gargle, and up t o
S0% one hour after,
9 YEARS OF RESEARCH
If yoii feel a cold coming on, or your throat
feels irritated, go to bed. Keep warm. Drink
plenty of water and frnit juices. E a t lightl.v.
(Jargle full .strength Listerinc .Antisej)tic
every two hours.
All of these simple measures are aimed to
help N a t u r e to abort a cold <|uickl,v. Rest and
warnitli build up reserve. Juices and water
aid elimination. Food restores strength. .Vnd
Listerine Antiseptic kills millions of germs
on m o u t h and t h r o a t surfaces . . . the very
types of germs t h a t man.y authorities claim
are t h e cau.se of many of the distressing a.s-
And in tests conducted during 9 years of
research, those who gargled Listerine twice a
day had fewer colds, milder cold.s, and colds of
shorter duration than tho.se who did not use it.
This success we ascribe t o Li.sterine'sgerm-kill-
ing action on the mouth and t h r o a t surfaces.
We wish we could say t h a t Listerine Anti-
sei^tic so used would always head off a cold,
but we cannot. We do say t h a t as a first aid it is
deserving of your most serious consideration.
I>-AMBEKT PF{.AKM.\CAI> C O . ,
St.
Loilis,
Mo.
At the first symptom of a
COLD or SORE THROAT
L I S T E R I N E - Q U I C K !
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sd
A
-and how ambitious men are qualifying
by the La Salle Problem Method
LaSalle accountancy students.* For example—one
man was a plumber, 32 years old, with only an
eleventh grade education. He became auditor for
a large bank with an income 325 per cent larger.
Another was a drug clerk at 330 a week. Now
he heads his own very successful accounting firm
with an income several times as large. .
A woman bookkeeper—buried in details of a
small job-«-is now auditor of an apartment hotel,
and her salary mounted in proportion to her work.
A credit manager—earning 3200 a month—
moved up quickly to 33000, to 35000, and then to
a highly profitable accounting business of his own
which netted around 310,000 a year.
rET this straight.
By "accountancy" we do not mean "bookkeep-
ing.". For accountancy begins where-bookkeeping
leaves off.
The skilled accountant takes the figures handed
him by the bookkeeper, and
analyzes
and
interprets
them. .
He knows how much the costs in the various
departmeiits should amount'to, how they may
be lowered.
He knows what profits should be expected from
a given enterprise, how they may be increased.
He knows, in a given business, what per cent of
one's working capital can safely-be tied up in mer-
And What It Means to You
chandise on hand, what per cent is safe and ade-
quate for sales promotion. And these, by the way, Why let the other fellow" walk away with the
are but two
oi scores
of percentage-figures where- better job, when right in your own home you may
equip yourself for a splendid future in this profit-
with he points the way to successful operation.
able profession?
He knows the intricacies of govern-
Are yon TtzWy determined to g^t
ment taxation.
Through ahead? If
so-,
you can start at once
He knows how to
survey
the trans-
Accountancy to acquire—by the LaSalle Problem
actions of a business over a given
Method^a thorough understanding
period; how to show in cold, hard
of Higher Accountancy, master its
figures the progress it. has made and
fundamental principles, become ex-
where it is going. He knows how to
pert in the practical application "of
use
these findings^'^s a basis for con-
those principles—:this without losing
structive policies. •
an hour from work o r a dollar of pay.
In short, the tirained accountant is
' Preliminary knowledge of book-
the
controlling engineer
of business-
keeping is unnecessary. You will be
one man business cannot do without.
given whatever training, instruction
Small wonder that he commands a
or review on the subject of bookkeepr
salary two to ten times as great as
ing you may personal-
t h a t of t h e b o o k -
ly need—and without
keeper. Indeed, as an
any extra expense to
independent operator
you.
^
(head of his own ac-
If you are dissatis-
A
Correspondence Institution
counting firm) he may
fied with your present
DEPT. SSS-MR
CHICAGO
earn as much as the
O p p o r t u n i t i e s in Accountancy—Check below and we will
e q u i p m e n t — i f you
send you a copy of "Accountancy, the Profession that
president of the big
P a y s / ' without obligation.
recognize the oppor-
and influential bank
•>tunitiS that lie ahead
• Higher Accountancy:
in his community, or
o t h e r LaSalle Opportunities: If more interested in one
of you through home-
the operating
mziC-
of the other fields of business indicated below, check here:
study training — you
O Business M a n a g e m e n t
n C o m m e r c i a l Law
ager of a great rail-
will do well to send at
D Modern S a l e s m a n s h i p
D Modern Forcmansfilp
road.
D Traffic M a n a g e m e n t
D Expert Bookkeeping
once for full particu-
D Law: Degree of LL. B.
D C. P. A. Coaching
lars. The coupon will
• Industrial M a n a g e m e n t O Business E n g l i s h
, n Business Correspondence P S t e n o t y p y
Some Examples
b r i n g t h e m t o you
.D Effective Speaking
• Credit and C o l l e c t l o a
without any obliga-
a Railway Accounting
'Correspondence
Small wonder that ac-
tion, also details of
countancy offers the
Name
La Salle's convenient
trained man such fine
payment plan.
Present Position-
opportunities—op-
C h e c k , sign and
portunities well illus-
Address
mail the coupon
trated by the success
NOW.
of t h o u s a n d s of
•Names available on request.
PRODUCED BY UNZ.ORG
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ntastic
Ma^^azine
Vol.
I
APRILS 1941
No. 5
Complete Book-Len^tK Novel
THE DWELLERS IN THE MIRAGE . . . .
*. A. MerrlH
6
FANTASTIC NOVELS presents the original version of this great story, as it
was first written by the author, and as the author prefers to have it con-
cluded. The difference between this and the printed version in >4rgo$y in-
volves only the last two and a half pages of, the story.
. '
,
\ Special Features
The Editors 105
Eric Reeve 106
.107
A N IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT
ALOSTCITY . . . . : . . . . ; . . . . . . . : . ^ . . i . . . ' v . . l . . . . . . . . . L l o y d
WHAT DO YOU THINK? . . . . . . . . . : . . . . . . .
;........
The next issue of FANTASTIC NOVELS will be combined with the June
issue of FAMOUS FANTASTIC MYSTERIES and will be on sale April 11,
featuring the great classic, "Beyond the Great Oblivion" by George Allan
England, sequel to "Darkness and Dawn" and a complete novel in itself
• A
RED STAR
Magazine.
THE FRANK A. MUNSEY COMPANY, Publisher, 280 Broadway, NEW YORK, N. Y.
& Treasurer
WILLIAM T. DEWART, JR.,
Secretary
PARTS:
HACHBlttE & CIE, 111 Rue Reaumur
LONDON:
THE CONTINENTAL PUBLISHERS & DISTRIBUTORS, LTD., 3 La Belle Sauvage, Ludgate Hill, Lon(ion,E.C. 4
Copyright, 1941, by Frank A. Munsey Company. Published bi-monthly. Single copies 10 cents. By tile year $0.50: in United States,
its dependencies, Mexico and Cuba; Canada, $0.T5. Other countries, $1.20. Currency should not-be sent unless regis'tered. Ke-
- mittaflees should be made by checlt, express money order or postal money order. Application for seeond-ciass entry pending
at the post offlce/ New Torlt, N. T.. under the Act ol March 3, 18T9. Copyrighted in Great Britain. Printed in U. S. A. '
WILLIAM T. DEW
A R T ,
President
.Other
RED STAR
Magazines
RAIIiROAD MAGAZINE •
RED STAB MYSTERY .• RED STAB ADVENTURES • CRACK-SHOT WESTERN
DETECTIVE FICTION WEEICLY • CONFESSION NOVEL OF THE MONTH • SILVER BUCK WESTERN • RED
STAB LOVE REVELAIHONS • BED STAB SECRET CONFESSIONS / • DOUBLE DETECTIVE • ALL STORY-
LOVE • BIG CHIEF WESTERN • LOVE NOVEL OP THE MONTH ' • ARGOSY • F I F T H COLUMN STORIES
SEA NOVEL MAGAZINE
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"ONE BITTERLY COLD
NDGDOT, my radio went
dead," writes Mr. Gipson.
"Suspecting that thehowl-
ing wind had blown down
the aerial, I threw on a
dressing gown, grabbed
my flashlight, and headed
for the fifteenth floor roof.
"AN tCV WIND chilled
me as I searched for and
found the aerial. Making
hasty repairs, I started
back down. To my hor-
ror,' I found myself locked
out. I battered the door.
I shouted. But the wind
howled me down.
"NEARiv FROZEN TO DEATH, I had an inspiration. Ripping the aerial loose,
I tied the lighted flashlight to it, and swung it over the side of thebuilding.
Luckily the light attracted someone in an apartment below. Thanks to those
dependable 'Eveready'
jresh
DATED batteries I was saved.
^^'^^yOee,^ M
' Tie word "Eveready" is a registered trade-mark of National Carbon Company, Ine,
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Pi^igKi ©Mir^iiisioiig i/s\§i7 m2)Ki(§[ii^:
^^m--?y^^^--^-
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