Argosy All-Story Weekly Pulp Magazine September 30, 1922 The Bird of Passage


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Description

Argosy All-Story Weekly – September 30, 1922 – “The Bird of Passage” (GD Interior, No Label)

This September 30, 1922 issue of Argosy All-Story Weekly launches “The Bird of Passage,” a six-part serial by John Schoolcraft, blending high adventure and intrigue. It also features other ongoing stories, plus a rich mix of novelettes, short fiction, and poetry from classic pulp authors.

The magazine is in acceptable condition with good interior considering its age. It shows rips, marks, creases, and general wear from handling over the years, but the interior pages remain sound and legible. The pictured copy is the exact one you will receive. Please inspect the photos for full condition details.

We offer combined shipping, and every issue is sent in a clear protective sleeve for safe storage.


Table of Contents

Five Continued Stories

  • The Bird of Passage (Part One of Six) — John Schoolcraft – p.1

  • A New Girl in Town (Part Two of Six) — Hulbert Footner – p.43

  • Magnificent Folly (Part Three of Five) — Olive McClintic Johnson – p.76

  • Out of the Silent North (Part Five of Five) — Harry Sinclair Drago – p.105

  • The Sign of the Serpent (Part Six of Seven) — John Goodwin – p.127

Novelette and Short Stories

  • Wasted Gold — Evelyn Campbell – p.22

  • The Ghost Ball — Hal M. Shumate – p.61

  • Blind Poker—Straight — Harold de Polo – p.97

  • Roo of the Atolls — Ralph Stock – p.122

  • The Fresh Guy — Max McConn – p.148

Miscellaneous and Poetry

  • Izzy Exposes the Experts — Izzy Kaplan’s Kolumn – p.158

  • The Greatest Debt — Jack Hyatt, Jr. – p.21

  • The Old Music Box — Mazie V. Caruthers – p.42

  • Missing — Morris Longstreth – p.60

  • Immortal Frauds — Captain Horatio Wragge – p.74

  • The Pirate Sea — Lilian Nicholson – p.126

  • The Time-Saver — Minnie Leona Upton – p.147

  • Life — Faith Baldwin – p.157

  • Tidewater — Thomas J. Murray – p.160


A fine example of early pulp adventure, this issue offers an engaging blend of serialized tales, stand-alone stories, and period poetry — perfect for collectors and fans of vintage literature.

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