Reader's name and address:
W. T,—8
COMING NEXT MONTH
FROM the black woods beside the trail rose a shriek of blood-curdling laughter. Slavering, mouthing sounds followed jt, so strange and garbled that at first I did not recognize them as human words. Their unhuman intonations sent a chill down my spine.
"Dead men!" the inhuman voice chanted. "Dead men with torn throats! There will be dead men among the pines before dawn! Dead men! Fools, you are all dead!"
Ashley and I both fired in the direction of the voice, and in the crashing reverberations of our shots the ghastly chant was drowned. But the weird laugh rang out again, deeper in the woods, and then silence closed down like a black fog, in which I heard the semi-hysterical gasping of the girl. She had released Ashley and was clinging frantically to me. I could feel the quivering of her lithe body against mine. Probably she had merely followed her feminine instinct to seek refuge with the strongest; the light of the match had shown her that I was a bigger man than Ashley.
"Hurry, for God's sake!" Ashley's voice sounded strangled. "It can't be far to the cabin. Hurry! You'll come with us, Mr. Garfield?"
"What was it?" the girl was panting. "Oh, what was it?"
"A madman, I think," I answered, tucking her trembling little hand under my left arm. But at the back of my head was whispering the grisly realization that no madman ever had a voice like that. It sounded—God!—it sounded like some bestial creature speaking with human words, but not with a human tongue! . . .
You will not want to miss this grim novelette of stark horror—of the terrible disfigurement inflicted upon Adam Grimm by the dark priests of Inner Mongolia, and the frightful vengeance that pursued his enemy to the United States and tracked him down in the Louisiana woods. It will be published complete in the November issue of Weird Tales: -
Black Hound of Death
By Robert E. Howard
Also
WITCH-HOUSE THE MAN IN BLACK
By Seabury Quinn By Paul Ernst
A fascinating and gripping tale of the blight that A vivid weird tale about a masquerade ball, and a
fell upon a lovely and beautiful American girl-— grim figure clad in formal black, who mingled
a tale of Jules de Grandin, ghost-breaker, occult with the dancers but did not dance. ist, and master of the supernatural.
THE DARK DEMON ™ E CRAWLING HORROR
By Robert Block b " Thorp McClusky
The strange tale of a man who communed too A Z" m , °£ of , '•* .weird terror that wrought
closely with things from beyond space—a shud ^f '» d f* anii ? a " ,c ?! Brataker Farm —W ,he
dery tale of stark horror. author of Loot of the Vampire.
MIDAS MICE
By Bassett Morgan By Robert Barbour Johnson
A shuddery graveyard tale, through which blows What ghastly fate pursued the dweller in that
an icy breach of horror, like a chill wind from vermin-infested old mansion in Louisiana?—the
the tomb. story of a weird doom.
November WEIRD TALES Out October 1
While They Last!
At
Special Close-out Price
The M° on i Terrot
A.6Birc
50c
THE MOON TERROR, by A. G. Birch, is a stupendous weird-scientific novel of Chinese intrigue to gain control of the world.
ALSO-OTHER STORIES
In addition to the full length novel, this book also contains three shorter stories by well-known authors of thrilling weird-scientific fiction:
OOZE, by Anthony M. Rud, tells of a biologist who removed the growth limitations from an amoeba, and the amazing catastrophe that ensued.
PENELOPE, by Vincent Starrett, is a fascinating tale of the star Penelope, and ntastic thing (liar happened when the in perihelion.
AN ADVENTURE IN THE FOURTH
DIMENSION, by Famsworth Wright, is an uproarious skit on the four-dime-; i theories of the madien inter-
planetary stories in general.
LIMITED SUPPLY
Make sure of getting your copy now bed close-out supply is exhausted. Si today for this book at the spen of only 50c.
NOT! : This book for sale from the pu only. It cannot be purchased ill
i : 50c for clotb-boond
I MOON TERROR as per your special
| City
Weird Tales volume 28 number 03 Page 21