Amazing Stories Volume 01 Number 01

Amazing Stories Volume 01 Number 01

< Jlpril, 1926 25 Cents % * % I PWHBWIBIHIBB! PANY, NEW YORK. PUBLISHERS OF RADIO NEWS - SCIENCE & INVENTION RADIO REVIEW - AMAZING STORIES - RADIO INTERNACIONAL Needs -Trained LARGEST RAD» EWQWfflW ORIGINATORS OF RADIO HOME-STUDY TRAINING They Called Me aHuman Clam Butl ChangedMmost Overnight I passed the President's "f^ce I could to any occasion, to meet any emergency with Send For This Amazing Book ASnot help bearing mv name. Instinct- just the right words. And I accomplished all ively 1 paused to listen. "Thai human this by developing the natural power of clam," he was saying, "can't represent us. speech possessed by everyone, but cultivated he's a hard worker, hot he seems to have no by so few—By simply spending IS minutes a ability to express himself. 1 had hoped to day in the privacy of my own home, on this make him a branch mana- most fascinating subject. ger this fall, but he yxms the shr-cr : power al f.,r,viriri , s <;n-rrh. Not only to withdraw farther and men who havr made : :!iliin:is ir.it Thousands have into his shell all sent i :.?- farther There is no magic, no for this book— nn, iT ,-'-i;i:- j i:< ilicir praise the time. I've given up trick, no mystery about hopes of making anything brooming a powerful and convincing talker. You, So that was it! That too, can conquer timidity, How tu make a political = was the reason why I had Ho* to tell entertaining s right, self-c been passed over t'.mc and How to make aft-t -dinner nd bashful- again when promotions ntss, winning advance- were being made! That ment in salary, popularity, social standing, and suc- plodder—a truck horse cess. Today business de- cap.ihle of elop jelf-tonfic for our firm, mands for the big, impor- doing a lot of heavywork, tant high-salaried jobs, but of no use where bril- ngthen your y, men who can dominate liant performance was re- other 5—men who can quired. I was a failure make others do as they could do what unless I wish. It is the power of seemed impossible— learn forceful, convincing speech of a •It- AMERICAN INSTITUTE to u»e words forrefully, that NORTH effectively and convmc- Av«.. Dipt. 93H4, Chicago, tllinoit i obsc 3601 Michigan ingly. the presidency of _ „. I corporation; another from a small, unimport- North American Institute. In 15 Minutes a Day 3B01 MichiBBn Ave., Dept. MS* ant territory to a salcsmanager's desk: an- | Chicago, Illinois. _' And then suddenly I discovered a new. easy other from the rank and file of political ' method which made a powerful speaker ,-,-,-' me workers to a post of national importance; a (iOD copy oTyoiir 'famous book, Hew' To overnight. learned to bend almost I how timid, retiring, self-conscious man to change | Work Wonders Wish Wordt. |i others to my will, how to dominate one man almost overnight imo a popular and much or an audience of thousands. Soon I had applauded after-dinner speaker. Thousands on salary increases, promotion, popularity, have accomplished just such amazing things I power. Today I a'.ways have a ready flow through this simple, casv, vet effective train- tClty - , .. State.. of speech at my corr.roand. I am able U> rise ing. Contents For April In Our Next Issue: Off on a Comet—or Hector Servadac "A TRIP TO THE CENTER OF THE EARTH." By Jules Verne 4 by Jules Verne. Tliis book, comparatively little known, is one o[ the most important of Verne's works. It holds The New Accelerator your interest from beginning to cud, and is by far the greatest work on this topic—namely tile exploration By H. G. Wells _ 57 of the earth's center—that has ever appeared. The Man From the Atom "THE CRYSTAL EGG," by H. G. Wells. One of (fee By G. Peyton IV ertenbaker 62 most ama/ins tales ever wriilni bv Wells. A storv von The Thing From—Outside will long remember by this master of scientifiction. 67 "THE RUNAWAY SKYSCRAPER," by Murray The Man Who Saved the Earth Lcinstcr. A story of the Fourth Dimension, in which the 50-story 11 c:ropr.ilitaii f.ife skyscriiiier vanishes By Justin Hall 74 into the Fourth Dimension. One of the most surprising tales The Facts in the Case of Mr. Valdemar we have ever read. By Edgar Allan Poe 92 "WHISPERING ETHER," by Charles S. Wolfe, a OUR COVER radio story that holds your iutcrc-l and is responsible " for a good deal of .cot ;i: flesh and chills running Dci-IclE an falerisnfls «™c <™n 0ff on i Cnmct" v this tip and down your spine. "OFF (Conclusion). COPYRIGHT ACKNOWLEDGMENT ON A COMET," by Jules Verne "Off on a Comet." by Jules Verne, copyright 1911 by A number of other short stories by well-known Vincent Parke & Co., (Parke, Austin & Lipscomb Co.) scientifiction writers. HOW to sr-ns-'ruir.E rnn ".\v.\v.:sr, ^TPitiFS." soml ymir MM, MHtj«H ar >»rt»! rn.Wed nfl rate Stud MUl ft* rlut. nit Mid „-"<'„.. ,','; ii..rll.n-TI1.-r 1'1,'iiii-liii ]=!-. I!.:, -.:, ii.n' -! 1rr ,:„. r::,';-,- 1 ' .1 !.,.. "i 1 '.: . f, , ! 1 i'vVKvi'r(iN. '[I.\IMl'i FiV.VM^r'';i!"'.r!i^Vl\VV.STOtN"ri0>\"? 'Su* ,,„»,,„ .,„ ,. „.* * „,„ ... ..., „..„„„.„ mm. 19 EO. It M)W K«f.1 «•*• W nuiu <m Mm SmS S our records. «* 01 ti.c n r tuvKino stories i, ratioatd mih cich naia UU«»i TOW*. M , A**! , ta , .„,, "Din, ' "Ill ' 'i !! " !: : ' ,. v.. *Stt>& S. -T. Wist El Hi, 40 l'Lra Verio. Anlmerji. Bc-ldum. lYLnLcl -.'. /v ). r;. h. ;V :( "",,;-'S;:,:i^,. c.-.r. Davids & 'Dillon. I5W It . — April, 1926 THE No. 1. MAGAZINE OF SCIENTIFICTION HUGO GERNSBACK, F.R.S., Editor DR. T. O'CONOR SLOANE, M.A., Ph.D. ; Managing Editor and Central Offices 53 Park Place. New York. N. Extravagant Fiction Today ------- Cold Fact Tomorrow A NEW SORT OF MAGAZINE By HUGO GERNSBACK, F.R.S. |NOTHER fiction magazine! It is in these situations that the new romancers find At first thought it does seem impos- their great inspiration. sible that there could be room for an- Not only do these amazing tales make tremendous- other fiction magazine in this country. ly interesting reading—they are also always instruc- The reader may well wonder, "Aren't tive. They supply knowledge that we might not there enough already, with the several otherwise obtain—and they supply it in a very pal- hundreds now being published?" True. But this is atable form. For the best of these modern writers not "another fiction magazine," Amazing Stories is of scientifiction have the knack of imparting knowl- a nevj kind of fiction magazine! It is entirely new edge, and even inspiration, without once making us —entirely different—something that has never been aware that we are being taught. done before in this country. Therefore, Amazing Arid not only that! Poe, Verne, Wells, Bellamy, Stories deserves your attention and interest. and many others have proved themselves real proph- There is the usual fiction magazine, the love story ets. Prophesies made in many of their most amaz and the sex-appeal type of magazine, the adventure ing stories are being realized—and have been real- type, and so on, but a magazine of "Scientifiction" is ized. Take the fantastic submarine of Jules Verne's a pioneer in its field in America. most famous story, "Twenty Thousand Leagues By "scientifiction" I mean the Jules Verne, H. G. Under the Sea" for instance. He predicted the pres- Wells, and Edgar Allan Poe type of story—a charm- ent day submarine almost down to the last bolt ! New ing romance intermingled with scientific fact and inventions pictured for us in the scientifiction of to- prophetic vision. For many years stories of this day are not at all impossible of realization tomorrow. nature were published in the sister magazines of Many great science stories destined to be of an his- Amazing Stories—"Science & Invention" and torical interest are still to be written, and Amazing "Radio News." Stories magazine will be the medium through which But with the ever increasing demands on us for such stories will come to you. Posterity will point to this sort of story, and more of it, there was only one them as having blazed a new trail, not only in lit- thing to do-—publish a magazine in which the scien- erature and fiction^ but in progress as well. tific fiction type of story will hold forth exclusively. We who are publishing Amazing Stories realize Toward that end we have laid elaborate plans, spar- the great responsibility of this undertaking, and will ing neither time nor money. spare no energy in presenting to you, each month, Edgar Allan Poe may well be called the father of the very best of this sort of literature there is to "scientifiction." It was he who really originated the offer. romance, cleverly weaving into and around the story, Exclusive arrangements have already been made a scientific thread. Jules Verne, with his amazing with the copyright holders of the entire voluminous romances, also cleverly interwoven with a scientific works of ALL of Jules Verne's immortal stories. thread, came next. A little later came H. G. Wells, Many of these stories are not known to the general whose scientifiction stories, like those of his fore- American public yet. For the first time they will be runners, have become famous and immortal. within easy reach of every reader through Amazing It must be remembered that we live in an entirely Stories.

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