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| 1911 1912 1913 | |
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Publishing: Author George Heber Hamilton Teed 'officially' joins the ranks of Blake writers (he's actually been 'ghost writing' stories for the late Michael Storm for some time). Teed was born in Canada in 1886. He travelled twice around the world during his teens, eventually settling in Australia to run a sheep farm. After a drought ended his business, he was left virtually penniless and booked passage to England. During the voyage, he met the widow of Ernest Sempill (aka Michael Storm, the creator of George Marsden Plummer) who persuaded him to try his hand at writing, introducing him to the editors at Amalgamated Press. Teed quickly became an enormously popular Sexton Blake author. During the war, he served in France before then being stationed in Dublin. He was invalided out of the army after suffering pneumonia and, giving up writing, he moved to South India to work as a manager in an export firm. After this ended, the now married Teed returned to England and resumed writing Blake tales. He died suddenly in 1939. Among Teed's creations are Prince Wu Ling, Doctor Huxton Rymer, Mlle Yvonne, Nirvana, Mlle Roxane and Marie Galante. John W. Bobin (aka Mark Osborne) also makes his first contribution to the Blake saga. He was born in 1889. THE CASE OF THE ANONYMOUS LETTERS was his first ever story and he wrote it on scraps of paper while working as a laundry-man in Southend. He introduced Aubrey Dexter to the list of Blake's criminal opponents. Bobin died aged just 46 in 1935. Continuing the theme of significant debuts, the incredibly prolific and endlessly inventive Edwy Searles Brooks arrives on the Blake scene. Brooks was born in 1889 and had his first story published while still a schoolboy. Most famous for his fabulous tales of Nelson Lee, Nipper and the Boys of St. Franks, Brooks also occasionally wrote for THE MAGNET and GEM, and, later, went on to pen a number of novels under the pseudonyms of Berkeley Grey and Victor Gunn. To the Blake saga he brought Rupert Waldo - the Wonder Man (who, as Berkeley Grey, he would later evolve into Norman Conquest). Brooks stopped writing Sexton Blake stories in the early 1940s. He died in 1965. Blake: Sexton Blake and Tinker survive the sinking of the Titanic - the tale is told in THE LAW OF THE SEA (in which the liner is thinly disguised as the Paleta). According to SEXTON BLAKE'S SECRET in DETECTIVE WEEKLY issue 1 (1933), this year Blake pays his troublesome younger brother Nigel to move abroad. Another significant event this year: Count Ivor Carlac begins his career as a super-criminal. | |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND · Issue 552 · 6/1/1911 · Amalgamated Press · 1d TINKER'S SCHOOLDAYS (part 16) by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND · Issue 553 · 13/1/1911 · Amalgamated Press · 1d TINKER'S SCHOOLDAYS (part 17) by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND · Issue 554 · 20/1/1911 · Amalgamated Press · 1d TINKER'S SCHOOLDAYS (part 18) by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND · Issue 555 · 27/1/1911 · Amalgamated Press · 1d TINKER'S SCHOOLDAYS (part 19) by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND · Issue 556 · 3/2/1911 · Amalgamated Press · 1d TINKER'S SCHOOLDAYS (part 20) by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND · Issue 557 · 10/2/1911 · Amalgamated Press · 1d TINKER'S SCHOOLDAYS (part 21) by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND · Issue 558 · 17/2/1911 · Amalgamated Press · 1d TINKER'S SCHOOLDAYS (part 22) by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND · Issue 559 · 24/2/1911 · Amalgamated Press · 1d TINKER'S SCHOOLDAYS (part 23) by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND · Issue 560 · 3/3/1911 · Amalgamated Press · 1d TINKER'S SCHOOLDAYS (part 24) by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND · Issue 561 · 10/3/1911 · Amalgamated Press · 1d TINKER'S SCHOOLDAYS (part 25) by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND · Issue 562 · 17/3/1911 · Amalgamated Press · 1d TINKER'S SCHOOLDAYS (part 26) by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: Unknown TINKER'S SCHOOLDAYS: THE FOUR MUSKETEERS (part 1) by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) Other content: Unknown Notes: THE FOUR MUSKETEERS serial was reprinted in an abridged version in THE BOYS' FRIEND LIBRARY issue 232 (1913). Unrated |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND · Issue 563 · 24/3/1911 · Amalgamated Press · 1d TINKER'S SCHOOLDAYS: THE FOUR MUSKETEERS (part 2) by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND · Issue 564 · 31/3/1911 · Amalgamated Press · 1d TINKER'S SCHOOLDAYS: THE FOUR MUSKETEERS (part 3) by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND · Issue 565 · 7/4/1911 · Amalgamated Press · 1d TINKER'S SCHOOLDAYS: THE FOUR MUSKETEERS (part 4) by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND · Issue 566 · 14/4/1911 · Amalgamated Press · 1d TINKER'S SCHOOLDAYS: THE FOUR MUSKETEERS (part 5) by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND · Issue 567 · 21/4/1911 · Amalgamated Press · 1d TINKER'S SCHOOLDAYS: THE FOUR MUSKETEERS (part 6) by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND · Issue 568 · 28/4/1911 · Amalgamated Press · 1d TINKER'S SCHOOLDAYS: THE FOUR MUSKETEERS (part 7) by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND · Issue 569 · 5/5/1911 · Amalgamated Press · 1d TINKER'S SCHOOLDAYS: THE FOUR MUSKETEERS (part 8) by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND · Issue 570 · 12/5/1911 · Amalgamated Press · 1d TINKER'S SCHOOLDAYS: THE FOUR MUSKETEERS (part 9) by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND · Issue 571 · 19/5/1911 · Amalgamated Press · 1d TINKER'S SCHOOLDAYS: THE FOUR MUSKETEERS (part 10) by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND · Issue 572 · 26/5/1911 · Amalgamated Press · 1d TINKER'S SCHOOLDAYS: THE FOUR MUSKETEERS (part 11) by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND · Issue 573 · 2/6/1911 · Amalgamated Press · 1d TINKER'S SCHOOLDAYS: THE FOUR MUSKETEERS (part 12) by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND · Issue 574 · 9/6/1911 · Amalgamated Press · 1d TINKER'S SCHOOLDAYS: THE FOUR MUSKETEERS (part 13) by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND · Issue 575 · 16/6/1911 · Amalgamated Press · 1d TINKER'S SCHOOLDAYS: THE FOUR MUSKETEERS (part 14) by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND · Issue 576 · 23/6/1911 · Amalgamated Press · 1d TINKER'S SCHOOLDAYS: THE FOUR MUSKETEERS (part 15) by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: T. W. Holmes Other content: Cricketers Three by Andrew Murray; Your Editor's Den (ed.); Kaiser or King? by John Tregellis; The Poachers of Mallow Woods by Anon.; White Slave Island by Henry St. John; In the Redman's Grip by Anon.; The Boy Who Ran Away From Home by Malcolm Dayle. Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND · Issue 577 · 30/6/1911 · Amalgamated Press · 1d TINKER'S SCHOOLDAYS: THE FOUR MUSKETEERS (part 16) by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND · Issue 578 · 7/7/1911 · Amalgamated Press · 1d TINKER'S SCHOOLDAYS: THE FOUR MUSKETEERS (part 17) by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND · Issue 579 · 14/7/1911 · Amalgamated Press · 1d TINKER'S SCHOOLDAYS: THE FOUR MUSKETEERS (part 18) by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND · Issue 580 · 21/7/1911 · Amalgamated Press · 1d TINKER'S SCHOOLDAYS: THE FOUR MUSKETEERS (part 19) by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND · Issue 581 · 28/7/1911 · Amalgamated Press · 1d TINKER'S SCHOOLDAYS: THE FOUR MUSKETEERS (part 20) by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND · Issue 582 · 4/8/1911 · Amalgamated Press · 1d TINKER'S SCHOOLDAYS: THE FOUR MUSKETEERS (part 21) by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND · Issue 583 · 11/8/1911 · Amalgamated Press · 1d TINKER'S SCHOOLDAYS: THE FOUR MUSKETEERS (part 22) by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND · Issue 584 · 18/8/1911 · Amalgamated Press · 1d TINKER'S SCHOOLDAYS: THE FOUR MUSKETEERS (part 23) by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND · Issue 585 · 25/8/1911 · Amalgamated Press · 1d TINKER'S SCHOOLDAYS: THE FOUR MUSKETEERS (part 24) by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND · Issue 586 · 1/9/1911 · Amalgamated Press · 1d TINKER'S SCHOOLDAYS: THE FOUR MUSKETEERS (part 25) by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND · Issue 589 · 21/9/1911 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE FIGURE IN BLACK by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND · Issue 591 · 5/10/1911 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE CLUE OF THE FINGER-PRINTS by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND · Issue 595 · 2/11/1911 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE AGONY COLUMN MYSTERY by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND · Issue 599 · 30/11/1911 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE KIDNAPPED AMBASSADOR by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND · Issue 602 · 21/12/1911 · Amalgamated Press · 1d TINKER'S HOLIDAY by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE BOYS' FRIEND LIBRARY · Issue 199 · Aug. 1912 · Amalgamated Press · 3d SEXTON BLAKE, SPY by Anon. (William Murray Graydon) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: This is an abridged reprint of a serial that ran in THE BOYS' FRIEND from issue 497 to 505. Unrated |
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THE DREADNOUGHT · Vol.2 issue 27 · 30/11/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE MAN FROM SCOTLAND YARD (part 1) by Anon. (Ernest Sempill) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Hobbies (article); Scorned by the School by Robert W. Comrade; The Fun o' the Fair by Claude Heathcote; The War in the Clouds by Anon.; The Lost Liner by Anon.; Lightning & Co. by Allan Blair; Harrogate's Waist-Coat by Lewis Carlton; Two of the Best by Anon.; Dreadnought League (ed.); The Lion-Tamer's Rival by Anon.; The Old Leonians by Anon. Notes: Story features George Marsden Plummer. This is a serialised reprint of UNION JACK issue 222 (1925). The story would appear again in PENNY POPULAR issue 50 as HUNTER AND HUNTED TOO (1913). Rating: |
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THE DREADNOUGHT · Vol.2 issue 28 · 7/12/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE MAN FROM SCOTLAND YARD (part 2) by Anon. (Ernest Sempill aka Michael Storm) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Hobbies (article); Scorned by the School by Robert W. Comrade; Within the Ropes by Clause Heathcote; The War in the Clouds by Anon.; Monarch of the Air by Anon.; The Misfortunes of Marmaduke by Anon.; The Actor Schoolboy by Lewis Carlton; Lightning & Co. by Allan Blair; Dreadnought League (ed.); The Old Leonians by Anon. Notes: Story features George Marsden Plummer. This is a serialised reprint of UNION JACK issue 222 (1925). Rating: |
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THE DREADNOUGHT · Vol.2 issue 29 · 14/12/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE MAN FROM SCOTLAND YARD (part 3) by Anon. (Ernest Sempill aka Michael Storm) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: Story features George Marsden Plummer. This is a serialised reprint of UNION JACK issue 222 (1925). Rating: |
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THE DREADNOUGHT · Vol.2 issue 30 · 21/12/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE MAN FROM SCOTLAND YARD (part 4) by Anon. (Ernest Sempill aka Michael Storm) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: Story features George Marsden Plummer. This is a serialised reprint of UNION JACK issue 222 (1925). Rating: |
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THE DREADNOUGHT · Vol.2 issue 31 · 28/12/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE MAN FROM SCOTLAND YARD (part 5) by Anon. (Ernest Sempill aka Michael Storm) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Unknown Notes: Story features George Marsden Plummer. This is a serialised reprint of UNION JACK issue 222 (1925). Rating: |
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THE PENNY PICTORIAL · 658 · 6/1/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE WELLINGTON THEATRE MYSTERY by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: R. J. MacDonald Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE PENNY PICTORIAL · 660 · 20/1/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE SALFORD MURDER MYSTERY by Anon. (Ernest Sempill aka M. Storm) · Illustrator: R. J. MacDonald Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE PENNY PICTORIAL · 661 · 27/1/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE MESSAGE IN THE BOTTLE by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: R. J. MacDonald Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE PENNY PICTORIAL · 662 · 3/2/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE BIRMINGHAM MYSTERY by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: R. J. MacDonald Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE PENNY PICTORIAL · 663 · 10/2/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE CLUE OF THE BROKEN BOOTLACE by Anon. (Ernest Sempill aka M. Storm) · Illustrator: R. J. MacDonald Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE PENNY PICTORIAL · 665 · 24/2/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE MARWELL MYSTERY by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: R. J. MacDonald Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE PENNY PICTORIAL · 666 · 2/3/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE MYSTERY OF BUCKLER'S MANSIONS by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: W. Tayler Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE PENNY PICTORIAL · 669 · 23/3/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE STOLEN SUBMARINE PLANS by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: R. J. MacDonald Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE PENNY PICTORIAL · 672 · 13/4/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE PLYMOUTH MOTOR-CAR MYSTERY by Anon. (Ernest Sempill aka M. Storm) · Illustrator: R. J. MacDonald Other content: Unknown Notes: In Devon, Sexton Blake and Bathurst come upon a car crash. The driver, Clifford Gavin, is dead. Blake finds evidence that someone had jumped out of the car shortly before Gavin lost control of it. He also notices that Gavin has a wound to the head which can't be explained by the accident. He becomes convinced that the affair is a carefully planned murder and, piece by piece, unravels the methodology, motive, and perpetrator of the crime. When the killer attempts to escape from the detective by car, he crashes into a furniture van and is killed. Trivia: Sexton Blake has been 'banished from London' by his doctor to take a two-week rest cure. Rating: |
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THE PENNY PICTORIAL · 674 · 27/4/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE NOTTINGHAM MURDER by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: R. J. MacDonald Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE PENNY PICTORIAL · 675 · 4/5/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE CARDIFF MYSTERY by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: R. J. MacDonald Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE PENNY PICTORIAL · 676 · 11/5/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE ROBBERY AT WOOLFREDGE'S by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: R. J. MacDonald Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE PENNY PICTORIAL · 679 · 1/6/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE HORSESHOE MURDER by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: R. J. MacDonald Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE PENNY PICTORIAL · 680 · 8/6/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE "WIRELESS" MYSTERY by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: R. J. MacDonald Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE PENNY PICTORIAL · 686 · 20/7/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE CASE OF THE MISSING PENDANT by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: W. Tayler Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE PENNY PICTORIAL · 699 · 19/10/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE TASKER LARKE MYSTERY by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: R. J. MacDonald Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE PENNY PICTORIAL · 700 · 26/10/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE PINK TAPE CLUE by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: R. J. MacDonald Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE PENNY PICTORIAL · 702 · 9/11/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE THAMES-NORTON MYSTERY by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: R. J. MacDonald Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE PENNY PICTORIAL · 703 · 16/11/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE LOST LADY TYPIST by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: R. J. MacDonald Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE PENNY PICTORIAL · 707 · 14/12/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d BLACKMAIL by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: W. Tayler Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE PENNY PICTORIAL · 708 · 21/12/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE TRAGEDY OF THE ALPS by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: R. J. MacDonald Other content: Unknown Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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THE PENNY POPULAR · Vol. 1 Issue 1 · 12/10/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE CASE OF THE TREASURE HUNTERS by Anon. (William Murray Graydon) · Illustrator: Harry Lane Other content: Tom Merry - New Boy! by Martin Clifford; Volcano Island! by S. Clarke Hook. Notes: This is an abridged reprint of UNION JACK issue 100 THE DOG DETECTIVE (1905) - the story that introduces Pedro. See that issue for further notes. Rating: |
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THE PENNY POPULAR · Vol. 1 Issue 2 · 19/10/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d SEXTON BLAKE, FIREFIGHTER by Anon. (William Murray Graydon) · Illustrator: Harry Lane Other content: A Fight to a Finish! by Martin Clifford; The Phantom Chief! by S. Clarke Hook. Notes: This is an abridged reprint of UNION JACK issue 103 THE FIREMAN DETECTIVE (1905). Unrated |
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THE PENNY POPULAR · Vol. 1 Issue 3 · 26/10/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE SMUGGLER DETECTIVE by Anon. (William Murray Graydon) · Illustrator: Harry Lane Other content: Tom Merry's Election! by Martin Clifford; The Wraith of Dismal Swamp! by S. Clarke Hook. Notes: This is an abridged reprint of UNION JACK issue 157 GUARDIAN OF THE LIGHT (1906). Unrated |
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THE PENNY POPULAR · Vol. 1 Issue 4 · 2/11/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE FOUR THUMB PRINTS by Anon. (William Murray Graydon) · Illustrator: Harry Lane Other content: Tom Merry's Challenge! by Martin Clifford; The Outcast by S. Clarke Hook. Notes: This is an abridged reprint of UNION JACK issue 126 THE THUMB PRINT CLUE (1906). Unrated |
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THE PENNY POPULAR · Vol. 1 Issue 5 · 9/11/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE STOLEN PLAN by Anon. (Norman Goddard) · Illustrator: Harry Lane Other content: The Rival Studies by Martin Clifford; The Redskins Feud! by S. Clarke Hook. Notes: This is an abridged reprint of UNION JACK issue 122 UNDERGROUND LONDON (1906). Unrated |
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THE PENNY POPULAR · Vol. 1 Issue 6 · 16/11/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d SEXTON BLAKE, KING'S MESSENGER by Anon. (William Murray Graydon) · Illustrator: Harry Lane Other content: Done Brown! by Martin Clifford; The Whale Hunters! by S. Clarke Hook. Notes: This is an abridged reprint of UNION JACK issue 128 THE LOST SEAL (1906). Unrated |
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THE PENNY POPULAR · Vol. 1 Issue 7 · 23/11/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE MISSING HEIR by Anon. (William Murray Graydon) · Illustrator: Harry Lane Other content: Tom Merry's Mistake! by Martin Clifford; The Dwarf's Secret! by S. Clarke Hook. Notes: This is an abridged reprint of UNION JACK issue 179 THE STEAMY SIDE (1907). Unrated |
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THE PENNY POPULAR · Vol. 1 Issue 8 · 30/11/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE LOST LAIRD by Anon. (William Murray Graydon) · Illustrator: Harry Lane Other content: The Mystery of St. Jim's by Martin Clifford; By the Czar's Command by S. Clarke Hook. Notes: This is an abridged reprint of UNION JACK issue 172 THE LAIRD OF DURRISDEER (1907). Unrated |
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THE PENNY POPULAR · Vol. 1 Issue 9 · 7/12/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d A DASH FOR FREEDOM! by Anon. (Norman Goddard) · Illustrator: Harry Lane Other content: Figgins & Co.'s Raid! by Martin Clifford; The Buried City! by S. Clarke Hook. Notes: This is an abridged reprint of UNION JACK issue 174 THE DOCTOR DETECTIVE (1907). Unrated |
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THE PENNY POPULAR · Vol. 1 Issue 10 · 14/12/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE CONVICT DETECTIVE by Anon. (E. Alais) · Illustrator: Harry Lane Other content: Tom Merry's Deed! by Martin Clifford; The Child Stealer by S. Clarke Hook. Notes: This is an abridged reprint of UNION JACK issue 123 SEXTON BLAKE - CONVICT (1906). Unrated |
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THE PENNY POPULAR · Vol. 1 Issue 11 · 21/12/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE ORDER OF RELEASE by Anon. (Norman Goddard) · Illustrator: Harry Lane Other content: Tom Merry's New School by Martin Clifford; The Ranch-Raiders by S. Clarke Hook. Notes: This Christmas issue is an abridged reprint of UNION JACK issue 114 SEXTON BLAKE'S CHRISTMAS (1905). Unrated |
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THE PENNY POPULAR · Vol. 1 Issue 12 · 28/12/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE HOUSE OF MYSTERY by Anon. (Cecily Hamilton) · Illustrator: Harry Lane Other content: Jack Blake's Recruit by Martin Clifford; The Rifled Bank by S. Clarke Hook. Notes: This is an abridged reprint of UNION JACK issue 168 A NEW YEAR'S MYSTERY (1906). Unrated |
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UNION JACK · New series · Vol. 16 Issue 430 · 6/1/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE CASE OF THE CINEMATOGRAPH ACTOR by Anon. (W. A. Williamson) · Illustrator: T. W. Holmes Other content: Great Nations of History by Eugen Sandow Notes: My copy is missing the cover. Unrated |
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UNION JACK · New series · Vol. 16 Issue 431 · 13/1/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE MOTOR-BUS MYSTERY by Anon. (Edwy Searles Brooks) · Illustrator: H. M. Lewis Other content: Peter the Great by Lewis carlton; When the Red Men Rose by Stanley Gordon Notes: This is the first Blake story by E. S. Brooks. Unrated |
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UNION JACK · New series · Vol. 16 Issue 432 · 20/1/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE PUBLISHER'S SECRET by Anon. (William Murray Graydon) · Illustrator: E. E. Briscoe Other content: Snowballs by Lewis Carlton Notes: A young woman's cousin proposes to her but the wedding is called off after he is exposed as a scoundrel by Sexton Blake. Some time later, her affections are transferred to a young man who works for her father's publishing company and they become engaged. The cousin also works there and, when the girl's father is murdered, takes over the firm. Her beau is accused of the crime and held in custody. The wicked cousin proposes once more but she turns him down. In revenge, he vows to run the company into the ground so that she'll receive no income from it. Blake and Tinker disguise themselves and arrange to replace the publishing firm's Reader and Office Boy. Blake discovers that the murder was committed by a well-known criminal called 'The Weasel' (due to his ability to squeeze through the tightest of openings) and puts Pedro onto the scent. As they close in, more and more police and onlookers follow until there's virtually a mob at The Weasel's heels. He takes refuge in some abandoned buildings but falls to his death. With his last breath, he makes a confession and admits that he was hired by the cousin, leading to the release of the girl's fiance and the arrest of the bad guy. Rating: |
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UNION JACK · New series · Vol. 16 Issue 433 · 27/1/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE FOOTBALL SWINDLERS by Anon. (Andrew Murray) · Illustrator: H. M. Lewis Other content: A Word from the Skipper (ed.); Kelly's Great Mistake by Lewis Carlton; The Dog of the 'Smiling Susan' by Anon. Notes: A couple of conmen are fooling gamblers with a football scam. They are so successful that it becomes necessary to take on extra staff. Honest but clueless Arthur Merton is employed as a clerk and sent to Switzerland to set up a new office. He's delighted, even though it means a temporary separation from his fiancé and frail mother. But while he's away the company comes under investigation. No sooner is Merton back in London than he's charged with obtaining money by deceit and sent to prison. Blake's investigations turn up some evidence but, before he can hand it to the police, he's attacked by hired thugs, knocked unconscious, tied up and left for dead in a baker's oven. Tinker, noticing the Guv'nor's absence, uses Pedro to track him to the abandoned bakery and frees him. Blake now takes illegal action; he switches identities with Merton, going to prison while the young man visits his ailing mother. The prison regime is brutal but Blake eventually has his revenge on the evil guards and the prison warden, before then going on to prove Merton innocent. The swindlers are forced to pay their dues. Rating: |
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UNION JACK · New series · Vol. 16 Issue 434 · 3/2/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE SHIPYARD MYSTERY by Anon. (Andrew Murray) · Illustrator: T. W. Holmes Other content: None Notes: My copy is missing the cover. Unrated |
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UNION JACK · New series · Vol. 16 Issue 435 · 10/2/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d SAVED FROM THE RIVER by Anon. (E. J. Gannon) · Illustrator: Harry Lane Other content: Run to Earth by Lewis Carlton Notes: My copy is missing the cover. Unrated |
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UNION JACK · New series · Vol. 16 Issue 436 · 17/2/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d LEPER ISLAND by Anon. (Cecil Hayter) · Illustrator: E. E. Briscoe Other content: None Notes: A long travelogue which sees Sexton Blake and Tinker chasing a criminal across the frozen wastes of Lapland towards the dreaded Leper Island, off the Russian coast. The villain, Bortsh, a nasty piece of work from a secret Mafia-style society, has kidnapped an Englishman and intends to leave him stranded on the diseased island. His motivation has something or other to do with an inheritance but it's not particularly well explained and it doesn't really matter much... the focus is on the chase, not on the reasons behind it. Rating: |
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UNION JACK · New series · Vol. 16 Issue 437 · 24/2/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE RUINED SQUIRE by Anon. (E. W. Elais) · Illustrator: T. W. Holmes Other content: Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John. Notes: The Hatherleigh family, once landed gentry but now made destitute by their mismanaged estate, have put their property up for auction. The father is long dead, leaving behind his wife and two sons. The eldest, Gerald - the 'ruined squire' of the title - has carried the burden of blame for the family's troubles but, in fact, his father's former servant and estate manager, Markham, is really responsible. He's already purchased a neighbouring farm and now intends to buy the whole estate at a low price, motivated by a tale of buried treasure. Unfortunately for Markham, Sexton Blake happens to be at the auction. He notices the family's despair and also recognises Markham's associate, a petty villain and card sharp called Sam Barnes, who's bidding on Markham's behalf. On impulse, Blake bids against him and buys the estate for £40,000. The tale follows Blake as he feuds with Markham, eventually discovering the treasure, uniting star-crossed lovers, serving the villain his just-deserts and, of course, returning the family to their estate. Trivia: Sexton Blake is obviously wealthy by theis stage of his career. Rating: |
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UNION JACK · New series · Vol. 16 Issue 438 · 2/3/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE STRIKE PAY SWINDLE by Anon. (Andrew Murray) · Illustrator: H. M. Lewis Other content: Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John. Notes: A strike has been called in northern England's cotton mills and angry men and women, in their traditional wooden clogs and flat cloth caps, are rampaging through the town. A mill owner, a young woman who inherited the business from her father, travels north to investigate. Miss Bargreaves is headstrong and innocent... and has fallen straight into a villainous trap. A bad guy, who arranged the strike before inviting her to come to witness the trouble, intends to frame her for the theft of £25,000 in unpaid wages; money which he, of course, will be happily spending on the continent while she languishes in prison. Of course, he hasn't reckoned on the presence of Sexton Blake. Trivia: Twice in this tale Blake recognises ungodly tendencies simply by looking at a person's face. It's like those early silent films where the heavies always had thick curly moustachios and dark make-up around their eyes. Equally, when he meets a girl who has been accused of a crime, it only takes a glance at her face to establish that she's completely innocent. Rating: |
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UNION JACK · New series · Vol. 16 Issue 439 · 9/3/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE CASE OF THE ANONYMOUS LETTERS by Anon. (John W. Bobin) · Illustrator: E. E. Briscoe Other content: A Word From the Skipper (ed.); Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John. Trivia: The author, better known as Mark Osborne, was a laundry-man with a horse and cart at the time he wrote this, his first story. It was penned on scraps of paper! Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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UNION JACK · New series · Vol. 16 Issue 440 · 16/3/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d SEXTON BLAKE, MUSIC HALL MANAGER by Anon. (A. C. Murray) · Illustrator: T. W. Holmes Other content: Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John. Notes: Issue contains theatre ad for HUSH, MONEY - OR THE DISAPPEARANCE OF SEXTON BLAKE at the Grand theatre, Walsall. Unrated |
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UNION JACK · New series · Vol. 16 Issue 441 · 23/3/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE RIVAL ADVERTISERS by Anon. (W. A. Williamson) · Illustrator: E. E. Briscoe Other content: Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John Notes: Issue contains an ad for the play SEXTON BLAKE, DETECTIVE at the Pier Theatre, Eastbourne. Unrated |
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UNION JACK · New series · Vol. 16 Issue 442 · 30/3/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d AFRAID TO GIVE EVIDENCE by Anon. (E. J. Gannon) · Illustrator: Harry Lane Other content: Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John Notes: My copy is missing the cover. Unrated |
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UNION JACK · New series · Vol. 16 Issue 443 · 6/4/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE MAN OF MANY ALIASES by Anon. (William Murray Graydon) · Illustrator: H. M. Lewis Other content: Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John Notes: My copy is missing the cover. Unrated |
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UNION JACK · New series · Vol. 16 Issue 444 · 13/4/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE CASE OF THE WOMAN ACCOMPLICE by Anon. (William Murray Graydon) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: A Word from the Skipper (ed.); Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John Notes: My copy is missing the cover. Unrated |
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UNION JACK · New series · Vol. 16 Issue 445 · 20/4/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d CIRCUMSTANTIAL EVIDENCE by Anon. (Norman Goddard) · Illustrator: T. W. Holmes Other content: Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John Notes: My copy is missing the cover. Unrated |
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UNION JACK · New series · Vol. 16 Issue 446 · 27/4/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE COFFEE-STALL MYSTERY by Anon. (Edward Searles Brooks) · Illustrator: E. E. Briscoe Other content: Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John Notes: My copy is missing the cover. Unrated |
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UNION JACK · New series · Vol. 16 Issue 447 · 4/5/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE SIGN OF 7 by Anon. (E. W. Alais) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John. Notes: My copy is missing the cover. Unrated |
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UNION JACK · New series · Vol. 16 Issue 448 · 11/5/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE CASHIERED CAPTAIN by Anon. (Norman Goddard) · Illustrator: H. M. Lewis Other content: Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John Notes: My copy is missing the cover. Unrated |
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UNION JACK · New series · Vol. 16 Issue 449 · 18/5/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE VINEYARD MYSTERY by Anon. (William Murray Graydon) · Illustrator: T. W. Holmes Other content: Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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UNION JACK · New series · Issue 450 · 25/5/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE SOLICITOR'S SECRET by Anon. (William Murray Graydon) · Illustrator: Harry Lane Other content: Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John Notes: My copy is missing the cover. Unrated |
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UNION JACK · New series · Vol. 17 Issue 451 · 1/6/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE CASE OF THE CALCUTTA SWEEPSTAKE by Anon. (Norman Goddard) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John. Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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UNION JACK · New series · Vol. 17 Issue 452 · 8/6/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE CASE OF THE UNCLAIMED BANK BALANCE by Anon. (William Murray Graydon) · Illustrator: T. W. Holmes Other content: Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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UNION JACK · New series · Vol. 17 Issue 453 · 15/6/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE CASE OF THE CONVICT MILLIONAIRE by Anon. (Norman Goddard) · Illustrator: Unknown (possibly Fred Bennett) Other content: Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John Notes: John Skelton commits a number of swindles in order to save his company. Fully intending to pay back everything he has stolen, he allows himself to be arrested and gaoled, though under the false identity of John Fell. Meanwhile, Sexton Blake has been receiving death threats from George Marsden Plummer. When the criminal promises to escape from Bleakmoor Prison, the detective, with Will Spearing, Tinker and Pedro, drives there to head him off. Plummer gets loose, betraying John Marsh by leaving him behind, and nearly kills the detective. But Blake is rescued by Marsh who has followed Plummer out of the prison. The two criminals make off and separate on bad terms. Weeks later, Plummer is living in poverty in the East End. When a petty crook puts him up to a burglary, Plummer finds himself in the house of John Skelton and, upon seeing a photograph, recognises John Fell, whom he knew in Bleakmoor. Fell is due for release, so Plummer takes the opportunity to kidnap him, hold him prisoner, and impersonate him. In this guise, he begins to take possession of the company finances, which have increased during Fell aka Skelton's spell in gaol. He also plans revenge on Blake, setting a trap which the detective falls into. Blake is held captive for two days until Tinker and Spearing come to the rescue. They race to capture Plummer before he leaves the country with the cash and receive help from an unexpected quarter — a disguised John Marsh, who is out for revenge on Plummer. On the verge of success, Plummer is caught and sent back to Bleakmoor. Blake, in gratitude for having his life saved, allows Marsh to go free on the condition that he starts a new and straight life abroad with his wife. Trivia: Sexton Blake has written a treatise about the brain-cells that represent vice and virtue. He owns a small premises on Bedford Street off the Strand which he uses for quick-change disguise purposes. This issue has some of the most unsuitable illustrations I've ever seen; unsigned, the pictures look nothing like the characters they're meant to depict. There are also faults in the text — at one point John Marsh is called Henry Marsh. Rating: |
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UNION JACK · New series · Vol. 17 Issue 454 · 22/6/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE CASE OF THE NEWSPAPER RELIEF FUND by Anon. (Norman Goddard) · Illustrator: H. M. Lewis Other content: Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John. Notes: A fire breaks out at Bleakmoor Prison and George Marsden Plummer, who has been incarcerated for the past three months, takes the opportunity to escape. He is reported to have perished in the blaze but, in truth, he hangs around Baker Street in the guise of a tramp, watching his hated nemesis, Sexton Blake. When the detective and his assistant leave for a two-week golfing holiday in France, Plummer impersonates him and takes up residence in the house, totally fooling Mrs Bardell. He breaks into Blake's safe and steals all his papers, which he can use to blackmail people in high places. Soon after his arrival, Will Spearing brings a newspaper tycoon, Theopold Mayne, to the consulting room. Mayne's paper, the Morning Bugle, has collected a relief fund of £100,000 to help the victims of a mining disaster but the money has been stolen by the fund secretary, Peter Larkin. Realising that if he finds the money he will not only be rich but will also have the chance to blacken Blake's name, Plummer agrees to investigate. He follows Spearing's lead and they quickly capture Larkin when the thief tries to recover the money from its hiding place. At this point, Plummer turns on Spearing, who suddenly realises that his partner isn't Sexton Blake, knocks him out and makes off with the loot. When Spearing — near death — is discovered, Mr Mayne is sent for. He concludes that Sexton Blake has turned criminal. He sends a wire, via Mrs Bardell, to Tinker who arrives home with the real Blake. After the initial confusion is cleared up and it's realised that Plummer is on the loose, the detective begins to investigate. He realises that Lord Meltry is likely to be Plummer's first blackmail victim and, right on cue, that man turns up pleading for help. He suggests that Blake impersonate him and wait at Meltry Hall for Plummer to make his move while Meltyry himself lays low at Baker Street. The detective agrees to this and departs. Hours later he realises that he's been fooled — Lord Meltry was actually Plummer in disguise. Meanwhile, back in his consulting room, the blackmailed men start arriving to plea for Sexton Blake's help, little realising that the man they are talking to is Plummer, who is again impersonating the detective. However, there's a surprise in store for the villain: one of his victims, an actor named Barry Soames, suddenly snaps handcuffs onto him, pulls off a wig, and proves to be the real Sexton Blake. Plummer is defeated! Blake agrees to place him on a ship to America in return for all the papers. The story ends with the crimal en route... and vowing to return. Trivia: This story is something of a tour de force for Mrs Bardell, finding her at her most malapropic. Rating: |
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UNION JACK · New series · Vol. 17 Issue 455 · 29/6/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE NOTTING HILL MYSTERY by Anon. (E. J. Gannon) · Illustrator: T. W. Holmes Other content: A Word From the Skipper (ed.); Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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UNION JACK · New series · Vol. 17 Issue 456 · 6/7/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE BLACKMAILER DETECTIVE by Anon. (Norman Goddard) · Illustrator: Harry Lane Other content: Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John Notes: My copy is missing the cover. A disguised George Marsden Plummer returns from America, rents the house opposite Sexton Blake's (his landlady is named Mrs MacShee), and sets up in business as a rival detective under the name Ezra Q. Turley. When Lord Velmer throws a part for the Maharajah of Banyah, Sexton Blake is there and Plummer is watching. The criminal spots a thief of his acquaintance, Jack Maitland, posing as a waiter and, when the Maharajah's emerald is stolen, Plummer is certain that Maitland is responsible. Meanwhile, the Maharajah reveals to Blake that the stolen emerald is not the genuine one... which he has sold. If this is found out, he will be ruined. As Turley, Plummer investigates, exposes the thief and hands him over to Detective-Inspector Lurgan of Scotland Yard. In doing so, he recognises that the gem is a fake and uses this knowledge to blackmail the Maharajah out of £25,000. The case throws Turley into the public eye and he soon has a plethora of clients. The 'small-fry' he rejects and, with great pleasure, refers them to Sexton Blake. The next case he takes up is that of a missing nobleman named George de Fayl who, after marrying far beneath himself, left his wife and travelled to the gold fields of America. Turley discovers that de Fayl is now a millionaire and that he is currently on a visit to England. He tracks him to a hotel where he commences his next blackmail operation. When de Fayl attempts to escape from his clutches, Turley takes him back to his Baker Street residence and ties him up. Sexton Blake, in the meantime, has growing suspicions and starts looking into the de Fayl case. His deductions lead him to the truth and, disguised as Mrs Bardell, he infiltrates Plummer's house and arrests him. After liberating de Fayne he persuades the millionaire to return to his abandoned wife. Trivia: The metal plate in Plummer's head receives a mention. Mrs Bardell reveals that she has a son named Bill and a daughter. Rating: |
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UNION JACK · New series · Vol. 17 Issue 457 · 13/7/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE CASE OF THE OLYMPIC CHAMPION by Anon. (J. G. Jones) · Illustrator: H. M. Lewis Other content: Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John Notes: My copy is missing the cover. Unrated |
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UNION JACK · New series · Vol. 17 Issue 458 · 20/7/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE KING'S PRIZEMAN by Anon. (Andrew Murray) · Illustrator: H. M. Lewis Other content: Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John. Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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UNION JACK · New series · Vol. 17 Issue 459 · 27/7/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE BROTHERHOOD OF TWELVE by Anon. (Norman Goddard) · Illustrator: H. M. Lewis Other content: A Word From the Skipper (ed.); Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John. Notes: While waiting to be moved to Bleakmoor Prison, George Marsden Plummer escapes by exchanging places with a prisoner whose case comes up in the appeal court. When the man thought to be Plummer then dies of consumption, Sexton Blake realises that his arch foe is on the loose again. Plummer witnesses a murder, captures the perpetrator, and discovers that his prisoner — Antonio Cesta — is head of a blackmailing gang known as The Brotherhood of Twelve. Plummer disguises himself as Cesta and infiltrates the group, ordering them to get a final payment from their victims. He intends to make off with the proceeds while also claiming a reward for turning the gang in. Rita, Cesta's daughter, loves Jack Lanson, a young man who once became involved with the group and who is now one of its victims. When he receives a demand for money, Lanson goes to see Sexton Blake. The detective recognises the signature on the demand as that of Plummer. He now knows where the master-criminal is and what he is doing; but what he doesn't yet realise is that his opponent has kidnapped Tinker. After convincing Rita that her that her father is an impostor, the detective spies on a meeting of the Brotherhood during which the girl exposes Plummer. The villain is shot in the shoulder and taken prisoner by the group. When they leave him, Blake approaches and makes a bargain with Plummer — in return for telling Blake the whereabouts of Tinker and Antonio Cesta, the criminal will be allowed to flee abroad. Blake finds and liberates his assistant and Rita's father then, with help from Will Spearing, he rounds up the Brotherhood and banishes them to South Africa. That night, in attempting to revenge himself on Plummer, Cesta and the master-crook plunge over a cliff and are lost at sea. Sir Henry Fairfax later informs the detective that only the body of Cesta was found. Trivia: We receive an insight into Sexton Blake's love life: "I have been a fool in my time, Mr. Blake; but there has only been one woman I have loved—the sweetest little girl in the world, with the face of an angel, and the soul—" "Ay, I know, my friend!" the detective interrupted, with a slight smile. "Three times in my life I have met girls I have thought like that; but two were married, and the other was going to be. Perhaps it was as well." We also learn that before she became Mrs. Will Spearing, Spearing's wife was named Lucy Renard. Rating: |
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UNION JACK · New series · Vol. 17 Issue 460 · 3/8/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE MASKED MUSICIANS by Anon. (E. W. Elais) · Illustrator: E. E. Briscoe Other content: A Word From the Skipper (ed.); Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John. Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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UNION JACK · New series · Vol. 17 Issue 461 · 10/8/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE CASE OF THE COLONIAL CRICKETER by Anon. (Andrew Murray) · Illustrator: E. E. Briscoe Other content: A Word From the Skipper (ed.); Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John; A Little Chat On Cricket. Notes: This story is riddled with more factual errors than any other in the whole Blake saga. A topical tale inspired by Lords Test Match between England and South Africa, the author makes it very apparent that he knew little about the sport. Enthusiasts of the time, who read this tale, must have been astonished at the nonsensical claims made about their favourite game! Unrated |
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UNION JACK · New series · Vol. 17 Issue 462 · 17/8/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE GREAT CHARITY SWINDLE by Anon. (Lewis Carlton) · Illustrator: H. M. Lewis Other content: A Word From the Skipper (ed.); Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John. Notes: After surviving his fall into the sea (at the end of THE BROTHERHOOD OF TWELVE, Union Jack issue 459), George Marsden Plummer is rescued by some henchmen and transported to France. There he falls ill and is taken to a hospital in Calais. After Sexton Blake pays him the thousand pounds he had promised at the climax of the previous tale, a somewhat recovered Plummer returns to England and attends a charity function where he observes Sir George Tanland and his wife Evelyn cheating money out of the attendees. Confronting them under the name of Comte de Gallois, he promises to keep their secret providing they help him organise another charity drive — one from which he intends to pocket all the proceeds. Suspicious of this plan, Evelyn visits Sexton Blake, explains her and her husband's indiscretion, and asks the detective to serve on the new charity's committee. When Plummer hears of this, he steals government papers from a King's Messenger, knowing that the case will be referred to Blake, thus keeping him too occupied to interfere with the charity swindle. Sure enough, Sir Henry Fairfax and the government call on Blake and they inform him that the stolen documents are vital to the security of the nation. During his subsequent investigation, the detective is knocked unconscious and taken to hospital where he remains insensible while Tinker, unaware of Sexton Blake's condition, helps with the charity auction. He soon realises that the Comte is, in fact, Plummer and decides to inform Scotland Yard and there meets up with his recovering master. Together, they put Pedro on Plummer's trail and track the criminal to his lair. They find the charity money and the stolen documents but Blake is too weakened from his injury to prevent Plummer from escaping. Notes: Will Spearing receives a passing mention. Blake's head injury is treated more seriously than the usual knocks he receives and he is weakened and ill for many days. Rating: |
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UNION JACK · New series · Vol. 17 Issue 463 · 24/8/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d IN THE SHADOW OF SIBERIA by Anon. (Andrew Murray) · Illustrator: Val Reading Other content: A Word From the Skipper (ed.); Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John. Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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UNION JACK · New series · Vol. 17 Issue 464 · 31/8/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE LAW OF THE SEA by Anon. (William Murray Graydon) · Illustrator: T.W. Holmes Other content: A Word From the Skipper (ed.); Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John. Notes: The adventure begins aboard the PALETA but the descriptions and illustrations of the ship make it plain that it’s the TITANIC in all but name. You can’t mistake those four famous funnels. Blake and Tinker are travelling to America to give evidence in a trial. Also aboard are a young naval officer called Richard Champney and, unknown to him and in disguise, his disreputable cousin, Hildred Nairne. These two have been rivals for the love of the beautiful Dulcie Romanis but it was Champney who won her hand. When the Paleta strikes an iceberg and begins to list in the water, very few of its passengers or crew believe that the problem is serious. But soon it’s a case of ‘Abandon ship!’ As the women and children crowd into the lifeboats, Blake catches Hildred Nairne stealing a pearl necklace from a cabin. They engage in a fierce fight but Nairne makes his escape. Later, he sneaks up behind Richard Champney and pitches him overboard and into a lifeboat. After the sinking, the story heads off into what often feels like an Arthur Conan Doyle yarn (the writing style is surprisingly similar). Richard Champney, seen ‘jumping’ into the lifeboat, is accused of cowardice. His father disowns him and Dulcie Romanis sends him a white feather and calls off their wedding. Humiliated and unable to shake off the stigma, he disappears. Blake discovers that the young man has joined the army under an assumed name and is serving in India. The detective, Tinker and Pedro set off in pursuit and are soon fighting alongside Richard against rebels led by his cousin. Of course, the villain is eventually defeated and the lovers reunited. Trivia: The cover of this issue is an outstanding illustration of the sinking vessel. Rating: |
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UNION JACK · New series · Vol. 17 Issue 465 · 7/9/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE SECRET SLAVES by Anon. (Lewis Carlton) · Illustrator: H.M. Lewis Other content: A Word From the Skipper (ed.); Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John Notes: Businessmen Felix Gane and John Leval require a ruthless associate to help them take advantage of slave labour in the Congo rubber industry. George Marsden Plummer, who overhears their plans while burgling Gane's house, introduces himself and is duly judged to be the man for the job. He arrives in the Congo accompanied by three roughnecks — Sam Mitt, Pete Carron and Nick Jute — and immediately wrests control of the rubber plantation from its kind-hearted manager, Will Mann. Realising that he's at the mercy of criminals, Mann escapes into the jungle but is recaptured, wounded and imprisoned. Managing to pass a letter to his faithful servant, Jim, he sends the man away to travel to England for help. Weeks later, Jim's journey ends at Baker Street and Sexton Blake takes up the case. He voyages to Africa with Tinker, Pedro, William Spearing and Jim. When they arrive at the camp, Plummer is unrecognisable — ravaged by fever and in disguise. He, however, recognises his old enemy and plots to leave him abandoned in the jungle. Blake searches alone for Mann and finds him but falls victim to Plummer's scheme and becomes lost. Fortunately, Tinker and Spearing have Pedro's nose at their disposal and are able to rescue the detective. While they do so, Plummer's fever grows worse and his three cohorts take advantage of this to make off with his supply of rubber. When Blake and his friends return, they find Plummer (who they now recognise) deep in the throes of his illness and abandoned by his henchmen. They take him prisoner and board a ship back to England. When they eventually sail into a fog-bound Thames, a somewhat revived Plummer leaps overboard and escapes. Blake is able to arrest Felix Gane and John Leval for their crimes, but his greatest enemy has evaded him once again. Rating: |
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UNION JACK · New series · Issue 466 · 14/9/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE RIVAL DOCTORS by Anon. (W. J. Bayfield) · Illustrator: T. W. Holmes Other content: A Word From the Skipper (ed.); Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John Notes: My copy is missing the cover. Unrated |
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UNION JACK · New series · Issue 467 · 21/9/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d SEXTON BLAKE, LAUNDRYMAN by Anon. (E. W. Elais) · Illustrator: E. E. Briscoe Other content: Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John; A Word from the Skipper (ed.) Notes: None at present. Unrated |
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UNION JACK · New series · Issue 468 · 28/9/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE REGENT STREET ROBBERY by Anon. (Andrew Murray) · Illustrator: H. Lane Other content: Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John. Notes: This Story introduces Count Ivor Carlac. Disguised as a crippled tramp, he witnesses Derek Valters purchasing a £4,000 diamond necklace for his new wife, Blanche. That night, he breaks into their house and steals it. A gypsy caravan has been parked by Carlac's confederates nearby. Here, unknown to them, he conceals the loot before leaving, once more disguised as a tramp. The next day Valters appeals to Sexton Blake. The detective arrives on the scene and, after preliminary investigations, heads back to Regent Street to question the jeweller. Meanwhile, Pedro leads Tinker and Valters to the caravan where a fight breaks out. The villains make a getaway, not realising that Tinker has stowed away aboard their vehicle. They drive to Dodd's Camp - a gypsy encampment on waste ground in London - and Carlac comes to them from a nearby house. Unseen by anyone but Tinker, he collects the necklace from its hiding place. But he also discovers the lad and overpowers him. Tinker is bound and dumped into the rat-infested cellar of the house. Sexton Blake's enquiries have also led him to Dodd's Camp. He and Valter, disguised as gypsies, enter it. Tinker manages to escape from his prison via a delivery lift. From inside the shaft, he watches as Carlac entrusts the necklace to one of his men, Swagger Harry, while he goes to locate a fence through which to dispose of it. Blake and Valter inspect the house and peek through the window to the room in which Swagger Harry is waiting just in time to observe Tinker emerging from the lift shaft behind him. The lad overpowers the villain and takes possession of the jewellery. Blake takes Harry's place while Tinker and Valter leave the camp to fetch help and, upon Carlac's return, the first of their many confrontations occurs. It does not go well for the detective. Carlac escapes through the lift shaft and leaves Dodd's Camp in his beggar disguise. Rating: |
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UNION JACK · New series · Issue 469 · 5/10/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE HEIR FROM TEXAS by Anon. (Lewis Carlton) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John. Notes: When Sir Richard Glinthorp loses two of his three sons at sea, his niece, Jessica, vows to find the third, Ralph, who has not been heard from since he went to America after falling out with his father seven years ago. The advertisement she places in the paper catches the eye of George Marsden Plummer, who, down on his luck, is working as waiter in a high class restaurant. With the intention of stealing Sir Richard's collection of antiques, the villain disguises himself as Ralph and turns up at the Glinthorp estate ... only to find himself arriving at the same time as another imposter ... who proves to be his old partner John Marsh. Forming an uneasy alliance, they scheme together, promising to split the loot on completion of their nefarious mission. Plummer is elected to continue in the guise of Ralph and duly presents himself at the house where he is accepted as the long lost son. However, Jessica has reservations and asks Sexton Blake to investigate. Blake teams Tinker up with William Spearing to look into Ralph's background while he himself — in the guise of a medical practitioner — becomes a guest in the Glinthorpe house. After Plummer tries to help himself to five thousand pounds of Sir Richard's money, Blake reveals to his host that he is the famous detective. Unfortunately, this meeting is spied upon by Plummer. During the night that follows, Plummer and Marsh kidnap Sir Richard and conceal him in an old disused part of the house. Marsh then disguises himself as the old man and, the next day, when Sexton Blake presents evidence of Plummer's crime, the imposter angrily dismisses it and banishes the detective from the house. At the local in, Blake finds Marsh's bag with disguise materials inside. Before he can piece together these new clues, he is accused of being a thief and is thrown into a police cell. The story now flashes back to a few weeks previously when, in America, John Marsh sought out the real Ralph Glinthorp, who was working for a shifty rancher named Seth Grogan. Grogan and Marsh overpower Ralph and leave him tied up in a remote hut. Grogan keeps the prisoner fed while Marsh journeys to Britain to impersonate the heir to the Glinthorp estate. However, Ralph eventually escapes and sets off in pursuit. Returning to the present, Tinker helps Blake to break out of the police cell and they race to the Glinthorp estate just as Ralph arrives and is attacked by Plummer and Marsh. The criminals flee and Blake gives chase but is halted when a storm fells a tree in front of his car. Trivia: William Spearing is mentioned once but doesn't actually take the stage in this story. Rating: |
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UNION JACK · New series · Issue 470 · 12/10/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE CASE OF THE BORGIA BRONZE by Anon. (Andrew Murray) · Illustrator: H. Lane Other content: A Word From the Skipper (ed.); Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John. Notes: Cyrus Papke and Japhet Harlan are rival art collectors from New York. Both covet the 'Borgia Bronze', a small but valuable statuette which is up for auction in London. Papke knows that Harlan would win the bidding, so he allows his rival to purchase the statuette and employs Count Ivor Carlac to steal it. At his hotel, Harlan and his niece, Sadie, lock the bronze into the safe in their room and leave for a walk. One of Carlac's henchmen, de Beer, reports this to his master. The couple don't go far before Harlan decides to return to admire his purchase. He re-enters the hotel via a side entrance, unseen by de Beer. Sadie keeps walking and is stunned to see Papke, whom she believed to be in New York. She follows him into a park where he turns and savagely attacks her. She is saved by Sexton Blake, who happens to be passing nearby. Papke gets away. Carlac, meanwhile, breaks into the hotel room and clubs her uncle over the head. Thinking that Harlan is dead, the criminal arranges the body to look like the old man fell and knocked himself out. He then leaves a forgery of the bronze and makes off with the real item. Blake escorts Sadie back to the hotel and they find her stricken uncle. The detective realises that a crime has been committed but can't understand the apparent lack of a theft. Elsewhere, Carlac meets de Beer, who he thinks betrayed him by not revealing that Harlan had returned to the hotel. He flies into a psychotic rage and tries to murder de Beer but the latter manages to escape and vows revenge. He writes a letter to Sexton Blake informing him that Papke is connected with the crime. Blake, who now discovers that the bronze is a forgery, sends Tinker to shadow the art collector. Papke, thinking Carlac has murdered Harlan, decides to abandon the villain and the bronze. He travels to his yacht in Folkstone harbour, intending to flee the country but Tinker blows up the vessel's fuel supplies, leaving the collector stranded. Sexton Blake traces the creator of the forged bronze and from him learns that Carlac commissioned it. He also discovers that Carlac has hired a car and driver to take him to Folkstone where he will confront Papke and demand payment for stealing the real statuette. Blake replaces the driver and manages to switch the two bronzes. He then follows Carlac out onto the yacht and attempts to capture him but the criminal evades him and the chase moves back to London. Blake manages to strip Carlac of the beggar disguise he has resorted to so often but, despite his efforts, the arch-criminal escapes capture and lives to be fiendish another day. Trivia: Carlac reveals that he is a Polish Jew. Blake is described as 'not very tall'. Rating: |
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UNION JACK · New series · Issue 471 · 19/10/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d A CASE OF GRAFT by Anon. (Lewis Carlton) · Illustrator: H. M. Lewis Other content: A Word From the Skipper (ed.); Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John. Notes: In New York, George Marsden Plummer witnesses a crooked police officer, Inspector Jefson, extort money from Han Sin, the owner of a Chinese opium and gambling den. This case of 'graft' gives the master criminal ideas. Realising that Han Sin is, in fact, a disguised and crooked millionaire named Luke Zitman, Plummer pursuades him to take prisoner a young opium user. This man, Hughie Masters, is the dissolute son of the wealthy philanthropist, John Masters. Some weeks later, an ex-New York policeman, Harry Elder, calls on Sexton Blake. Elder had left the New York police force after witnessing Inspector Jefson's crooked dealings. When John Masters asks Blake to find his son, the detective agrees and asks Elder to assist him. Zitman gets wind of this and, when Blake arrives at the opium den, he sets fire to it to destroy evidence. Hughie Masters is believed to have been killed in the blaze after his ring and watch are found on a charred corpse — however, Blake realises that these items have been planted in the hope that John Masters, in mourning, will fail to buy wheat stocks, thus allowing Luke Zitman to drive up the prices and make a huge profit. He locates and rescues Hughie and finds evidence of Jefson and Zitman's villainy. They are arrested and sent for trial. However, halfway through the court proceedings, Plummer causes the judge to retire for a few minutes and, in those moments, overpowers him and dons his clothes. Disguised as the judge, he leads the jury to acquit the two criminals. Amid the subsequent uproar, he, Jefson and Zitman escape. Sexton Blake is defeated! Rating: |
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UNION JACK · New series · Issue 472 · 26/10/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE OPIUM SMUGGLERS by Anon. (Andrew Murray) · Illustrator: Harry Lane Other content: Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John; A Word from the Skipper (ed.) Notes: A clergyman named Cyril Baylaine approaches Sexton Blake and asks for assistance in defeating a gang of opium smugglers. He tells the detective about an attempt on his life by a Chinese man named Chan. Blake gives Tinker the task of tracing this villain and the lad meets with quick success; Chan is lodging at a hotel with Captain McVietch, whose ship will be used to transport opium from London to Hong Kong. Tinker applies for a position with the crew and is accepted. Meanwhile, unknown to Blake, the leader of the drug smuggling gang is none other than Count Ivor Carlac, who now makes a bold move by kidnapping Baylaine, leavijng a forged letter to convince the detective that the clergyman has simply gone abroad for a few weeks. This plot comes to light when Baylaine's mother visits Blake, claiming that her son has vanished. The Baker Street detective follows clues to McVietch's vessel. He boards it using the letter of acceptance that Tinker had been given by McVietch. In the hold, he finds the missing man. Instructing the prisoner to hold fast, Blake escapes just as Carlac comes aboard. While this is happening, Tinker follows Chan as the opium is moved to a barge which sets sail along the Thames to rendezvous with McVietch's ship. Reunited, the detective and his assistant, together with the Thames Police, take possession of the barge and then of the ship. All the criminals are captured apart from Carlac, who makes a daring escape. Baylaine is freed and the smuggling ring is broken. Rating: |
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UNION JACK · New series · Issue 473 · 2/11/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE GREAT BANK FRAUD by Anon. (Lewis Carlton) · Illustrator: H. M. Lewis Other content: A Word From the Skipper (ed.); Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John. Notes: George Marsden Plummer follows an elderly man named Jesse Kells home from a race meeting after noticing that he's been passing counterfeit notes. He forces Kells to admit that he's printed a hundred thousand pounds worth. Plummer beats him unconscious and steals the money. Some days later, Sexton Blake finds himself in receipt of forged notes. He learns from Detective-Inspector Lurgan that a number of banks have found that they've inadvertently distributed counterfeits. Blake begins to investigate and quickly establishes that Plummer is active in England again and has exchanged some of the notes he stole from Kells with the real thing by impersonating a bank employee named Melton, who has since been charged with passing out the forgeries. Believing that Plummer will check to see whether Kells is still alive, Blake sends Tinker to keep watch at the hospital. The lad spots the criminal and trails him, reporting back to his guv'nor that his quarry met with another bank employee, a man named Charles Teen. Plummer visits Teen at his house, overpowers him, leaves him tied up in the attic and uses his talent at disguise to take on his identity. All this is witnessed by Blake who sets a trap at the bank the following morning. However, when Teen escapes and races to the bank he accidently ruins the detective's plan. Plummer flees but is followed by Tinker. Realising that he's being tailed, he turns and attacks, choking Blake's assistant before throwing him into the Thames. Believing that he has committed his first murder, he flees. Led by Pedro's nose, Sexton Blake arrives at the river bank and, believing Tinker dead, sets the bloodhound onto Plummer's scent. The master-crook, overwhelmed by fear of the hangman's noose, gets drunk and, when the detective catches up with him, they engage in a terrific fist fight. Blake is knocked out and Plummer escapes. Blake learns, upon regaining consciousness, that Tinker is alive and well. Trivia: This story reaffirms some long-neglected facts about Plummer: that he has a metal plate in his head, white hair and a habit of biting his fingernails. He also at least matches Blake in physical strength — after their fight at the end of this tale, it takes the detective a full month to recover. Rating: |
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UNION JACK · New series · Issue 474 · 9/11/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d CARLAC: GUN-RUNNER by Anon. (Andrew Murray) · Illustrator: H. Lane Other content: A Word From the Skipper (ed.); Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John. Notes: Wilfred Dalgliesh is a young officer who commands Jalmuna Fort in India. While on leave in London, he is tempted into a gambling den by a female card-sharp known as Lady Garbay — an associate of Count Ivor Carlac. Soon, he is heavily in debt and thus falls under the power of Carlac who bribes him to allow a caravan of gun-runners to pass the fort unhindered. Meanwhile, Sexton Blake is instructed by the War Office to keep a watch on Kaid Mustafa, the chieftain of a hostile hill tribe on the Indian frontier who is currently staying in Richmond. The detective sends Tinker on a reconnaissance mission and, through a maid named Nooya, the lad learns that Kaid is buying armaments. Blake discovers that he is negotiating with Carlac. Tinker, meanwhile, meets Wilfred Dalgliesh's mother and sister shortly before they are kidnapped by Carlac's gang. Blake, who watches as the two ladies are taken hostage, is captured. He is left tied in a glass tank which is slowly filling with water while the criminals make their getaway, leaving the country. Tinker comes to the rescue, aided by Nooya. Blake learns that Lady Garbay is still in London, guarding the two women. He traces and confronts her, freeing Dalglieshes mother and sister. He and Tinker then travel to India where they, with Wilfred Dalgliesh, attack and capture the gun-running caravan led by Carlac. The master crook, however, manages to escape. Rating: |
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UNION JACK · New series · Issue 475 · 16/11/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE CASE OF THE £500,000 LOAN by Anon. (Lewis Carlton) · Illustrator: H. M. Lewis Other content: A Word From the Skipper (ed.); Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John; Scorned by the School by Robert W. Comrade. Notes: A Brazilian minister commissions Sexton Blake to help restore the former president of Santa Lucia to power. Fillipi Malia was deposed by Lopez de Garcia who is now denying Brazil the privileges it had previously enjoyed. With a loan of £500,000 in bullion, the former president is ready to depart Britain for the small South American republic ... but then assassins attempt to kill him. They are prevented from doing so by George Marsden Plummer, who happens upon the murder attempt. However, the master crook then throws in his lot with the assassins, convincing them that if they help him to usurp Garcia, he will share the wealth of the country's silver mines with them. Disguising himself as a sailor, Plummer bribes his way into the position of second mate aboard the ship that will carry Malia across the Atlantic. It will also carry the ex-president's daughter, Rosina, whom Plummer has fallen in love with. To his dismay, Sexton Blake also joins the passengers. Days later, as the vessel nears its destination, Plummer's men strike and the ship is captured. Plummer is shocked to discover that the man he had thought to be Blake is, in fact, a cleverly made up actor named Will Alton. With the detective's whereabouts unknown, Plummer continues with his plan. He makes himself up to impersonate Malia and informs Rosina that she must act as his daughter to protect her imprisoned father's life. He then leads the 'revolution' and overthrows Lopez de Garcia. The chief of the silver mines proves to be a Britisher named Jack Leyland and Plummer is quick to spot that this man is a rival suitor for Rosina. When the loaned bullion turns out to be nothing but lead, Leyland and his men realise that they won't be paid and so refuse to work. Plummer takes Leyland captive but in doing so he reveals his identity to a watcher: Sexton Blake. The detective, with the real bullion, has travelled to the republic on a yacht and is now observing the master criminal. The two confront each other but Blake is overpowered and is sentenced to death by firing squad. Tinker radios to the yacht for help and rescuers arrive just in time to save the detective. Plummer is captured and Malia restored to power. Due to the progress made in the country under Plummer's dictatorship, he is allowed to go free. Leyland and Rosina marry. Trivia: This story was reprinted in DETECTIVE WEEKLY issue 353 as PRESIDENT PLUMMER (1939). Rating: |
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UNION JACK · New series · Issue 476 · 23/11/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE GREAT TURF MYSTERY by Anon. (Lewis Carlton) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John. Notes: While in disguise, George Marsden Plummer is arrested for a petty crime. He is helped to escape by Gustave and other confrederates, who have been hired by a dishonest bookmaker named Abe Gulwood. Gulwood commissions Plummer to help him conduct a racing scam, their target being a wealthy race horse owner named Arthur Waynfleet. After their first success, Sexton Blake realises that Plummer is once again in action and warns Waynfleet. He then, in disguise, keeps watch on Gulwood's house. Plummer, also disguised, goes to examine the watcher only to have his true identity exposed by Blake. Fortunately for Plummer, his cohorts are on hand and the detective is knocked unconscious and thrown into a lake to drown. He escapes death and secretly returns to Baker Street, leading the newspapers to believe that he has mysteriously disappeared. The subsequent reports convince his opponent that he is dead. Blake and Tinker, in disguise, take on jobs as hands at Waynfleet's stable. They want to keep a special eye on 'Silverheels', the young millionaire's prize racer. Sure enough, Plummer — once again disguised — makes an attempt to nobble the horse but is tricked by the detective and fails. Teaming up with a couple of disgruntled stablehands, he then spies on a midnight trial in which Silverheels is tested against another horse. In order to predict the outcome of the next race meeting, Plummer needs to know how the horses were weighted during the trial. To this end, he steals the trainer's log book. However, while doing so he is confronted by Blake, whom he initially believes is a ghost. A chase ensues, Plummer shoots the detective in the wrist and Blake tumbles into an old quarry. Unscathed, he emerges and fetches a couple of policemen. They race after Plummer, who escapes on a racehorse. A couple of days later, after another unsuccessful sabotage attempt by the villain, Silverheels is taken to the race meeting. The event commences but is interrupted by a fire set by Plummer and his cohorts. The subsequent cancellation means that Abe Gulwood has saved a huge amount of money. However, Sexton Blake tracks the criminals to their lair and, though Plummer escapes, Gulwood is captured. He later commits suicide in prison. Rating: |
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UNION JACK · New series · Issue 477 · 30/11/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d DEAD MEN'S SHOES by Anon. (George Hamilton Teed) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: A Word From the Skipper (ed.); Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John. Notes: None at present. Trivia: This is the first of G. H. Teed's stories to have been submitted under his own name. Previous to this, his work was handed to the editor by the widow of Michael Storm and were supposedly the last remaining stories of her late husband. Unrated |
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UNION JACK · New series · Issue 478 · 7/12/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 2d THE MAD MILLIONAIRE by Anon. (Andrew Murray) · Illustrator: H. M. Lewis Other content: A Word from the Skipper (ed.); Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John; Grindley's Ghost Hunt by Anon. Notes: Double Christmas issue. The editorial includes an account of when Blake first met Tinker, as told at greater length in SEXTON BLAKE AT OXFORD in THE BOYS' HERALD 1908-1909. American millionaire Sheldrake Emerson hires Count Ivor Carlac to abduct his grandson, Geoffrey. The toddler is cared for by his mother, Miriam, who Emerson hates and who is living in near-poverty after her husband, Sheldrake Junior, went missing while abroad. Carlac, aided by his henchman, Jem Stokes, sets fire to Miriam's house and, under cover of the subsequent confusion, kidnaps the child, leaving the woman for dead. He delivers Geoffrey to Emerson's well-defended castle in Cornwall and receives his payment. After recovering from the disaster, Miriam visits Sexton Blake and asks for his assistance. He investigates the burned house and discovers that the fire was set purposely. Leaving Tinker to follow up the clues, the detective travels to Cornwall to pursue Miriam's suspicions that Emerson is behind the crime. His confrontation with the millionaire convinces him that she is right. That evening, with the help of a poacher named Peter, he breaks into the castle and discovers Sheldrake Junior living secretly in the grounds. The millionaire's son had faked his own death so that the insurance would provide for his wife. Not realising the plan had failed, he had been leading the life of a vagrant ever since. Blake leaves him to keep watch on the castle and returns to Baker Street but Sheldrake is spotted and shot in the thigh. He manages to make an escape and is given shelter by Peter. Tinker, meanwhile, has struck Carlac's trail and witnessed him piloting a monoplane to an unknown destination. It turns out to be Emerson's castle; the master-criminal secretly lands on its roof during the night, kidnaps Geoffrey, and flies away. He ditches the plane and escapes in a gypsy caravan. Worried by the lack of communication from Sheldrake, Blake travels back to the castle where he is imprisoned by Emerson who thinks the detective is responsible for the child's abduction. Tinker comes to the rescue and Blake, after convincing the millionaire of his innocence in the matter, discovers evidence of Carlac's landing. After reuniting the repentent Emerson with his son and daughter-in-law, the detective sets off on the trail of the kidnapped boy. A police-inspector tries to help by tackling Carlac himself. He rescues Geoffrey but cannot hold the master-criminal. Blake and the policeman have another try at capturing Carlac but fail; he escapes to fight another day. Geoffrey is reunited with his family just in time for Christmas Day. Trivia: Blake's landlady, who is not mentioned by name, is described as 'a shrewish, bad-tempered old dame.' Ivor Carlac reveals that he was a pilot before turning to crime — he was one of the first men to fly in the whole of Europe. Rating: |
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UNION JACK · New series · Issue 479 · 14/12/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE CASE OF THE BALKAN WAR CORRESPONDENT by Anon. (William Murray Graydon) · Illustrator: H. Lane Other content: A Word From the Skipper (ed.); Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John. Notes: The story is inspired by real events in the Balkans (you can feel the First World War looming). In the editorial, a reader's letter argues that Plummer and Carlac are winning their ongoing battle with Sexton Blake. But another letter asks for a story in which Plummer wins a clean victory. Unrated |
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UNION JACK · New series · Issue 480 · 21/12/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d THE PRICE OF SILENCE; OR, THE ASYLUM MYSTERY by Anon. (Lewis Carlton) · Illustrator: H. M. Lewis Other content: A Word From the Skipper (ed.); Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John. Notes: Story features George Marsden Plummer. Unrated |
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UNION JACK · New series · Issue 481 · 28/12/1912 · Amalgamated Press · 1d A CHRISTMAS CONSPIRACY by Anon. (W. J. Bayfield) · Illustrator: Unknown Other content: A Word From the Skipper (ed.); Charlie Gordon's Schooldays by Henry St. John. Notes: None at present. Unrated |
| 1911 1912 1913 | |