The FictionMags Index
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[]Smith, Hazel Marjorie (fl. 1910s-1920s) (chron.)
- * All in a Lifetime, (ss) Breezy Stories September 1915
- * And So On, Ad Infinitum, (pm) Young’s Magazine March 1920
- * As Good an Excuse as Any, (ss) Young’s Magazine July 1917
- * At Any Price [Peggy], (ss) Breezy Stories June 1918
- * At Final Curtain Call, (ss)
- * Bab Chooses, (ss) Young’s Magazine October 1917
- * Be on the Level, (ss) Breezy Stories January 1918
- * Blame It on the Woman, (ss) Breezy Stories July 1918
- * The Calendar, (ss) Breezy Stories August 1917
- * Cowardice, (vi) Young’s Magazine August 1917
- * The Deceitful Little Cat, (vi) Young’s Magazine May 1917
- * The Demi-God, (ss) The Parisienne Monthly Magazine July 1916
- * The Fools, (nv) Young’s Magazine August 1918
- * Heights, (vi) Young’s Magazine May 1918
- * I Long to Be a Coquette, (vi) Young’s Magazine May 1918
- * Isn’t It the Truth?, (vi) Young’s Magazine August 1917
- * It Pays to Wait, (ss) Young’s Magazine February 1916
- * It’s a Funny Thing, (vi) The Parisienne Monthly Magazine May 1919
- * The Last String, (ss) Young’s Magazine April 1918
- * Luigi’s Cabaret, (ss) Breezy Stories May 1917
- * Metamorphosis, (ss) Young’s Magazine September 1917
- * A Modern Don Quixote, (ss) Young’s Magazine February 1918
- * Moral Uplift—and Peggy [Peggy], (ss) Breezy Stories May 1918
- * Nothing but the Truth [Peggy], (ss) Breezy Stories March 1918
- * Oh…Anyhow, (ss) Young’s Magazine April 1917
- * One Woman, (ss) Young’s Magazine June 1919
- * Orchids and the Call, (ss) Young’s Magazine December 1915
- * The Paying Guest, (ss) Young’s Magazine December 1916
- * Peggy’s Interesting Experiment, (ss) Young’s Magazine January 1916
- * Platonic Stuff [Peggy], (ss) Breezy Stories April 1918
- * Scotch and Plain Water [Peggy], (ss) Breezy Stories February 1918
- * Shackles, (ss) Young’s Magazine March 1916
- * Shielding Ben, (ss) Young’s Magazine May 1916
- * The Single Standard, (ss) Young’s Magazine March 1918
- * The Six, (ss) Young’s Magazine January 1918
- * The Spongers, (ss) Young’s Magazine May 1915
- * Step Lively!, (ss) Breezy Stories April 1916
- * The Subtle Charm, (vi) Young’s Magazine January 1917
- * Taking Aunty’s Advice:
* ___ I.—Scotch and Plain Water [Peggy], (ss) Breezy Stories February 1918
* ___ II.—Nothing but the Truth [Peggy], (ss) Breezy Stories March 1918
* ___ III.—Platonic Stuff [Peggy], (ss) Breezy Stories April 1918
* ___ IV.—Moral Uplift—and Peggy [Peggy], (ss) Breezy Stories May 1918
* ___ V.—At Any Price [Peggy], (ss) Breezy Stories June 1918
- * The Tame Cat, (ss) Young’s Magazine November 1915
- * Ten Thousand Dollars a Day, (ss) Snappy Stories 2nd August 1919
- * Things I Love to Look At, (ms) The Smart Set September 1916
- * The Triumphant Hour, (ss) Young’s Magazine May 1919
- * The Way of the Transgressor, (ss) Young’s Magazine June 1917
- * When I Am Dead, (vi) Young’s Magazine March 1919
- * Wilkie’s Wife, (ss) Breezy Stories July 1917
- * The Woman Who Was Different, (vi) Young’s Magazine October 1918
- * The Wrong Way, (ss) Breezy Stories March 1916
[]Smith, Helena Huntington (fl. 1920s-1950s) (about) (chron.)
- * Bataan Home Town, (??) Collier’s August 29 1942
- * The Child Is the Monument, (ar) Collier’s September 3 1949
- * Down to the Sea in Ships, (??) Collier’s October 16 1943
- * Food That Fights, (ar) Collier’s August 7 1943
- * G.I. Babies, (??) Collier’s December 4 1943
- * Great American Gamble, (ar) Collier’s October 6 1945
- * The Helpmeet, (ss) The New Yorker September 17 1927
- * I Have a Case Against Doctors, (ar) Redbook Magazine September 1938
- * It Pays to Listen, (ar) Collier’s January 30 1943
- * The Man Who Stuck His Neck Out, (??) Collier’s June 5 1943
- * Men, Animals—and Nerves, (ar) Redbook Magazine February 1938
- * Mrs. Tilly’s Crusade, (??) Collier’s December 30 1950
- * Of You—and the River, (ms) McCall’s November 1939
- * People Aren’t Fireproof, (ar) Woman’s Home Companion April 1947
- * Port of Navy Wives, (ar) Collier’s February 20 1943
- * Precipice in the Sky, (??) Collier’s September 30 1944
- * The President Never Rings Twice, (ar) The Delineator May 1935
- * The Same Old Rumors, (ar) Collier’s April 10 1943
- * Sidelights on a Simple Soul, (ss) The New Yorker May 4 1929
- * Soldiers Speak Out, (??) Collier’s December 25 1943
- * So You Want a Screen Test!, (ar) Pictorial Review December 1935
- * They’re Not Expendable!, (??) Collier’s July 15 1944
- * Uncle Sam’s Seminary, (ar) Collier’s November 28 1942
- * Want a Buffalo?, (ar) Collier’s August 12 1944
- * What Are You Afraid Of?, (ar) McCall’s June 1940
- * Where Flowers Come From, (ms) McCall’s March 1940
- * Who Said Promised Land?, (??) Collier’s July 2 1949
- * Why They Hate Washington, (ar) Collier’s July 17 1943
- * Why We Quarrel (with Henry F. Pringle), (ar) Redbook Magazine June 1938
[]Smith, Henry J. (fl. 1900s-1910s) (chron.)
- * Albright, the Artist Feller, (ar) Metropolitan Magazine February 1913
- * The Débutante, (pm) The Smart Set April 1901
- * The Engine’s Hymn, (pm) The Railroad Man’s Magazine February 1910
- * Letters from the Middle West, (ar) Metropolitan Magazine April 1913
* ___ Albright, the Artist Feller, (ar) Metropolitan Magazine February 1913
* ___ The Nearly True Story of Little Joe, (ar) Metropolitan Magazine November 1912
* ___ White Hearses, (ar) Metropolitan Magazine December 1912
- * Letters from the Middle West: Mr. and Mrs. Perkins, (ar) Metropolitan Magazine June 1912
- * Letters from the Middle West: Otto Rudd, (ar) Metropolitan Magazine September 1912
- * Letters from the Middle West: The Case of Midas, Jr., (ar) Metropolitan Magazine May 1912
- * Letters from the Middle West: The Dean Who Became a Drainman, (ar) Metropolitan Magazine July 1912
- * Letters from the Middle West: The Education of John Stone, (ar) Metropolitan Magazine February 1912
- * Letters from the Middle West: The Kansas Woman Mayor and Her Conflict with “Pure Cussedness”, (ar) Metropolitan Magazine January 1912
- * Letters from the Middle West: The Motorman Discusses the Pulmotorman, (ar) Metropolitan Magazine August 1912
- * Letters from the Middle West: Tillie the Superfluous, (ar) Metropolitan Magazine March 1912
- * Letters from the Middle West: “Young Dick: Rourke and the Awful Habit”, (ar) Metropolitan Magazine April 1912
- * The Nearly True Story of Little Joe, (ar) Metropolitan Magazine November 1912
- * White Hearses, (ar) Metropolitan Magazine December 1912
[]Smith, Herbert E. (fl. 1900s-1940s) (chron.)
- * Airplane Drops House from Skies, (ms) Argosy September 9 1933
- * Alma Mammy, (ar) College Life September 1930
- * Army:
* ___ The Swanky Army, (cl) Swank January 1942
- * As in ’49, (ss) Western Action January 1949
- * Badge of Office, (ss) Mystery Adventure Magazine July 1936
- * Ballplayer-Soldier, (ss) Ten Story Sports June 1941
- * The Big Red “C”, (hu) College Life October 1928
- * Blood Brother, (ss) Far East Adventure Stories July 1931
- * Brunoian, (hu) College Life May 1931
- * Buzzard Challenges Plane, (ms) Argosy January 6 1934
- * Clean-Up, (ss) Mystery Adventure Magazine October 1936
- * Code for the Cobra, (ss) Mystery Adventure Magazine September 1936
- * A Day with a Dodo, (ar) Flying Aces January 1940
- * Dude Ranch Polo, (ss) All Sports Magazine December 1941
- * An Exclusive Orginization, (ms) Argosy May 25 1935
- * A Fighting Kid!, (ts) War Stories #96, July 1931
- * Firebrand, (ss) Ace Sports Monthly April 1936
- * Foolproof, (ss) Ten Story Gang March 1939
- * Four-Bit Piece, (ss) True Gang Life March 1938
- * Galloping Goals, (ss) All-American Sports February 1941
- * The Guardsman, (ss) Mystery Adventure Magazine August 1936
- * Gyrene, (ss) Foreign Service December 1942
- * Honor Man, (ss) Detective Fiction Weekly November 16 1935
- * Horse Arrests Man, (ms) Argosy July 21 1934
- * Jitterbug Soldier, (ss) 12 Adventure Stories March 1939
- * Kid Kegler, (ss) Sports Fiction April 1938
- * Killer Hawk Caught Barehanded, (ms) Argosy December 3 1932
- * Lament of an Old GMC Truck, (pm) Top-Notch Magazine 2nd January 1930
- * The Land of No Parachutes, (ms) Argosy October 8 1932
- * Longest Snap Shot, (ms) Argosy July 2 1932
- * Low Ceiling Hop, (ss) The Open Road for Boys June 1941
- * The Lyddite Run, (ss) War Stories #97, August 1931
- * Man to Man!, (ts) War Stories #91, February 1931
- * Murder at the Movies, (ss) Detective and Murder Mysteries September 1937
- * “My First International”, (sy) Cassell’s Magazine November 1908
- * Nocturne, (ss) Far East Adventure Stories December 1931
- * The Only, (ar) Railroad Stories July 1937
- * Outcast, (ss) Far East Adventure Stories November 1930
- * Pancake Tosser, (ss) Ace Sports Monthly July 1936
- * Parachute WACS, (ar) Army Romances 1945
- * A Powerful Weapon, (ms) Argosy August 20 1932
- * Pro Hoopster, (ss) Dime Sports Magazine February 1936
- * Road Trip, (ss) All Sports July 1941
- * The Rollo Boys at Brunswick, (hu) College Life Summer 1931
- * Saturday Night, (ss) New Mystery Adventures January 1936
- * “Saved by a Hair”, (ms) Argosy June 23 1934
- * Second Chance, (ss) Ten Story Sports December 1937
- * Seconds to Go, (ss) Dime Sports Magazine January 1936
- * Sharpshooter’s Handicap, (ss) Ace Sports April 1940
- * “Signals On”, (ss) Complete Sports October 1938
- * Sister Act, (ss) College Life September 1930
- * Ski Special, (ss) Super Sports December 1941
- * Slave Girl, (ss) Far East Adventure Stories September 1931
- * Speaking of Tough Breaks—, (ms) Argosy May 7 1932
- * Spike to Butch, (ss) National Magazine July 1941
- * The Swanky Army, (ar) Swank January 1942
- * The Throwback, (ss) Far East Adventure Stories December 1930
- * Tin Soldier, (ss) Street & Smith’s Top-Notch Magazine 2nd April 1931
- * Tools of the Trade, (ss) Sports Winners July 1941
- * Torpedo!, (ts) War Stories #101, December 1931
- * Torpedo!, (ts) War Stories #105, April 1932
- * Trouble Shooter, (ss) Mystery Adventure Magazine June 1936
- * War Plane Insignia, (ar) War Birds #43, June 1931
- * Wearing of the Green, (hu) College Life April 1931
- * What I Am Fighting For, (ar) The Saturday Evening Post July 17 1943
- * When Jerry Charged, (ar) Fawcett’s Battle Stories #41, January 1931
- * “Will Die Down”, (lt) Yes or No September 25 1909
- * Yuh Gotta Be Smart, (ss) Double-Action Gang Magazine July 1939
- * [letter from Bronx, NY], (lt) Astounding Stories March 1931
[]Smith, Herndon (fl. 1950s) (chron.)
- * Autumn for Peter, (ss) Adam November 1958
- * The Blue Morocco Blondes, (ss) Adam July 1958
- * Cream Puff, (ss) Adam November 1957
- * The Dean’s Lace Panties, (ss) Adam March 1958
- * A Most Unusual Girl, (ss) Adam January 1958
- * Peter’s Poll Tax, (ss) Adam February 1959
- * Peter’s Private Car, (ss) Adam May 1958
- * Peter Strikes Out, (ss) Adam September 1958
- * The Super Aloof Dame [Peter van Haick], (ss) Adam Bedside Reader #1, 1959
[]Smith, Holly (fl. 1980s)
_____, trans.
- * The Artist by Vyacheslav Rybakov, (ss)
- * The Boy, the Old Man, and the Dog by Vladislav Ksionzhek, (ss)
- * Counter-Attack by Mikhail Pukhov, (nv)
- * Every Tree Has Its Bird by Sergei Drugal, (nv)
- * Inspiration by Victor Kolupayev, (ss)
- * It Never Pays to Make a Sorcerer Mad! by Kirill Bulychev, (ss)
- * Mephisto by Askold Yakubovsky, (nv)
- * A Person Is… (An Essential Addition to Asimov’s Three Laws) by Boris Stern, (nv)
- * The Piano-Tuner by Victor Kolupayev, (ss)
- * The Planet with Nothing to Offer by Olga Larionova, (na)
- * The Tale of the Abominable Snowman by Alexander & Sergei Abramov, (na)
- * Tower of Birds by Oleg Korabelnikov, (na)
- * The Toy-Pistol by Vladimir Kantor, (ss)
[]Smith, Howard E(verett) (1885-1970) (about) (chron.)
- * In a Habitant Village, (ar) Harper’s Monthly Magazine February 1908
- * [frontispiece], (fp) Harper’s Monthly Magazine Feb, Aug, Dec 1911, Jan 1912, Nov 1915
- * [illustration(s)], (il) Harper’s Monthly Magazine Dec 1907, Jan, Feb, Apr, Jun, Aug, Oct, Dec 1908, Mar, Apr, Nov,
Dec 1909
Feb, Nov 1910, Feb, Aug, Dec 1911, Jan 1912, Apr, Jul 1915
- * [illustration(s)], (il) Scribner’s Magazine September 1909
- * [illustration(s)], (il) Every Week May 7 1917
[]Smith, Iain (1964- ); used pseudonym The Reverend Rave (books) (chron.)
- * Abbeys and Advertising: The Steam-Powered Marketing Career of M.R. James, (ar) Ghosts & Scholars #48, 2025
- * Against Metre: Oscar Wilde, Arthur Machen and the English Prose Poem, (ar) Wormwood #36, 2021 [Ref. Arthur Machen & Oscar Wilde]
- * The Bells of St Quentin, (ss) Sorcery and Sanctity ed. Daniel Corrick, Hieroglyphic Press, 2013
- * Black Dogs, (ar) The Hotspur 2005
- * A Brief Meditation on Eternity, (ar) The Hotspur 2006
- * Careful with That Book, Eugene…, (ar) The Hotspur December 2007
- * The Compact Cassette—A Paean to the Mighty Reel, (ar) The Hotspur 2011
- * The Decline of the English Anaesthetic, (ar) The Hotspur October 2007
- * An Ecstacsy of Repetition: The Flower Power Phantasmagoria of The Seeds, (ar) Wormwood #38, 2022
- * The English Day of the Dead, (ar) The Hotspur 2006
- * The Forgotten Festival, (ar) The Hotspur 2005
- * “Here Be Taverns…”: A Pub Crawl Around Olde Fleet Street (with Michael Butterworth, Jonathan Preece & Raymond B. Russell), (ar) Avallaunius Spring/Summer 1992
- * In the Footsteps of Nennius, (ar) Faunus #40, 2019
- * Judas Iscariot—Deus Ex Machina or Devil’s Disciple?, (ar) The Hotspur November 2013
- * Machenalia—A Bibliography, (bi) Machenalia Autumn 2019 [Ref. Arthur Machen]
- * The Machenogion: A Chronicle of the Great Arthur Machen Revival 1984-99, (ar) Faunus #39, 2019
- * The Machenogion II—The Third Millennium: A Chronicle of the Great Arthur Machen Revival 2000-2019, (ar) Faunus #40, 2019 [Ref. Arthur Machen]
- * Midnight in the Big City, (ar) The Hotspur April 2007
- * The Miracle of St Cuthbert’s Mist, (ar) The Hotspur September 2015
- * The Most Boring Constellation Ever, (ar) The Hotspur July 2007
- * Music in Colour & Paintings in Sound—The Artistic Adventures of Roger “Syd” Barrett, (ar) The Hotspur November 2012
- * Recycled Revenants: The Recurring Nightmare of “The Fenstanton Witch”, (ar) Ghosts & Scholars #44, 2023 [Ref. M. R. James]
- * Searching for Ecstasy, (ar) Avallaunius Winter 1996, as by The Reverend Rave
- * The Shining Ones, (ss) Mark Valentine (ph), 2005
- * Sorcery Plus Sanctity: The Curious Christianity of Arthur Machen, (ar) The Secret Ceremonies ed. Mark Valentine & Timothy J. Jarvis, Hippocampus Press, 2019 [Ref. Arthur Machen]
- * The Subtle Fragrance of Southernwood, (ar) The Hotspur 2006
- * A Supernatural War, (br) Faunus #42, 2020 [Ref. Owen Davies]
- * Through a Glass Darkly, (ar) Avallaunius Winter 1990
- * Views from a Bridge, (ar) The Hotspur 2009
- * William Croft Dickinson: The Scottish Ghost Stories of an English Antiquarian, (ar) Wormwood #34, 2020 [Ref. William Croft Dickinson]
[]Smith, Iain Crichton (1928-1998) (about) (chron.)
- * The Atoms, (pm) New Writing Scotland 4 ed. Alexander Scott & Carl MacDougall, Association for Scottish Literary Studies, 1984
- * The Boat People, (pm) Ploughshares Spring 1980
- * The Brothers, (ss) Prevailing Spirits ed. Giles Gordon, Hamish Hamilton, 1976
- * Did you see the modest girl?, (pm) Ploughshares Spring 1980
- * Goodbye John Summers, (ss) Transatlantic Review #33/34, Winter 1969/1970
- * “Ill, Dying,…”, (pm) Bananas #17, Autumn 1979
- * Introduction, (in) Scottish Short Stories 1987, Collins, 1987
- * The Invasion, (pm) New Writing Scotland 4 ed. Alexander Scott & Carl MacDougall, Association for Scottish Literary Studies, 1984
- * Marcus Aurelius Speaks, (pm) New Writing Scotland 4 ed. Alexander Scott & Carl MacDougall, Association for Scottish Literary Studies, 1984
- * The Punishment, (ss) Short Story Monthly #4, January 1982
- * Roman Poems, (gp) New Writing Scotland 4 ed. Alexander Scott & Carl MacDougall, Association for Scottish Literary Studies, 1984
- * Springtide, (pm) Ploughshares Spring 1980
- * The Travelling Poet, (ss) Scottish Short Stories 1986, Collins, 1986
- * What to do About Ralph?, (ss) Shakespeare Stories ed. Giles Gordon, Hamish Hamilton, 1982
_____, trans.
_____, [ref.]
[]Smith, Ian C. (fl. 2000s-2010s) (chron.)
- * Bloodlines, (pm) Eclecticism E-zine #13, July 2010
- * Church Bells, (pm) Eclecticism E-zine #5, July 2008
- * Did You Hear That?, (vi) Eclecticism E-zine #2, October 2007
- * The Old Couple, (pm) Eclecticism E-zine #6, October 2008
- * Teacher, (pm) Ripples #10, November 2007
- * When Life Gets Bitter and Sad, (pm) Ripples #10, November 2007
- * Write, Right?, (vi) Eclecticism E-zine #17, October/November 2011
[]Smith, J. Ashley (fl. 2010s-2020s) (chron.)
- * Duplicity, (ss) Dimension6 #11, 2017
- * The Further Shore, (ss) Bourbon Penn #15, March 2018
- * Men Without Faces, (ss) Damnation Games ed. Alan Baxter, Clan Destine Press, 2022
- * The Moth Tapes, (ss) Aurealis #117, February 2019
- * Old Growth, (ss) SQ Mag #31, May 2017
- * On the Line, (ss) Midnight Echo #12, December 2017
_____, [ref.]
[]Smith, J. D. (fl. 1990s-2010s) (chron.)
- * Canticle in Noir, (pm) Noir Nation #7, April 2019
- * Exceptions, (ss) Clean Sheets 2004
- * The Flower Girl, (ss) Out of the Gutter #2, 2007
- * Humiliation, (ss) Satire v4 #3, 1997
- * In, (ss) Crimespree Magazine #67, 2018
- * Mummies, (pm) Twilight Tales Presents Book of Dead Things ed. Tina L. Jens, 11th Hour Productions, 1999
- * The Myths, (ss) Retreats from Oblivion June 4 2018
- * Straws, (ss) Close to the Bone (online) November 20 2017
[]Smith, J. E. (fl. 1900s-1930s) (chron.)
- * Billy M. Has a Merry Time Trying to Make the Rubes Fall for a New Blue Uniform with Gold Braid and Brass Buttons, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine November 1909
- * The Brief Chronicles Touching on the Ups and Downs, the Ins and Outs, and the Rise and Fall of a Con Who Rejoiced in the Name of “Jackdaw”, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine May 1910
- * The By-Gone Combination of Telegraph Operator and Station-Agent Who Was Paid for Overtime Only When There Were Thirty-Two Days in a Month, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine March 1911
- * Chauncey Discources on the Patience and Labor That Goes to Make Up the Unrewarded Lot of the Ticket-Agent, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine October 1909
- * Chauncy Tells of the Causes That Made Him Swear Off on New Year’s Day, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine February 1911
- * From “Plug” to President, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine November 1910
- * Hiram Benson Lightful, the Crossing-Watchman of Pippenville, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine April 1910
- * The Home Town Is ALways Proud of Its Sons but the Home Folks’ Boost Does Not Make a Railroad Man, (ar) Railroad Man’s Magazine January 1917
- * In Which Schwartz Tells of His Troubles While Purchasing Right-of-Way from Farmers, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine July 1910
- * Is It Any Wonder That Railroad Men Don’t Make Good Farmers?, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine December 1909
- * Luther Leghorn, (ss) Railroad Man’s Magazine December 1929
- * Matt White and Sam Horne, of Two Kentucky Freight-Houses, Indulge in a Battle Royal, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine May 1911
- * Meeting All Manner of Miscellaneous and Unassorted Humanity Makes the Freight Clerk an Expert in Judging Bothersome Boobs, (ss) Railroad Man’s Magazine October 1912
- * Observations of a Country Station-Agent:
* ___ No. 17.—Chauncey Discources on the Patience and Labor That Goes to Make Up the Unrewarded Lot of the Ticket-Agent, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine October 1909
* ___ No. 18.—Billy M. Has a Merry Time Trying to Make the Rubes Fall for a New Blue Uniform with Gold Braid and Brass Buttons, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine November 1909
* ___ No. 19.—Is It Any Wonder That Railroad Men Don’t Make Good Farmers?, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine December 1909
* ___ No. 20.—Our Correspondent Indulges in a Sort of Feast of the Passover, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine January 1910
* ___ No. 21.—To the Boys Who Bend Over the Desks, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine February 1910
* ___ No. 22.—The Trials and Tribulations of Captain Fish, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine March 1910
* ___ No. 23.—Hiram Benson Lightful, the Crossing-Watchman of Pippenville, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine April 1910
* ___ No. 24.—The Brief Chronicles Touching on the Ups and Downs, the Ins and Outs, and the Rise and Fall of a Con Who Rejoiced in the Name of “Jackdaw”, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine May 1910
* ___ No. 25.—One Cannot Always Tell Just Who Constitutes His Public, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine June 1910
* ___ No. 26.—In Which Schwartz Tells of His Troubles While Purchasing Right-of-Way from Farmers, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine July 1910
* ___ No. 27.—Schwartz Relates Further Troubles, Especially with a Female Poet and a Phonograph, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine August 1910
* ___ No. 28.—The Railroad Detective, as Represented by Pat Flynn, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine September 1910
* ___ No. 29.—Some Simple Narratives About Clay Calhoune Sokum, the Legal Luminary of Pippinville, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine October 1910
* ___ No. 30.—From “Plug” to President, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine November 1910
* ___ No. 31.—The Wily Politician May Think That He Carries the Railroad Vote in His Vest Pocket, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine December 1910
* ___ No. 32.—Sometimes Christmas Cheer Has the Right-of-Way Over All Things, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine January 1911
* ___ No. 33.—Chauncy Tells of the Causes That Made Him Swear Off on New Year’s Day, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine February 1911
* ___ No. 34.—The By-Gone Combination of Telegraph Operator and Station-Agent Who Was Paid for Overtime Only When There Were Thirty-Two Days in a Month, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine March 1911
* ___ No. 35.—What Do You Suppose Will Happen When a Superstitious Woman with a Phoney Dollar Moves to Ohio and Leaves Her Cat Behind?, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine April 1911
* ___ No. 36.—Matt White and Sam Horne, of Two Kentucky Freight-Houses, Indulge in a Battle Royal, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine May 1911
* ___ No. 37., (ss) Railroad Man’s Magazine June 1911
* ___ No. 38., (ss) Railroad Man’s Magazine July 1911
* ___ No. 39., (ss) Railroad Man’s Magazine August 1911
* ___ No. 40., (ss) Railroad Man’s Magazine September 1911
* ___ No. 41., (ss) Railroad Man’s Magazine October 1911
* ___ No. 42., (ss) Railroad Man’s Magazine November 1911
* ___ No. 43., (ss) Railroad Man’s Magazine December 1911
* ___ No. 44., (ss) Railroad Man’s Magazine January 1912
* ___ No. 45., (ss) Railroad Man’s Magazine February 1912
* ___ No. 46., (ss) Railroad Man’s Magazine March 1912
* ___ No. 47., (ss) Railroad Man’s Magazine April 1912
* ___ No. 48., (ss) Railroad Man’s Magazine May 1912
* ___ No. 49., (ss) Railroad Man’s Magazine June 1912
* ___ No. 50., (ss) Railroad Man’s Magazine July 1912
* ___ No. 51., (ss) Railroad Man’s Magazine August 1912
* ___ No. 52., (ss) Railroad Man’s Magazine September 1912
* ___ No. 53.—Meeting All Manner of Miscellaneous and Unassorted Humanity Makes the Freight Clerk an Expert in Judging Bothersome Boobs, (ss) Railroad Man’s Magazine October 1912
* ___ No. 78.—Yes, Rollo, the Moving-Picture Railroad Drama Differs Materially from the Rigid Rules of the Operating Department, (ar) Railroad Man’s Magazine November 1914
* ___ , (ss) Railroad Man’s Magazine May 1915
* ___ , (ss) Railroad Man’s Magazine March 1916
* ___ , (ss) Railroad Man’s Magazine April 1916
* ___ , (ss) Railroad Man’s Magazine June 1916
* ___ , (ss) Railroad Man’s Magazine January 1930
* ___ , (ss) Railroad Man’s Magazine February 1930
* ___ , (ss) Railroad Man’s Magazine April 1930
* ___ , (ss) Railroad Man’s Magazine May 1930
* ___ , (ss) Railroad Man’s Magazine July 1930
* ___ , (ss) Railroad Man’s Magazine September 1930
* ___ The Home Town Is ALways Proud of Its Sons but the Home Folks’ Boost Does Not Make a Railroad Man, (ar) Railroad Man’s Magazine January 1917
- * One Cannot Always Tell Just Who Constitutes His Public, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine June 1910
- * Our Correspondent Indulges in a Sort of Feast of the Passover, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine January 1910
- * The Phantom Headlight, (ss) The Black Cat September 1908
- * The Railroad Detective, as Represented by Pat Flynn, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine September 1910
- * Schwartz Relates Further Troubles, Especially with a Female Poet and a Phonograph, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine August 1910
- * Some Simple Narratives About Clay Calhoune Sokum, the Legal Luminary of Pippinville, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine October 1910
- * Sometimes Christmas Cheer Has the Right-of-Way Over All Things, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine January 1911
- * Talent That Overreached, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine December 1908
- * To the Boys Who Bend Over the Desks, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine February 1910
- * The Trials and Tribulations of Captain Fish, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine March 1910
- * What Do You Suppose Will Happen When a Superstitious Woman with a Phoney Dollar Moves to Ohio and Leaves Her Cat Behind?, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine April 1911
- * The Wily Politician May Think That He Carries the Railroad Vote in His Vest Pocket, (ss) The Railroad Man’s Magazine December 1910
- * Yes, Rollo, the Moving-Picture Railroad Drama Differs Materially from the Rigid Rules of the Operating Department, (ar) Railroad Man’s Magazine November 1914
[]Smith, J. Everard (fl. 1950s) (chron.)
- * Battle of Tombstone City, (ar) Clubman #25, October 1952
- * The Great John L. Sullivan, (ar) Clubman #24, September 1952
- * The Loves of the Duchess de Langeais, (ss) Bedside Clubman v7, 1953; J. Everard Smith’s version of Balzac’s immortal novel.
- * Manon, (ar) Clubman #30, March 1953
- * Police Spy, (ar) Clubman #31, April 1953
[]Smith, J. Frederick (1917-2006) (chron.)
- * Astrid, (pi) Penthouse (UK) August 1968
- * Illustrator & Photographer J. Frederick Smith (with Daniel Zimmer), (bg) Illustration #31, Fall 2010 [Ref. J. Frederick Smith]
- * [front cover], (cv) Esquire Apr 1946, Mar 1947
- * [front cover], (cv) The American Magazine June 1955
- * [front cover], (cv) Cosmopolitan Jun 1956, May 1957, Jan 1958, Feb 1959, Jan 1963, Jun, Jul 1965
- * [front cover], (cv) Erotic Edwardian Fairy Tales ed. Paul Tabori, NEL, 1970
- * [front cover], (cv)
- * [illustration(s)], (il) Cosmopolitan Apr 1947, Apr 1948, Sep, Dec 1949, Sep 1950, Oct 1951, May, Dec 1952, Feb 1953,
Jan, Feb 1954, Mar, Apr 1955
Jun 1958, May 1959, Apr, Aug 1960, Aug 1961
- * [illustration(s)], (il) The American Magazine Jul, Aug, Sep 1948, Feb, Apr 1949, May, Sep, Oct 1950, Feb 1951, Dec 1952,
Jan, Jul 1953
Mar 1954, Aug 1955
- * [illustration(s)], (il) Today’s Woman #107, September 1948
- * [illustration(s)], (il) Collier’s Dec 11, Dec 18 1948, May 14, May 21, Jun 4 1949, Oct 1 1954, Apr 15, Aug 5 1955
- * [illustration(s)], (il) McCall’s Apr, Nov 1953
- * [illustration(s)], (il) This Week March 15 1964
_____, [ref.]
[]Smith, J. G. Officer (fl. 1890s-1910s) (chron.)
- * Homeward Bound!, (il) The Boy’s Own Paper December 30 1899
- * Might and Mite, (il) The Boy’s Own Paper April 9 1910
- * Thoroughly up to Date!, (il) The Boy’s Own Paper September 8 1900
- * [cartoon(s)], (ct) The Boy’s Own Paper Aug 27, Oct 22, Nov 19 1898, May 20, Sep 16 1899, Mar 24, Oct 27 1900, Jan 31, Mar 21,
May 9, Jul 25 1903
- * [cartoon(s)] (with Arthur Cooke), (ct) The Boy’s Own Paper May 21 1910
- * [illustration(s)], (il) The Boy’s Own Paper April 15 1899
[]Smith, J. Gordon (fl. 1900s-1910s) (chron.)
- * Beyond the Great Wall, (ss) The Monthly Story Blue Book Magazine March 1907
- * Christmas and the Beachcomber, (ss) The Blue Book Magazine January 1908
- * The Derelict, (ss) The Red Book Magazine July 1907
- * The Governor’s Visit, A Story of Present-Day Japan, (ar) The Pacific Monthly May 1906
- * Haynes: War Correspondent, (ss) The Pacific Monthly September 1905
- * “His Mother’s Son”, (ss) The Pacific Monthly January 1906
- * The Home-Pennant, (ss) The Red Book Magazine May 1907
- * The Magic of the Missionary, (ss) The Pacific Monthly June 1906
- * A Page from the Book of War in Manchuria, (ar) National Magazine May 1905
- * The Plaudits of the Brave, (ss) The Blue Book Magazine July 1914
- * Tanaka, the Coward, (ss) The Pacific Monthly July 1905
- * [illustration(s)], (il) The Idler October 1907
[]Smith, J. Murray (fl. 1920s-1930s) (chron.)
- * Are You a Hero? -1, Parachute!, (ar) The Passing Show June 3 1933
- * Are You a Hero? -3, The Cash Value of Courage, (ar) The Passing Show June 17 1933
- * Are You a Hero?—Because I’m Really a Coward!, (ar) The Passing Show June 10 1933
- * Behind the Headlights, (ar) The Passing Show November 11 1933
- * Better Watch That Man, (ar) The Passing Show September 5 1936
- * The Big Hole, (ar) The Passing Show July 14 1934
- * Blow the Man Down, (ar) The Passing Show October 3 1936
- * Bunkered! (with Archie Compston), (ar) The Passing Show April 8 1933
- * Cameras Can’t Be Candid, (ar) The Passing Show September 18 1937
- * A City Inside Her, (ar) The Passing Show October 27 1934
- * Crowds Can Win Matches (with Joe Hulme), (ar) The Passing Show December 16 1933
- * Curtain’s Up!, (ar) The Passing Show August 1 1936
- * Dancing a Story, (ar) The Royal Magazine March 1929
- * Detectives of the Air, (ar) Modern Wonder September 25 1937
- * Enjoyable Epidemics, (ar) The Passing Show December 15 1934
- * Felix Weiss: Clay in His Hands, (ar) Pearson’s Magazine August 1936
- * The Fight for Fish, (ar) The Passing Show November 26 1932
- * Flying Man’s Food, (ar) The Passing Show August 15 1936
- * Food and Wine Tree, (ss) The Passing Show September 21 1935
- * Footballers Have Feelings (with Joe Hulme), (ar) The Passing Show January 13 1934
- * Football’s Unsolved Problem (with Frederick Wall), (ar) The Passing Show April 17 1937
- * Giant Killers (with Frederick Wall), (ar) The Passing Show May 1 1937
- * Good Figures Keep a New Industry in the Swim, (ar) The Passing Show May 4 1935
- * Heading for the Last Gee-Up, (ar) The Passing Show December 14 1935
- * He Makes Their Feet Twinkle, (ar) The Royal Pictorial July 1934
- * He Makes the World Go Gay, (ar) Pearson’s Magazine November 1936
- * Holding the World Together, (ar) The Passing Show January 16 1937
- * How It Is Done, (ar) The Passing Show June 23 1934
- * Ice and Steel, (ar) The Passing Show January 12 1935
- * I Have Nine Lives! (with Hans Schneeberger), (ar) The Passing Show August 31 1935
- * The Iron Epic, (ar) The Passing Show July 27 1935
- * It’s Safety Last Week with Them, (ar) The New Passing Show April 30 1932
- * Keep Wicket for England (with Herbert Strudwick), (ar) The Passing Show February 25 1933
- * Making Air Travel Safe, (ar) Pearson’s Magazine July 1930
- * Marvellous Game! (with A. D. S. Roncoroni), (ar) The Passing Show April 15 1933
- * The Mystery House of the BBC, (ar) Modern Wonder September 11 1937
- * Outposts of Radio, (ar) Modern Wonder October 9 1937
- * Paul Robeson, (iv) The Royal Magazine February 1929 [Ref. Paul Robeson]
- * Pedalling in Paradise, (ar) The Passing Show November 14 1936
- * Race up the River, and Row, Row, Row! (with David Haig-Thomas), (ar) The Passing Show April 1 1933
- * Referee the Cup Final (with W. P. Harper), (ar) The Passing Show April 22 1933
- * Ride a Flying Horse (with Bobby Everett), (ar) The Passing Show March 18 1933
- * The Right Holiday Can Be Prescribed, (ar) The Passing Show August 3 1935
- * The Ro-Railer, (ar) The New Royal Magazine April 1931
- * Scareobatics, (ar) The Passing Show December 3 1932
- * The Secret Side of the B.B.C., (ar) Pearson’s Magazine July 1936
- * Seen Behind the Scenes, (ar) The New Royal Magazine May 1931
- * Selling Paris, (ar) The Passing Show April 24 1937
- * Share the Kick That I Get (with Billy Walker), (ar) The Passing Show February 11 1933
- * The Show Behind the Show, (ar) The Passing Show January 7 1933
- * Ski Heil!, (ar) The Passing Show December 12 1936
- * Smash and Grab!, (ar) The Passing Show October 14 1933
- * “Soling and Heeling” the Highway!, (ar) The Passing Show March 10 1934
- * The Split Seconds, (ar) The Passing Show March 17 1934
- * The Terror Trophy, (ar) The Passing Show June 4 1932
- * These Ideas Rob the Machine of Peril, (ar) The Passing Show February 1 1936
- * They Live to Dance, (ar) The Passing Show July 18 1936
- * They Still Believe in Chivalry, (ar) The Passing Show May 8 1937
- * The Things Women Don’t Do, (ar) The Passing Show February 17 1934
- * This Army of Unpaid Actors, (ar) The Passing Show November 17 1934
- * This Is Henry Hall, (ar) The Passing Show May 30 1936
- * This Was Football… (with Frederick Wall), (ar) The Passing Show September 29 1934
- * Three Rounds of Fury (with Jack Petersen), (ar) The Passing Show March 4 1933
- * Thrills Made to Pleasure, (ar) The Passing Show August 13 1932
- * Trek to the Sun, (ar) The Passing Show August 14 1937
- * Unseen Dramas of Soccer (with Joe Hulme), (ar) The Passing Show November 18 1933
- * Ups and Downs, (ar) The Royal Magazine September 1930
- * Warney Cresswell: What a Football Dictator Should Do, (ar) The Passing Show December 22 1934
- * ‘We Are Taking You Over—’, (ar) The Passing Show March 13 1937
- * What’s Being Done, (cl) The New Royal Magazine December 1930
- * What’s Your Hobby?, (ar) The Passing Show May 18 1935
- * When Genius Runs Amok, (ar) The Passing Show October 1 1932
- * When You Swim the Channel, (ar) The Passing Show September 2 1933
- * Where it’s Snowing Money, (ar) The Passing Show February 16 1935
- * Why You Pay to Play, (ar) The Passing Show June 29 1935
- * Your Horseless Carriage, Sir!, (ar) The Passing Show October 15 1938
_____, as told to
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