| 211. |  Prentiss Ingraham. The Pirate Patrol; or, The Outlaw Cadet. A Tale 
        of Gulf Waters and Ocean Trails. V, No. 211, November 27, 1886, to 
        V, No. 223, February 19, 1887. Three illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various title changes), 
        no. 211; Dime Library, no. 791. Gulf of Mexico and the Bahamas, during the second war with England. | 
   
    | 214. |  Albert W. Aiken. King Dandy, the Silver Sport; or, The High Kicker 
        of Salt River. A Romance of Silverland. V, No. 214, December 18, 1886, 
        to V, No. 226, March 12, 1887. Three illustrations.Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various title changes), 
        no. 214; Dime Library, no. 775.An Arizona mining camp. | 
   
    | 216. |  Charles Morris. Billy Bubble, the Highway Waif; or, Mother Buster's 
        Protégé. V, No. 216, January 1, 1887, to V, No. 223, 
        February 19, 1887. No illustrations.Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various title changes), 
        no. 216; 340Pocket Library, no. 
        Philadelphia and elsewhere in Pennsylvania. Kidnapped boy turns tramp. | 
   
    | 217. |  Dr. Noel Dunbar. Duke Despard, the Gambler Duelist; or, The Lady 
        of Luck. V, No. 217, January 8, 1887, to V, No. 230, April 9, 1887. 
        Three illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various title changes), 
        no. 217; Dime Library, no. 730.
        New Orleans and on the Mississippi River, and the plantations along its 
        banks. A story of planters and river gamblers. | 
   
    | 220.  | Dangerfield Burr. Buffalo Bill's Secret Service Trail; or, Major 
        Mephisto, the Soldier's Foe. A Romance of Red-Skins, Renegades and Army 
        Rencounters. V, No. 220, January 29, 1887, to V, No. 232, April 23, 
        1887. Three illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various title changes), 
        no. 220; Dime Library, no. 682. General Custer, Buffalo Bill, Indians, renegades, and the usual crew 
        of Ingraham's western tales.  | 
   
    | 223. |  Oll Coomes. Dauntless Dan, the Free-Lance of the Plains; or, The 
        Vagabond Pard's Deliverance. V, No. 223, February 19, 1887, to V, 
        No. 229, April 2, 1887. One illustration. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various title changes), 
        no. 223; Half-Dime Library, no. 680. Arizona, 187  . Mexicans, Spaniards, Indians, outlaws, etc.  | 
   
    | 224. |  K. F. Hill. Sam Saunders, the Go-As-You Please Detective; or, Hunted Around the World. V, No. 224, February 
        26, 1887, to V, No. 237, May 28, 1887. Two illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various title changes), 
        no. 224; Half-Dime Library, no. 721.
        New York City, London, Australia. A murdered man in a catboat. | 
   
    | 226. |  Leon Lewis. The Cowboy Couriers; or, The Rustlers of the Big Horn. 
        V, No. 226, March 12, 1887, to V, No. 239, June 11, 1887. Three illustrations. 
      Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various title changes), 
        no. 226; Dime Library, no. 699.
        Big Horn Valley, Wyoming, "a few years ago." Miners, outlaws, etc. | 
   
    | 229. |  Prentiss Ingraham. The Ocean Gipsy; or, The Buccaneer Bohemians. 
        V, No. 229, April 2, 1887, to V, No. 241, June 25, 1887. Three illustrations. 
      Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various title changes), 
        no. 229; Dime Library, no. 854.
        Close of the nineteenth century. Bahama Islands, Gulf of Mexico, New Orleans 
        and an island off the coast of Florida  the home of the "Sea Gipsies." 
        Rival twin sons of the gipsy king  a strange burial  gipsy 
        corsairs  nemesis. | 
   
    | 231. |  Col. E. Z. C. Judson. The Border Rivals. A Hunting Story of the 
        Big Rockies. V, No. 231, April 16, 1887, to V, No. 233, April 30, 
        1887. No illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various title changes), 
        no. 231; Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various title changes), 
        no. 588. The last story written by Judson before his death. Written expressly 
        for the Banner Weekly.The contest of two young men of Montana to win a girl by their prowess 
        as hunters. | 
   
    | 232. |  Albert W. Aiken. The Man of Three; or, Playing for Five Millions. 
        V, No. 232, April 23, 1887, to V, No. 243, July 9, 1887. Three illustrations. 
      Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various title changes), 
        no. 232; Dime Library, no. 793. New York City and vicinity. Joe Phenix again. | 
   
    | 235. |  Dr. Frank Powell ("White Beaver"). The Dragoon Detective; or, The 
        Darling of Destiny. V, No. 235, May 14, 1887, to V, No. 247, August 
        6, 1887. Three illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various title changes), 
        no. 235; Dime Library, no. 746. "In the wild parts of the Rockies." Panther Pete "was seized in a grip 
        of iron, dragged bodily from his feet, and hurled ten feet away upon the 
        heads of the crowd, going in his flight over the two prisoners and Ribbon 
        Rob." There were strong men in those days! and the detective was one of 
        them.  | 
   
    | 238. |  Leon Lewis. The Rancher's Four Millions; or, The Robber Lawyer. 
        V, No. 238, June 4, 1887, to V, No. 244, July 16, 1887. Two illustrations. 
      Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various title changes), 
        no. 238; Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various title changes), 
        no. 603; Half-Dime Library, no. 1030. A story of southern California. A girl, heiress to four millions, becomes 
        the prey of a scoundrel from a neighboring ranch. | 
   
    | 240. |  Joseph E. Badger. Top-Sawyer Sam, the River King; or, Entered for 
        the Golden Stakes. The Romance of a River Free Lance. V, No. 240, 
        June 18, 1887, to V, No. 252, September 10, 1887. Three illustrations. 
      Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various title 
        changes), no. 240; Dime Library, no. 789.
        A Mississippi river romance of the 1860's. Vicksburg and St. Louis.       | 
   
    | 243. |  Oll Coomes. Highland Harry, the Wizard Rifleman; or, Tough Times 
        at Teton Basin. V, No. 243, July 9, 1887, to V, No. 249, August 20, 
        1887. One illustration. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various title 
        changes), no. 243; Half-Dime Library, no. 778 .
        Teton basin, Wyoming and Idaho, 1884. Snake river and eastern bank of 
        the Gallatin river. An Indian and outlaw tale. Jack Hart, the infamous, 
        who was finally captured in 1886, takes part. | 
   
    | 244. |  Dr. Noel Dunbar. The Pointing Finger; or, The Outcast's Heritage. 
        A Story of Secret Life and Secret Service in New York. V, No. 244, 
        July 16, 1887, to V, No. 256, October 8, 1887. Three illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various title 
        changes), no. 244; Dime Library, no. 801.
        New York City and along the Hudson river. A man, long absent, reappears 
        to claim a lost inheritance and defend a sister's honor.       | 
   
    | 247. |  Maj. Dangerfield Burr. Caster's Shadow; or, The Red Tomahawk. 
        V, No. 247, August 6, 1887, to V, No. 259, October 29, 1887. Three illustrations.Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various title 
        changes), no. 247; Dime Library, no. 750.
        General Custer, Buffalo Bill, Dr. Powell, Indians, soldiers, etc., out 
        West. | 
   
    | 250.  | Leon Lewis. Doctor Paul, Detective; or, Under a Terrible Spell. 
        V, No. 250, August 27, 1887, to V, No. 255, October 1, 1887. Two illustrations. 
      Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various title 
        changes), no. 250; Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various title 
        changes), no. 536; Half-Dime Library, no. 1021.
        New York City detective tale. | 
   
    | 252. |  Prentiss Ingraham. The Last of the Pirates; or, Doom Driven. 
        V, No. 252, September 10, 1887, to VI, No. 265, December 10, 1887. Three 
        illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various title 
        changes), no. 252; Dime Library, no. 805.
        Maryland, the West Indies, and adjacent waters. | 
   
    | 255. |  Albert W. Aiken. Dick Talbot in No-Man's Camp. V, No. 255, October 
        1, 1887, to VI, No. 268, December 31, 1887. Three illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various title 
        changes), no. 255; Dime Library, no. 725. Arizona mining camp. Talbot accused of murder. Joe Bowers shows up 
        again. 'Frisco Nell also to the rescue. Talbot married at last."Probably there was not a man in all the wild West who was a better 
        judge of the skill of the frontiersman in the use of the revolver than 
        he. At twenty-five feet about one man out of every ten was an expert shot, 
        and could put a bullet inside of a three-inch circle nineteen times out 
        of twenty. At fifty feet not over one man in a hundred could put his ball 
        within a six-inch bulls eye six times out of ten, and at sixty or seventy 
        feet, not beyond one man in a thousand would be able to hit the mark  
        a six-inch circle  once out of fifty times, and when it came to 
        over seventy feet, the man who could hit an object the size of a human 
        being at that distance, would be able to bear off the palm as being an 
        expert marksman fit to distinguish himself in any company." Dime Library, 
        no. 725, p. 17, col. 1. "Why don't you come up and see me some time?" Dime Library, 
        no. 725, p. 24, col. 3.  | 
   
    | 256. |  A. F. Holt. Headlight Harry; or, Black Bart's Brotherhood. A Romance 
        of the Rail. V, No. 256, October 8, 1887, to V, No. 260, November 
        5, 1887. No illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various 
        title changes), no. 256; Half-Dime Library, no. 673. Followed by Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various title changes), 
        no. 277.
        Colorado. The hero was tied to a log and set adrift in a river above a 
        forty-foot waterfall. | 
   
    | 258.  | Jackson Knox (Old Hawk). The Hurricane Detective; or, Through Thick 
        and Thin. V, No. 258, October 22, 1887, to VI, No. 271, January 21, 
        1888. Three illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various 
        title changes), no. 258; Dime Library, no. 732.
        New York City detective story.       | 
   
    | 261.  | Leon Lewis. The Sons of Thunder; or, The Rivals of Ruby Valley. A 
        Romance of Nevada. VI, No. 261, November 12, 1887, to VI, No. 271, 
        January 21, 1888. Three illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various 
        title changes), no. 261;Dime Library, no. 785.
        Ruby Valley, Nevada, between the East Humboldt and Butte Ranges. Mormons 
        and Gentiles strive for political control of the state.       | 
   
    | 264. |  Prentiss Ingraham. Zulita, the Queen of the Island Rovers; or, Dishonored 
        and Disowned. VI, No. 264, December 3, 1887, to VI, No. 276, February 
        25, 1888. Two illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various 
        title changes), no. 264; Dime Library, no. 811. Followed by Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various title changes), 
        no. 276.A tale of the days when bandits and buccaneers held sway on one of the 
        islands in the Gulf of Mexico. | 
   
    | 266.  | Oll Coomes. Ajax, the Infant Giant; or, Kit Bandy Outwitted. 
        VI, No. 266, December 17, 1887, to VI, No. 272, January 28, 1888. One 
        illustration. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various 
        title changes), no. 266; Half-Dime Library, no. 791.
        Elkhorn Canyon, Montana. Kit Bandy and Tom Rattler again appear. A story 
        of Indians and outlaws. | 
   
    | 267. |  Albert W. Aiken. The Cohort of Five; or, Dick Talbot's Great Clean-Out. 
        The Romance of a Just Vengeance. VI, No. 267, December 24, 1887, to 
        VI, No. 279, March 17, 1888. Three illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various 
        title changes), no. 267; Dime Library, no. 729. Preceded by Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various title changes), 
        no. 225 and followed by Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various 
        title changes), no. 288.
        Arizona. Black Mac is finally killed, but so also is Talbot's wife, leaving 
        him free for further adventures. | 
   
    | 270. |  Joseph E. Badger. Dan Dunn, the Soft-Hand Sport; or, Unmasking the 
        Masks. VI, No. 270, January 15, 1888, to VI, No. 283, April 14, 1888. 
        Three illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various 
        title changes), no. 270; Dime Library, no. 809.
        Cattle kings, boomers, cowboys, and adventurers in and around Kansas City, 
        Missouri. | 
   
    | 273. |  Dr. Noel Dunbar. The Captain's Enemy; or, The Evil Genius of it 
        All. A Romance of the Old East and the Wild West. VI, No. 273, February 
        4, 1888, to VI, No. 285, April 28, 1888. Three illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various 
        title changes), no. 273; Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various 
        title changes), no. 624; Dime Library, no. 972.
        Virginia and the frontier in Nebraska. Plotting for a fortune. Several 
        attempted murders.       | 
   
    | 276.  | Prentiss Ingraham. The Rival Monte Cristos; or, The Sea Spiders. 
        A Romance of American Waters. VI, No. 276, February 25, 1888, to VI, 
        No. 288, May 19, 1888. Three illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 276; Dime Library, no. 819. Preceded by Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various title changes), 
        no. 264.Date: the last years of the second war with England when pirates were 
        still common in the Bahamas and the Caribbean Sea. | 
   
    | 277. |  Arthur F. Holt. The White Phenix; or, The Flagman's Daughter. 
        VI, No. 277, March 3, 1888, to VI, No. 282, April 7, 1888. No illustrations. 
      Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 277; Half-Dime Library, no. 811. A sequel to Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various title changes), 
        no. 256."Richville," in a Trans-Mississippi state. | 
   
    | 278. |  C. Dunning Clark. Through the Everglades. VI, No. 278, March 
        10, 1888, to VI, No. 287, May 12, 1888.
        Up the St. John's River. Fish, mosquitoes, deer, alligators, Spanish moss, 
        a "cracker," turkeys, pompano, devil fish, big cypress, and Seminoles. | 
   
    | 279. |  Leon Lewis. The Bobtail Bonanza; or, Johnny Geer's Pay Streak. 
        VI, No. 279, March 17, 1888, to VI, No. 292, June 9, 1888. Three illustrations. 
      Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 279; Dime Library, no. 797.
        Locale: Near Socorro, New Mexico. A mining story. | 
   
    | 282. |  Jackson Knox (Old Hawk). Captain Clew, the Fighting Detective; or, 
        Against Terrible Odds. A Romance of the Wolves of New York. VI, No. 
        282, April 7, 1888, to VI, No. 292, June 30, 1888. Three illustrations. 
      Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 282; Dime Library, no. 740.
        New York City, "many years ago."       | 
   
    | 285. |  W. J. Hamilton. Gideon's Band; or, The Beautiful Spy. VI, No. 
        285, April 28, 1888, to VI, No. 292, June 16, 1888. Three illustrations. 
      Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 285; Half-Dime Library, no. 985.
        Near Matamoras, Mexico, in the time of the Emperor Maximilian, not long 
        after the Civil War.       | 
   
    | 286. |  Herrick Johnstone. Barney Blake, the Boy Privateer; or, The Cruise 
        of the Queer Fish. A Tale of the Sea Scud and Ocean Trails of the War 
        of 1812. VI, No. 286, May 5, 1888, to VI, No. 292, June 16, 1888. 
        No illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 286; Half-Dime Library, no. 1020. Year 1813. Boston  at sea  privateering  crossing 
        the line  Rio de Janeiro  Tierra del Fuego  ostrich 
        hunting in Patagonia  Valparaiso  South Seas  Sandwich 
        Islands  California.  | 
   
    | 288.  | Albert W. Aiken. Talbot, the Ranch King; or, The Double Foe. A Romance 
        of the Hawks of Cababi. VI, No. 288, May 19, 1888, to VI, No. 300, 
        August 11, 1888. Three illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 288; Dime Library, no. 733. Preceded by Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various title changes), 
        no. 267 and followed by Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various 
        title changes), no. 306. 
        Sonora and Arizona. A gang of outlaws, Mexicans, soldiers, etc. Talbot 
        and 'Frisco Nell are married in this number.       | 
   
    | 291. |  Dangerfield Burr. Buffalo Bill's Double; or, The Desperado Detectives. 
        A Romance of the Old East and Wild West. VI, No. 291, June 9, 1888, 
        to VI, No. 303, September 1, 1888. Three illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 291; Dime Library, no. 757.
        Long Island Sound and somewhere in the West. Dr. Powell, Buffalo Bill, 
        Indians, soldiers, miners, and a bad brother.       | 
   
    | 292.  | A. F. Holt. Will Wideawake, the Train-Boy; or, The Amateur Railway 
        Detective's Good Run. VI, No. 292, June 16, 1888, to VI, No. 297, 
        July 21, 1888. No illustrations.Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 292; Half-Dime Library, no. 817 .
        Amateur sleuths on the Boston and Portland train.       | 
   
    | 294. |  Jackson Knox. Old Grip, the Detective; or, The Woman of the Frozen 
        Smile. A Tale of the Inside and Outside of New York High Life. VI, 
        No. 294, June 30, 1888, to VI, No. 306, September 22, 1888. Three illustrations.Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 294; Dime Library, no. 762.
        New York City detective story. Getting rid of a wicked stepmother.       | 
   
    | 297. |  Leon Lewis. Wind River Clark, the Gold Hermit; or, The Ghouls of 
        the Placer. A Romance of the Great Wyoming Range. VI, No. 297, July 
        21, 1888, to VI, No. 309, October 13, 1888. Two illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 297; Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 720; Dime Library, no. 967.
        Wyoming. Hermit, Shoshone Indians, gold hunters, gold thieves, etc. | 
   
    | 299.  | Prentiss Ingraham. The Sea Recreant; or, The Taint of Blood. The 
        Romance of an Honored and Dishonored Name. VI, No. 299, August 4, 
        1888, to VI, No. 311, October 27, 1888. Three illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 299; Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 726; Dime Library, no. 963.
        New York Bay, Island off Panama, Taboga. Time: before the Revolution. 
        Pirates, British ships-of-war, etc.       | 
   
    | 302. |  Joseph E. Badger. The Soft Hand's Clutch; or, Dan Dunn's Double 
        Foil. VI, No. 302, August 25, 1888, to VII, No. 314, November 17, 
        1888. Two illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 302; Dime Library, no. 815.
        St. Joseph, Missouri. Dan Dunn, the detective, could throw a man bodily 
        into the air over another man, and from the sidewalk into the center of 
        the street! | 
   
    | 303. |  Oll Coomes. Silent Saul, the Young Mountain Patrol; or, The Protégé 
        of Pilgrim's Bar. VI, No. 303, September 1, 1888, to VI, No. 308, 
        October 6, 1888. Two illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 303; Half-Dime Library, no. 823.
        Locale: A gold camp in southwestern Utah.       | 
   
    | 306.  | Albert W. Aiken. Dick Buckskin, the Man of Mettle; or, Talbot in 
        Apache-Land. VI, No. 306, September 22, 1888, to VII, No. 317, December 
        8, 1888. Three illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 306; Dime Library, no. 737. Preceded by Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various title changes), 
        no. 288.
        "Silveropolis," Arizona. Talbot, the mighty fighter.       | 
   
    | 309. |  Jackson Knox (Old Hawk). The Showman Detective; or, Old Grip's Compact. 
        VI, No. 309, October 13, 1888, to VII, No. 321, January 5, 1889. Three 
        illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 309; Dime Library, no. 770.
        New York City and vicinity. A story of the circus. Jealousy and murder. | 
   
    | 310. |  Major Dan Brown. Jack, the Girl Brave; or, The Boy-Settler's Level 
        Best. A Story of the Frontier. VI, No. 310, October 20, 1888, to VII, 
        No. 316, December 1, 1888. No illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 310; Half-Dime Library, no. 
        979.
        A romance of settlers' life, when Sioux roamed from the Des Moines to 
        the Black Hills. | 
   
    | 312. |  Maj. Dangerfield Burr. Silk-Ribbon Sam, the Mad Driver of the Overland; 
        or, Buffalo Bill's Twelve. A Romance of the Rockies. VI, No. 312, 
        November 3, 1888, to VII, No. 324, January 26, 1889. Three illustrations. 
      Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 312; Dime Library, no. 765.
        New Hampshire, then "Danger Station," somewhere in the Rockies. Buffalo 
        Bill and Dr. Frank Powell on the Overland trail. | 
   
    | 315. |  Capt. R. M. Hawthorne. In the Death Net; or, Burd Bayard's Terrible 
        Ordeal. VII, No. 315, November 24, 1888, to VII, No. 320, December 
        29, 1888. Three illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 315; Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 680; Half-Dime Library, no. 1019.
        Chesapeake Bay, Maryland. A murder and an innocent man accused.       | 
   
    | 317. |  T. C. Harbaugh. Mute Merle, the Boy Nabob; or, The Rivals of Cinnabar. 
        VII, No. 317, December 8, 1888, to VII, No. 322, December 22, 1888. No 
        illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 317; Half-Dime Library, no. 827.
        "Cinnabar," in southern Arizona.       | 
   
    | 318. |  Joseph E. Badger. The Soft-Hand Detective; or, Dan Dunn's Vendetta. 
        VII, No. 318, December 15, 1888, to VII, No. 330, March 9, 1889. Three 
        illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 318; Dime Library, no. 824.
        A Missouri detective story.       | 
   
    | 321. |  Albert W. Aiken. Talbot in Arms; or, The Ranch King at Bay. A Sequel 
        to the "Ranch King." VII, No. 321, January 5, 1889, to VII, No. 333. 
        March 30, 1889. Three illustrations.Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 321; Dime Library, no. 741.
        Sonora and Arizona. Talbot in trouble again. | 
   
    | 323. |  Ben D. Halliday. Citizen Rube, the Boy Philisopher of Rag Alley; 
        or, The Grim Lodger's Game. VII, No. 323, January 19, 1889, to VII, 
        No. 328, February 23, 1889. No illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 323; Half-Dime Library, no. 830.
        New York City slum story.       | 
   
    | 324. |  Dr. Noel Dunbar. The Invisible League; or, Brother against Brother. 
        The Romance of Two Double Lives. VII, No. 324, January 26, 1889, to 
        VII, No. 336, April 20, 1889. Three illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 324; Dime Library, no. 858.
        New York City and state, Long Island Sound, Boston, coast of Maine. Murder 
        and all kinds of inconveniences. A fortune teller whose servant was named 
        "Kiddoo."       | 
   
    | 327.  | Burke Brentford. Spray Sprite, the Sea Witch; or, The Privateer Free 
        Lance. A Tale of Blue Waters and Prize-Money. VII, No. 327, February 
        16, 1889, to VII, No. 340, May 18, 1889. Two illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 327; Dime Library, no. 866.
        Atlantic Seaboard in 1777. American privateering in the Caribbean Sea.       | 
   
    | 329. |  Oll Coomes. Kit Bandy in Red Ruin; or, The Young Whirlwind of the 
        Hills. VII, No. 329, March 2, 1889, to VII, No. 335, April 13, 1889. 
        Two illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 329; Half-Dime Library, no. 795.
        The usual Colorado "Western" mining story.       | 
   
    | 331.  | Leon Lewis. Buffalo Bill's Ban; or, The Sierra Scourges. VII, 
        No. 331, March 16, 1889, to VII, No. 343, June 8, 1889. Two illustrations. 
      Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 331; Dime Library, no. 773.
        San Juan region and Fort Harris, near Durango, Colorado. A story of scoundrels 
        who were terrorizing southwestern Colorado.       | 
   
    | 333.  | Jackson Knox (Old Hawk). Old Grip's Grip; or, The Great Detective's 
        Covenant with the Dead. VII, No. 333, March 30, 1889, to VII, No. 345, 
        June 22, 1889. Two illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 333; Dime Library, no. 778.
        New York City. The mystery of the woman with the gloved arm.       | 
   
    | 335.  | William West Wilder (Wyoming Will). Old Disaster, the Border Nomad; 
        or, The Mystery of the White Horse Waterfall. A Romance of Southeast Wyoming. 
        VII, No. 335, April 13, 1889, to VII, No. 340, May 18, 1889. Two illustrations.Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various title changes), 
        no. 335; Half-Dime Library, no. 836.Black Hills and adjacent parts of Wyoming.  | 
   
    | 337. |  Dr. Noel Dunbar. The Planter Detective; or, The Triple Retribution. 
        A Story of Gypsy Vengeance. VII, No. 337, April 27, 1889, to VII, 
        No. 351, August 3, 1889. Two illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 337; Dime Library, no. 850.
        Virginia about 1845, and the coast of Mexico, 1848.       | 
   
    | 340.  | Prentiss Ingraham. The Sea Rover's Protégé; or, The 
        Mysterious Cruiser. A Romance of the High Seas in Troublesome Times. 
        VII, No. 340, May 18, 1889, to VII, No. 345, June 22, 1889. Three illustrations. 
      Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 340; Half-Dime Library, no. 873.
        At sea near the Antilles, and Vera Cruz. Time: 1812 and the succeeding 
        years. | 
   
    | 341. |  Ben D. Halliday. Poverty Paul, the Gotham Cricket; or, The Portrait 
        Painter's Prize. VII, No. 341, May 25, 1889, to VII, No. 346, June 
        29, 1889. No illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 341; Half-Dime Library, no. 846.
        New York City detective story.       | 
   
    | 343.  | Oll Coomes. Saddle-King Sam, Old Kit's Adjutant; or, The Big Rustle 
        on the P. V. L. Ranch. A Romance of the Little Missouri. VII, No. 
        343, June 8, 1889, to VII, No. 348, July 13, 1889. Two illustrations. 
      Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 343; Half-Dime Library, no. 799.
        Eastern Montana. Cattle thieving on a grand scale.       | 
   
    | 345. |  Jackson Knox (Old Hawk). Old Grip's Still Hunt; or, The Bank President's 
        Nemesis. A Tale of New York and its Environs. VII, No. 345, June 22, 
        1889, to VII, No. 358, September 21, 1889. Two illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 345; Dime Library, no. 838.
        Westchester County, New York. Edward Crimmins, otherwise known as "Old 
        Grip," the detective, is again in action.       | 
   
    | 346. |  Marmaduke Dey. Messenger Max; or, A Detective by Legacy. VII, 
        No. 346, June 29, 1889, to VII, No. 351, August 3, 1889. No illustrations. 
      Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 346; Half-Dime Library, no. 841.
        A story of Brooklyn.       | 
   
    | 347. |  Prentiss Ingraham. The Wild Steer Riders; or, The Red Revolver Rangers. 
        A Story of Lawless Lives, Love and Adventure in the Lone Star State. 
        VII, No. 347, July 6, 1889, to VII, No. 359, September 28, 1889. Three 
        illustrations.Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 347; Dime Library, no. 834.Baltimore and Texas. Indians, gamblers, card sharps, cowboys, Texas 
        Jack, Buck Taylor, Buckskin Sam, etc.  | 
   
    | 350. |  Burke Brentford. The Sea Scout; or, The Patriot Privateer. A Tale 
        of the First Fleet. VII, No. 350, July 27, 1889, to VII, No. 362, 
        October 19, 1889. Three illustrations.Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 350; Dime Library, no. 919.Date: 1780. New York Harbor, Newburgh, New York, Caribbees. Among the 
        characters are British and American officers, Benedict Arnold and George 
        Washington. An earthquake, a tidal wave, a pirates' lair, and an old-fashioned 
        sea fight. | 
   
    | 351. |  Ben D. Halliday. Caleb Cinders, the New York Castaway; or, The Evil 
        Genius in High Life. VII, No. 351, August 3, 1889, to VII, No. 356, 
        September 7, 1889. No illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 351; Half-Dime Library, no. 850.
        New York City. A man of wealth plays the low-down on a widow and her little 
        boy.       | 
   
    | 353. |  Albert W. Aiken. Teton Tom, the Half-Blood; or, The Conspirators 
        of Bearfoot Bar. A Romance of Montana. VII, No. 353, August 17, 1889, 
        to VIII, No. 365, November 9, 1889. Three illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 353; Dime Library, no. 842.
        New London, Massachusetts, and Montana. A struggle for a mine.       | 
   
    | 356.  | Dr. Noel Dunbar. The King of Crooks; or, The Fugitive Detective. 
        VII, No. 356, September 7, 1889, to VIII, No. 368, November 30, 1889. 
        Three illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 356; Dime Library, no. 886.
        New York City, Canada, Chicago, and Texas. An altered will  a man 
        poisoned  his stepson in a difficult position  and three plots 
        against the heir.       | 
   
    | 359.  | Prentiss Ingraham. Buffalo Bill's Brand; or, The Brimstone Brotherhood. 
        A Romance of Army, Scout and Wild Life in the True Wild West. VII, 
        No. 359, September 28, 1889, to VIII, No. 371, December 21, 1889. Three 
        illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 359; Dime Library, no. 781.
        Fort Fairview, out West. Buffalo Bill, Texas Jack, and Dr. Powell perform 
        prodigies.       | 
   
    | 360.  | Ben D. Halliday. Good-for-Nothing Jerry, the Football of Fortune; 
        or, The Pier Pards. VII, No. 360, October 5, 1889, to VIII, No. 365, 
        November 9, 1889. No illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 360; Half-Dime Library, no. 855.
        New York City.       | 
   
    | 362. |  Burke Brentford. The Sea Sweeper; or, The Pirate's Foe. A Tale of 
        Privateering and Pirate-Chasing in Revolutionary Times. VII, No. 362, 
        October 19, 1889, to VIII, No. 375, January 18, 1890. Three illustrations.Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 362; Dime Library, no. 846. Caribbean Sea and adjacent land, also New Jersey, at a time when American 
        privateers were the terror of English merchantmen. | 
   
    | 365.  | Joseph E. Badger. Riata Rob, the Range Champion; or, The Rustle at 
        Run-Over Ranch. VIII, No. 365, November 9, 1889, to VIII, No. 377, 
        February 1, 1890. Three illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 365; Dime Library, no. 862.
        Texas. Jealousy on the range  a rodeo  a good man and a bad 
        one who look alike. | 
   
    | 366. |  Ben D. Halliday. Kit Clipper, the Boat-Club Mascot; or, Corraling 
        the Sea-Horses. VIII, No. 366, November 16, 1889, to VIII, No. 371, 
        December 21, 1889. No illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 366; Half-Dime Library, no. 860.
        New York City and vicinity detective tale. A well-organized outlaw band 
        of apparently respectable and wealthy men.       | 
   
    | 368.  | Jackson Knox (Old Hawk). Detective Walden's Web; or, The Beautiful 
        Typewriter's Evil Genius. VIII, No. 368, November 30, 1889, to VIII, 
        No. 380, February 22, 1890. Three illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 368; Dime Library, no. 827.
        New York City. Inspector Byrnes' detective Walden. A beautiful typist 
        is the victim of persecution.       | 
   
    | 371. |  Prentiss Ingraham. Buffalo Bill's Boys in Blue; or, The Officer 
        Outcast. A Romance of Wild Western Army Life. VIII, No. 371, December 
        21, 1889, to VIII, No. 383, March 15, 1890. Three illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 371; Dime Library, no. 830. Preceded by Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various title changes), 
        no. 359 and followed by Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various 
        title changes), no. 384.
        "Valley City" on the Overland trail. She sold herself for her lover's 
        life. Cody, Powell, and Texas Jack are in this story. | 
   
    | 372. |  Ben D. Halliday. Kris Chatterbox, the Pavement Guide; or, The Missing 
        Claimant. VIII, No. 372, December 28, 1889, to VIII, No. 377, February 
        1, 1890. No illustrations.Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 372; Half-Dime Library, no. 864.
        New York City. A young street guide pilots a country boy to his true name 
        and inheritance.       | 
   
    | 374.  | Albert W. Aiken. The Countryman Detective; or, The Trail of Lucifer. 
        A Romance of the Snares and Wiles of a Great City. VIII, No. 374, 
        January 11, 1890, to VIII, No. 386, April 5, 1890. Three illustrations. 
      Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 374; Dime Library, no. 892.
        Long Island, New York City, and Brooklyn. In part a story of the stage.       | 
   
    | 377.  | Oll Coomes. Coeur D'Alene Dan, the Mountain Guide; or, Old Kit Bandy's 
        Black-Hawk Brigade. A Story of the Pan Handle of Idaho. VIII, No. 
        377, February 1, 1890, to VIII, No. 382, March 8, 1890. Two illustrations. 
      Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 377; Half-Dime Library, no. 804.
        Red Notch mining camp, northeastern Idaho. | 
   
    | 378. |  Charles Morris. Ned Norman, the Gamin Negotiator; or, The Shake-Up 
        of Grip and Gorley. A Story of Two Boys of Grit. VIII, No. 378, February 
        8, 1890, to VIII, No. 383, March 15, 1890. One illustration. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 378; Half-Dime Library, no. 869.
        Philadelphia and New York. Ned is a thorn in the flesh of two crooked 
        merchants of Philadelphia. | 
   
    | 380.  | Oliver Optic. The Pink of the Pacific; or, The Adventures of a Stowaway. 
        VIII, No. 380, February 22, 1890, to VIII, No. 393, May 24, 1890. Three 
        illustrations. Found in: The Young New Yorker, no. 25 (unfinished); 
        Saturday Journal/Star Journal (various title changes), no. 481; 
        Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various title changes), no. 58; 
        Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various title changes), no. 380; 
        Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various title changes), no. 706. | 
   
    | 383. |  Prentiss Ingraham. Buffalo Bill's Buckskin Braves; or, The Renegade 
        Queen. A Romance of Life in the Wild West. VIII, No. 383, March 15, 
        1890, to VIII, No. 395, June 7, 1890. Three illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 383; Dime Library, no. 874. Preceded by Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various title changes), 
        no. 371.
        With Buffalo Bill, Dr. Powell, Texas Jack, Sioux Indians, outlaws, soldiers 
        and gamblers at "Fort Fairview" and "Gold Pocket."       | 
   
    | 384. |  Ben D. Halliday. Unlucky Joe; or, The Wolf in Sheep's Clothing. 
        VIII, No. 384, March 22, 1890, to VIII, No. 389, April 26, 1890. No illustrations. 
      Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 384; Half-Dime Library, no. 
        878.
        New York City. | 
   
    | 384. |  Launce Poyntz. Dick Darling in Mexico. VIII, No. 384, March 
        22, 1890, to VIII, No. 390, May 3, 1890. Seven illustrations.Found in: Saturday Journal/Star Journal 
        (various title changes), no. 235; Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 384. | 
   
    | 386.  | Dr. Noel Dunbar. The Three Millionaires; or, The Young Jew's Reprisal. 
        VIII, No. 386, April 5, 1890, to VIII, No. 397, June 21, 1890. Three illustrations. 
      Found in: Saturday Journal/Star Journal 
        (various title changes), no. 596; Fireside Library, no. 140; Waverley 
        Library (quarto edition), no. 196; Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 386; Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 734; Dime Library, no. 1015. | 
   
    | 387. |  Philip S. Warne. Who Was Guilty? VIII, No. 387, April 5, 1890, 
        to VIII, No. 398, June 28, 1890. No illustrations.Found in: Saturday Journal/Star Journal 
        (various title changes), no. 574; Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 387. | 
   
    | 389. |  Joseph E. Badger. High-Water Mark, the Mountain Sport; or, The Phantom 
        Inheritance. VIII, No. 389, April 26, 1890, to VIII, No. 401, July 
        19, 1890. Two illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 389; Dime Library, no. 870.
        A stage hold-up  a kidnapping  a cryptogram  buried 
        treasure. Out West, between "Paragon City" and "Peerless Flats." | 
   
    | 390.  | Charles Morris. Turkey Billy, the Shine-'Em-Up Detective; or, The 
        Gamin Guardian. VIII, No. 390, May 3, 1890, to VIII, No. 396, June 
        14, 1890. One illustration. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 390; Half-Dime Library, no. 881.
        New York City. A bootblack detects a scheme for ruining a business man 
        and robbing him of his fiancee.       | 
   
    | 392.  | Albert W. Aiken. The Hawks and Wolves of New York; or, The Livingstone 
        Millions. VIII, No. 392, May 17, 1890, to VIII, No. 405, August 16, 
        1890. Three illustrations. Found in: Saturday Journal/Star Journal 
        (various title changes), no. 635; Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 392; Dime Library, no. 935. | 
   
    | 395 | Prentiss Ingraham. The Three Bills (Buffalo Bill, Wild Bill and 
        Bandbox Bill); or, The Bravo in Broadcloth. A Story of Deadly Trails. 
        VIII, No. 395, June 7, 1890, to VIII, No. 407, August 30, 1890. Three 
        illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 395; Dime Library, no. 882.
        Companion story to 407Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various title 
        changes), no. ;.
        "Glory Hallelujah" camp, apparently in Colorado on the Overland trail. | 
   
    | 398. |  Dr. William Mason Turner. Doubly Disguised; or, The Young Miner's 
        Merciless Foe. A Tale of Pittsburg. VIII, No. 398, June 28, 1890, 
        to VIII, No. 409, September 13, 1890. Four illustrations. Found in: Saturday Journal/Star Journal 
        (various title changes), no. 15; Saturday Journal/Star Journal 
        (various title changes), no. 318; Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 398; Dime Library, no. 917. | 
   
    | 399 | Ben D. Halliday. Curley Kell, the Prodigy of Paradise Park; or, 
        The Junior Detective's WellPocket Library, no. ayed Hand. VIII, 
        No. 399, July 5, 1890, to VIII, No. 404, August 9, 1890. No illustrations. 
      Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 399; Half-Dime Library, no. 886.
        The seamy side of New York City. | 
   
    | 401. |  Burke Brentford. Dauntless Dick, the Knight of the Deck; or, The 
        Letter-of-Marque Sea Witch. A Romance of the High Seas and Coast in the 
        Days that Tried Men's Souls. VIII, No. 401, July 19, 1890, to VIII, 
        No. 415, October 25, 1890. Three illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 401; Dime Library, no. 878.
        Year 1778. Privateering off the eastern seaboard during the Revolution. | 
   
    | 404. |  Edward S. Ellis. Konrad, the Swordmaker; or, The Masked Emperor. 
        VIII, No. 404, August 9, 1890, to VIII, No. 412, October 4, 1890. Three 
        illustrations.Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 110; Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 404. | 
   
    | 405. |  Ben D. Halliday. Messenger 999, the Trump-Card Detective; or, The 
        Cruise for Human Shares. A Story of One of the Unrevealed Cases of the 
        City Detective Records. VIII, No. 405, August 16, 1890, to VIII, No. 
        410, September 20, 1890. No illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 405; Half-Dime Library, no. 890.
        Pool rooms and crooks' haunts in New York City.       | 
   
    | 407. |  Prentiss Ingraham. The Texan's Double; or, The Merciless Shadower. 
        A Revelation of the Mystery of the "Bravo in Black" in the Romance of 
        "The Three Bills." VIII, No. 407, August 30, 1890, to IX, No. 419, 
        November 22, 1890. Three illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 407; Dime Library, no. 895. Companion story to Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly (various title 
        changes), no. 395.
        Texas, Utah, Mexico. Buffalo Bill, Buckskin Sam, Mormons, the Prophet, 
        Danites, Mexicans, etc. A stolen treasure. | 
   
    | 410. |  Tom W. King. Luke, the Life-Saver; or, The Wreckers of Bell-Point 
        Light. A Story of the Last of the Shinnecocks. VIII, No. 410, September 
        20, 1890, to IX, No. 418, November 15, 1890. Two illustrations.Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 80; Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 410; Dime Library, no. 1011. | 
   
    | 411. |  Edward Lytton Wheeler. Sol Sharpe, Detective; or, Hayseed Ramsay's 
        Double Find. A Metropolitan Romance. VIII, No. 411, September 27, 
        1890, to VIII, No. 416, November 1, 1890. One illustration.Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 411; Half-Dime Library, no. 943.
        Pottsville, Pennsylvania, New York City and Brooklyn. A missing father, 
        a girl, and a wicked guardian.       | 
   
    | 413. |  Burke Brentford. The Sea Wraith; or, The Privateer Prince. A Romance 
        of Broadsides, Boarders and Blue Waters. VIII, No. 413, October 11, 
        1890, to IX, No. 425, January 3, 1891. Three illustrations. Found in: Beadle's Weekly/Banner Weekly 
        (various title changes), no. 413; Dime Library, no. 889.
        Long Island, Bermuda, and the sea in 1812. Pressed American sailors capture 
        an English war vessel and turn it into a privateer.
       |