Copyright, 1933, by Frank A. Munsey Co.
Copyright, 1936, by Hector Bolitho.
Copyright, 1924, by Street & Smith Publications, Inc.
Copyright, 1937, by Raoul Whitfield
From Mystery Magazine, copyright, 1935, by Tower Magazines, Inc.
Original version of “Queen’s Quorum” from Twentieth Century Detective Stories, edited by Ellery Queen. Copyright, 1948, by The World Publishing Company.
Conan Doyle considered The Pavilion on the Links “the very model of dramatic narrative.”
This statement is no longer true. Jack Moffitt submitted a short story called The Lady and the Tiger to the Third Annual Detective Short Story Contest sponsored by “Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine,” and won a Special Prize for the Best Tour de Force. Mr. Moffitt’s solution to the most famous of literary riddles is positively brilliant; it appeared in the September 1948 issue of EQMM, and later in THE QUEEN’S AWARDS, 1948 (Boston: Little, Brown, 1948).
Copyright, 1939, by Cornell Woolrich