Madame Eulalie’s Rare Plums

Devoted to the early works of P. G. Wodehouse 

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Stories from Pictorial Review (US)

 

Items with annotations are flagged with the symbol ✎ below.

 

✎ By Advice of Counsel — September 1910

✎ Lines and Business (a Reggie Pepper story) — March 1912

✎ Three from Dunsterville — August 1912

✎ The Dinner of Herbs — February 1913

Rallying Round Clarence (a Reggie Pepper story) — April 1914

✎ Parted Ways — June 1915

Concealed Art (a Reggie Pepper story) — July 1915

The Episode of the Landlady’s Daughter (A Man of Means: 1) — May 1916

The Episode of the Financial Napoleon (A Man of Means: 2) — June 1916

The Episode of the Theatrical Venture (A Man of Means: 3) — July 1916

The Episode of the Live Weekly (A Man of Means: 4) — August 1916

The Diverting Episode of the Exiled Monarch (A Man of Means: 5) — September 1916

The Episode of the Hired Past (A Man of Means: 6) — October 1916

 

 

Pictorial Review (US)

Pictorial Review first appeared in September, 1899. The magazine was originally designed to showcase dress patterns of William Paul Ahnelt’s American Fashion Company. By the late 1920s it was one of the largest of the “women’s magazines.” In June 1931 it had a circulation of 2,540,000.

In 1936, the publisher sold the magazine to its Vice President, Adman George S. Fowler. In 1937 it merged with The Delineator, another women’s magazine. Two years later it ceased publication.

Plum contributed these thirteen stories to Pictorial Review, from 1910 to 1916.


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