This is a pulp that I own and read recently. That’s my copy in the scan. I think the cover is by Sam Cherry. The horse and rider look like his work to me. The Fictionmags Index agrees and attributes the cover to Cherry.
I always enjoy the Tombstone and Speedy stories by W.C. Tuttle, and the lead
novella in this issue of EXCITING WESTERN, “Coyote Luck for Tombstone”, is no
exception. Our somewhat hapless range detective heroes, Tombstone Jones and
Speedy Smith, are sent to find out who’s behind the rustling on a ranch in
southern Arizona, but in the process they run afoul of a mysterious bandit
known as the Red Mask who’s been terrorizing the border country. Could it be
that the two cases are connected? What do you think? With some help from a
coyote that’s been turned into a pet and a trip across the border to a bandit
sanctuary, not to mention a few attempts on their lives, Tombstone and Speedy
untangle the mess and expose the villains. It’s another well-plotted,
light-hearted, but also action-packed entry in the series.
I’m also a fan of the series about Arizona Ranger Navajo Tom Raine. In this
issue’s “Ranger on the Run”, Raine is bushwhacked by a gunman who’s supposed to
be locked up behind bars and winds up facing a showdown in an abandoned mine tunnel.
These stories were published under the house-name Jackson Cole, and at least
two authors contributed yarns to the series, Lee Bond (who created it) and C.
William Harrison. I feel certain this is one of Bond’s efforts, since the
villains spend a lot of time standing around explaining their schemes to each other
and the final shootout features Raine against three bad guys. Both of those
things are very common in Bond’s stories. Predictable they may be, but they
move along nicely and have plenty of well-written action.
Gunnison Steele was really Bennie Gardner. I was fortunate enough to be friends
with his son Barry Gardner for several years before Barry passed away. Bennie
Gardner wrote quite a few novels featuring various Western pulp characters, but
he was also really prolific when it comes to short-shorts, possessing the
ability to pack interesting characters and plenty of plot into three or four
pulp pages. His story in this issue, “Smoke on the Mountain”, is one of those,
centered around an outlaw’s attempt to force an old-timer to reveal the
location of some hidden money. The old-timer’s clever way of dealing justice to
his tormentor is very effective. I’ve read a bunch of Gunnison Steele stories
and enjoyed every one of them.
Del Rayburn published about two dozen stories in various Western pulps between
1944 and 1950 and also wrote one episode of the TV series DEATH VALLEY DAYS.
Some of his stories were reprinted in a Powell Books paperback in the Sixties
called TRAIL-BLAZERS WEST. His novelette “Tough Texas Tophand” from this issue
was reprinted in the November 1951 issue of THRILLING WESTERN, where I’d read
it before. To quote what I said about it then: The story is about the clash
between a Texas cowboy and a clan of renegade Mormons in Montana. It’s a little
over-the-top (the protagonist’s name is Hondo Uvalde) but the author won me
over with plenty of well-written action and some interesting characters. I
wouldn’t call “Tough Tophand” a Western classic, but it’s an enjoyable story.
That’s still an accurate assessment. Curious about Rayburn, I did a little more
digging and came across online claims that he was actually a TV network
executive with some connection to STAR TREK. Some posters on a Star Trek
bulletin board make a pretty scurrilous charge against him. The whole thing
seems highly unlikely to me, but it’s an interesting example of the theory that
you never know what you’re going to come across on the Internet.
Another masked bandit, this time known by the name Blue Mask, shows up in “Right
Handy With a Rope” by veteran Western pulpster Donald Bayne Hobart. A new ranch
hand with a secret shows up to hunt down the outlaw. This is another
short-short, only four pages long. Hobart was a dependable writer so it’s
fairly entertaining, but it’s a really minor piece of work.
The other long-running series in EXCITING WESTERN featured Pony Express rider
Alamo Paige. These were published under the house-name Reeve Walker. “In the
Line of Duty” in this issue finds Paige having to helping rescue a cavalry
patrol besieged by a Sioux war party. The plot is pretty simple, but the story
is very well-written and features more character development than usual for
Paige, implying that he used to be a cowboy, or perhaps a cavalryman, or maybe
even a reformed outlaw. I’ve seen speculation connecting Tom Curry, Charles N.
Heckelmann, Walker A. Tompkins, and Chuck Martin with the Reeve Walker
house-name, but really there’s no telling who wrote “In the Line of Duty” and
the other Alamo Paige stories. It might be Heckelmann’s work, since his stories
often have more fully developed characters, but really, who knows. Whoever
wrote this one, it’s really good, probably the best Alamo Paige story I’ve read
so far.
This is a really solid issue of EXCITING WESTERN overall. Some of the stories
are better than others, of course, but all of them are entertaining and the
yarns featuring Tombstone and Speedy and Alamo Paige are top-notch, outstanding
entries in those series. If you have a copy of this one on your shelves, it’s
very much worth reading.
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