Description: MY BEST by J.G. Thompson, Jr.- A FANTASTIC BOOK OF MAGIC! The pages of this book contain the best tricks from the best brains in magic – not just any effects, but the best and most jealously guarded originations of over 100 magicians. A compilation consisting of 193 tricks in all branches of magic, contributed by 115 well known professionals, as well as amateurs. Nine chapters of Card Discoveries and Locations, Cards in Motion (transpositions, flying, and rising), Mental Magic with Cards, Assorted Card Tricks, Pocket Tricks, Tricks for the Home, Tricks for Home and Stage, Stage Tricks, and a section of biographies on the contributors. 380 pages, over 350 illustrations, softcover. Contents:iv Preface: J.G. Thompson, Jr. Pennsylvania 1945 vi Introduction: Bruce Elliot vii Contents 9 Chapter 1: Discoveries & Revelations 9 The Card Between (Bobo the Magician): A card is selected and returned. Two are are turned face up, the selected card appears between them. 10 Cards of Cairo (John Booth): magician deals two piles until spectator says stop. Cards in one pile are taken, other pile is returned to deck. The number of cards in the pile is used to count down in the deck, and the selection is found 11 The Middle Deal (R.C. Buff): selection is found at a number selected by the spectator 11 Dick Tracy Card Trick (Clyde Carny): A card is selected and returned. Five cards are pulled off, the third card appears to be the selected card, but it turns out to be the fifth. 12 Tap Force (Milbourne Christopher): a sort of classic force 13 Under Cover (Arnold L. Grubin): selection appears in the card case 14 As You Desire (Hathaway): a card trick for the stage 16 So That's the Way You Want It! (Charles H. Hopkins): a card is revealed in an attempt to calm a heckler 18 Kindred Spirits (Joe Karson): two selections come together in the pack 18 The Timed Turnover (Wilbur Kattner): two cards reverse in the pack one at a time 20 Magneto Box (Dr. Howard B. Kayton): card with lots of pips is shown; the pips drop off except the one matching a selection 20 The Kolar Card Trick (J.J. Kolar): Fake card with 1/2 circle, tape and ribbon pulls card out of middle of deck. 21 My Clutch Slips - Or Reverso with No Brakes (Art Lyle): selection becomes reversed in the deck 23 Bill McCaffrey's Prize Winner (William H. McCaffrey): a card is chosen from one deck and found to be missing in the other deck. The missing card is found in a hat 24 Card on the Wall (Harry Mendoza): Deck is thrown against wall, and the selection sticks there 25 Are You Sure? (Paul Morris): Four jacks are found, but not selected. Then it is discovered among the Jacks. 27 The Principle of Alternative Terminations And Its Application When the Spectator Shuffles (Charles Nyquist): putting the odds in your favor; a detailed article 30 Just Think of One (Dolf Rudin): two selections appear face out in two glasses 30 Here's Your Card (Herb Rungie): magician counts to the selection 31 Well, Well! (Ned Rutledge): Ace of spades locates a card after an apparent miss.Uses 1 rough & smooth, 1 double side 33 That's The Way They're Done: four selections are revealed in different methods, including Martin Gardner's Lie Detector Test 35 Chapter II: Cards in Motion 35 A. Transpositions 35 Insto-Transpo Perfected (Dr. Raymond Beebe): Two signed cards held by two spectators transpose. An improvement on Annemann's Insto-Transpo 37 There'll Be Some Changes Made! (Sigmar K. Hofeller): Magician uses a tray to handle the deck. Spectator separates reds from black. One half is given to one spectator, the other half to the other. Each takes the top card to show who has reds and who has blacks. Instantly the rest of the packs change color (or places) 38 Technicolor Transpose (Greer Marechal, Jr.): several named cards transpose from red deck to blue deck in the hands of the spectators 39 Saturn's Card Transposition (Dr. Harlan Tarbell): One card is visibly placed in a hat. The deck is wrapped in rubber bands from top to bottom and side to side. The magician passes his hand over the deck, and the face card changes to the value of the card in the hat, which is shown to have transposed with the face card. This is repeated as the card is turned back. 41 Guess It (William H.Wilson): two cards in two folders transpose even though they can be seen through a small hole in the folders42 B. Flying Pasteboards 42 Again, The Card In the Wallet (Franklin M. Chapman): ungimmicked wallet, but should open at the end, not like a book. Feature is that when you reach for the wallet at the end, your hands are clearly empty. 43 Parade of the Lamas (Bruce Elliot). 3 Jokers placed down, tapped with others. They move one at a time to other pile 45 Up My Sleeve (R.M. Jamison): a Jumbo card effect 46 Effective Passee-Passee Card Melange (C.A. George Newmann): a pocket to pocket routine 49 Card Thru Hank (George H. Pittman): the selection slowly emerges from a deck encased by a handkerchief. An improvement of Hoffman's technique. 53 Six Cards to Pocket with Extras (Audley V. Walsh): cards move from a paper bag to your pocket, with comedy 54 Here, There and Everywhere (Bob Weill): magician needs 3 chances out of 52 to find the card 55 The Improved "Zens" Cards & Envelopes (M.F. Zens): The Miracle Pocket to Pocket trick (cards and envelopes)59 C. Rising Cards 59 Rising Cards From Houlette (Charles Arbuthnot, III): rising cards from a mechanical apparatus 60 Mechanico Rising Cards (Verne Chesbro): in glass, with another mechanical rising mechanism 63 The Impromptu Floating Card (Sid Fleischman and Bob Gunther): a card is laid on the palms and seems to float without aid 64 The JM Rising Card (Jack McMIllen): a deck is wrapped in a handkerchief and a card rises out 66 My Best Rising Cards (Peter Warlock): using thread and a platform display 69 Chapter III: Meeting of the Minds 69 The Master Mind (Theo. Annemann): a mental card trick with multiple sub-effects 71 At a Mentally Chosen Number (Sylvan Barnet): Spectator thinks of a card and a number. Performer fans through deck and does some arranging. Spectator names card and number, number is counted to and the chosen card is shown 72 Sensitive Fingers (Eugene Bernstein): 5 cards chosen by 3 spectators from 3 piles are revealed by the backs 73 Four Ace Memory Test (Mystic Craig): a verbal force 74 Extra Joker Prediction (John Crimmins Jr): a prediction is written on a Joker card, and 12 other cards are spread on the table an one chosen. It matches the prediction.Uses specially printed cards 75 Next! (Paul Curry): Selection is made and lost in the deck. A prediction card is inserted in the deck. When the deck is gone through, the prediction card is found to say "yours is the next card", and proves to be correct 78 Follow Me (Paul Curry): a do as i do with two decks 80 Bi-Mentalism (Ronald Edwards): A double-barreled effect, the first approach using a Si-Stebbins stack, the 2nd using a Svengali Deck. Written card winds up next to selected card 82 Silent Stop (Professor El-Tab): Two spectators each handle half the deck and exchange one selection. Magician locates both selections. 83 DigiVision (Val Evans): One card is removed from the deck. The deck stays behind the magician's back, but the card is named. 84 In The Mind ("Hen" Fetsch): Selections are determined in three different, dramatic methods. Teaches the The Fetsch Force. 89 Spread, Shuffle, Spread (Martin Gardner): spectator takes a card from one end of the deck and places it in the other end, yet it can be determined even though the deck was shuffled. This can be repeated multiple times. 91 Dark Eyes (Teral Garrett): Magician can reveal the Ace in an envelope, even in the dark 92 Turnabout (Walter B. Gibson): Two spectators come up with a match in two decks. Good prelude to a Do As I Do effect 94 The Blue Intruder (Nelson C. Hahne): Spectator names a card, and it is the only blue backed card in a red deck. Requires some skill, and is not for close up 94 Coincidence? No. Prevision? Yes (George Kaplan): a clever use of the Brainwave deck 95 The L.W. Stop Mystery (T. Page Wright and William W. Larsen): a "Stop" effect using a cleverly gimmicked deck 96 Mental Rescue (L. Vosburgh Lyons): Magician is able to determine two cards exchanged, even though the spectators can't. 97 Two Be or Not Two Be That Was the Question (Richard F. Madden): Two freely chosen cards (one selected mentally) are reversed in a deck. Another deck is spread and the same cards are found reversed 99 My Best Trick (George McAthy): a mental card effect in which the magician doesn't touch the deck 101 PredictoPack (Orville Meyer): Selections are made after performer has made individual written predictions. Uses a clever deck prepared from blank back, blank doubles, a couple of blank face cards, and a regular deck. Uses rough & smooth. Two decks can be made. 103 Encore (Frederick Mosteller): Part I - a clever speller 104 Encore Part II (Frederick Braue): another version 106 Part III (Orville W. Meyer): another approach 106 Carbo (Julien J. Proskauer): a location effect with a clever use of daub 108 The Mental Broadcast (Clayton Rawson): A card is selected in another room, the magician is blindfolded, and the deck is placed in his pocket. Cards are removed one at a time as the magician names the card and asks some questions about it relating to the selection. Then the selection is found. 111 Peek Deck (Dr. Franklin V. Taylor): this specially gimmicked deck described along with nine different ideas for its use 115 Out of these Hands (J.G. Thompson Jr.): magician determines two cards and which of two spectators hold them 117 The Future Deck (Jack Vosburgh): a prediction is written on a card and tossed in a hat. The deck is spread and a card selected and matches the prediction 119 The Magician's Dream (Audley V. Walsh): a thought of card is located 120 Victoria (Herman L. Weber): a psychological choice effect not to be passed by 122 Chapter IV Potpourri Unclassified Gems 122 One Plus One Equals Three (Roger Barkann): a four Ace trick with a difference 124 A Two-Tiered Blank Fan and Some Variations (John Braun): some flourishes 127 Flighty Aces (Lu Brent): another four Ace routine 128 Hallucination (Eddie Clever): a test in observation 131 The Alpha Four Ace Trick (Stanley Collins): for platform presentation 132 New Color Change of a Giant Card Fan (Del Monte): a very visual effect 134 I Won't Play Cards With You (Dariel Fitzkee): a gambling demonstration 138 One in Millions! (Royal V. Heath): mathematical card effect 140 Telepathic Routine (Maury Kains): application for the Brainwave Deck 141 The Canfield Set-up (Gerald L. Kaufman): a stacked deck that let's you win every time at this solitaire game 142 The King Can Do No Wrong (Gerald L. Kaufman): a relationship story between the Kings and the Queens 144 Vanishing Aces (Gerald Kosky): the missing Ace is removed from the pocket 144 The Four Burglars (Sid Lorraine): an adaptation of this classic puzzler 147 Greatest Four Ace Trick (Orville Meyer): Ace effect using three double facers 150 A New Find the Lady Illusion (Howard D. Wise): using Black Art and Shell principles for platform 152 Mind Testing Deck (Ed Wolff): a gag (be careful who you use it for) 154 Chapter V Pocket Tricks 154 ST(R)UNG! (Joseph L. Barnett): a cut and restored string with the aid of a finger ring 156 The Ghost Coin and Key (Bobo, The Magician): a half dollar to Key transformation 157 Paper Napkin Vanish (R.C. Buff): without the need for a TT 158 Ribbon Release (Clyde F. Cairy): Scissor handles are threaded onto a ribbon and released first in a puzzle manner, then in a magical manner 160 Gone! (Jack Chanin): a complete vanish of a coin (must wear a jacket) 161 Paper Money (Melbourne Christopher): a rolled up newspaper ball is held in the hand and tapped with a coin, the ball turns into a rolled up bill 161 I.O.U. (Paul Curry): a dime changes into a penny in a flash, along with an IOU 163 Impromptu Bill Reading (Dr.E. G. Ervin): a quick way to mind read the value of a dollar bill serial number 164 Four Coin Transposition (Val Evans): four coins vanish and are found in the other hand (one at a time) 165 The Ring on Pencil (Tom Fitzgerald): finger ring makes it way onto the pencil, the latter held by a spectator 166 Pop Through Cigarette (Martin Gardner): cigarette pops through the center of a handkerchief 167 The Ring of Thoth (Nelson C. Hahne): a finger ring passes onto the center of a handkerchief while the ends are held by a spectator 169 A Cubical Curiosity (Mark Jacobs): the spot on a cube changes places 170 Jamison's Spot Sticks (R.M. Jamison): a paddle trick with a two bar set like Jumping Gems 172 Karger's Bent Coin (George Karger): a coin bending illusion 173 A Hole In One (L. Vosburgh Lyons): a hole is punched in three pieces of cardboard, the magician restores three of them 174 The Pedagogue's Nightmare (Bill McCaffrey): a paddle trick with three paddles that are designed to hold three pennies each 179 A Shot of Scotch (Chester Morris): a shot of Scotch produced from a handkerchief 180 Three In One (Paul Morris): trick with wooden matches and thimbles 182 Peter Rabbit Goes to Town! (Robert A. Nelson): sponge rabbit presentation 183 Sefalaljia III (Charles W. Nyquist): a ring is threaded onto a string in an apparently impossible manner 184 Tapping Pencil (Ralph W. Read): a pencil can rap messages 185 Perpetual Pencil (Jimmy Sanders): a bullet pencil adapted to the old "snapper" effect and also rolls on the table unaided 186 Poor Man's Bank Knight (Jerry Sorensen): only the magician gets the real stick of gum 186 The Philathropic Poker Chip (Willard S. Smith): a poker chip gains a sticker with the aid of the spectator's quarter 188 The Ghost Coins (George Starke): a handful of coins vanishes 189 Hornswoggled (George Starke): a packet of bills keeps changing value 195 Materialization (Franklin V. Taylor): a handkerchief is placed over the hand and a clothespin in dipped into the cloth where it comes out with a half dollar 195 Double or Nothing (J.G. Thompson, Jr.): a follow up for the above 197 Chapter VI Tricks for the Home 197 Pen-Plexity (John Booth): a code for a two person mentalist act 197 Vanishing Salt Trick (Jack Chanin): Salt poured into fist vanishes to be found in a silk handkerchief 199 Marbles and Marvels (Stanley Collins): two marbles change to two potatoes and then to four 200 Under the Pan (T.J. Crawford): a sort of cups and balls with four shallow dishes and four rubber balls 202 Finger Finger (Bruce Elliott): some approaches to a mentalist effect in which the magician always knows how many fingers a couple of spectators are holding up (requires a confederate) 204 On the Cuff (Bruce Elliott): a live goldfish trick is briefly described by the editor, then a ring on handcuffs stunt 205 The Trick Without a Name (Sid Fleischman): Spectator prints his name in red in a magazine, the page is ripped out an burned, but then returns to the magazine, with the signature intact 206 The Perfect Pitch Test (Wilbu Kattner): magician is able to tell which notes are being thought of without hearing them 208 Kolar's Magic Shears (J.J. Kolar): an approach to the Clippo cut and restored newspaper strip 209 Dead! (Orville Meyer): living and dead test 210 The Morris Plan (Chester Morris): a coin goes through a finger ring with the aid of a handkerchief 211 Telephone Book Test (Jack Trepel): one and two person versions 213 Assisted by the Dead (M. Van Reese): A Miniature Seance with four psychic feats 217 Trinket Test (Jack Vosburgh): magician can determine which articles were placed in a hat 219 Chapter VII Tricks for Home and Stage 219 Multiple Slate Writing (Roger Barkann): a message appears on several slates that were previously shown blank 220 Wuxtra! (Sylvan Barnet): newspaper headline effect 221 Egyptian X-Ray Scope (John N. Booth): with the aid of a magic tube, the magician duplicates a design on a selected card 222 A Paper Cone, Silk N' Water (Lu Brent): Red silk and water are put in the cone, a white silk and red water are poured out 223 The Spirit Mirror (Loring Campbell): the ghostly image of a card appears on a mirror that was previously shown blank 224 A Ring In Transit (Eddie Clever): borrowed finger ring jumps from right hand to left, even though both hands were covered with handkerchiefs and enclosed in rubber bands 225 Humpty Dumpty Gets Around (John J. Crimmins, Jr.): A Fantasy for Children with mechanical apparatus 228 Double Locking Slate (Harry Dobrin): A numerical prediction with a gimmicked slate 229 Double Locking Periscope Slate (Harry Dobrin): magician duplicates drawing on a slate 230 Cut Post Card Mystery (Professor El-Tab): one of 60 postcards is selected and torn into four pieces, all but one piece vanish. A book of postcards is opened and the card at a predicted page number has only one piece that matches the other three 232 The Watch, Glass and Handkerchief (Dr. Henry R. Evans): a watch is apparently accidentally destroyed but then recovered 234 Hand(y) Magic (Tom Fitzgerald): finger and hand stunts - thumb and forefinger, pendulum, arm control, etc. 239 Big Money (Dr. Joseph H. Fries): torn and restored(?) jumbo money 240 Physician's Ropes (J.H. Fries): Multi part rope trick - Part I The Mystic Necktie, Part II A Sailor's Rope (cut and restored), Part III Rope Riting (clever ending for any rope routine) 242 Chapter VII: Tricks for Home and Stage 242 Dy-Cyphering Trick (Royal V. Heath): mathematical dice mentalism 244 Chesbro on Heath's Dy-Cyphering (Verne Chesbro): further approaches 246 Take a Number from 1 to 30 (Royal V. Heath): another mathematical trick 247 Hugard's Butterflies (Jean Hugard): tissue paper is torn, wet, and danced on a fan, where dry tissue butterflies seem to fly forth 250 Magnetic Spheres (Mark Jacobs): balls seem to cling to a wand without support 250 A Silk Production (Mark Jacobs): silks are produced from a sheet of paper rolled into a tube 251 The Bewitched Paper (Dr. Howard B. Kayton): a do as I do with a cut and restored paper strip 252 Dollar Bill in Lemon (Gerald Kosky): torn bill is restored inside a lemon 253 The Rise and Fall of Paul Mall (Art Lyle): cigarette pack is dropped in a glass, and a cigarette rises from the case 254 Linking Rings (Greer Marechal, Jr.): A 4 (5) ring routine using one oversized ring. 256 Torn and Restored Strip of Paper (Harry Mendoza): using a TT 247 Psychic Impressions (Bob Nelson): using the U.P Clip Boards 259 Mystic Sewing Machine (Dell O'Dell): paper is torn and turns into a hat and some pants. Includes poems to go along with it! 261 The Ring from the Rope (Tom Osborne): a ring drops off a loop of rope 263 Tomorrow's News (Herb Rungie): a future headline prediction 264 The Invisible Mischievous Genii (Dr. Raymond V. Stone, Sr. - RAMO): a metal can collapses into a shriveled mess 265 Moonlight Madness (J.G. Thompson Jr.): two-person mental act fully explained with apparatus and suggestions 273 Tear Supreme (Howard D. Wice): Torn & Restored magazine papers 277 Refund (Ed Wolff): Milk is poured into a paper cone, and money is retrieved! 279 Chapter VIII Stage Effects 279 The Telephone Drama (Theo Annemann, Courtesy Max Holden): a telephone, a friend, a deceased friend and some mentalism 280 The Test of the Tiber (Theo Annemann): mindreading with the telephone book 283 The Arrowsmith Glass Penetration (G.E. Arrowsmith): passing objects through glass 286 Hat'N Bunny (Dr. Raymond Beebe): the rabbit from the hat! 288 The Color Changing Hat and Gloves (Tom Bowyer): performers hat and gloves change from black and white to white and black 291 An Amusing Interlude (Vynn Boyar): a glass of wine keeps emptying before the performer can drink it 292 The Flaming Punch (Joan Brandon): a comedy gag 293 Fountain of Silks (Franklin M. Chapman): Bare Hand Silk Production Act 298 The Silver Shower (Verne Chesbro): an approach to the Midas Dream coin production act 301 The Elusive Canary (Mystic Craig): canary vanishes from the hand and appears on a stand 301 My Best Club Laugh ("Hen" Fetsch): beer is poured into a paper cone where it vanishes, the paper now has a picture of a happy man on it 303 My Best Flash Opening ("Hen" Fetsch): bouquet from paper cone, milk into paper cone, turns into a dove 305 My Favorite Trunk Routine (Dariel Fitzkee): for stage 308 The Four Door Production Cabinet (Walter B. Gibson): a stage illusion 311 The Magic Sewing Cabinet (Hathaway): a kid's show stage illusion with comedy 313 Magic of the Wand (Sigmar K. Hofeller): a wand vanishes and reappears in its box 314 Pop's Opener (F.H. Jeudevine): a approach to the cut and restored ribbon 315 Karson's A La Die Box Illusion (Joe Karson): a stage size die box that uses an assistant rather than the die 316 The Lamarque Rabbit Vanish (Abril LaMarque): for the magician's table 319 Fatima (William Larsen): a Fatima doll is constructed from a handkerchief and dances 320 A Flash Opener (Sid Lorraine): a comedy bit with a flash bill 321 Just Raising Cane (Dick Madden): a cane clings to the hand 324 Modern Crystal Coin Jar (Harry Mendoza): Three coins are produced and end up in a glass (gimmicked, but examinable at end) 325 Nite Club Teaser (Doc Mifflin): a club routine with a bathing beauty (ends clean) 326 Thought Projection Test (Grady S. Nicholson): an experiment in "thought projection" 328 Oldoscope (Dr. Cecil E. Nixon): a mind reading machine for stage 332 The Secret of the Maharajah (Dolf Rudin): three borrowed rings end up in a bottle attached to miniature roses and miniature duplicates of selected cards 334 Patter for the Egg Bag (Lucille Saxon): a poem for use with the egg bag 334 The Escape-Ologist (Dr. Raymond V. Stone - RAMO): a guinea pig escapes from a sack 337 Namreh's Electrick (Herman L. Weber): handkerchief and banknote are loaded into a gun, a light is shot, and the handkerchief and note are found in the broken bulb 338 Cig to Pipe (Bob Weill): instant change 339 Watch and Nest of Boxes Without Assistant (William H. Wilson): a borrowed watch ends up in a nest of boxes 341 Windsor's Egg Bag Routine (Tommy Windsor): Tommy's routine for an egg bag fully described, adding in a real egg, a lemon, and gags 345 The M.F. Zens Magic Table and Walking Through Ribbon Illusion (M.F. Zens): portable table converts into Walking Thru Ribbon illusion 347 Chapter IX Biographical Sketches of Contributors 347 Theo. Annemann: 1907 - 1942 347 Charles Arbuthnot III 348 George Ernest Arrowsmith 348 Roger Barkahn 348 Sylvan Barnet 348 Joseph L. Barnett 349 Raymond L. Beebe 349 Eugene Bernstein 349 J.B. Bobo 349 John Nicholls Booth 350 Tom Bowyer 350 Vynn Boyar 350 Joan Brandon 350 Fred Braue 351 John Braun 351 Lu Brent 351 R.C. Buff 351 Clyde F. Cairy 352 Loring Campbell 352 Jack Chanin 352 Frank Chapman 352 Forest V. Chesbro 353 Milbourne Christopher 353 Eddie Clever 353 Stanley Collins 353 Mystic Craig 354 Thomas J. Crawford 354 John J. Crimmins, Jr. 354 Paul J. Curry 354 Del Monte (Charles Reagan) 355 Harry Dobrin 355 Ronald B. Edwards 355 Bruce Elliott 355 Professor El-Tab (Alfred J. Battle) 356 Dr. E.G. Ervin 356 Dr. Henry Ridgely Evans 356 Val Evans 357 "Hen" Fetsch (Henry) 357 Thomas B. Fitzgerald 357 Dariel Fitzkee 358 Sid Fleischman 358 Joseph Harman Fries 358 Martin Gardner 358 Teral Garrett 359 Walter B. Gibson 359 Arnold L. Grubin 359 Nelson C. Hahne 359 Hathaway (John) 359 Royal V. Heath 360 Charles H. Hopkins 360 Jean Hugard 360 Mark Jacobs 361 R.M. Jamison 361 F.H. Jeudevine 361 Maurice Kains 361 George G. Kaplan 362 George Karger 362 Joseph A. Karson 362 Wilbur Kattner362 Gerald Lynton Kaufman 363 Howard B. Kayton, M.D. 363 The Great Kolar (J.J.) 363 Gerald Kosky 364 Abril Lamarque 364 William W. Larsen 364 Sid Lorraine 364 Art Lyle 365 L. Vosburgh Lyons 365 Richard F. Madden 365 Greer Marechal, Jr. 365 George McAthy 365 William H. McCaffrey 366 Jack McMillen 366 Harry Mendoza 366 Orville Meyer 367 John W. Mifflin 367 Chester Morris 367 Paul Morris 368 Frederick Mosteller 368 Robert A. Nelson 368 C.A. George Newmann 368 Grady S. Nicholson 369 Cr. Cecil E. Nixon 369 Charles Walter Nyquist 369 Dell O'Dell 370 Tom Osborne 370 George Harrison Pittman 370 Julien J. Proskauer 371 Clayton Rawson 371 Ralph W. Read 371 Dolf Rudin 372 Herb Rungie 372 Ned Rutledge 372 James J. Sanders 372 Lucille Pierce Saxon 373 Sigmar - The Magician (Sigmar K. Hofeller) 373 Jerry Sorensen 373 Williard S. Smith 373 George Starke 374 Dr. Raymond V. Stone, Sr. (RAMO) 374 Harlan Tarbell 374 Dr. Franklin V. Taylor 375 J.G. Thompson, Jr. 375 Jack F. Trepel 375 M. Van Reese 375 Jack Vosburgh 376 Audley Valentine Walsh 376 Peter Warlock 376 Herman L. Weber 377 Bob Weill 377 William H. Wilson (Will de Seive) 377 Tommy Windsor 377 Howard D. Wise378 Ed. Wolff378 Michael F. Zens 379 Catalog of selected magic books 381 General Index
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