The Strand Magazine/Volume 10/Issue 60


Vol. 10. No. 60.
December 1895.


Contents (not listed in original)

  • The Exploits of Brigadier Gerard.
    VII. How the Brigadier Played for a Kingdom, by A. Conan Doyle.
    Illustrated by W. B. Wollen.
  • Illustrated Interviews.
    No. XLV. Captain M'Giffin, by William G. FitzGerald.
  • The Vision of Inverstrathy Castle: Sequel by F. Startin Pilleau.
    Illustrated by Paul Hardy.
  • A Day in a Doll's Hospital by Harry How.
    Illustrated by Macneil Barbour.
  • An Express of the Future by Jules Verne[1].
    Illustrated by A. J. Johnson.
  • The Lost Property Office, by William G. FitzGerald.
  • The Lepers' Guest by Max Pemberton.
    Illustrated by Sidney Paget.
  • Portraits of Celebrities at Different Times of their Lives.
  • John Guinness Rogers
  • E. Onslow Ford
  • Sir Matthew White Ridley
  • Ellaline Terriss
  • The Handwriting of John Ruskin, written and illustrated by J. Holt Schooling.
  • Stories from the Diary of a Doctor, Second Series.
    XII. "To Every One His Own Fear", by L. T. Meade and Clifford Halifax.
    Illustrated by Gordon Browne.
  • Naming the Baby by Edward Salmon.
    Illustrated by A. J. Johnson.
  • Gleams from the Dark Continent.
    VI. The Great Dial of the Gold-Finders, by Charles J. Mansford.
    Illustrated by A. Pearse.
  • Frost Photography.
    Illustrated by James Leadbeater.
  • Morbus Nobilis, or, The Plaster Brigade by W. H. Williamson.
    Illustrated by Max Cowper.
  • Acrobats and How They Are Trained by Ernest W. Low.
    Illustrated by A. J. Johnson.
  • The Understudy by Robert Barr.
    Illustrated by J. Finnemore.
  • Chimney Felling by Walter Wood.
    Illustrated by A. J. Johnson.
  • In the Tules by Bret Harte.
    Illustrated by Paul Hardy.
  • Street Toys written and illustrated by Ernest C. Fincham.
  • Abraham Fleeter's Weariness written and illustrated by J. F. Sullivan.
  • An Animal Actor, by Harry How.
  • Artists of "The Strand Magazine".
  • The Children's Fairy by Saint-Juirs.
    Illustrated by H. R. Millar.
  • Fables: The Old Man and His Donkey by J. A. Shepherd.
  • Waiter! This Cat's Meat is Tough! by Louis Wain.
  1. Note that this is actually by Jules Verne's son, Michel Verne, but has been published many times since under Jules Verne's name