The French Decorative Styles From the Earliest Times to the Present Day (1904) By Ellis P. Butler and Brittain B. Wilson. "A hand-book for ready reference by the editors of the Upholstery dealer and decorative furnisher." A large format (8.5x12 inch) book. Trade publication with many pages of advertising. Illustrated throughout with photos and line art. New York: Thomas A. Cawthra and Company. [NYPL]
Other Material
Syracuse Herald (September 28, 1927) "False Prophets of the Crack of Doom Annoying to the Author of "Pigs is Pigs"" An article. Illustrated. Syracuse Herald; September 28, 1919; magazine section. From New York World (?). [NPA]
Muscatine Journal (January 11, 1915) "Former Carrier Tells of Being a Barefoot Boy in Muscatine" [HARPER]
The Happy Profession (1946) "Friends and Crooks" By Ellery Sedgwick. An Atlantic Monthly Press Book. Boston: Little, Brown and Company. Pages 124 and 126. [EPBLIB]
Anthologies
The College Years (1958) "The Famous Oklahoma-Stanford Tug of War" A reprint of the Bull Hyde and Little Peewee story. A. C. Spectorsky, editor. New York: Hawthorn. [HARPER]
Favorite Jokes of Famous People (October, 1928) "Favorite Joke" A story. "I'm glad that it is possible to reproduce Mr. Butler's favorite story in his own words -- a splendid example of his genius in writing humor". Edited and illustrated by Frank Ernest Nicholson. Includes a caricature of the author and a reproduction of the author's famous signature. New York: E. P. Dutton. p 46-50. [EPBLIB]
Spoofs (August, 1933) "The Financial Structure" Humor. Edited by Richard Butler Glaenzer. New York: Robert M. McBride & Company. p 252-262. [HARPER]
A Preface to College Prose (1935) "The Financial Structure" Humor. Edited by Charles Gott and John A. Behnke. New York: Macmillan. p 224-29. [HARPER]
The Art of Interpretive Speech (1952) "The Financial Structure" Humor. Edited by Charles H. Woolbert and Severina E. Nelson. New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts. p 468-72. Third Edition. (Fourth Edition 1956 p 429-33.) [HARPER]
Periodicals (Prose)
Life (September, 1933) "The Fable of the Fox and the Cream" Life (1883-1936). New York:Sep 1933. Vol. 100, Iss. 2582, p. 38 (1 pp.) [HARPER]
Judge (March, 1934) "The Fable of Three Men" [HARPER]
Blue Book (November, 1914) "The Facts That Myra Hid" [HARPER]
All-Story Cavalier (May 23, 1914) "Fagan and the Elephant" A story. [PULPGEN]
World Outlook (November, 1919) "False Retentions or Something" [RGTPL]
American Magazine (September, 1906) "The Family Album" A series of drawings made to resemble a photo album. "Reproduced by Angie Breakspear with 'Remarks' by Ellis Parker Butler." With one drawing per page, Butler wrote a running commentary on the album and its characters. [RGTPL]
Woman's Home Companion (May, 1928) "Far Seas and Distant Lands" A story. Illustrated in color by George Illian. [RGTPL]
Success Magazine (March, 1926) "Fat Is Fat" A story. p 40-44+. [HARPER]
Rotarian (February, 1927) "Father" A story. Illustrated by R. M. Brinkerhoff. Also, there's a very brief bio of the author on page 64, including a photograph. p 16-17, 56-63. [HARPER]
Ideal House (September, 1905) "Fatima's Rug" [HARPER]
Judge (February 11, 1911) "Fatma, the Fortune-Teller" [HARPER]
Leslie's Monthly (August, 1904) "The Feet of the Detwilers" A story. "A Tale of Cousin Carrie and the Lousiana Exposition." With pictures by E. D. Stevens. Volume 58. Number 4. p 413-418. [HANNIGAN]
Every Week (February 17, 1934) "Fenderton Breaks a Date" A Fenderton Roper story. Illustrated by Ethel Hays. Found in the Wisconsin Rapids Daily Tribune. [NPA]
_____ (February 26, 1933) "Fenderton Checks Out" A Fenderton Roper story. Illustrated by Ethel Hays. Found in Lima (Ohio) News. [NPA]
_____ (October 8, 1932) "Fenderton Flies" A Fenderton Roper story. Illustrated by Ethel Hays. Found in Wisconsin Rapids Daily Tribune. [NPA]
_____ (August 5, 1934) "Fenderton Kidnapped" A story. Illustrated by Ethel Hayes. Found in the Butte Montana Standard magazine section. [EBAY]
_____ (June 27, 1936) "Fenderton Looks Ahead" A Fenderton Roper story. Illustrated by Ethel Hays. Found in Indiana (PA) Weekly Messenger 21-OCT-1937. [HARPER, NPA]
_____ (September 23, 1934) "Fenderton Makes Hay" A Fenderton Roper story. Illustrated by Ethel Hays. Found in Lima (Ohio) News. [NPA]
Sure-Fire Detective (August, 1941) "Fenderton Roper, Hero" A story. The name Ellis Parker Butler appears on the cover. Thanks to Richard Hall who spotted this issue in an eBay auction. Canadian pulp. Volume 1. Number 3. [EBAY]
Every Week (December 9, 1934) "Fenderton Roper, Hero" A Fenderton Roper story. "A little snappy work by our fearless sleuth." Found in (Portland) Oregon Journal Sunday Magazine. Illustrated by Ethel Hays. p 2. Also, found in Lima (Ohio) News same date. [EPBLIB, NPA]
Liberty (February 28, 1925) "Fenderton Roper, Pressman" A Fenderton Roper story. "The Short and Snappy Story of a Young Man Who Started Out to Reform Journalism." Pictures by Nancy Fay. p 14-22. [BEST]
Every Week (January 23, 1936) "Fenderton, the Avenger" A Fenderton Roper story. Illustrated by Ethel Hays. Found in Newark (Ohio) Advocate. [NPA]
Good Housekeeping (May, 1907) "The Fenelby Smugglers" A serial. This story was later published in book form as The Cheerful Smugglers. [HARPER]
_____ (June, 1907) "The Fenelby Smugglers" A serial. This story was later published in book form as The Cheerful Smugglers. Illustrated by May Wilson Preston. p 626-633. [HARPER]
_____ (July, 1907) "The Fenelby Smugglers" A serial. Chapter IV. Illustrated by May Wilson Preston. This story was later published in book form as The Cheerful Smugglers. p 15-21. [EPBLIB]
_____ (August, 1907) "The Fenelby Smugglers" A serial. This story was later published in book form as The Cheerful Smugglers. [HARPER]
_____ (September, 1907) "The Fenelby Smugglers" A serial. This story was later published in book form as The Cheerful Smugglers. [HARPER]
Harper's Bazar (December, 1913) "The Fifth Commandment" A story. The author "approaches the divorce problem from a new angle." Includes a full-page drawing by Walter Biggs. p 26-8. Numbering for the commandment in this title is likely from some source such as Westminster Shorter Catechism (or other) and is certainly "Honor Thy Mother and Father". [EPBLIB]
Christian Herald (June, 1931) "First Aid" A short short story. One illustration by Dieden Medter. The name "Ellis Parker Butler" appears on the cover. p 19. [HARPER]
Red Cross Magazine (October, 1919) "The First Day of School" A story. Four illustrations by Maginel Wright Enright. "Ethelbert stood for a brief second on the stairs looking down. He was vastly unhappy." p 23-26, 66. [HARPER]
World Magazine (November 19, 1916) "The First Gold Brick" A Jabez Bunker story. [HARPER]
New York Herald Tribune (April 11, 1926) "Fish Out of Water" A review of They Had to See Paris by Homer Croy. p 14 VII. [HARPER]
Pictorial Review (December, 1912) "Five Forks" A story. Illustrated by Lawrence Herndon. p 12-13. [HARPER]
American Girl (September, 1934) "The Flat-Tire Mystery" A Betty Bliss story. Illustrations by Leslie Turner. "The boys always laughed at the 'Tenth Street Yard Detective Club,' but when Superintendent Betty Bliss found a real crime, they did their best to help." The name "Ellis Parker Butler" appears on the cover. p 20-22, 44-45. [HARPER]
American Magazine (December, 1907) "Fleas Will Be Fleas" A Mike Flannery story. With illustrations by Rollin Kirby. Included later in Mike Flannery, On Duty and Off. [RGTPL]
College Humor (May, 1925) "For Good Old Wumpus" A story. "A Thrilling Romance of Love and Baseball." "'Curse you, Clyde Zingo!' one of the two exclaimed rather crossly." Illustrated by Russell Patterson. p 63-66,93. [EPBLIB]
Argosy (February 10, 1934) "For Mayor of Dog Bite" A short story. "A six-gun election out West. Frisco Bill fired, and the feud was on. Why waste time on ballots when bullets are so much quicker?" [ARGOSY, PULP]
Success Magazine (December, 1906) "For Skudsy" A story. Illustrated by Clara D. Davidson. [EPBLIB]
Red Book (May, 1914) "For the Love of Mike" "A 'Guaranteed Laugh' story of a group of circus 'freaks.'" Illustrated by Rea Irvin. "Another 'Laughs-guaranteed' story from the most famous humorist in the country today." [HARPER]
Short Stories (May, 1914) "The Forgiveness of Spot" [HARPER]
Leslie's Monthly (July, 1904) "A Fortune in Hot Air" A Perkins of Portland story. "An Adventure of Perkins the Great." With drawings by F. R. Gruger. Volume LVIII. Number 3. Whole Number 343. Pages 269-274. This story is not in Perkins of Portland. Also reprinted in Dallas Morning News, January 5, 1908. [HANNIGAN]
Washington Post (November 25, 1917) "Four Tufts of Golden Hair" A Philo Gubb story. Illustrated by Thornton Fisher. p 69+. [WASHPOST]
Red Book (November, 1915) "Four Tufts of Golden Hair" A Philo Gubb story. [HARPER]
Delineator (May, 1925) "Fragrance of Lilacs" Three Glimpses into the Beyond. [BEST, EPBLIB]
Popular Magazine (August 20, 1922) "The Frane Mystery" A story. "A mystery tale providing a petty instance of how you never can tell." One illustration. [EPBLIB, PULP]
Judge (August 7, 1920) "Freedom from the Press" A story. The phrase "Another 'Man from '20' story by the author of 'Pigs Is Pigs'" appears on the cover. p 5-7. [EPBLIB]
Youth's Companion (March 11, 1915) "A Fresh-Water Salt" A Fresh-Water "Salt" The Youth's Companion (1827-1929). Boston:Mar 11, 1915. Vol. 89, Iss. 10, p. III (1 pp.) [KAYLIN, PROQUEST]
Hardboiled (February, 1937) "A Friend in Need" [COOK+MILLER]
Designer (March, 1915) "The Fringe of Fate" A story. Illustrated by Arthur Little. p 3. [HARPER]
Association Men (February, 1921) "From Cowhide to Patent Leather" [HARPER]
Boston Sunday Herald (March 31, 1912) "Frost-Bit Frisbie" Joe Chapple's News-Letter succeeding The Boston News-Letter the first newspaper printed in America. Sunday Magazine Section of The Sunday Herald. Illustrated. p 10. Also called National News-Letter, probably in syndication. [EPBLIB]