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July 6, 2005

Python Isle by Lester Dent

On June 11, 1996 Bob Bookman posted the original outline to a novel proposed for the Doc Savage series. The outline was first published in Pulp Vault magazine #10 May 1992. According to Bob it was discovered by Will Murray on a visit to Mrs. Lester (Norma) Dent's home, and was to be the 21st Doc story but was never written by Dent.
It`s left up to fans of Doc Savage to compare this outline to Will Murray's Python Isle.





WHAT IS BACK OF YARN:

Centuries ago, King Solomon maintained a colony in the land of Ophir, source of his treasure. But the colony was put to flight by savage tribes, and set out to sea in boats. Their navigators had been killed by the savages, and the boats could only keep together as they were driven southward into the Indian Ocean by storms. Eventually they reached an island in a locality where storms are almost continuous. These monsoons prevented them again leaving the isle. They kept the Ophir treasure in their boats intact.

The colonists still live there, with Queen Lha on the throne. Opposed to Lha is Taxus, sorcerer and unscrupulous villain who is hungry for power. Taxus has a knowledge of hypnotism and the arts of magic, handed down by generations of sorcerer ancestors, and he uses these to cast spells over those who oppose him. He can hypnotize an enemy, aided by a drug made from native herbs, putting that person in sort of a trance known as Taxus' invisible wrath.

Tom Franklin, flier trying a non-stop from Australia to Cape Town, was blown off his course in the storms and landed on the isle, which is known as Python Isle because of the number of snakes of that species.

Franklin, to maneuver his own escape, told Queen Lha of Doc Savage, who could smash Taxus, and with the girl, got away in his plane. Franklin's idea is not to get Doc, but to enlist aid of unscrupulous men and come back for the Solomon wealth. Franklin takes with him from the Isle a papyrus script history of the Ophir colony by way of proof that the isle does exist.




CHAPTER I

Tom Franklin and Queen Lha, both in the costumes of Solomon days, are flying over the Pacific near South Africa. Their gasoline supply is low. They sight a small tramp steamer on the sea below, circle it, and to their surprise, are fired upon.

The ship is skippered by Blackbird Hinton, diamond smuggler and crook, who thinks the plane holds officers of the law after him. He shoots the plane down, and sends a small boat out to pick up the occupants. Prince Albert , Blackbird's henchman, has charge of the boat.

Franklin stages a fake fight and manages to hide his papyrus roll under a thwart. This is to keep from Blackbird the secret of Python Isle and its treasure. The papyrus is in a bamboo tube.

Blackbird, questioning Franklin, finds him ignorant of all worldly events since 1927. The girl does not speak English, except to speak in some language in which one name, Doc Savage, is recognizable.

Mention of Doc worries Blackbird. Prince Albert is infatuated with the girl.

That night, Franklin creeps to the radio room with the girl and attempts to send a radio message to Doc Savage asking for help. They are discovered by Blackbird, who sets upon them, and they retreat to the boat where Franklin hid his papyrus roll.
Franklin gets his roll and escapes in a launch, but the girl is left behind, a prisoner of Blackbird.



CHAPTER II

Franklin, pursued by Blackbird and his crew, reaches the South African coast. He has the idea he can enlist Doc Savage's aid and double-cross Doc when the Solomon treasure is taken from the Python Isle, so he inquires around about how to get a message to Doc Savage. He is directed to Renny, who is supervising a hydro-electric construction project nearby.

Before Renny can talk to Franklin, they are set upon by Blackbird's men. Renny has the papyrus roll in his possession for awhile, but it is taken from him by Blackbird's men. Blackbird's crew also makes off with both Franklin and the bamboo tube which contained the parchment.

Blackbird is worries for fear the message sent earlier, before Franklin escaped the boat, was received, and he goes to the Cape Town radio station, which would logically have picked it up, and forces the operator to show his files. Sure enough, the message did get through and was relayed on to Doc Savage in New York.



CHAPTER III

Renny, however, had pulled a trick on Blackbird, having emptied the bamboo tube of its parchment contents and substituted blank wrapping paper. He is examining the meaningless (to him) symbols on the parchment when he is set upon by Prince Albert, who, more canny than Blackbird, has been watching over the affair. There is a fight in which Prince Albert is bested temporarily. But Prince Albert manages to lead Renny into a trap at the radio station, in which Renny is seized by Blackbird and his gang.

Blackbird then gets in touch with a crook he knows in New York, Bull Pizano by name, and directs Bull to keep the radio message from Doc if possible.




CHAPTER IV

Bull Pizano, in NY, moves to stop the message from reaching Doc. This is possible, because Doc is at the moment away at his Fortress of Solitude.

Monk is at the NY headquarters of Doc Savage, and has the message. Bull Pizano has him decoyed outside and seized.

But Monk has cannily not taken the message with him. Bull Pizano cannot find it.




CHAPTER V

Thinking Ham, another of Doc's men, may have the message, Bull Pizano forces Monk to call Ham and make an appointment, the idea being that Ham is to be seized as he goes to the appointment. But Monk, who is using a French type phone, cannily wedges a match under the receiver hook so that the words he yells after hanging up reach Ham. The words are a warning, although Bull Pizano does not recognize them as such.

Ham rushed out, intent on aiding Monk, but was trapped as he left Doc's skyscraper headquarters-his car being forced into a big van before he can do anything about it.



CHAPTER VI

Doc comes back from his Fortress of Solitude and finds his safe has been blown-Bull Pizano's work hunting for the radiogram. The thieves are still at work, and Doc trails them to their hideout. There is a fight, the Pizano gang escaping, but not before Doc has gotten sight of a large van which holds one of his cars-the one Ham used. This informs Doc that something must have happened to Monk and Ham.



CHAPTER VII

Doc's cars are fitted with a cylinder which, at the touch of a concealed lever, releases a thin stream of vapor which is heavier than air, settles to the ground and remains there for some hours. Doc uses a fluoroscopic hood which renders this vapor visible as a sparking cloud, and trails the van-the vapor is being released by the car in the van, Ham having had a chance to get to the lever.

Thus, Doc trails the gang, and manages to rescue Monk and Ham.

They get the radiogram-there is only blank paper inside. But both Monk and Ham know its contents. It does not make much sense, being merely an appeal for help from a man named Franklin on a ship off the South African coast.

A radiogram comes from South Africa, from Renny's associates on the hydroelectric project, advising that Renny had been seized at the radio station there.



CHAPTER VIII

Doc does some sleuthing and learns that Bull Pizano and his gang have disappeared, apparently scared out by Doc's presence in N.Y.

Doc determines on the quickest route to South Africa to aid Renny-taking passage with Monk and Ham on a Zeppelin which is making one of its periodic Atlantic passages.

Pizano is on the Zeppelin, it develops, with a number of his men, and fighting follows. Doc and his party, outnumbered, are forced-apparently-into a motor gondola, which is cut loose into the sea. Doc, Monk and Ham have apparently died.



CHAPTER IX

Pizano commandeers the Zeppelin, forces it to sail well down the African coast, quits the craft and joins Blackbird, his old associate. Blackbird is enraged because the radio message was not apprehended, but news of Doc's death pacifies him and he agrees to cut Pizano in on the treasure. Blackbird has the golden ornaments worn by Queen Lha and Franklin, as well as certain parts of Franklin's plane, which are repaired with gold plate, as proof that there is a treasure. They haven't found the papyrus; Renny won t tell where it is.

They decide to kill Renny. But Doc, Monk and Ham-they were not dead, Doc having deceived Pizano into thinking that they were in the gondola which plunged into the sea-appear and rescue Renny.

Renny gets the papyrus from where he hid it.



CHAPTER X

Doc is working on the cabalistic writing of the papyrus when Franklin staggers in, with a story of having escaped from Blackbird. He says he knows where the girl is held Not taking time to hear Franklin's full story-Franklin faints from exhaustion a moment after he reaches Doc-the bronze man hurries to get the girl. But he encounters a trap, thwarts it, and does rescue the girl.

Back at his hotel, he finds Renny, Monk, Ham and Franklin have been taken by Blackbird's men during his absence. There is a note saying they will be released if Doc will turn over the papyrus roll and the girl.



CHAPTER XI

From the papyrus and the girl's story-Doc with his fabulous learning knows a little of the lost language-the story of the Python Isle, the villainous Taxus and the treasure comes out.

Doc accepts the offer of Blackbird to trade the girl and the papyrus for his men.

But the bronze man has equipped the girl with weapons, and trailed her, so that when Blackbird attempts to kill Doc's men instead of releasing them as he had promised, Doc is on hand to thwart the murders and free the prisoners.

Blackbird, Prince Albert and Pizano, with some of their men, strike out in a large plane for the Python Isle, the location of which they have, Franklin admits, forced him to divulge.



CHAPTER XII

Doc, in another plane with Renny, Monk, Ham, Franklin and Queen Lha, nears Python Isle. They have trouble with the monsoon storms which makes ships steer clear of the vicinity, but get through and land. Doc sets the plane down on a valley before a city that looks as if it might have existed in Solomon's day. The people are strangely garbed.

There is no sign of Blackbird's party or their plane, which has had time to arrive ahead of Doc.

Taxus, the sorcerer, has taken over power during Queen Lha's absence, claiming she was dead, and his followers now seize Doc's party. Queen Lha, having come back from the dead, is now an evil person, Taxus claims, and Doc and his men are her servants.



CHAPTER XIII

The populace seems on the side of Taxus, and it is agreed to give Doc and his men the trial by the python pit which consists of a gladiatorial affair of making them fight enormous snakes. It is equivalent to a sentence of grisly death.

As they are led into the city, Doc observes some who are under the strange spell of Taxus' hypnotic and drug art, and the bronze man treats one of these, an old woman. Hagai by name, working what seems a miraculous cure. This is by way of refuting Taxus yarn that he is evil spirit, a devil from the outer regions.

But Doc is tossed, with Monk, Renny and Ham, in an ingenious torture pit into which sand filters steadily so that they cannot sleep, or even breathe in comfort. Here, they are to await death by the python pit.

Queen Lha and Franklin are incarcerated elsewhere in the palace, as befitting individuals of more standing than Doc and his party.

Someone opens the sand grill and the fine particles threaten to suffocate them at once. They sight Blackbird's features-he is on Python Isle and it was he who opened the grill. Not satisfied with waiting for the python pit, Blackbird wants Doc out of the way at once.



CHAPTER XIV

That night, Franklin gets in touch with Queen Lha, and they try to escape, only to be seized outside the palace by Blackbird and his men. Blackbird, against Prince Albert's objections, orders one of his men to take the girl out to sea in the plane and drop her. Prince Albert balks at this so forcibly that they are forced to seize him and hold him.

With Taxus, in whose cause he has enlisted himself, Blackbird cooks up a scheme whereby the people will be told that Doc caused the Queen to vanish.



CHAPTER XV

Doc has darts fastened to the bottom of a foot with adhesive tape, and he uses these to make one of the pit guards nauseated; then he tells the fellow he will be made well if he releases them. The terrified guard does so.

Doc overheard Prince Albert objecting strenuously to the girl's fate, and that tipped him so that he was able to head off the flier who was to drop her into the sea. He rescues the girl.

Then Doc takes off in the Blackbird plane and deliberately drops it into the sea, escaping by a long swim and shark battle under water so that Blackbird will now think the girl and the pilot dead and know his plane is gone.



CHAPTER XVI

Doc and his party drain the gasoline from their own plane and conceal it. The girl is placed in a hiding place, with Renny left behind to watch over her.

Doc, Monk and Ham now go in search of Franklin the girl having told them where he is held. But Franklin is not at the spot. Doc's party is discovered by Taxus' warriors; there is a fight, and near its climax, Franklin puts in an appearance, saying he has escaped on his own hook, and leads them out through secret doors.



CHAPTER XVII

Doc finds and talks to the old woman Hagai, who has been spreading the story of the miraculous cure Doc worked on her. This has given the populace something to think about; Doc may be stronger magic than Taxus. Friends of Queen Lha are with Hagai and they listen to Doc explain that Taxus is a fakir.

Taxus and his men, with Blackbird and Prince Albert, appear and break up the meeting.

Doc, retreating, learns that Renny and the girl vanished from the hiding place, taken away by Blackbird s crowd, it appears.

A ship appears.

CHAPTER XVIII

The ship is Blackbird's vessel, which has come under forced draft. It is to be used to remove the Solomon gold.

Doc and his party attempt to remove the treasure first, but are surprised and seized.



CHAPTER XIX

Doc and his men receive trial in the python pit, Blackbird s gang using the cover of the ceremonies to make away with the gold. By using a chemical vapor, Doc stupefies the pythons. His seeming power over the serpents arouses those of the populace who are on the side of Queen Lha, and they rout the followers of Taxus.



CHAPTER XX

Blackbird, Taxus, Prince Albert, Pizano and gang have seized Queen Lha and boarded the ship and are putting out of the harbor. Doc boards his plane in an attempt to head them off, but the craft is not a fighting ship and his tanks are punctured. He is forced down on a reef.

In attempting to get close enough to him to kill him, Blackbird's ship goes on the rocks, is broken up and sinks. Prince Albert, a debonair fellow after his way, is the last to drown.

The plane is safe. Doc reaches shore.

Queen Lha is safe, it develops, because Prince Albert had turned her loose prior to the sailing of the ship.

Continue reading "Python Isle by Lester Dent" »

July 23, 2005

Trading Cards


July 24, 2005

Bleeding Sun Timeline

First, we had the idea for the shenanigan. Next we had a cover. Then we had the back cover blurb.

8-4-1998 Doc and his courageous crew race to the Far East to combat the Axis plague! Can they solve the mystery of an insidious new weapon certain to turn the tide of the war? What causes the sun to turn red and ships to disappear? Can mere light really turn a man to smoke and ashes? Will Doc and Monk save Ham in time or will he too die under a bleeding sun?


Then, Bill had a story idea.


Email 8-6-98 This is my idea on the story line. Doc and Long Tom are in Norfolk working on a new radar system for the Navy in preparation for the invasion of Japan. The head of Naval intelligence, Admiral J. Ryan, disappears after a strange red cloud appears in the Navy base in Norfolk and causes ships to melt and turns men to ashes. Doc analyzes the remains and discovers a rare element that is only found in the coastal islands of Japan. Doc and Long Tom immediately take off for Japan in hopes of finding Admiral Ryan before he reveals the secret plans for the invasion.

We didn't have a real novel though. Bleeding Sun might have ended then and there. Then another email from Duane.


Email excerpt 8-13-98 Meanwhile, I have a weird idea: If you think it's worth trying, I'd like to take the ideas everyone's thrown out about #127 and actually take a stab at writing the "unpublished novel." (Okay, okay, I've always had a grandiose dream of wanting to be one of the Kenneth Robesons.) You could serialize it on your site as the Chapter of the Week or something like that.


A great idea! Which led to a lot of hard work. Two years of hard work. Using the barest bones of the blurb he began writing Bleeding Sun. I promised to publish each chapter as he finished it. At a chapter per month I figured we'd have the novel finished by Pulpcon 2000. Of course, neither one of us counted on family and careers delaying the project.
I doubt Duane let Bill's idea and my cover blurb dictate his novel. We didn't discuss how he planned to plot the novel and my editorial interference was limited to a couple of suggestions.
Email 10-29-1998 After reading the two adventures that supposedly precede and follow "Bleeding Sun" -- "Trouble on Parade" and "The Screaming Man" -- it's clear that the Doc who appears in 1945 is quite different from the Doc of the early 1930s. Even the language and tone that Dent uses is quite different. So I've tried to combine a little of both the early 1930s and 1945. I hope it works. -- Duane

I know he had planned the tone and timing of the novel pretty early on. There are a few familiar names used as character names and I want to state emphatically that all characters in this novel are fictions and any resemblance to persons living or dead is unintended.
It was wonderful reading each new chapter as Duane mailed them to me. Even more I enjoyed being able to read the complete novel in one weekend last week. I hope you've enjoyed this welcome addition to the Doc Savage cannon as much as I have.

Now if I can just convince Duane to start writing Terror of the Death Devil…

CG Welch
March 2001

The True Story Behind the Bleeding Sun


shenanigan: "a playful or mischievous act; a prank."




At first Bleeding Sun was a shenanigan. In 1998, a few attendees of Pulpcon pretended there was a Doc Savage novel named Bleeding Sun. There wasn't. That was the fun.


Now it really is a novel. A fine work of fiction written by a true Brother of Bronze. No longer can anyone say, "The Bleeding Sun doesn't exist. It's a hoax." No one can claim to own all the Doc Savage novels if they don't have Bleeding Sun.


Then again maybe it wasn't really a shenanigan. Maybe we just pretended to "discover" what already existed. For those who weren't there…and only a few of us were… here is the story….


In the summer of 1998 I attended my second Pulpcon. The year before I had a great time and I was looking for more of the same. This year was to be even better Fate wanted me to meet my (then) future wife, Catherine. Thank you, Fate.


We did all the usual Doc Savage fan activities. We spent hours in the dealer room looking for coverless magazines and pristine Bantam's. We sat and thumbed though a near mint copy of The Man of Bronze. We oohed and ahhed over Jay Ryan's detailed account of the publishing history of Doc Savage. We argued over the relative merits of the various authors. We learned the difference between "e", "e", and "e."


We were Doc fans at "the" convention. All those years of being the only Doc fan in town were forgotten as we had a great time. You won't find a more dedicated group of crazy and inventive people than at Pulpcon.



The event that would reverberate for months in Doc fandom started with a simple comment over Jay's book, "What if Jay had missed something?"


The cartoons are right: light bulbs literally appear over our heads.


Email excerpt 8-23-1998 I know it was in the dealer room where the subject was first mentioned. I know that we had been discussing the rather high price that was put on Doc doubles by some of the dealers. -- Bill

The story developed over the next two days. The principal members of the shenanigan operated the more popular Doc Savage websites. People looked to us for information on Doc Savage.


What if we quietly inserted information about a Doc Savage novel that had been published by Bantam? A novel that never existed, but that would seem to be as real as any of the others.



Primarily over a single dinner we developed our "back story." Our Doc Savage was novel scheduled to run late 1945 but was pulled at the last second. The editors at Street and Smith thought the novel was too wrapped up in the war to be published after VJ Day. So the manuscript was filed away until Bantam discovered it 30 years later. Of course they would publish it! Bantam editors would remember the cash they had reaped over The Red Spider.



We decided to insert the novel as Bantam Number 127. That's when the novels went to Bantam Omnis. Our #127 would be the last numbered Bantam Doc Savage. We all knew that a Bantam 127/128 double had been announced but was pulled in favor of the first omni edition. It would only confuse the issue more.

Next, we had to have a novel synopsis. We attacked the story logically. Since it was to be set at the end of the war it needed to feature the war in the Pacific. The Japanese empire was called the rising sun. We bandied about plays on such words as "sun" "red" "blood" and "setting sun." We thought about the red sun of the Japanese flag, which took us to "Bloody Sun" and finally to Bleeding Sun.



That would be our title: Mystery of the Bleeding Sun. Of course, Bantam would have shortened that to Bleeding Sun.


You may have noticed I haven't identified all of the names of the perps of the shenanigan. I'll leave it up to the dedicated Savageoligist to uncover the posts and interview the participants. Suffice it to say that we numbered at least seven and each had his or her role.


The story and title developed over an otherwise forgettable dinner. During the next day we would identify certain needs to carry out the shenanigan. We needed a blurb. I volunteered to write one. I had just completed an interview with the original Bantam blurb writer, Nick D'Annuzio, and thought I was up to the task.



Chris Kalb not only operated the prime Doc Savage website he was an award-winning artist. (Later someone claimed the art had been put together by some "idiot with photoshop.") He agreed to make up a Doc Savage cover. …using Photoshop. We didn't want to make it too hard to figure out.


Email excerpt 8-4-1998 The cover might be a little too nice considering the cheap crap Bantam put on the fronts of the first omni. BTW, looking at the list there's plenty of time between the doubles (mar 85) and omnis (aug 86). --Chris

We would place that cover and blurb on all of our sites. There would be no special announcement. We wanted it to seem like it had been there all along. Crazy, huh?





I was taking quite a few pictures of the festivities. The previous year I had posted them on the Hidalgo Trading Company along with a record of the event. To sell the story I took a picture of Catherine holding up a novel she had purchased. Chris finished the cover and digitally placed it on Catherine's novel.

Now we had a picture of someone holding Bleeding Sun. It had to exist! We went home and started fixing our sites. Someone noticed the picture of Catherine and asked about Bleeding Sun. I feigned surprise they didn't own a copy.

The story started to unravel when a copy was placed on eBay. I know it sounds like we were pushing our luck, but it seemed to make sense at the time. Only one person bid on the novel and he laughed when he learned of the joke.

One participant tried to enlist someone outside the group to help. In retrospect, that was the beginning of the end. The first rule of any shenanigan is "Don't try to involve anyone who doesn't have a sense of humor."

Accusations, recriminations and many angry Usenet posts later the word was out. We had pulled a fast one. No one was really hurt and the alt.fan.doc-savage newsgroup was more alive than it had been for months.

Only one person seemed angry. Most laughed when they discovered the joke. We had a few emails thanking us for injecting some fun into fandom. I think the following two comments were representative of the majority response to the shenanigan:




Usenet excerpt Aug 13, 1998 As I happen to have been one of the people who actually bid on "Bleeding Sun" and therefore was "taken" by the "hoax", I want to say to one and all, "Relax". I appreciate the laugh and I really appreciate the fact that the only thing I lost was some time placing a bid on Ebay. It was a masterful hoax, and I applaud its originators. If, however, in any real or imagined guilt they may or may not feel, they desire to commit acts of restitution, I will gladly accept, though I do not compel this action, help in getting the last 3 Doc PB's that I need for my collection.
Sincerely, Marcel Allen Lamb




Email 1-16-99 Just wanted you to know I fell for the Bleeding Sun book scam, and loved it! You have to understand I was in a vulnerable state when I saw it, I had just been at J__ G_____ site and found out the hardcover versions of the Bantam pb's exist so I thought anything was possible. Thanks, Mike S_______


I tried to write Marcel recently. I wonder if he finally completed his collection? Maybe he bought those three to reach his Nirvana. I hope someone sends him a copy of Bleeding Sun so he will truly discover "completion peace."





CG Welch


March 2001




James Bama

That painting looks oddly familiar, but what is it doing on a Doc Savage website? Well, first, the artist is James Bama. Yes, the Bama who painted the best Bantam covers. That's why it looks so familiar. Second, I chose this Bama painting as the subject reminds me of an elderly John Sunlight.




Who is this? I'd like to think this is Bama's version of Pat Savage. Doc fan Paul Cook rightly points that Bama works for cash and probably didn't paint this lady as his view of Pat. Still, I like to think the bug hit him one day and he just had to paint his version of Doc's counsin.


Doc Savage fan and Flearun member Biblioman contributed scans of Doc Savage in his earlier incarnation as Nevada Jim. Actually, you can recognize Bama in these illustrations for a series of western novels. Personally, these poses and colors give me Doc Savage flashbacks. I'll leave it to readers of this page to comment on which Doc Savage cover matches which Nevada Jim cover.

(ED NOTE: Click on the image for a larger version. I've cropped the copy from all the Nevada Jim covers)






















Want more Bama? Or even more Bama? What? You want a short Bama bio? Or a collection of Bama art? If that isn't enough you can purchase a few Bama Doc Savage prints...

July 25, 2005

Baumhofer's Doc Savage

click image to enlargeWalter Baumhofer was the first artist to portray Doc Savage. Is this the face you see when you're reading the novels?

Click image to enlarge.

Free Doc Savage Portrait

Click image to enlargeYes, you can get a free Doc Savage portrait...suitable for framing. All you need is three Doc Savage coupons...consecutively numbered of course. We're presenting No. 10. Just find Numbers 8 & 9 or 11 & 12 (or even 9 & 11). That shouldn't be too hard. Just purchase a couple of rare Doc Savage pulps. After you collect your coupons youneed to mail them to the Doc Savage Magazine Portrait Editor. Now, that is the tough part!

Click image to enlarge.

Chaloner's Doc Savage


Gary Chaloner created this portrait of Doc Savage exclusively for Doc fan Steve Sherman. Click the image for a larger view.

Thanks to Gary and Steve for allowing us to reprint it here. Art (c) Gary Chaloner -- Doc Savage (c) Conde Nast

July 26, 2005

Doc Savage 101?

The next time some family member chides you about your interest in Doc Savage just mention he is taught in college.

Yes, a college course in an accredited college in the United States teaches anthropology using Doc Savage as an example.

But, wait, there's more!

The professor isn't using the Doc Savage text. He's using the 1975 film Doc Savage: Man of Bronze. Obviously a sign of the end of days.

Thanks Professor Warms for taking Doc to a College other than Crime.

About July 2005

This page contains all entries posted to Hidalgo Trading Company in July 2005. They are listed from oldest to newest.

June 2005 is the previous archive.

August 2005 is the next archive.

Many more can be found on the main index page or by looking through the archives.

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