The New York Evening Journal
The New York Evening Journal, founded in 1896, was an afternoon newspaper published in New-York and owned by William Randolph Hearst (1863-1951), the businessman and publisher who built up the American’s largest newspaper chain and whose methods profoundly influenced journalism. Hearst as a pioneering media magnate became an inspiration for Orson Welles' "Citizen Kane" 1941 movie.
The "Mandrake the Magician" daily strips were published in the "New York Evening Journal" from June 11, 1934 (the very first strip of the series) until the newspaper merged with the "New York American" (on June 24, 1937) in one publication renamed "The New York Journal American" in 1937.
Other comics published in "The New York Evening Journal": "Secret Agent X-9", "Red Barry", "Buck Rogers", "The Phantom", "Tim Tyler's Luck".
Mandrake in Daily Argus
Daily stories
# | Original story title | Start date | End date | Comment |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "The Cobra" | 11 Jun 1934 | 24 Nov 1934 | |
2 | "The Hawk (Mandrake Meets Narda)" | 26 Nov 1934 | 23 Feb 1935 | |
3 | "The Monster of Tanov Pass" | 25 Feb 1935 | 15 Jun 1935 | |
4 | "Saki, the Clay Camel" | 17 Jun 1935 | 2 Nov 1935 | |
5 | "The Werewolf" | 4 Nov 1935 | 29 Feb 1936 | |
6 | "The Return of the Clay Camel" | 2 Mar 1936 | 18 Jul 1936 | |
7 | "The Slave Traders of Tygandi" | 20 Jul 1936 | 28 Nov 1936 | |
8 | "Mandrake in the Lost World" | 30 Nov 1936 | 17 Apr 1937 | |
9 | "In the Cobra's Grip" | 19 Apr 1937 | Jun 24 1937 | incomplete / last edition |