The North American Review 



Edited by GEORGE B. M. HARVEY 



Some Comments from the Press 



J\mns Hrgus 



I new Vork Press 



Is ahead uf any other magazine this country has ever 

 seen in tlie importance of the topics it discusses and 

 the eminence of its contributors. 



new Vork Citnes 



Every one is wilHng to pay 50 cents for a volume of 

 the must advanced opinions of the day at first hand. 



Rochester Post express 



Has, upon the whole, been much the most 

 of Amerii nn literary periodicals. 



$t. James's gazette 



(London 



A review which has long establislied its reputation 

 for sound literature and valuable criticism. 



PbiladelpMd Ttetti 



All the papers will be found thoughtful, logical, 

 learned, and in the highest degree interesting. 



Brooklyn Standard-Union 



In the front rank of the monthlies which devote their 

 attention to the serious and significant things of life. 



Is made up of articles that are unusually pertinent 

 and valuable. 



Boston Journal 



Is reii>arkably strong in articles of vivid contemporary' 

 interest. 



Journal of education 



The great questions of our day have a masterly treat 

 ment in The North American Review. 



new Vork Sun 



Constantly oflcrs to the public a programme of writers 

 and essays that excite the reader and gratify the 

 intellectual appetite. 



OCTOBER CONTENTS. 



The Peace Conference and the Moral Aspect of 

 War. C\)pfaiH A. 1 . Mahan, U.S.N. 



In the Clutch of the Harpy Powers. 



R. M. Johnston. 

 The Picture Gallery of the Hermitage. — I. 



Claude Phillips. 

 A Transvaal View of the South African Question. 



Dr. F. r. Engelenhtirg, 

 Editor of the Pretoria " Vollcsstem." 



The Present Literary Situation in France. 



Henry James. 

 The Alaskan Boundary. Pro/. J. B. Moore, 



Formrrly Assistant Secretary 0/ State. 



Some Social Tendencies in America. 



J he Right R,'v. H. C. Potter, D.D. 

 A Trained Colonial Civil Service. E. G. Bourne, 



Professor of '->istory in J 'ale University. 



The French Press and the Dreyfus Case. 



M. de Bloivitz. 



THE ANGLOSAXON RIVALS: 

 Five Years of American Progress. 



.1/. G. Mulhall, F.S.S. 



The Decline of British Commerce. 



A. Maurice Low. 



America and England in the East. 



The Right Hon. Sir CharFs IV. Dilke, Bt., M.P. 



The Restless Energy of the American People. 



Ian MacLaren. 



NOVEMBER CONTENTS. 



Hawthorn and Lavender: Songs and Madrigals. 



IV. E. Henley. 



INTERNATIONAL ARBITRATION: 



A Russian View. F. de Martens, 



Delegate /rom Russia to The Hague Conference. 



From an American Standpoint. Seth Low, 



United States Delegate to The Hague Conference . 



France at the Parting of the Ways. 



Bernard Lazare. 



The "Open Door" Policy in the Philippines. 



Frank D. Parley. 

 The Dramatic Festivals of Orange. Jules Claretie, 



Administrator-General of the Cotnidie Pranfazse. 



Is Civil Service Reform in Peril? 



Professor Joseph F. Johnson, 

 Of the University of Pennsylvania. 



Food Which Fails to Feed. Louis WindmUller. 

 The Story of a Helpful Queen. Carmen Sylva, 



The Queen of Rouinania. 



The Picture Gallery of the Hermitage.— H. 



Claude Phillips. 



THE ANGLICAN CHURCH CRISIS: 



The Rebellion Against the Royal Supremacy. 



The Earl of I ortsmouth. 



How the Ritualists Harm the Church. 



The Right Hon. Arthur J. Balfour. 



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THE NORTH AMERICAN REVIEW, 



II WARREN STREET, 



NEW YORK. 



