THE BEE-KEEPERS' REVIEW 61 



im^ 



^ffer 



I wish that every one of my subscribers were also readers ot 

 the Success Magazine, a 70-page monthly at $1.00 a year. I have 

 read it for years, and I know that a share of my enthusiasm, cour- 

 age and perseverance have been gathered from its pages. A man's 

 habitual frame of mind has much to do with his success, and the 

 reading of Success will cheer, and inspire, and encourage, and 

 arouse a man to successful efforts. I can offer the Review and 

 Success one year for only $1.75. 



If you are reading none of the many most excellent magazines 

 oftheday, you are missing a great treat. Perhaps you regard 

 them as luxuries. Possibly they are in some instances. They 

 certainly help to fill out our lives, and give us broader views. 

 They are like windows that allow us to look out over the wide 

 world. This life is not one wholly of dollars and cents — at least 

 it ought not to be. Enjoyment, pure and simple, enjoyed just for 

 the sake of the enjoyment, is desirable and beneficial. To many 

 there are few things more enjoyable than the bright pages of a 

 leally good magazine; and the Cosmopolitan is the one great 

 magazine of all the great national monthlies. "The best — no 

 matter what it costs," is its motto. The Cosmopolitan is $1.00 a 

 year, but I can send it and the Review one year for only $1.75. 



Cosimlbmatlioiii Offer 



The Review, Success and the Cosmopolitan are each $1.00 a 

 year, but I will send^all three oi them tor only .$2.25. I will not 

 make one cent on this offer unless I secure 100 subscribers to each 

 of the magazines, when there ^will be a rebate of $20.00. It seems 

 as though I would secure that'^many'at this price, ^but, if I don't, I 

 shall be happy in having helped a few^of my readers to secure some 

 most excellent reading at a very low-price. 



W. Z. HUTCHINSOM, Flint. Micfci, 



