E 



do no 

 better for 

 the children 

 or for 

 ourselves 

 than to take 



TheYOUth'S Only 4 Cents 



Companion "AWeST" 



Something new every week, something inspiring every week, something to 



read aloud and talk over ever}- week, something good to treasure up in 



the memory every week. 



Seven Stunning Serials and 250 Other Stories 



The titles below indicate that this is one of the strongest groups of serials 

 ever offered to Companion readers : 



TilE SriOVEL-MAN, A Tale of the Panama Canal, RALPH D. PAINE 



ON MISERY COVE, A Story of the Maine Logging -Camps. HOLMAN F. DAY 



THE WILDERNESS CASTAWAYS, A Tale of Hudson Bay, DILLON WALLACE 



SARAH BREWSTER'S RELATIVES, A Home Story, ELIA W. PEATTIE 



THE COLONEL'S EXPERIMENT, A Story for Girls, EDITH BARNARD DELANO 



THE VISION, A Tale of Chicago Business Life, GARDNER HUNTING 



HIS FATHER'S SON, A Story of " St. Timothy's," ARTHUR STANWOOD PIER 



The best expert advice on baseball, football, and other great games and sports — sprinting, 

 hockey, fancy skating. A department for girls suggesting profitable occupations, hints 

 for dress, etc. For the family, recipes for dainty dishes, household devices, etc. 



SKND A POSTAL FOR THF, FUIJ. AXNOrXCK:\IKXT FOR 1913. 



HOW TO GET THE FREE ISSUES 



Every new subscriber who at once cuts out and sends this coupon (or mentions this 

 publication) with $2.00 for the 52 issues of The Companion for 1913 will receive 



1 All the issues for the remainini? weeks of 1912 FREE, including the beautiful 



' • Thankssjiving: and Christmas Numbers. 



^7 The Companicn Window Transparency and Calendar for 1913 FREE — the most 



■^ ' exquisite novelty ever given to Companion readers. 



"2 Then The Companion every week untiljanuary, 1914— longhoursof companionsb^p 

 *-^* with the wise, the adventurous, t'.ie inspiring — all for less than 4 cen.s a week. 



THE YOUTH'S COMPANION, BOSTON, MASS. hi>'m 



