Peres MAGAZINE ,=. 
$1.00a year 
The idea aay directs the editing of McCLURE’s MaGazinE is that a periodical may be 
unfailing] ap entertaining, and still be Rp gS Ae and informing ; and that it may be low in price, 
and still maint ihe highest literary and artistic standards. Friends of the Ma si are con- 
stantly sayin I look into other magazines, eee McCLuRE’s is the only one I really read.” This 
popularity, this entertainingness, is not se ria at any sacrifice of quality. The best aves and the 
best artists are the contributors to MCCLUR 
NEW CONTRIBUTIONS TO AMERICAN HISTORY 
Following an instinct which we have good reason to believe is shared by all of our readers, we 
have had as se of our foremost interests, in pice: the magazine, the inspiring history of our own 
country. Charles A. Dana’s REMINISCENCES OF MEN AND EVENTS OF THE CIVIL WAR, now pub- 
srgaes hee in the Ma gazine, present the sieved ‘side of the war as no other man pase apes igen 
a 
of LiFe PorTRAITS OF GREAT eo is the coe fe? and adequate fecseatation of "the gon 
features of those sterling patriots whom all hon revere. Miss Tarbell’s papers on TH 
EARLY LIFE oF LINCOLN gave the first, ak indeed ihe mark full and a account of Lincoln 
youth and early sete that the world hashad. Mr. Hamlin Garland’s series of papers did some- 
what the same service HE EARLY LIFE OF GRANT. And in the No rice number will begin 
MISS TARBELL’S LATER LIFE OF LINCOLN 
ss Tarbell’s A af on fest ‘Early Life of Lincoln” ended with Lincoln’s first nomination 
to the Presidene cy. “Lat 3 ” will exhibit a coln at his home in = aba eld between the 
time of his ieiaatuation pole auguration, and in his daily life in the White House, f iptows a 
oe setgcach of the men a throughou t his hero five bale: and also an account a such of the move- 
Petes t as centered in him Tarbell has gathered, from men who knew Lincoln 
pone a prea store of secclleetiogs pe vers never yet been publishe ed. 
HISTORY BY THE MAKERS OF IT 
herever there survives a man whose own life has been a significant ro a in the history of 
country, we aim to have him el the world his story in the pages o of E’s MAGAZINE. 
et aha eg in addition o being the most entertaining to rea a is Pe era aps the most 
valuable. It is the one kind that is “infallibly vivifying; it gives us the fact, hot and direct, from 
the hand of me one man a te of delivering it. Scarcely a month passes that the magazine does 
not contain matter of this kin 
THE NEWEST SCIENCE, INVENTION, ne EXPLORATION 
ti he 
Always wide for the significant discoveries or speculations which to uch the of t 
future, McCLur rag a as been the first to give Seo rina e and attractive account of 
any hew scientific achievements. Among the coming articles of this kind we may mention, 1 HE 
i of his own 0 
British postal authorities in Ha cnt without the of wires; and THE b 
EVER CLIMBED—an article by Mr. E. A. FitzGerald, itue the story of his recent triumph in climb- 
A 
ing Aconcagua, a peak 23,000 feet hi m9 
SERIALS AND SHORT STORIES - ee 
No magazine h teresting serial than Anthony Hope’s “ Rupe 
of ntzau,” pe i oom ahs — Sec es sia n ttt intains the — set by yi olan s 
itself when it publizbed Sevens s “Ebb Tide” and “St. Ives “and Anthony Hope’s 
McCLureE short story has come to be a kind by t_me of _ the world. : It 
ertain novelt . ili poh of plot ciden 
reality of characterisation; an and co ae pad an unfailing purity of a and hopefulness 
- It ma : 
the 
i , Octave Tha’ 
or some n by Rudyard 1 Kiplin ng but it is still always the MCCLURE story—a $ sto 
Harr 
1 
that people will abe with an and pier eld they will be the happier for reading. 
BUY OF ANY NEWSDEALER OR REMIT DIRECT. 
THE S, Ss, MCCLURE COMPANY, 141-155 EAST 25TH ST., NEW YORK CITY 
: | ET cute enn, 
