ATTEL. Living Age. 
Ens 1885, Tue LivinG AGE entered upon its 164th 
“Volume, admittedly unrivalled and cpanel suecessful. 
A Weekly Magazine, it gives more than 
THREE AND A QUARTER THOUSAND 
double-column octavo pages of reading matter yearly. It pr 
sents in an inexpensive form, considering its great amount of 
matter, with freshness, owing to its weekly issue, and with : 
completeness nowhere else attempted, 
The best Essays, Reviews, Criticisms, Serial and Short Stories. 
Sketches of Travel and Discovery, Poetry, Scientific, Bio- 
_ graphical, orale and Political sereioniaaeot ne 
the entire body of Foreign Periodical Litera 
2 Tt is therefore invaluable to every American reader, as the o fee satisfactory 
fresh and COMPL com) pilation of Sas ee ciirrent literature,—indis 
nsable because it airs races pro f the 
Re "ABLEST LIVING WRITERS 
n all ‘Neesctace: of Literature, Science. Politics, and Art. 
tus Nearly the whole hae = —— and writers appear in THe Livinc AGE in 
eir best — OATE and literature find fresh and eloquent expres- 
in rom the pens ore the ge writers of the re ite and “pee reader is 
ell aba of the nt thought of the age.”-—Boston 
w for Pest fore held the fret. ye _ _ our reel p publintons . 
ible objection that could be utged io the immense amount = 
There is x terature, bi 
nl oteworthy i a. oa aol ae li 
be fi 
osoph - cannot ound in it. Its readers are 
I th tm ed New York. 
i cordially said ‘that it never offers a dry oF valueless 
aC oT n, air pobtry:: travels; whatever men 
> found here. . It tfaristes more fr the ee 
al within knowledge.”—The oe 
