THE GARDEN MAGAZINE 
The World’s Work 
for 1907 
The forthcoming number of Zhe World’s Work will contain features that 
no wideawake American can afford to miss. They begin with: 
264 
DeEecEMBER, 1906 
THE COMMUNICATION NUMBER 
The New Wonders of Communication. So nchly interesting and important are the things that men are doing in 
railroading and ocean transportation, and in adapting the telephone and the telegraph to wider uses, that a special number is 
being prepared to be issued for January, celebrating the new era that electric railroads, “wireless” and turbine liners are open- 
ing, with a group of some of the most entertaining stories of progress that have ever been brought together. 
A beginning will be made in the same number of some of the noteworthy series planned for later issues: 
The Trusts From the Inside. How far are Messrs. 
Morgan, Rockefeller, Harriman, Havemeyer, and other 
magnates public enemies, and what is their service to the 
public. An intimate study of the Trusts as they affect the 
daily lives of all of us. 
The Real South—Why and How it is Becoming 
Nationalized. A revelation of the vital changes beneath 
the surface that are bringing the section into step with the 
The Making of Investments. Personally helpful 
monthly articles by Mr. C. M. Keys, now a member of 
The World’s Work staff and formerly railroad editor of the 
Wall Street Journal 
Medical Sense and Nonsense The Right Way 
to Keep Well. If people knew and practised what the ad- 
vance of medicine has discovered, there would be fewer fools 
and fewer physicians, but healthy human beings would be 
nation—a story.of the South in a new and bustling day— commoner. This series gives the needed illuminating facts. 
by Walter H. Page, the editor. Secrets of Business Success. Intimate stories of the 
methods of men who are making money. Stories of mer- 
chants, manufacturers, bankers, and professional men, telling 
of their plans, their battles, their devices. The articles 
have all the suggestiveness of personal contact with these 
business geniuses. 
Does Harvard Do Its Job? This will be one of a 
series of unsparing investigations of the kind of education 
the big (and some of the little) colleges are really giving. 
Are our colleges doing what we expect of them ? 
What Other Countries Can Teach Us. Has England better postal service? | Germany, better schools and 
better public utilities? Holland, better working conditions? France, better buildings? Canada, better local govern- 
ment? Japan, better national spirit ? 
The timely interpretation of all the most interesting things that are done in the world of politics, business, 
industry, books and art, will be illustrated with an unequaled profusion of photographs, for the magazine 
keeps improving in the pictorial field for which it has set a new standard. 
This is but a taste of the big things the editors have in preparation. No wideawake American can 
afford to miss The World’s Work’s keen interpretation and pictorial panorama of the world’s activities. 
25 cents; $3.00 a year 
Doubleday, Page & Co., 133-137 E. Sixteenth St., New York 
