FROM $175 TO $6 



If you were to subscribe for the English quarterlies, maga- 

 zines, reviews, and literary, political, and scientific journals 

 from which THE LIVING AGE takes its materials, they would 

 cost more than $175. You would also waste a good deal of 

 time in sifting out the important from the trivial, and determin- 

 ing what was really worth your reading. 



THE LIVING AGE practises this art of skipping for you, 

 and gives you, for $6, in a single weekly magazine, light and 

 easy to hold, the best essays, the best fiction, the best poetry, 

 and all the most timely and important articles from this long list 

 of periodicals, reprinted without abridgment. 



Six Dollars is not a large sum to pay for 3,300 pages of the best 

 contemporary reading, covering all subjects of human interest, 

 and embodying the freshest thought in literature, art, inter- 

 national affairs, and current discussion. 



THE LIVING AGE presents each year twice as much mate- 

 rial as is contained in one of the four-dollar monthly jnagazines. 

 As it has the whole field of English periodical literature to select 

 from, it is able to present a wider range of subjects, treated by a 

 more brilliant list of writers, than any single magazine, English 



But you can buy a magazine for less money? Certainly. 

 There are more magazines than one can easily count which 

 may be had for one dollar a year each. 



But there are magazines and magazines. THE LIVING 

 AGE presupposes intelligence and an alert interest in what is 

 going on. To people of that sort it has ministered successfully 

 for more than sixty years. It holds its field alone, and it was 

 never more nearly indispensable than now. 



Subscribers for 1907 will receive free the remaining numbers 

 for 1906. 



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6 BEACON STREET, BOSTON 



