She Great 

 English 



Mag'azines 



^f^O YOU know them— know what they are pubHshing— 

 read them— subscribe for them? There are THE 

 EDINBURGH REVIEW and the QUARTERLY; the 

 CONTEMPORARY, FORTNIGHTLY, MONTHLY, 

 INDEPENDENT, WESTMINSTER,and NINETEENTH 

 CENTLTIY REVIEWS; BLACKWOOD'S, CORNHILL, 

 MACMILLAN'S, GENTLEMAN'S, and PALL MALL 

 MAGAZINES; the SPECTATOR, the SATURDAY 

 REVIEW, the SPEAKER, the OUTLOOK, PUNCH and 

 others. No matter how many American magazines you read, 

 you need to know something of our EngUsh contemporaries. 

 The one convenient, sensible, inexpensive way is to subscribe 

 for The Living Age, which gives every week the best con- 

 tributions from current numbers of the foreign periodicals. 

 Its scope includes literature, science, history, politics— especi- 

 ally timely discussions of pubHc affairs; travel and exploration : 

 essays, reviews and criticisms; fiction— both serial and short 

 stories. President Roosevelt, Chief Justice Fuller, and 

 thousands of other people who want to be cosmopolitan in 

 their reading are subscribers for The Living Age. 

 Founded in 1844. S6 a year, SI for 3 months' trial. Speci- 

 men copy free. 



ADDRESS 



THE LIVING AGE CO. 



6 Beacon Street*, . Boston, 



Boston, Mass. 



