TINSLEYS^ MAGAZINE. 
27 
Tinsleys’ Magazine: 
ill PttstaM it0tit|lg. 
Price ONE SHILLING. 
OPINIONS OF THE PRESS. 
'’^Tinsley is fast making head into the first ranks of the shilling 
monthlies ; both as regards matter and illustrations it is running hard 
all other competitors. Mrs. Henry Wood’s story, ‘ George Canterbury’s 
Will,’ is one of the best she has written.” — Catnbridge Chronicle. 
‘‘ Well edited, well written, well illustrated, and produced in a neat 
and handsome style, it can hardly fail to achieve success .” — Daily 
Telegraph. 
“ ‘ The Adventures of Dr. Brady ’ open with all the dash, spirit, and 
descriptive power which are naturally to be looked for from their author, 
and are pervaded also by a keen, easy, racy humour, which, if it be 
necessary to institute any comparison for so good a thing, will remind 
the reader of Theodore Hook, in the best style of his best days. Since 
Cuthbert Gurney came home from India, and carried surprise and 
desolation into the bosom of his family, no ‘ Exile of Ind ’ has appeared 
to compare with the trio composed of Master Brady, Mohun, and 
Jacko .” — Morning Post. 
“ This enterprise of Dr. Russell’s in a new field seems likely to bring 
him fresh laurels. The story so far keeps to the soil of Ireland, and 
the style is something like that of Charles Lever suddenly endowed 
with depth and strength, and a gleam of bright imagination.” — Star. 
“ Right well does it look, and right well does it read. Its contributors 
are men of mark ; and they have not merely given their names, but 
their brains. Dr. William Russell opens with a capital beginning of 
TINSLEY BROTHERS, 18 CATHERINE ST, SIRA ND. 
