WIDE AWA.K E FOR DECEMBER. 
G RAN D HOLIDAY NUMBER. ELEGANT NEW COVER IN COLORS. 
Beginning the new voluine. 
THE LARGEST AND FINEST PICTORIAL MAGAZINE EVER ISSUED. 
144 Large Quarto Pages, 150 Choice Pictures. Only 25 cts. 
Famous Authors who Contribute 
TO THIS NUMBER. 
Mrs. A. D. T. Whitney, “H. H”, Mrs. Rose Terry Cooke, Eliot 
McCormick, John Coryell, Rose Kingsley, Margaret Sidney, Mrs. 
Craigin, George Cary Eggleston, Elizabeth Stuart Phelps, Edward 
Everett Hale, Susan Coolidge, Arthur Gilman, Mrs. Harriet 
Beecher Stowe. Fred A. Ober, Mrs. Hartwell-Catherwood, Christ¬ 
ina Rossetti, Mary F. Robinson. Phillip Bourke-Marston, Mrs. 
Mulock-Craik, Mary E. Wilkins, Prof. Sargent, Marion Harland. 
Subscription lor one year, $2.50. 
Ask your bookseller for it, or send twenty-five cents with order to 
Celebrated Artists who Contribute 
100 BEAUTIFUL ILLUSTRATIONS TO THIS NUMBER. 
St. John Harper, Geo. F. Barnes, Jessie Curtis Shepherd, L. B. 
Humphrey, W. Parker Bodfish, Bonguereau, Jessie McDermott, 
Rose Kingsley, H. Pruett Slack, Robert Lewis, Addie Ledyard, 
C. A. Northam, E. H. Garrett, Jean Aubit, Mary A. Lathbury, 
Caroline Hansell, Prof. H. Faber, J. H. Moser, “Boz.” 
Engravers of rank also contribute to make the number notable; 
and the printing is of the highest class on the finest paper. 
D. L0THR0P & CO., 32 Franklin St., Boston. 
“There is no Juvenile Magazine 
as Wide Awake.” 
well as grown up' 
Concerning the Brilliant Illustrated Magazine Wide Awake, the Boston Transenpt says: 
published in this country so carefully edited, or that contains so much that is really useful and interesting 
The London Literary World says: “This is a very sumptuous Monthly adapted to the tastes of children as 
people, with illustrations not to be matched in any Magazine of its class published in England. 
THE PANSY. 
A.n eight-page xoeeldy for JBoys and Girls . Only *15 cents a year . 
This delightful illustrated paper, edited by the author of the *’ Pansy books, is equally suited to week-day and Sunday reading 
A serial by the editor, “Pansy,” will run through 1883, one of those inimitable stories that take hold of the people, suie to win new 
friends to this popular author, and to stimulate to the very highest of true, sincere living. 
OUR LITTLE MEN AND WOMEN. 
A Magazine for Youngest Readers. Only $1.00 a year. 
To please our small patrons who wish for “more pictures” still, we have altered and enlarged our pictorial monthly known 
heretofore as Little Folks’ Reader. It will be published hereafter as Our Little Men and Women, is to contain twenty-four pages 
instead of sixteen, and in addition to its regular illustrations will give Six Beautiful Full-page Pictures each mouth. Its original 
plans will be adhered to, of giving easy reading for beginners at home and at school put in short words and short sentences, of basing 
even its stories as nearly as possible upon actual incidents, of interesting its readers in animals and kindness toward them, and of 
making them acquainted with the home life of, little men and women in other countries. In short the magazine contains just the 
pleasurable variety of reading suited to joyous, inquiring, restless childhood. 
BABYLAND. 
The only Magazine in the World Expressly for Babies. Only 50 cents a year. 
No home where a baby laughs and coos can be complete 'without this dainty monthly. During the next year it will be more 
delightful than ever. It will have its musical jingles, and its sweet amusing stories of tiny men and women, and its large, beautiful 
pictures, as heretofore, and will be printed in the same large type, and on the same heavy cream-tint paper. In addition, Mr. Barnes 
is preparing a novel series of twelve full-page pictures illustrating “What Black Eyes and Blue Eyes saw in Foreign Lands.” A 
.beautiful picture alphabet will run as a wee serial through the year. Send the address of your baby and your baby friends, and speci¬ 
mens will be sent them. Grand holiday number with cover in six colors; only 5 cts. 
Orders for subscriptions, applications for agencies, special terms and circulars, may be sent to 
D, L0TER0P & 00., Publishers, 
99 Franklin St., Boston 
