Rensselaer Republican, Volume 25, Number 12, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 17 November 1892 — Page 3 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]
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it' \^ e Hst_year J&las beeil the most prosperous of the Sixty-five years of The Companion’s history. It has now over 550,000 * subscribers. Tkis support enables it to provide more lavishly than ever for 1893. Only a partial Usi L Mm .of Authors, Stories and Articles can be given here. "* ' \ sjta , J Prize Serial Stories. 1 " <-Jm The Prizes offered for the Serial Competition of 1892 were the Largest ever given by any periodical. O , First Prize, $3,000. Larry; “Aunt Mat's” Investment and its Reward; by , Miss Amanda M. Douglas. ' J» .Jf Second Prize, SI,OOO. Armejo; How a very hard Lesson was bravely Learned; by Charles W. Clarke.' Third Prize, SI,OOO. Cherrycroft; The Old House and its Tenant; by Miss Edith B. Stowe (Pauline Wesley)! \ v Fourth Prize, SI,OOO. Sam; A charming Story of Brotherly Love and SeH-Sacriiice; by Miss M. G. McClelland. s SEVEN OTHER SERIAL STORIES, during the year, by C. A. Stephens, Hotter Greene and others, Jl \ The Bravest Deed I Ever Saw, -f -v Great Men at Home? ,jr wfll be described in graphic language by Officers of the United States Army How Mr. Gladstone Works; by his daughter. Mm Drew ' It' and by ftmous War Correspondents. Gen. Sherman in his Home; by Mrs. Minnie Sherman Fitch! // / General John Gibbon. General Wesley Merritt. •*« Gen. McClellan; by his son, - George B. Captain Charles King. _ Archibald Forbes. President Garfield; by h» daughter, Mrs. Molly Garfield Brown, jl Your Work in Life. ji T * / w bat are you going to do? These and other similar articles may offer you some suggestions. ’ I,L i j? urna^sm as a Profession. the Editor-in-chief of the New York Times, Charles R. Miller. Why not be a Veterinary Surgeon 7 Airoppoxtimity for Boys; by “ Dr. Austin Peters, |l\V" In What Tradea and Professions is there most Room ? by Hon. R. P. |S| v Shipbuilders Wanted, Chats with great shipbuilders on this Sjbject; By ~ Alexaridcr Wainwright! —— ——Adnflssion to West Point; bytheSupt. of U. S. Academy, Col. John M. Wilson. If 1 Admission to the Naval Academy-; by Lieut. W. F. Low, U. S. N. II , Young Government Clerks at Washington. By the Chief Clerks of Six Departments. U Things to Know. '' ‘ _ Over the Water. \f What b a Patent? by _ The Hon. Carrol! D. Wright. How to See St. Paul’s Cathedral; by The Dean of SL Part, \\ ' A Chat With Schoolgirls; by Amelia E. Barr. Windsor Castle. A picturesque description by The Marquis of Loraa* \\ Naval Courts-Martial; bj Admiral S. B. Luce. A Glimpse of Belgium. The American Minister at Brussels. . \\ Patents Granted Young Inventors; by U. S. Com. of Patents. A Glimpse of Russia; by The Hon. Charles Emory Smith. \| The Weather Bureau; by Jean Gordon MattiU. Adventures in London Fogs; by Charles Dickens. l| Newly-Married in New York. What will SI,OOO a year do? London Cabs. “Cabbies; *’ their “hansoms.” Charles Dickens, Jn 11 Answered by Mrs. Henry Ward Beecher and Marion Harland. A Boy’s Club in East London* Frances Wynne* » Short Stories and Adventures. 3 = More than One Hundred Short Stories and Adventure Sketc|ief will be given in the volume for 1893. g Knlttin* Susan. An Able Mariner Quality’s Temptation. yy «ln the Death Circle. Uncle DanTs Will. / i A Bad Night in a Yacht. V A MountalnviUe Feud. ... On the Hadramaut Sands. ■> Leon Kestrellt Reporter. N , Mrs. Parshley’s First Voyage.' An April First Experience. ' Uncle Sim’s Clairvoyance. V * Bain McTlckel’s “Vast Doog.” Rlddliiig Jimmy, and other stories. How I Won my Chevtana., The Cats Of Cedar Swamp. A Boy’* Proof that he was not a Coward; by . W. J. Baker. * ' strong “Medicine.” The amusing effect of a brass instrument on a hostile Indian; by Capt. D. C. Kingman, U. S. A. j v • _______ “How I wrote Ben Hor,” by Gen. Lew Wallace, opens a series, “Behind the Scenes of Famous Stories” Bir Edwin Arnold N - - > writes three fascinating articles on India. Rudyard Kipling tells the “Story of My Boyhood.” A series of practical article*. “At the World’s Fair,’’ by Director-General Davis and Mrs. Potter Palmer, will be foil of valuable hints to who go. “Odd Hoorn* | . keeping in Queer Places” is the subject of half a down bright and.amusing *T **-T f tht Wnllsrg, I, «<fy «■«"», mhos. I All the well-known features of Tu* Con pan ion will be maintained and improved. The Editorials will be impartial cunrent events at home and abroad. The lUuatrated Supplements, adding nearly one-half to size of the paper, will be -r* ‘ . \ • • .... r— ... . .... • ' S 1 - ■ Send This Slip with $1.75. W W 1 To *»J N.w SnbMnibef who will cut oat nd and wo this iUr with iSlrwi <IILd L) “o* l wIU send Th« Companion Froo to Jan. t, 1893, and tor o Full Tear toam Am w O 1. MX 1 1 that dat *- Tk, » offter tnetudea the Double Bollday Number, at Thaakaflvlns. Chrlstmaa, TfD 1 ' ‘ New Year’a, Raster and Fourth of July. The Souvenir of The Companion illustrated da colon, wV/ Iv/'Uf.w 1 1 ■ ASpoga, describing the Sew Building, with aU its 10 departments, wiU to sent on receipt of oi* cents, ...... A. rtt ** oue r*<P*estino it mho sends a subscription for one year. 4* The Youth’s Companion, Boston, Mass. ■-. ■ .
