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THE SEPTEMBER COSMOPOLITAN-Regular price 12% cts.-sold for 75 cts. and $1.00 per copy within Thirty Days after publication.

The Cosmopolitan Magazine.

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manuscript of Guy de Maupassant. It will be illustrated by Vierge. This number will also contain more than a hundred illustrations of

the World's Fair, including drawings by

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There were demands for nearly two hundred thousand copies of the September number more than could be printed. The December World's Fair number will surpass that of September. The Yearly Subscription, $1.50, should be sent by P. O. Money Order or Check to THE COSMOPOLITAN MAGAZINE, 11th St. & 6th Ave., New York. The New Department of THE COSMOPOLITAN, "In the World of Arts and Letters," is attracting the favor of book lovers the world over. To have the whole field of arts and letters watched for you by the ten most famous critics of the world, and the results condensed over their signatures in such brief form as to be within the reach of all-that is the effort which The Cosmopolitan is making. Sarcey in France, Spielhagen in Germany, Andrew Lang and Zangwill in England, Repplier, Boyesen, Janvier, and Hardy in America, compose eight of the ten contributors. Never before has any publication undertaken to keep its readers regularly posted upon the latest literature and art of the day by bringing the most distinguished critics of the world into the constant service of its readers.

One of the most remarkable stories ever

"OMEGA," by Camille Flammarion, published, with more than 75 illustrations

famous French artists, will be on sale by all booksellers by December 10th. PRICE, $1.00. An intertory, deeply philosophical, full of startling speculation.

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In this way a smart gown for evening or day wear, any article or articles of dress, or furniture, jewelry, household ornaments, etc., etc., can be procured for comparatively little effort and no cost, because subscriptions to VOGUE are very easily procured.

The terms of this competition are most favorable to contestants. The actual money sent will count on a computation of one point for each ten cents received. That is to say, $4 will count as 40 points, $3 as 30 points, $1 as 10 points, 10C. as point, under the following terms of subscription:

Subscription for the United States, Canada and Mexico. Four dollars a year in advance, postage free. Two dollars six months. One dollar three months. For foreign countries in the postal union, five dollars a year, postage free. Remit by check, draft or postal or express money order. Other remittances at sender's risk. Single copies ten cents, or three sample copies for ten cents if sent with this advertisement.

The firms that this order for $250 will be given on are acknowledged to be the leading firms in their specialties because VOGUE advertisers make up the highest class of business houses.

VOGUE,

220 FOURTH AVENUE, NEW YORK.

AN UNIQUE

FASHION

PAPER

WITH ACCURATE ARTICLES ON

FASHIONABLE

NEW YORK

AN

SOCIETY.

ABSOLUTE AUTHORITY

IN MATTERS OF

DRESS

ENTERTAINING

AMUSEMENTS

Fully and daintily illustrated.
Clever short stories, bright verses, jokes and skits.

FASHION AND SOCIETY
CORRESPONDENCE

FROM

PARIS AND LONDON.

THE FRENCH DRAWINGS

REPRESENT THE

VERY LATEST PARIS FASHIONS.

REGULAR DEPARTMENTS:

As Seen by Him (Fashions and Etiquette for Men).

What She Wears (Fashions for Women).

Portraits of distinguished and beautiful Society women of New York, London, Paris, and Vienna a special feature.

The most original, charming, and beautiful weekly.

A Society Journal that, free from scandal, is an adornment to every home, and of inestimable service and value to all who wish to dress well, appear well, and live well. Now taken by the prominent clubs and found in all fashionable drawing-rooms.

Four dollars a year in advance. Two dollars for six months. For ten cents enclosed with this advertisement three sample copies will be sent to any address.

SPECIAL OFFER FOR 1894.

Subscribers sending now with this advertisement $4 for the coming year, 1894, will receive, in addition to all the numbers for 1894, all the numbers of 1893 from the time their subscription is received. Address: 220 Fourth Avenue. N.Y. (Scribner's.)

The Atlantic Monthly

FOR JANUARY, 1894,

Will contain

The opening chapters of

Philip and his Wife. By Margaret Deland. Admiral Earl Howe. By Captain A. T. Mahan. From Winter Solstice to Vernal Equinox.

By Edith M. Thomas.

Talk at a Country House: Down to Tower'd

Camelot.

The Only Rose.

By Sir Edward Strachey.

By Sarah Orne Jewett.

Helen (a poem). By Edward A. Uffington Valentine. A Group of Coleridge's Letters.

Wolfe's Cove. By Mrs. Mary Hartwell Catherwood. The Scope of a University.

By Nathaniel Southgate Shaler.

Marina Sings (a poem). By Helen Gray Cone.

Hamilton Fish.

By J. C. Bancroft Davis.

TERMS: $4.00 a year in advance, postage free;

35 cents a number.

The November and December numbers sent free to new subscribers whose subscriptions for 1894 are received before December 20th.

Postal Notes and Money are at the risk of the sender, and therefore remittances should be made by moneydr draft, or registered letter, to

HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN & CO.,

rk Street, Boston. II East Seventeenth Street, New York.

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THE BOY SCOTT.

A National Family Paper-550,000 Subscribers Comes Every Week.

THE YOUTH'S COMPANION

A brighter programme is offered than ever before.

Famous Boyhoods.

A noteworthy series is the Boyhood of Famous Authors. "Shakespeare, the Boy," by Prof. W. J. Rolfe; "Milton, the Boy," by Prof. David Masson; "Walter Scott, the Boy," by Andrew Lang.

Fully as engaging will be the personal experiences given by popular living authors :-"Among the Argonauts," by Bret Harte; "My Boyhood in Scotland," by J. M. Barrie; "My Boyhood in Rome," by Marion Crawford; "A Holiday on a Farm," by Frank R. Stockton.

Tale and Romance.

Henry M. Stanley contributes his own thrilling adventures in Darkest Africa; Archibald Forbes writes "My Closest Call;" "The Boat Attack on Sumter," by Admiral T. H. Stevens, and "Under Fire for the First Time," by Gen. John Gibbon, are vivid war sketches.

A serial story of the great Sepoy Mutiny, by Sara Jeannette Duncan; three Romances of the Sea, by W. Clark Russell; "The Deserter," a powerful Serial by Harold Frederic; are some of the masterly stories.

World-Wide Writers.

Among other famous contributors for next year are: The Duke of Argyll, Prof. Henry Drummond, Sir Archibald Geikie, Elizabeth Stuart Phelps Ward, Prof. H. H. Boyesen, Lady Jeune, John Burroughs, Justin McCarthy, Sir Robt. Ball, and many more.

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FROM STANLEY'S "BLUE-COAT BOY IN AFRICA."

The Gift of the Year.

"Sweet Charity," one of the most beautiful pictures of the American Academy, was purchased by THE COMPANION and reproduced in colors. Its subject is a young lady of Colonial times whose charming and sensible face expresses the sentiment of her errand. This picture is presented to all New (and Renewing) Subscribers who send their $1.75 for a year's subscription.

Also all New Subscribers sending the $1.75 now get the paper Free to January 1, 1894, and a full year from that date.

Full Announcement and Sample Copies Sent Free.

Boston, Mass.

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