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Pres. John H. Finley, Ph.D. (Knox College— Ed. Charities Review):

May I expect you to continue to send me your periodical during the coming year in exchange for the Charities Review? Such a favor will be greatly appreciated. I am the more anxious to make this exchange because it gives our students here an opportunity to see and read your periodical.

Rev. Wm. M. Lawrence, D.D.:

The principles which underlie THE ALTRUISTIC REVIEW are excellent. The copies which I have seen are most assuring. I have been much interested in favor of the REVIEW, and shall be greatly pleased at its success. It has manifested unusual discretion in the selecting of its topics, as well as its choice of those who write them.

William Dean (San Diego, Cal.):

I am pleased with your motto. There has come to be something like Noah's flood of waters a flood of books, pamphlets and papers, so that it requires a pilot to point out what is worth reading. In looking over your sample copy, the style seems pure enough for a sage to read, and simple enough for a school-boy to understand, and the contributors indicate that the articles will be worth remembering.

Fred E. Morgan, B.A. (Central University):

I regard THE ALTRUISTIC REVIEW as a faithful herald of the dawn of a nobler brotherhood. I sincerely trust that you may find an answering chord in the heart of every true American.

Prof. J. Henry Thayer (Harvard):

Relative to THE ALTRUISTIC REVIEW, permit me to say that lists and summaries of the best current publications treating topics of general interest to students and thinkers have become well nigh a necessity, a necessity the imperativeness of which bids fair to increase rather than abate.

Prof. H. B. Adams (Johns Hopkins University): I think so well of THE ALTRUISTIC REVIEW that I wish you would send me a bound copy of Vol. I., for which I will remit. The spirit of your REVIEW is excellent, and it cannot fail to accomplish great good, not only in Chicago, but throughout the country.

Watauga Valley News:

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It is replete with good cheer, and an intellectual feast from first page to the last, without a dull paragraph in it.

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It is a neat and attractive publication. The Star (Franklin, Ind.):

The matter to be treated finds place in no other magazine.

W. A. Harris, D.D. (President Virginia College): We appreciate your REVIEW. It occupies a new field of advanced thought. It is destined, I hope, to accomplish great results as a powerful and beneficent force in developing and quickening all the best elements of human progress. A. B. Chaffee, M.A.:

The January REVIEW is just in. It is fine. It grows, as wine, better with age. Permit me to congratulate you.

The Old Homestead:

THE ALTRUISTIC REVIEW is full of good things. The photogravures are excellent.

It is an inspiration to have such a work outlined on the literary horizon. It has the glow of the East. Its warmth is already felt. The greater day is coming.

HAZLITT ALVA CUPPY.

Published on the 1st of every month at Springfield, Ohio,

and 1643 Monadnock Block, Chicago, III.

CONTENTS FOR OCTOBER.

Our Later Development, New Impetus Toward Reform, Chicago Aroused, English

Interference, Breckinridge Defeated, Abroad, The War in the East, Death of Dionysios
Latas, Casualities, The Late Comte de Paris and the Late Professor Helmholtz, Political.

THE PEOPLE'S PALACE

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Extracts from, and comments on, some articles in Demorest's Magazine, The Overland

Monthly, The Eclectic, The Atlantic Monthly, North American Review, Review of
Reviews, Outing, McClure's Magazine, Century, Harper's, Lippincott's, Scribner's, Our
Day, The Arena, St. Nicholas.

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Gleanings from The Ram's Horn, The Interior, Herald and Presbyter, The

Standard, The Mid-Continent, Sunday-School Times.

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BANKRUPT. 9

The publishers of Gen. U. S. Grant's Personal Memoirs (C. L. Webster & Co., New York) have gone into bankruptcy, and the business is now in the hands of an assignee. In order to pay the company's debts, the assignee was compelled to sell lots of the stock on hand, away below cost. We were fortunate enough to secure a quantity of the Grant books, and are thus enabled to make the following unparalleled offer:

We

Will Send

General Grant's
Personal Memoirs

FREE For One New Yearly Subscriber to THE ALTRUISTIC REVIEW

Over 180,000 were sold by subscription for $7.00 to $10.00 each. We offer the genuine Memoirs, written by General Grant himself, completed only a short time before his death. The Memoirs contain 666 pages, printed on fine glazed paper, with all the illustrations and maps selected by Gen. Grant. They are beautifully bound in English cloth, lettered in silver and gold. The Memoirs alone would be a great bargain at $2.00, and many who could not afford them heretofore will find this the only opportunity they will likely ever have to get them at such a remarkably low price. It is simply one of the opportunities of a lifetime.

ANY ONE

Who has already renewed their subscription to The Altruistic Review for the coming year can secure a copy of this $7.00 work FREE, postage paid, by sending us $2.00 for one new subscriber. You must be a paid-up subscriber to this REVIEW to take advantage of this offer. We want to double our circulation again. By showing the REVIEW to a friend you can often receive a new name. This offer is good any time after October 1st, until it is withdrawn.

Americans are notably the busiest people on earth; life is too short to do and learn half one wishes, hence multum in parvo is what is needed, and the times call for just such a magazine as

The Altruistic Review.

It has met with great success, because it gives just what a man wants without obliging him to wade through a great deal he don't want, and thus it fills a need of the whole English-speaking world, and is growing in circulation rapidly.

"A wonderful record. Just the magazine for busy people.'

"It gives one the cream from all, and if I took no other paper, the Altruistic would keep me well posted.'

"Not a dull paragraph in it."

Prof. David Swing (Chicago):

To me it is delightful.

Rev. Dr. Bolton (Chicago):

It has the right ring.

Rev. O. P. Gifford, D.D. (Chicago):

I am delighted with it.

Kansas City Gazette:

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It is well worth any one's subscription.

Rev. P. S. Henson, D.D. (Chicago):

I am greatly pleased with your Review.

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THE ALTRUISTIC REVIEW, Springfield, Ohio.

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