INDEX TO VOLUME III, OF THE ALTRUISTIC REVIEW. Winnowings--Continued. Winnowings--Continued. By James L. Hughes. By John Russell Young. Standpoint, 298 Market Gambling, 122 By Wm. E. Bear. Men Who Make the Best Husbands, 31, 32, 33 By Rev. Dr. Parkburst, Palmer Cox, Bill Nye and Anthony Comstock. By Elizabeth Morris. By W. H. Mállock. By Mrs. Joseph Cook. By Edward Everett Hale. Pauperism, The Abolition of, 130 By Edward Everett Hale. Playgrounds for City Schools, 176 By Jacob R. Riis. Plutocracy's Bastiles, or Why the Republic is Becoming an Armed Camp, 234 By B. O. Flower. By Mr. Meriwether. 283 By Captain Maban, U. S. N. By Dr. Shaw, By Silvester Baxter. By Prof. Henry C. Adams. By Hon. Henry L. Dawes. Renaissance of Women, The, 227 By Lady Henry Somerset. By Chas. Dudley Warner. By J. M. Rice. By Dora E. W. Spratt. By Thomas A. Janvier. By W. D. Howells. Education ? 169, 170 Short Stories: Old Boston Mary, 172 The Storm and Stress in Germany, 172 By A. Symons Eccles. By Albert H. Washburn. By Christopher Valentine. By Joaquin Miller. By Christine Ladd Franklin. By Theodore Roosevelt. By Ira H. Brainerd. By Mr. Leslie Stephen. England, 287 By J. W. Ludlow. By Julian Ralph. By Kate Douglas Wiggin. It Does for the Public Health, 78 By Ida M. Tarbell. By Octave Thanet. By Lafcadio Hearn. By Dr. Albert Shaw. a Claim, 121 What Have We to Give Thanks For? 224, 225 By John Swinton, Alice French, Isidor Straus, Bronson Howard and Jeannette L. Gilder. Where Time Has Slumbered, 178 By Julian Ralph. Woman, 293 By Charles Dudley Warner. Woman Suffrage, 133 By Mrs. Burton Harrison. Zee-Wee, 170 By Hjalmar Hjorth Boyesen. Woman's Clubs, 264 By Mrs. V. G. Ellard. THE STRUGGLE FOR THE LIFE OF OTHERS. By PROF. HENRY DRUMMOND. Vol. 3. No. 1. A Monthly Record of Whatever is Worth Remembering. July, 1894. By James L. Onderdonk. WHITMAN. IN THIS NUMBER-THE JEW: IS IT A QUESTION OF RELIGION ? IN THE NEXT NUMBER-WALT A Winnower of Wheat from Chaff. $2.00 A YEAR. SPRINGFIELD. OHIO CHICAGO, IL PRICE 20 CENTS IDAHO FALLS, IDAHO. LOCATION.... 700 miles east of Portland and 700 miles west of Denver. 280 miles east of Boise City, Idaho, and the U. P. Railroad. EXPORTS.... or 66 100 car loads 1889. 1890. 1891. 3000 1892. POPULATION.... Returns, $500 per car 500 $ 50,000 200,000 600,000 1,500,000 Population in 1890, 250 people. It now claims 1,500, and before 5 years will have 20,000, and it is to-day the best point in the United States to make real estate investments that will pay certain returns and immense dividends. BIRD'S EYE VIEW OF IDAHO FALLS, IDAHO. CITY LOTS IN IDAHO FALLS.... No city has ever become wealthy or pro einent without opposition. It is easy to criticise. A few years ago city loss in Chicago, Portland, Omaha, St. Paul, Minneapolis, Denver and other cities of importance were severely condemned by the “wise ones.” They said no one of sound mind would put money in town lots, in these places, But a few short years have intervened and the "wise soothsayers ” are still as poor as church mice, and those who invested in city property, while it was yet cheap, are now the financial kings, millionaires and wealthy men and women of these cities. History repeats itself. Again there is an opportunity. This time at Idaho Falls, Idaho. City lots can be purchased to day in Idaho Falls at from $50 to $200 each, and we prophesy that in five years time they will be worth from $500 to $10,000 cach. The time to buy is when the opportunity knocks at your door. BANK REFERENCES GIVEN. Address EMERSON & McCAFFREY, 6c4 Chamber of Commerce Building, Chicago, Ill. Please mention ALTRUISTIC REVIEW. EDUCATIONAL. NEW YORK, Brooklyn, 160 Joralemon Street. NEARLY 60,000 SOLD! SOLD!! Miss Katherine L. Maltby's Home !! NO BETTER TESTIMONIALS NEEDED Highest Academic, Art and Musical Advantages. CONNECTICUT, Coscob in Greenwich. ELGIN, Minois. Prepares for any College, furnishes pupils with a thorough business course, and offers special inducements in its free course in Manual Training. A large new building well equipped. Send for catalogue and copy of a bi-weekly paper, printed and published by the pupils. Address À. G. WELCH, A.M., Elgin, m. VIRGINIA, Roanoke. Opens September, 1894. Magnificent buildings, all modern improvements. Grand mountain_scenery, health unsurpassed. Twenty American and European teachers. Pupils from seventeen states. Music and Art unexcelled. One of the most attractive and beautiful college homes in the South. For_catalogues address. W. A. HARRIS, D.D., President. HOUSEHOLD TREASURE. GROWING POPULARITY OF THE OXFORD SEWING MACHINES. There is nothing more truly a household treasure than a good sewing machine. To be without it is to be willfully deprived of the immense advantage of one of the greatest of all inventions. A machine once bought is a perpetual treasure. It demands no wages, occasions no expense or trouble NEW YORK ANO CHICAGO. and is always ready without a moment's notice to render the work of the laborious housewife tenfold more efficient and expeditious. Some machine combine the best ideas and suggestions which have been so abundantly introduced in this remarkable mechanism. A machine which exhibits in liberal combination all the best features introduced is the Oxford Sewing Machine, made by the Oxford Manufacturing Company, Chicago, with lock-stitch, shuttle running light and quiet. These machines have the following important features: Cheapness, perfect, self-adjusting and graduated tension, are under control of the operator and are always positive in 316 to 322 West 43rd Street, ale points, including the shuttle. The needle is their working , NEW YORK. self-setting, the attachments are quickly and easily placed and fastened. The shuttle has an easy oscillating motion, causing it to keep its proper place against the race. Their Oxford, Home and Columbia machines, with attachments, awarded the medal premium at the World's Columbian Exposition, Chicago. the knife and with little or no pain by Dr.M.G.PINGREE,126 Statest.,Chicago. BUOK FREE. Please mention ALTRUISTIC REVIEW. Pease Piano Co., were CANCER CURED VOLUME II. THE ALTRUISTIG® REVIEW. BOUND VOLUMES OF NO. 1 Have been in demand from the start. Fortunately, we anticipated the demand, so that a few copies of No. 1 may still be had. Volume II. is a rich volume, filled with choice matter almost indispensable for reference. Character Sketches In this volume: John Everts; The Heart of Lincoln. Are: University Settlements; A Few Thoughts Forces. Gossipy Letters: Professor Max Muller; Professor William Ihne. Stories in a Nutshell : A Royal Heiress; Hiram Golf's Religion; The Oath of Allegiance; The King of Schnorrers. Other Important Features Are: The Monthly Round-up in each number, being a resume of the most important events; Winnowings, which gives each month the cream of the cream from other periodicals. Every leading event in the year, etc., etc. It will be found invaluable for your library. Address THE ALTRUISTIC REVIEW, SPRINGFIELD, Ohio. It Contains the following Character Sketches: POPULAR ATLAS OF THE WORLD. Size, Open, 14 by 22 Inches ; Closed, 14 by 11 Inches. CONTAINS Over 200 Large Maps and Illustrations, Complete ostal Gaide, ABRAHAM LINCOLN, CARDINAL MANNING, CHARLES KINGSLEY, PETER COOPER, ROBERT WHITAKER MCALL. AMONG THE SPECIAL ARTICLES In this volume are: Social and Educational Cen- and Early Social Experiments in Indiana. OTHER IMPORTANT FEATURES Are: The Monthly Round-up, in each number, being a resume of the most important events; Winnowings, which gives each month the cream of the cream from other periodicals; Every lead ing event in the year, etc., etc. PORTRAITS AND 'PHOTOGRAVURES: OF Abraham Lincoln, Peter Cooper, John Crevar, It will be found invaluable for your library. á DOCULAR Department of Amer. TLAS WORLD ican Biography, Department of Chro Dology Special Map of YOUR w2: SPRINGFIELD, OHIO. State. For Daily Reference, 226 Pages of Usefal Information, Price in Cloth, $2.00; in Half Morocco, $2.50. AGENTS WANTED. Address, MAST CROWELL & KIRKPATRICK, Springfield, Obio. |