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Judge, 1896-12-26 · page 14 of 17

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Briggs—'* 1 have climbed all these stairs,| — Teacher—"* Tommy, parse discretion.” Tom-| sir, to ask you one question.” Weather-bureau | my ({ his i | man—"* Well, what is it?’ Briggs—" Is Hen-| femini ry George running this prediction shop?’— | fem wy—'" It's the better part of Cleveland Plain Dealer. valor.” —Pittsburg News. ALL ORUGGISTS P hs ae Qe o = > Z a fe) a io] | 8 IDEAF-NESS ° &2ead notses | A widow in France has confessed that she lps | bas gone without food for nine years and doesn't ere toedieine fails; stops the Brc- | care for it. She is receiving offers of marriage ora of deatneses concetre tes sont | from frugal widowers.— Texas Siftings. o takes the, dec dlcccecccdeeded = nd bad roads turn to) good ones. The TIRES | \ : THE HARTFORD RUBBER WORKS CO. HARTFORD, CONN. < Ae \ N . . | sible, comfortable, sao00. No matter how much a girl takes after her ‘write or call tor teen feucness'asei | mother, it's always hard to imagine her with . rn ti fod Vguieviioy Kee eonn the same double chin.—Mew York Press, @eve{fisa'renawas, (itoom #80), Now York, lll a lon z Z g “<< lll arian R Wetter Caste. _| ens tnt parts Nora: [ade aT RSD | Be een —— SS | AA2AWE ASK YOU TO COMPARES #% ia ae he December Cosmopolitang Ee 1.00 A YEARS lh FS With the $4.0 Magazines We ask a comparison : From the standpoint of literary excellence. From the standpoint of artistic merit. From the standpoint of high tone and quality. From the standpoint of engraving and reproduction. From the standpoint of paper and press work. From the standpoint of widest interest. Yet the December issue is not an unusual one. It is simply of average quality; in fact, not up to the January issue, in which Conan Doyle’s new story will be begun. Such a magazine at $4.00 a year would command a sale of a hundred thousand copies. At $1.00 a year it is [= traveling toward the half-million mark. NEWSPAPER ITEM. l—— i Prins During 1896 The Cosmopolitan reached the largest Bec ce Sppes $e plata, it is conclusive that at one time or another there must clientele of intelligent, thoughtful readers possessed by any . , periodical in the world. The smallest issue of the year was 300,000 copies. 4 Note that we do not state what a few extra issues are to be, ®! or have been, but what the smallest issue of the year was. Growing in eight years from an edition of 20,000 copies, its advertising rates have steadily decreased. The price per e of $3.00 per 1,000 copies went down with advancin in the hearts of Americans. pag $ per ?, P 8 cis SECOND to none, at home or abroad. see——_FIFTH in sales in the United States. i4 circulation to $2.66; then $2.00; then $1.79; then $1.45, 8% until to-day it is but $1.05—the cheapest rate for known circulation of its class in the world, 66 KG re at W e st ern 99 Fe FH KS HS ACKNOWLEDGED TO BE si = Send $ j pau to THE COSMOPOLITAN MAGAZINE, sin THE VERY BEST AMERICAN CHAMPAGNE. " CHAMPAGNE STATISTICS FOR 1895 SHOW Fifth Avenue and 42d Street, 895 THAT. of all Champagnes, New York. IRVINGTON, NEW YORK. foreign or domestic, sold in the United States, “GREAT WESTERN” Reliable Agents Wanted. LARGE MAJORITY. STOOD FIFTH — LEADING every other American Champagne BY A . soins = Porcealesuy ait eines PLEASANT VALLEY WINE COMPANY, * ORS ery ° 2 — ex ——_* and Wine Merehsaues Cellars :. RHEIMS, STEUBEN ©O., NEW YORK EVERARD'S TURKISH, RUSSIAN AND ELECTRIC BATHS. Permanent and Transient Rooms. Moderate Prices. 24 ge@Y¥eagesiarrees