Life, 1897-05-27 · page 27 of 32
Life — May 27, 1897 — page 27: what you’re looking at
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- LIFE: The largest clientele of intelligent, thoughtful readers reached by any periodical, daily, weekly or monthly, in the world during 1896 was that of . .... . | | ‘The COSMOPOLITAN . MA GAZINE During 1897 THE COSMOPOLITAN will present a valuable series of papers on the great industries and more important operations of finance and business. They will be from the pens of men thoroughly familiar with the subjects of which they write. No business man, however high his place in the financial world, or humble his commercial life, but will find interesting and instructive material in this series. It will constitute a very complete course of business training, and every young man just entering commercial life, and every old man, however experienced, will alike find it of value. . An Important Series of Papers on the Conduct of Great Business Operations. Julian Hawthorne Goes to India to Investi- gate Plague, Famine and British Rule for The Cosmopolitan. Mr. Julian Hawthorne is in India, as commissioner for THE COSMOPOLITAN, to investigate the famine and plague now desolating that land. India is the least known of the populous countries of the earth, and it is worth while sending there an American with an established reputation for fairness and sincerity, who will paint in his own graphic style, the actual condition of affairs. I—THE FAMINE IN INDIA. II—THE PLAGUE IN INDIA. III.—BRITISH RULE IN INDIA. IV.—COMMERCE AND FINANCE ININDIA. V.—THE FUTURE OF INDIA. Will be studied for THE COSMOPOLITAN'’S readers by Mr. Hawthorne. These papers will embrace one of the most important series ever presented in a magazine. If Du Maurier had not chosen ‘‘The Martians" as his last title, that would have been the name of the new story of Mr. H. G. Wells, which was begun in the The New Story April COSMOPOLITAN. ‘The War of the Worlds” is one of the most | The War of the Worlds brilliant pieces of imagination ever put in words. Swift and Poe, Jules Verne | By Wells— began in and Flammarion have all been left behind by the boldness of this new con- q April Cosmopolitan. ception of Mr. Wells. Mars, growing cold through the ages, the fight for life on that planet has developed the intelligence of its people to acuteness many centuries in advance of the inhabitants of our globe. They determine to migrate and seize upon our warmer soil. England is the point at which they arrive, and the interest is intense from the first to the closing chapter. During 1897 THE COSMOPOLITAN will contain a series of articles bearing Does the Modern College upon the merits and defects of the saoaton even “t the present day — ay es ave promise Oo 0) tu! s es. es | ie a ee gaa Most possible discussion, the editor of THE COSMOPOLITAN has prepared a table | WIDCEA eCHSE 0: of subjects which seem valuable for the equipment of the young man or | The Term? woman entering the world as constituted in the year of our Lord 1897. The courses of the great universities will be placed in comparison with this table,. and the opinions of officers of the university sought in criticism or defence of the merits of the existing arrangement of studies. It can do no harm to have, just at the close of the nineteenth century, a general discussion of the merits of our educational methods. On the contrary, it may serve a useful purpose — and it will be interesting to know what leading educators really think of the system in vogue. President Gilman, of the Johns Hopkins University, contributes an able paper on this series in the June number. ON ALL NEWS STANDS. PRICE TEN CENTS, or, ONE DOLLAR A YEAR. THE COSMOPOLITAN MAGAZINE, IRVINGTON, NEW YORK.