The Bay State Monthly, Volume 3, No. 6 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 301 pages of information about The Bay State Monthly, Volume 3, No. 6.

The Bay State Monthly, Volume 3, No. 6 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 301 pages of information about The Bay State Monthly, Volume 3, No. 6.

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Subscriptions may begin at any time, but in order to get the first chapters of Mr. W.D.  Howells’s novel, “The Rise of Silas Lapham,” and to commence the War Series, new subscribers should date from the November number.  The subscription price of THE CENTURY is $4.00 a year, and single numbers can be purchased of book-sellers and news-dealers everywhere at 35 cents each.  All dealers receive subscriptions, or remittance may be made direct to the publishers by postal or express order, registered letter, bank check, or draft.

THE CENTURY CO. 33 East 17th Street, New-York.

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[Illustration:  FROM “RECOLLECTIONS OF A PRIVATE.”]

THE CENTURY is beyond question the first among magazines in the English language.  The people of the South owe it especial thanks not only for the fairness of its spirit toward this section, but because it opened its pages to many of our best writers and made them known to the world.—­THE APPEAL, MEMPHIS, TENN.

The time has now come when this portion of our national history can be discussed by the actors in it, whether they wore the blue or the gray, and different versions can be judged without partiality.—­ARGUS, ALBANY, N.Y.

The great captains on both sides will make this series the most notable historic contribution of the day.—­CONSTITUTION, ATLANTA, GA.

Every soldier should be a subscriber to THE CENTURY for the coming year.—­COURIER-GAZETTE, ROCKLAND, MAINE.

In securing these articles from the leading generals of the great struggle, THE CENTURY did the best piece of journalistic work that has been done in this country for many a year.—­THE CHRISTIAN UNION, N.Y.

The wounds and passions of the late war are rapidly healing, but it will never lose its interest to the students of history.  These articles cannot fail to be of great interest to all careful readers both North and South.—­PRESS, PARAGOULD, ARK.

A series of important papers, the like of which has never before been attempted, and which possess the peculiar quality of interesting every person in the land.—­THE BEACON, BOSTON, MASS.

What a vast work for good in these several ways is the great magazine-publishing house of THE CENTURY Co. doing; what an uplift is it giving to good taste, good morals, good politics, and good manners, as well as to the dissemination of useful knowledge, to the culture of “the masses,” to the comfort and peace and pleasure of home, to the welfare of society in general!  No engine of the things that are true and pure and good is more mighty than a work like this; we ought all to be thankful that it is in such hands.  Making money, of course, THE CENTURY Co. are; we are glad of it; but they are also making hearts happier, lives better, and homes brighter the world over.—­THE LITERARY WORLD, BOSTON, MASS.

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Project Gutenberg
The Bay State Monthly, Volume 3, No. 6 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.