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): of your REVIEW is excellent, and it cannot fail to accomplish great good, not only in Chicago, but throughout the country. 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. THE ALTRUISTIC REVIEW. EDITED BY HAZLITT ALVA CUPPY. CONTENTS FOR SEPTEMBER. The War in the West, Party Failure, Breckinridge Persists, Bravo!, The Anti-lynching Movement, The Catholic Total Abstinence Union, Ingersoll Throws Light on What Infi- delity is Suicide Justifiable, Providing for the Rainy Day, Professor Ely's Trial, All of Extracts from, and comments on, some articles in Demorest's Magazine, The Overland Monthly, The Eclectic, The Atlantic Monthly, McClure's Magazine, North American Gleanings from The Ram's Horn, The Mid-Continent, The Standard, Herald and Presbyter, Sunday-School Times, The Independent, The Interior. Let him who walketh in high places, when he becomes unclean and filthy in A PETITION-W. C. P. BRECKINRIDGE. As loyal and devoted subjects of the United States, who recognize that our For the sake of our country and all that goes to make up its purity and greatness, To be detached and forwarded to The Altruistic Review, Chicago, Illinois. be held equally guilty for violating the moral law, kindly sign this petition and send some standard of morality and decency, or if you hold that man and woman should If you are in sympathy with the movement to show public men that they must maintain THE EDITOR OF THE ALTRUISTIC REVIEW, it to Secure as many signatures as you can. Blanks furnished free upon application. |