Abbildungen der Seite
PDF
EPUB

Two Million Dollars. Over 5 Million'
Dollars Given in Cash Dividends and
Other Concessions not Stipulated in
Policies.

Paying Each Business Day an average Present of nearly $50,000 in Dividends, En

Future

dowments, Claims, etc.

The Absolute Guarantee of Every Obli gation. Over 73 Million Dollars Reserve to Protect Policies. Over 13 Millior Dollars Surplus to Policyholders.

The PRUDENTIAL

ܐ܂

C 1

[graphic]

Will Do for You and Yours What
it is Doing for Millions of Others-
Issue a Policy at Low Cost, Pro-
viding Sound Protection and
Liberal Dividends, with Certainty
of Prompt Settlement.

The Best in Life Insurance
For The Whole People

Write for Particulars, Dept. 35.

The Prudential Insurance Co. of Ameri

Incorporated as a Stock Company by the State of New Jersey.

JOHN F. DRYDEN, President.

Home Office, NEW

1 1

u)

[graphic]
[merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small]

axim Gorky and the Russian Revolt. By R. L. Fortnightly Review, April.

ukden and After. 1. Russian Apathy and Insouciance. By JULIUS M. PRICE. 2. The Débâcle. By MILES. Fortnightly Review, April. he Situation in Russia. By Dr. E. J. DILLON. Contemporary Review, March. he Breakdown of Russian Finances. By Dr. E. J. DILLON. Nineteenth Century and After, March.

he Renewal of the Japanese Alliance. By O. ELTZBACHER. Nineteenth Century and After, March.

evolution by Telegraph: a Letter from Russia. By R. L. Fortnightly Review, March.

Issia's Social and Political Condition. By ALEXANDER KINLOCH. Fortnightly Review, March.

he Russian Navy from Within. By CHERSONESE. Fortnightly Review, March. ow Port Arthur Fell. By RICHARD BARRY. Fortnightly Review, March. he Russian Crisis (1905). By MARCUS HOLMES. Westminster Review, April. he Prospects of Russian Revolution. By ALEXANDER ULAR. Contemp orary Review, February.

ussia's View of Her Mission.

Century, February.

By C. HAGBERG WRIGHT, Nineteenth

he Awakening of the Tartars. By Professor A. VAMBÉRY. Nineteenth

Century, February.

he Awakening of Russia. By KARL BLIND.

Russia on the Eve of a Revolution?
Fortnightly Review, February.

brt Arthur-and After. By ALFRED STEAD.

Fortnightly Review, January.

By Dr. A. S. RAPPOPORt.

Fortnightly Review, February.

ussia. By Dr. E. J. DILLON. Contemporary Review, January.

he Constitutional Agitation in Russia. By PRINCE KROPOTKIN.

Nineteenth Century, January.

[blocks in formation]

The Quarterly for 1905 will offer

its readers many notable features.

GEORG BRANDES, the great Danish critic and Shakespearean commentator, wil contribute a series of striking Reminiscences. "A Child's Discovery of the World," (the first paper) gives one of the most subtle analyses of early childhood impressions that have ever been written. In later numbers there will be enter

taining recollections of meetings and friendships with Taine, Stuart Mill, Renan Sudermann, Hauptmann, Ibsen and Nietzsche.

MR. FRANZ BOAS will write on The Mythology of the Indians of North America. The American Indian embodies his views regarding nature in his myths, which are at the same time his literature and his poetry, and show the power of his imagination. The articles by Mr. Boas will set forth the principal features of Indian mythology, and discuss their significance and development.

PROFESSOR N. S. SHALER of Harvard University will contribute a group of papers under the title of Earth and Man, an Economic Forecast. The first article, which finds a place in this number of the Quarterly, begins an account-taking of the material resources of the earth, with reference to the needs of mankind in the centuries to come. The general aim will be to light up our knowledge as to the ability of the earth to endure the grave tax which the demands of civilization im-1 pose upon it.

The REV. WASHINGTON GLADDEN will contribute a paper on The Church and Social Work: the beginning of a series of articles dealing with the responsibility of the church to practical charity. Other writers will take up the same problem as it exists in France, Belgium, England and Germany.

ELGIN R. L. GOULD will contribute two valuable papers, beginning with one in the present number, on The Housing of City Masses. The first paper takes up the history of reform legislation in England and America during the last fifty years, and the second article will contain the rest of the story-the practical results of this law-making.

MR. KAKUZO OKAKURA will write on the unique idealizations of Japanese life: the conception of a dwelling as part of human life, the sympathy and courtesy of. the Japanese, their artistic insight, their idea of the beauty of the imperfect, the greatness of little things, the value of suggestion, and the relations of art to humanity.

[merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small]
« ZurückWeiter »