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WORLD
TO-DAY

AP2

1

TO SUBSCRIBERS

The World To-Day

I

N its new, attractive, dress has met with the enthusiastic approval of the press and public. We have received hundreds of letters of congratulation and encouragement for the large, handsome magazine we are now furnishing. The press of the country has been especially hearty in its commendation and some astonishment is expressed that it should be left to the West to produce a publication having so many practical and excellent features. To all we return our sincere thanks, and renew our assurance that we will make the publication even better in the future. Our aim is to publish a magazine that will not only be a continuing record of our times but will contain in each issue something of practical value to the thousands of world's workers in every department of human activity.

A considerable number of subscriptions will expire with this issue From these friends who have stood loyally by the publication, we solicit a renewal, solely with the belief that we are giving good value for the money. If you, kind reader, are one of them, and your subscription has not already been forwarded, let us hear from you promptly, and thus avoid missing an issue. THE WORLD TO-DAY is but $3.00 per year and this amount cannot be expended in any other single magazine giving such a varied and large amount of practical and instructive information.

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Coronation Pictures The next issue of

THE WORLD TO-DAY will contain a large number of illustrations of the Coronation of King Edward VII made from photographs taken by our own photographer who is now in London. These photographs will cover the leading features of the ceremony which has attracted the attention of the whole world.

Current Encyclopedia Company

153-155 La Salle Street ....Chicago

OFFICERS

W. E. ERNST, President and Secretary
SAMUEL FALLOWS, Vice-President
ALBERT G. BEAUNISNE, Treasurer

Entered at Chicago, Ill., Post Office as second-class mail matter.

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THE NEW WASHINGTON

LOOKING UP THE MALL TOWARD THE CAPITOL FROM THE MONUMENT GARDEN, DRAWN BY CHARLES GRAHAM FROM THE PLANS OF THE WASHINGTON COMMISSION. (A SAMPLE ILLUSTRATION.)

FOR EVERYTHING NEW CONSULT

THE WORLD TO-DAY

THE ONLY PUBLICATION KEEPING PACE WITH THE WORLD'S PROGRESS
A NEW IDEA EMBODYING THE VERY SPIRIT

OF THE TWENTIETH CENTURY.

The World To-Day is a monthly publication containing the very latest information in every and Religion are a few of the departments treated regularly by specialists. History, Politics, Science, Industry, Literature, Art, Education, Philosophy

department of human progress.

Nothing Like It.

The metro

The weekly

The daily record of current events appears in the leading newspapers of the large cities. and te monthly also have their place. With their reports of recent occurrences they give a more or less com

The bi-monthly and quarterly reviews furnish condensed

Some

plete history of what is going on in the world. chronicles of passing events, with articles on special topics of interest only to a limited circle of readers. of the reviews afford glimpses of home and foreign affairs, with brief notes on science, art and literature. Their outlook is necessarily circumscribed, for each has a limited field to cover.

The province of a scientific journal
The range of no

is not politics, and the religious paper can give only incidental attention to public questions.

periodical can be universal.

As a result of this multiplication of papers and magazines, it is impossible for the busy man to keep track In the Middle Ages an intellectual giant like Dante could master the learning of his Business and professional men, too, find it necessary to confine themWhile the successful man of to-day must know one thing thoroughly, he

of human advancement.

time, but now scholars must specialize.

selves to a particular line of work.

Compila

must have ready access to knowledge on a vast variety of subjects. Handy works of reference are indispensable, not only to the teacher, the clergyman and the lawyer, but to the financier and the farmer.

tions of facts are the tools of every thinking man.

We cannot.

The ancients got along with few books and no periodicals.

The time has come when every citizen ought to keep in touch with public affairs.

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