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قراءة كتاب The Great Round World and What Is Going On In It, Vol. 1, No. 36, July 15, 1897 A Weekly Magazine for Boys and Girls

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The Great Round World and What Is Going On In It, Vol. 1, No. 36, July 15, 1897
A Weekly Magazine for Boys and Girls

The Great Round World and What Is Going On In It, Vol. 1, No. 36, July 15, 1897 A Weekly Magazine for Boys and Girls

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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Copyright, 1897, by William Beverley Harison

Books

To any subscriber securing for us

··· ··· 1 NEW SUBSCRIPTION

we will send post-paid any one of the following books. Printed on extra laid paper, bound in red buckram, gilt top.
  • Andersen's Fairy Tales. By Hans Andersen.
  • Allan Quatermain. By H. Rider Haggard.
  • Auld Lang Syne. By W. Clark Russell.
  • Adam Bede. By George Eliot.
  • Abbé Constantin. By Ludovic Halévy.
  • Ardath. By Marie Corelli.
  • Big Bow Mystery. By I. Zangwill.
  • Bondman. By Hall Caine.
  • Beyond the City. By A. Conan Doyle.
  • Black Beauty. By Anna Sewell.
  • Beatrice. By H. Rider Haggard.
  • Baron Munchausen. By Rudolph Raspe.
  • Bryant's Poems. By William Cullen Bryant.
  • Chouans. By Honoré de Balzac.
  • Cloister Wendhusen. By W. Heimburg.
  • Country Sweetheart. By Dora Russell.
  • Change of Air. By Anthony Hope.
  • Cowper's Poems. By William Cowper.
  • Cleopatra. By H. Rider Haggard.
  • Deerslayer. By J. Fenimore Cooper.
  • Desperate Remedies. By Thomas Hardy.
  • Danira. By E. Werner.
  • Duchess. By The Duchess.
  • Dorothy's Double. By G.A. Henty.
  • Diana of the Crossways. By George Meredith.
  • Doctor Rameau. By Georges Ohnet.
  • David Copperfield. By Charles Dickens.
  • Dombey & Son. By Charles Dickens.
  • Elsie. By W. Heimburg.
  • Evolution of Dodd. By William Hawley Smith.
  • Fromont Jr. and Risler Sr. By Alphonse Daudet.
  • Flower of France. By Marah Ellis Ryan.
  • Great Keinplatz Experiment. By A. Conan Doyle.
  • Gladiators. By C.J. Whyte-Melville.
  • Grimm's Fairy Tales.
  • House of the Wolf. By Stanley Weyman.
  • Harlequin Opal. By Fergus Hume.
  • Hortense. By W. Heimburg.
  • Heir of Redcliffe. By Charlotte M. Yonge.
  • Han of Iceland. By Victor Hugo.
  • Ironmaster. By Georges Ohnet.
  • In All Shades. By Grant Allen.
  • Jane Eyre. By Charlotte Brontë.
  • Kings in Exile. By Alphonse Daudet.
  • Kidnapped. By Robert Louis Stevenson.
  • Little Rebel. By The Duchess.
  • Last of the Mohicans. By J. Fenimore Cooper.
  • Light that Failed. By Rudyard Kipling.
  • Light of Asia. By Sir Edwin Arnold.
The Great Round World
3 and 5 West 18th St.    NEW YORK CITY

The Second Bound Volume

OF

THE GREAT ROUND WORLD

(Containing Nos. 16 to 30)

IS NOW READY

Handsomely bound in strong cloth, with title on side and back. Price, postage paid, $1.25. Subscribers may exchange their numbers by sending them to us (express paid) with 35 cents to cover cost of binding, and 10 cents for return carriage.

Address

3 and 5 West 18th Street,· · · · · New York City



Librarians

will please note that the subscription price of The Great Round World—to libraries—is $1.75 per year.

Do you Cover your Books?

THE "ONE PIECE"
ADJUSTABLE BOOK COVERS

are made of the strongest and best book-cover paper obtainable. This paper is made in large quantities especially for these book covers and will protect books perfectly. The book covers themselves are a marvel of ingenuity, and, although they are in one piece and can be adjusted to fit perfectly any sized book without cutting the paper, they are also so simple that any boy or girl can use them; as they are already gummed they are always ready for use.

A sample dozen will be mailed to any address for 20 cents (or ten two-cent stamps) if you write

WILLIAM BEVERLEY HARISON
3 and 5 West 18th Street, New York City

ILLINOIS STATE NORMAL UNIVERSITY.

NORMAL, ILL. June 16, 1897.

To whom it may concern:—

I have examined the publication "The Great Round World". It seems to me to be admirable in its design and also in its execution. It abandons the formal style of the newspaper in the narration of events, substituting instead a style that is at once conversational and free. I commend it to the consideration of school men.

John W. Cook

"The Great Round World" PRIZE CONTEST

The Great Round World is now over six months old, and it feels some anxiety to know just how much interest its readers have taken in the news and how much information they have gained from its pages. To ascertain this, it has been decided to offer ten prizes for the best answers to the following:

Name ten of the most important events that have been mentioned in "The Great Round World" in the first 30 numbers, that is, up to number of June 3d.
In mentioning these events give briefly reasons for considering them important.

This competition will be open to subscribers only, and any one desiring to enter the competition must send to this office their name and the date of their subscription; a number will then be given them.

All new subscribers will be furnished with a card entitling them to enter the competition.

In making the selection of important events, remember that wars and political events are not necessarily the most important. If, for instance, the air-ship had turned out to be a genuine and successful thing, it would have been most important as affecting the history of the world. Or if by chance the telephone or telegraph had been invented in this period, these inventions would have been important events.

Prizes will be awarded to those who make the best selection and who mention the events in the best order of their importance. Answers may be sent in any time before September 1st.

The Great Round World does not want you to hurry over this contest, but to take plenty of time and do the work carefully. It will be a pleasant occupation for the summer months.

We would advise you to take the magazines starting at No. 1, look them over carefully, keep a note-book at your side, and jot down in it the events that seem to you important; when you have finished them all, No. 1 to 30, look over your notes and select the ten events that seem to you to be the most important, stating after each event your reason for thinking it important.

For instance: suppose you decide that the death of Dr. Ruiz was one of these important events, you might say, "The killing of Dr. Ruiz in the prison of Guanabacoa—because it brought the cruelties practised on American citizens to the attention of our Government," etc., etc.

In sending your answers put

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