Part 160 (2/2)
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The Forecast
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Is right there every time on every topic uppermost in the minds of the public.
THE SEPTEMBER NUMBER
contains many special features that are readable, timely, lively.
ELLA WHEELER WILc.o.x tells of ”The Influences Which Shaped My Career.”
ANTOINETTE E. GAZZAM contributes an original article on ”Clothes” which is most beautifully ill.u.s.trated and full of valuable suggestions and pleasing surprises.
THOMAS MARTINDALE, the renowned sportsman and author of ”Sport Royal,”
and other fascinating sporting tales, tells of ”The Lure of Hunting.”
Mr. Martindale never wrote more entertainingly than in this article.
EDWENA LAWRENCE reveals inside information in an article, especially pleasing to theatre-goers, on ”The Educational Value of a Theatrical Stock Company,” an article that will be appreciated by both the actor and auditor.
SPLENDID FICTION, intimate sketches of the personalities of the day, able book reviews, able articles on political, social, civic and national phases of the leading questions of the day, and an entertaining department of Fun, Fact and Fiction, as well as
CHARLES HOUSTON GOUDISS'S splendid eugenism in an article treating of the most important phase of the prevention of child degradation, combine in making The Forecast the most attractive ten cent magazine published.
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Since John Stuart Mill's essay there has been no book dealing with the whole position of women to approach it in originality of conception and brilliancy of exposition.--_London Chronicle._
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