OCR Text |
Show TWO HUNDRERED FIFTY STORIES And everv story a good one. They are entertaining, but that is not all you can say about them. You know there j is hardly a periodical published that is ; not full of time-wasting stories, but ! not a single story in the Youth's Com-! Com-! panion is a time waster. Take the ! stories of C. A. Stephens. It would be ; he hard to pick out one from which you can not learn something useful and yet i entertaining. Some of the Companion storiesi-efre'-h ! your knowledge of geography; some tell ' you the mysteries of chemistry, some reveal the secret of forestry and of general farming. They cover a wide range. Thi'y are chosen with an eye to the possible likings of every member of a Companion family- stories of vig-. vig-. orous action and stirring adventure for I boys, stories of college life and domes-, domes-, tic vicissitudes for girls, stories that range for men'ard women. There are j no stories quite like those in The Com- panion. If you are not familiar with The Companion Com-panion as it is to-day, let us send you sample copies and the forecast for 1916. I New subscribers who send $2.09 for 1916 will receive free a copy 'of The Companion Home Calendar for 1916 will receive, in addition to all the remaining 1915 issues from the time the sub scrip-! tion is received. THE YOUTH'S COMPANION Boston, Mass. |