OUR MAGAZINESTHE WORLD'S WORK

OUR MAGAZINESTHE WORLD'S WORKReaders of "Short Stories" are probably aware that "Short Stories" is only one of a family of magazines. The demand for specimen copies in answer to our advertisements of our other magazines, shows that our readers are eager to read the magazines published by the same House that publishes "Short Stories."The other magazines are "The World's Work," 1/- monthly, "Radio-Broadcast," 1/- monthly, "The Health Builder," 1/- monthly, and "The Garden Magazine," 1/- monthly, and I think a short description will be much more useful and interesting to our readers than any number of advertisements.To many thousands of readers "The World's Work" is an old friend, and we receive many letters of appreciation from readers all over the world, who have subscribed for years, and would not be without their "World's Work" for anything. If a number goes astray, we get no peace until they get their copy."The World's Work" seems to appeal strongly to people who live in the lonely parts of the world. It seems to keep them in touch with the world—with England. No story magazine can have the same link, but a magazine like "The World's Work" tells people what is going on everywhere.Last year the famous Walter H. Page's Letters were published in "The World's Work," and caused an immense sensation. The exciting series of big-game hunting in Central Africa by Carl Akeley, the famous explorer, was also hugely appreciated. This year we started with the inner history of the Irish Rebellion, by Darrell Figgis, who knows, if any man does, the secret workings of the campaign, and who was closely associated with Michael Collins and Arthur Griffiths in the guerilla warfare against the British Government."The World's Work" deals with every kind of work and every kind of worker: with science, industry, agriculture, adventure, travel, politics, motoring—in fact it is a live wire between the world and the reader. It is written for the thinking man and woman, but not for the high-brow; it does not use too technical language, but, on the other hand, it goes far deeper than the information of the cheap, popular magazine.THE WORLD'S WORK1/- monthlySpecimen copy 3d. fromThe World's Work (1913) Ltd., 20 Bedford St., London, W.C. 2

Readers of "Short Stories" are probably aware that "Short Stories" is only one of a family of magazines. The demand for specimen copies in answer to our advertisements of our other magazines, shows that our readers are eager to read the magazines published by the same House that publishes "Short Stories."

The other magazines are "The World's Work," 1/- monthly, "Radio-Broadcast," 1/- monthly, "The Health Builder," 1/- monthly, and "The Garden Magazine," 1/- monthly, and I think a short description will be much more useful and interesting to our readers than any number of advertisements.

To many thousands of readers "The World's Work" is an old friend, and we receive many letters of appreciation from readers all over the world, who have subscribed for years, and would not be without their "World's Work" for anything. If a number goes astray, we get no peace until they get their copy.

"The World's Work" seems to appeal strongly to people who live in the lonely parts of the world. It seems to keep them in touch with the world—with England. No story magazine can have the same link, but a magazine like "The World's Work" tells people what is going on everywhere.

Last year the famous Walter H. Page's Letters were published in "The World's Work," and caused an immense sensation. The exciting series of big-game hunting in Central Africa by Carl Akeley, the famous explorer, was also hugely appreciated. This year we started with the inner history of the Irish Rebellion, by Darrell Figgis, who knows, if any man does, the secret workings of the campaign, and who was closely associated with Michael Collins and Arthur Griffiths in the guerilla warfare against the British Government.

"The World's Work" deals with every kind of work and every kind of worker: with science, industry, agriculture, adventure, travel, politics, motoring—in fact it is a live wire between the world and the reader. It is written for the thinking man and woman, but not for the high-brow; it does not use too technical language, but, on the other hand, it goes far deeper than the information of the cheap, popular magazine.

THE WORLD'S WORK

1/- monthly

Specimen copy 3d. from

The World's Work (1913) Ltd., 20 Bedford St., London, W.C. 2


Back to IndexNext