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Coming Nation from Girard, Kansas • 12

Coming Nation du lieu suivant : Girard, Kansas • 12

Publication:
Coming Nationi
Lieu:
Girard, Kansas
Date de parution:
Page:
12
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

12 THE COMING NATION The Coming Nation Is ''M To Appear Soon A Series of Ten Special Articles by Bouck White Author of the of the Carpenter" Publishers FRED D. WARREN Editors A. M. SIMONS. CHAS.

EDW. RUSSELL. Entered as second-class matter. weekly at 4759 Evanston Chicago, in. By mall In the United States, $1 a year.

In all other countries, $1.50. Remit by Post Office or Express Order, or draft on Chicago. Individual checks cost us five cents for collection. Bundles of ten or more, two cents a copy. Stamps must be Inclosed for the manuscripts.

The COMING NATION assumes no responsibility for manuscripts or drawings sent to ft for examination. A CIIAIICE TO MAKE HONEY I am making a fortune selling Pure Fruit Candy. Any brainy person can do likewise; so if you want to make more money than you ever possessed, send forty-eight two cent stamps to cover the expense of mailing seventy-feven Pure Food Candy Formulas, and the mould to make the candy. I will help you start in business. I am glad to help others, who, like myself, need money.

People say "the candy is the best they ever tasted" therein lies the beauty of the business the candy is eaten immediately and more ordered. You don't have to canvass; you sell right from your own home. I made $12 the first day; so can you. Isabelle Inez, Block 999C, East Liberty, Pittsburg, Pa. New Review AWEEKlY-mVIEW-OF'lNTERNATIQNAL'SOCIALISM ONLY SOCIALIST PERIODICAL OF IT5 KIND IN AMERICA parables of the Gospels then you will want the series of special articles which White is preparing exclusively for the Coming Nation.

HOW TO ORDER. If you are an unexpired subscriber to this magazine and want to take advantage of our combination offer, don't write like this: "Extend my subscription from date of expiration and send me the "Call of the Carpenter." This makes endless trouble. DO THIS. Send us $1.50 and order a sub card good for a year. Chances are you can sell the sub card.

If not, It will be good any time you want to redeem it. Fill out this blank: For the enclosed $1.50 send me the Coming Nation, one year, or send me a yearly sub card (Mark with an which you want) and a copy of the Call of the Carpenter. Name Address State Address your letter carefully, as follows: COMING NATION, 4769 Evanston Chicago, 111. GENERAL SUBJECT. "What would be the message of Jesus to the Working Class If he were alive today?" The "Call of the Carpenter" has had the most phenomenal run of any book ever offered by a Socialist publication.

The reason Is simply this: By far the larger portion of our population incline to religion in some form or to some extent. They cannot understand why the church especially the Roman church-wars against the Socialist party, nor why Socialists are lukewarm or indifferent toward the modern church. Bouck White makes it all clear in his book, and will make it still more clear in his series of articles soon to begin in the Coming Nation. If you want to know "The Carpenter," not as superstition has cast a halo about him not as theology has mystified him, but simply as he was; if you want to know why he said the terrible things against the rich that make the Gospels fairly ring with revolution; to know the awful oppressions which the working class his class suffered then you want the "Call of the Carpenter." And if you want to understand the economic meaning of the ten CoDialDlDjj Just He iijtt Son ol Brlicies THE FOREMOST AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN WRITERS ON SOCIALIST rRORltm, rOHTICAL DEVELOPMENTS AND CURRENT EVENTS IN THE CLASS STRUCCLE, NATIOWAt AND INTERNATIONAL Foi Sims of Socialism, Speakers anil Jgiiaiois EVERYONE SENDS FOR ALL THE ISSUES AFTER READING A COPT. SO WILL YOU S2.00 A YEAR; $1.00, SIX Sf Each; lt in Bundle New Review 150 NASSAU STREET ew ryeview NEW York city of CLOTHES- is one of the most com plete style Books ever issued, it contains illustrations and samples ot fabrics of over 200 Suits.

Trousers, Overcoats, Rain coats, for men and boys, and a full line of Men's urnishines. The an order for a dollar sub card, and fifty cents additional one dollar and a half in all, will get the book. 1 1 generous samples enable you to choose the actual fabrics and colors you prefer. Our prices, because we manufacture and sell to you direct lire from to less than you pay elsewhere. Let us prove it.

Sand for Our Stylo Book Today. It's Froo. C. V. BOLLER COMPANY 386 Bridfto Stroo NEW YORK CITY Hause for Men and Boy cartoons, the humor, the Washington letter, and the Russell editorials, and all the other regular features.

You see we are going ahead on the supposition that the Socialists want the best magazine published to be a Socialist publication. We can keep this up if you will just show your paper to a few friends this week and tell them about it. They will want to subscribe. I Few Hours Work Earns a Beauti- si i tt I mi ji-riece winner aei No need to pay out mon- IV, a uat a lew uuurs among your friends sets this set 82 beautiful pieces ofperfeet, view ffuia cnuiB.EjTerr sj piece cnanningiy aeo ormwa in gold. A Beautiful sat in every respect.

Railroaded to Prison By A. M. S. More thai twenty years ago, when Charles Edward Russell was a reporter on a New York daily paper, he came in contact with a great crime story. It was a story that involved the solution of the famous "Jack the Ripper" murders in London.

It was a story that involved the head of the New York police force, several great newspapers and editors, the courts, a famous firm of lawyers, and the whole system of court procedure in New York state. Russell could not write the story when he first learned it and have any hope of ever seeing it in print. Not in the twenty years since has there been a periodical whose pages would have been open to the' whole The Coming Nation is now going to print it. It may sound strange for me to praise the work of a fellow editor, but when the story appears, which will be next week, you will agree with me that as a mystery story it ranks with any fiction, that in its view of the underworld it is the most startling thing that has appeared, that not all the investigations of the New York police in connection with the Becker case have brought anything to light stranger and more damning than this and that the telling of this story forever closes the question of whether an innocent man, a man who could not by any possibility have been guilty, can be railroaded through the courts, past the press and all the organs of public opinion, into prison without any redress. Told purely as a piece of fiction, with names and places altered to avoid detection, and any magazine would pay a splendid price for this story.

But Russell gives you the names of the guilty police officers, the judges and newspapers implicated, and tells you just who did the things described and when and how. He opens up the secret springs by which the press of a great city is controlled and lets you watch the wheels go round. This story will be famous. You will save it and quote from it for years to come. The immediate occasion for its appearance is the denial that the ironworkers could have been railroaded.

This shows that they certainly could, because another was so railroaded. This story of Russell's is one thrilling sensation after another, but along with it we print a strong simple story of a woman's struggle on a homestead in Colorado, that is throbbing with that strange vital thing editors call "human interest." There is romance and adventure, and all the things that make you read fiction, and, again, it is all true. There are some beautiful photographs with this story. The new "Information Department" of the Socialist Party is doing some mighty important and interesting work, yet few even among Socialist Party members know about this work. Next week J.

L. Engdahl tells what this department is doing and it makes very good reading and presents some stuff that will help to make Socialists. Then, of course, there is the serial, the I Wo 0 fimniu White Cloverine Salve. nil! hoeiiMful art Some Big Orders Our friends responded so enthusiastically to our request to meet us in Chi-cago with subscription lists-that they succeeded in "swamping" us temporarily. Many big lists have been gathered, among the number being one from Detroit, by Comrade F.

M. Crossley, with twenty combination Call of the Carpenter and Coming Nation subs. This entitles him to a double set of all our premium books. Lists of ten subs, which win a set of our premium books, are becoming more and more frequent. Most of them are for the Call of the Carpenter with the Coming Nation.

And, by the way, we have just received from the printers 100,000 new Call of the Carpenter leaflets. They are revised, very tastily printed, and designed for propaganda as well as advertising purposes. We will fill orders at 10 cents per hundred fifty cents per thousand. A house-to-house distribution will start everybody in your town talking. Try it.

ileturea. in colors, 16x20 Incl no two alike, mera- i aII thm 12 boxi at 25e each --five one beautiful picture free FT a Ml aotHfU wjee uvuu sm.vv we wilt forward dinner set Imme- I mi a t- xiamiy. inai aaii. Dana no money, were- iv write send evervemnff oot DOSS id. Write auick: be first in your town.

Wll ON CHEMICAL Dept. 178 Tyrone, Pa. 5 A Mistake Through an error in the -types, in No! 127, we were made to say that the Coming Nation and the Call of the Carpenter could be had for a dollar. And now is coming a flood of letters asking if it is true. NO; IT IS NOT TRUE.

We have the price of the combination down to bed rock, and a hole blasted in the rock. Either one of the two is worth a dollar and a half. And you never could have got this book for the price we are offering it except for one thing. When it was brought out the book reviewers, on whom publishers rely for advertising a new book, wrote nothing, either for or against. Evidently there was a conspiracy hatched somewhere to keep the book in obscurity.

It did not sell simply because but few people knew that such a book existed. At this juncture the publishers offered it to us, and knowing full well that White had produced one of the masterpieces of the age we quickly accepted the offer. Now that we have popularized it people are eagerly buying at the bookstores for $1.20 per copy. Our edition is limited. If you want yours if your friend wants his with the Coming Nation for a year better order now.

Remember that Shows how to earn this W.J,..'' I swell tailored-to-order suit in an hour. How to make $33 to $65 a week, ju st by show. LORD'S PRAYER AND 10 COMMANDMENTS Ten colon, background solid gold, complete Lord's Prayer beautifully lettered A also 10 Commandments. Greateit picture ever made. Tremendous seller.

Sendyourname ing your hne fkhk SAMPLE SUIT and our beautiful samples to your friends. Lowest Wholesale Prices ever heard of. Wo pay express charges. Fellowe everywhere going wild about our afvlaa VI noat.niml I t.TOllArnnf flpll and we will send you an assortment ol 8 pictures, Lord I Prayer, Lord Supper, Rock of Ages, MarriageCer-titicate and others. You can distribute them in an hour on our plan and taka your oholoe of premium! from our Ms Hat.

which oonttlni Dinner Hat, Diamond Ring, Oold Watoh, Aooordlon, Bint, Curtains, 81 Iter Sot sthor uma. Writ as today. Wo run all tho rlak and pay all poatago. Kelly Robinson, (Ol Plymouth tt 10, InlcaKO tailoring in America. We Bend magnificent BAM.

PLB OUTFIT and everything FREE. You pay nothing, slim nothing, promise nothing-end eed no experience. Wait until you see how handaome your REE SAMPLE SUIT Is before yon decide to be our Agent. More quick money in thia than vnn ever thought poihlB. So easy to make It you wiU be Only one FREE SAMPLE BOOK to each county.

Territory going fast. Send ua your name today. Chicago Tailors' Ass'n. Dept. no Van Buren St.

Chicago BIG POWERFUL AIR RIFLE SteKSIl strong, durable ana oompaot snooting piece, snoots accurately ana wun ioroe. moao -long. Working parts of nigh-grade steel. Stock of highly polished walnut. Just the thing for target practice or shooting small game.

More fan than with anything yon ever owned. You can set it renre sTbbXIbt HI fl ls TTr net vonrname. and wo Pit EC of your own money. Oullli 111 11 IS lab I will send you 8 sets of our far, anllinir art Dictnresto distribute 6 as on a special 26o offer. Everybody will take a set to help you earn this fins big Air for your trouble we will send you tree this fine 82 inch powerful Sterling Air Eifle.

just premiums from our big list. IT COSTS YOIT MOTIIINtt TO THY, as we take back aaat, jaf ana. af4 ssas 0 ST STBF A Pa BT' Ta Rifle. Send us the $2.00 you collect and described, or your choica of other tit ind cloture! "staBjSJWaWeW CHZOAOrO! JVC. Om BBXVZi Z-D125 you cannot dispose of.

Send us $2 and Eifle will be sent at once. eaa 1.

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À propos de la collection Coming Nation

Pages disponibles:
1 983
Années disponibles:
1910-1913