. Review of reviews and world's work. d to Russian Autocracy: 501 With portraits, maps, and other illustrations. Briefer Notes on Topics in the Periodicals. . 503 With portrait of the Empress Jingo. The New Books 508 With portraits of authors. TERMS: $ a year ia advance; Zo cents a number. Foreign postage $ a year additional. Subscribersmay remit to usby post-otHce or express money orders, or by bank checks, drafts, or registered letters. Money in letters is at sendersrisk. Renew as early as possible, in order to avoid a break in the receipt of the numbers. Bookdealers, Postmasters, a


. Review of reviews and world's work. d to Russian Autocracy: 501 With portraits, maps, and other illustrations. Briefer Notes on Topics in the Periodicals. . 503 With portrait of the Empress Jingo. The New Books 508 With portraits of authors. TERMS: $ a year ia advance; Zo cents a number. Foreign postage $ a year additional. Subscribersmay remit to usby post-otHce or express money orders, or by bank checks, drafts, or registered letters. Money in letters is at sendersrisk. Renew as early as possible, in order to avoid a break in the receipt of the numbers. Bookdealers, Postmasters, andNewsdealers receive subscriptions. (Subscriptions to the Englisli Review ok Reviews, wliich is edited and pal>lislied byMr. W. T. Stead in London, may be sent to tliis office, and orders for single copies can also he filled, at the price of $ the yearly subscription, including postage, or 5:5 cents for single copies.) THE REVIEW OF REVIEWS CO. k af/-«>• Dlo/*£i ^I^*«r Vf\r\7 f^ii-\ 13 Astor Place, New York Photograjjh by the New York American. SCENE ON THE REAR PLATFORM OF AN ELEVATED RAILROAD TRAIN IN NEW YORK CITY, LAST MONTH,SHOWING DANGEROUS PROXIMITY OF PASSENGERS TO THE DEADLY THIRD-RAIL CURRENT. The AMERICAN Monthly Review of Reviews, V^OL. XXXI. NEW YORK, APRIL, 1905. No. 4. THE PROGRESS OF THE WORLD. The wintei has been one of such se-Rigorous Verity,—and of such unwonted andWinter. stubborn persistence far into themonth of March,—that the reluctant dawn ofspring becomes, in tlie minds of at least half theAmerican people, a matter of deep and positiveconcern. In the northern half of the country,the winter brought records of low temperatureand heavy snowfall that reminded the oldest in-habitant of the orthodox weather of his boyhood,before the climate had changed. The South wasswept by cold waves and snowstorms. In partsof the West the snow blockade caused the fuel-supply to fail, so that in some places the farmersburned their corn, and in


Size: 1356px × 1842px
Photo credit: © Reading Room 2020 / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookpublishernewyo, bookyear1890