. St. Nicholas [serial] . gue Prizes for Puzzles 1151 Illustrated. Subscription price, $ a year; single number, 25 cents. The half-yearly parts of ST. NICHOLAS end withthe October and April numners respectively, and the red cloth covers are ready with the issue of these numbers; price 50 cents, by mail,post-paid; the two covers for the complete volume. $ We bind and turnish covers .or 75 cents per part, or $ for the com-plete volume. In sending the nuiibers to us. they should be distinctly marked with owners name, and 54 cents (27 cents per part)should be included in remittance, t


. St. Nicholas [serial] . gue Prizes for Puzzles 1151 Illustrated. Subscription price, $ a year; single number, 25 cents. The half-yearly parts of ST. NICHOLAS end withthe October and April numners respectively, and the red cloth covers are ready with the issue of these numbers; price 50 cents, by mail,post-paid; the two covers for the complete volume. $ We bind and turnish covers .or 75 cents per part, or $ for the com-plete volume. In sending the nuiibers to us. they should be distinctly marked with owners name, and 54 cents (27 cents per part)should be included in remittance, to cover postage on the volume if it is to be returned by mail. Bound volumes are not exchangedfor numbers. Persons ordering a change in the direction of Magazines must give both the old and the new address in full. No change can bemade alter the 5th of any month in the address of the Magazine for the following H. SCOTT. Prest. ^^•lA^w^SwokT^secy. THE CENTURY CO., Union Square, New York, N. Y. Oct. 1902. *^ J. FIRST ANNOUNCEMENT —AND MORE TO FOLLOW! QINCE the first number of St. Nicholas was published, in 1873, many weekly and monthlyO publications for children have come and gone, but St. Nicholas still holds its place—the unrivaled prince of periodicals for young folk,—and seemingly never can grow old ordull. It was never more prized by its young readers than now. One just-grown-up criticwrote recently: I have read St. Nicholas for twelve years, and I think that 1902 has beenthe banner year of this wonderful magazine. Assuredly, the editor and the publishers are bent upon securing for it the utmost thatmoney, enterprise, and unceasing effort can achieve in providing for Young America enter-taining, varied, and helpful reading. The November number begins the thirtieth volume of St. Nicholas. In the volumejust ending St. Nicholas made an absolutely new departure in magazine editing bydiscarding entirely the serial story, which had long been regarded as an esse


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, bookidstnicholasserial292dodg