YOUTH

An Illustrated Monthly Journal for Boys and Girls
Edited by HERBERT LEONARD COGGINS


Single Copies 10 Cents Annual Subscription $1.00

Sent postpaid to any address. Subscriptions can begin at any time and must be paid in advance


The publishers should be promptly informed of any change of address


Subscribers who have not received their magazine regularly will please notify the publishers
Remittances may be made in the way most convenient to the sender, and should be addressed to
THE PENN PUBLISHING COMPANY
923 Arch Street, Philadelphia, Pa.


THE NEW DEPARTMENT

Although we have opened our new department, “Out of Doors,” a little later than was intended, we believe that it will meet with favor among our readers. We hope, too, that, in the future, it will grow in size as well as in interest.

TO CONTRIBUTORS

The publishers of Youth desire to state that for a time, hereafter, they will be unable to examine manuscripts submitted for publication, except those to be entered in the Prize Competition. Full particulars in regard to this offer will be found in one of the advertising pages of this issue.

50c. FOR TWENTY-FIVE NAMES

Anyone who will send us the names and addresses of twenty-five of his friends, boys or girls, and fifty cents additional, will receive a year’s subscription to Youth. The magazine will be sent to any desired address. This is a very easy way for any person, young or old, to obtain a year’s subscription. We wish the twenty-five names for the sole purpose of distributing sample copies of Youth. They will be put to no other use, so that no one need have any hesitation in sending the list.

AN EASY WAY TO EARN MONEY

In order to increase the circulation of Youth as rapidly as possible, we have decided to make some exceptional inducements to boys and girls to obtain subscriptions. The work can be done after school hours, and on Saturdays and holidays. The arrangement we make for doing the canvassing renders the work very agreeable, and the commission offered is so large that it cannot fail to be an inducement.

To such of our readers as would like to earn a considerable sum of money with little effort, we suggest that they send us their names and addresses, and we will at once forward full particulars.

SPECIAL SUBSCRIPTION OFFER

In order to make it a substantial object for our subscribers to interest themselves in extending the circulation of Youth, we have decided to make the following special offer:

For every new subscription sent us we will send, free of all cost, one of any of the books named in the accompanying list. These books are the latest and best stories of the most popular writers for boys and girls. They are beautifully illustrated and handsomely bound. The regular price of each book is $1.25. This is an exceptional opportunity for any one to add to his library with little effort, and we trust that a very large number of our subscribers will quickly avail themselves of this special offer. This, of course, does not apply to those taking advantage of our other subscription offers.

Earning Her WayBy Mrs. Clarke Johnson
Her College DaysBy Mrs. Clarke Johnson
A Maid at King Alfred’s CourtBy Lucy Foster Madison
A Maid of the First CenturyBy Lucy Foster Madison
A Yankee Girl in Old CaliforniaBy Evelyn Raymond
My Lady BarefootBy Evelyn Raymond
Dorothy DayBy Julie M. Lippmann
Miss WildfireBy Julie M. Lippmann
An Odd Little LassBy Jessie E. Wright
An Every-day HeroineBy Mary A. Denison
Uncrowning a KingBy Edward S. Ellis, A. M.
At the Siege of QuebecBy James Otis
In the Days of WashingtonBy William Murray Graydon
On Woodcove IslandBy Elbridge S. Brooks
Under the TamaracksBy Elbridge S. Brooks
The Wreck of the Sea Lion.By W. O. Stoddard
The Young FinancierBy W. O. Stoddard
True to His TrustBy Edward S. Ellis, A. M.
Comrades TrueBy Edward S. Ellis, A. M.
Among the EsquimauxBy Edward S. Ellis, A. M.
The Campers OutBy Edward S. Ellis, A. M.
The Young Gold Seekers.By Edward S. Ellis, A. M.
Andy’s WardBy James Otis
Chasing a YachtBy James Otis
The Braganza DiamondBy James Otis
The Lost GalleonBy W. Bert Foster
Exiled to SiberiaBy William Murray Graydon
The Lost Gold MineBy Frank H. Converse
A Cape Cod BoyBy Sophie Swett
Making His MarkBy Horatio Alger, Jr.
The Young BoatmanBy Horatio Alger, Jr.
The Odds Against HimBy Horatio Alger, Jr.

Transcriber’s Notes:

A number of typographical errors have been corrected silently.

Archaic spellings have been retained.

Irregular closing quotes were not modernized.

Page 191 number of 51,000 immigrants is unreliable as the “1” is unclear.

Spelling of “Seesame and Lilies” has been corrected to “Sesame and Lilies”.

Cover image is in the public domain.

Alt text for images are in the public domain