Norwegian Life by Ethlyn T. Clough
page 167 of 195 (85%)
page 167 of 195 (85%)
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of _Aftonbladet_, which is considered the best advertising medium
in Sweden on account of its large circulation and superior class of readers, display ads. in preferred places cost about twenty-eight cents a line. The subscription price corresponds. You can have any one of the evening papers delivered at your house for $3 a year, and the highest rate for the morning dailies is $5 a year. It is worth while to know that postmasters in Sweden will receive subscriptions for newspapers published in any part of the world. A small fee is exacted to cover the amount of postage and the stationery required in forwarding the subscription. The father of cheap newspapers in Sweden is Anders Jeurling, the publisher of _Stockholm-Tidningen_ and _Hyvad Nytt i Dag_, who started the first-named journal about twelve years ago and sold it on the street for two _öre_, which is about one-half cent. Now the price of the former is four _öre_, about one cent, and of the latter a half cent. The former paper has the largest circulation in the city of Stockholm, its ordinary edition reaching about one hundred thousand copies, but _Aftonbladet_ exceeds it in the country. Mr. Jeurling has the reputation of being the ablest publisher in Sweden, and is a better business man than the editor. He has made a fortune out of his papers on the theory that the people care more for news than for politics. Mr. Adolph Hallgren is the editor-in-chief of _Stockholms-Tidningen_, and the managing editor is Mr. F. Zethraens, who studied journalism in the office of the Chicago _Record-Herald_. The official paper of the Swedish government is _Post och Inriches Tidning_, which was founded as far back as 1645, and is one of the |
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