Reading Matter and Thinking 
Matter 
In these days of wood pulp paper and 
rapid printing any one can get all the read- 
ing matter he wants at any price he is will- 
ing to pay, but to insure thruout the year 
a supply of nutritious food for thought at 
frequent and regular intervals requires 
some care. You cannot keep yourself in 
touch with current events from the month- 
lies and quarterlies alone, for what they 
publish has to be written months before. 
Dailies print too much about some things, 
and too little about others. What you need 
for the formation of opinion is THE INDE- 
PENDENT, which will give you every week 
an impartial narration of current events, a 
half-dozen or more original articles by com- 
petent authorities, critical reviews of all 
the important new books, and fearless edi- 
torial discussion of vital questions. 
ad 
Our Continued ave plncipa! et eck 
Stor lished in THE INDEPEN- 
y . : 
DENT is a continued story 
one, is not known to any human being. 
Some periodicals offer prizes of ten or 
twenty-five dollars to their readers who 
can guess the contents of future chapters 
of their continued stories. We are willing 
to follow their example, and give ten 
thousand dollars to any one who will write 
for us now, with satisfactory accuracy, the 
instalment of the “Survey of the World” 
which we shall publish a year from date 
There are a billion and a half characters in 
this story, any one of whom may come to 
the front and play a prominent part at any 
time. There will be more cabinet ministers 
in this story of ours than in Mrs. Humphry 
ard’s_ stories, 
than in Henry James’s, more startling 
changes of fortune than in Anthony Hope’s. 
rd 
It is not the organ of 
any party, sect, trust 
es or individual. The 
editorial rooms are just as completely sepa- 
rated from the publishing department as 
is possible. When the editorial conference 
decides that a certain policy is right, that 
_ Settles it, even tho it may mean the loss of 
“The Independent” 
Is Independent 
some big advertisement and a lot of wb) 
scribers. But as a matter of fact the ab 
scribers we have now are used to having 
their cherished views attacked occasionally 
by some plain spoken editorial, and realy 
prefer reading a magazine which has de 
cided views to those periodicals of a newt 
tint, which a subscriber may read for # 
without finding in them anything hed 
not agree with and did not know belie 
The Best and 
a : 
Weekly periodicals are 
the Cheapest i 
So much for quantity. 
compare our list of contri 
any other periodical. THE | 
will not suffer by the compat! 
you count or weigh the names. 
year THE INDEPENDENT is cheaper now b 
ike standing, ™ 
we fi 
scription to January 1st, 1907: 
not seen it recently 
quainted with the new sprog 
you do not want to risk ten ce 
send you a sample copy free. 
Instead of attempting 
you to take periodi - - 
With Other 
Magazines > want in order [0° de 
that you do, we-make the following: in 
clubbing offers: If you 
own list of the periodicals y 
and send it to us, we Will § 
est possible terms 0m the group. | 
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rade aha 
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PENDENT, 130 Fulton Street, 
T 
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