f MUli mitt Hi. m L 2 '"J iilr9r 1 There are one hundred and fourteen specially designed presaes. Including high-speed color preeaea. An endleas belt carries awar the mall pouches In -which the magazine! are packed ISO tons a day. tl5 era The EnarraTlns" Department, -where ervery out. adver tising; or plotorial. Is brought to its highest efficiency. In the Womin'i Luneh Room, where 00 dine at one tlmvar IT oxigtnal painting by Mxxfleld PatTlsfe, ETBirrd rtETx$mvmrrATTSi'EvmrKt moitp&y. febbttary t, roifr lb IB b tVliWt FB 1 H "We W H H W V - UNIM JJ tioe tSuilt on raith II nstitu This great building in Independence Square represents an institution built on faith faith in the power of advertising. Thirty years ago this company started The Ladies' Home Journal with $400 to spend advertising it. Year after year since then it has been faith in the power of advertising which has carried this company through business crises to greater successes. Before The Saturday Evening Post began to pay, nearly $1,250,000 was spent upon it. Large sums went into advertis ing. It paid. During the panic of 1907 this company put $50,000 into advertising The Post. And it paid. During the present winter, when many business houses are relaxing their efforts, this company is investing $200,000 in adver tising. And it is paying. This company not only urges the use of advertising in its publications upon the manufacturers of Philadelphia. It strives to exemplify its faith and to demonstrate to them the soundness of its advice by liberal use of advertising in its own and other publications. We invite you to visit and inspect this plant and when you do to look upon it as a visible evidence of the power of advertising. The Curtis Publishing Company it Horn Journal Th Saturday Suntnf F'l Tht Ctuntry C. Independence Square, Philadelphia Tha tmJUa' ffemm Jaurnef Tht Ctuntry Cantltmmn tgu4i 7 T j .Ku A YM I 'TT -iiy rtft. n ' N'tf II iVl wilf-rvPniM rVlA "A A t I wWrT (nv3 TCUMfiEsMMffiT bTuM I utthX. 'JLa? VI M -ti This enormous Rtock room, with 27,000 square feet of floor apace, holds baroly a month's supply of paper. lap B ililifct 'T;ffajfSSataMj. Jg f 7 ft g" i'i,,1ii'i"- $ j? P This -warehouse. In another part of the city, has a storage capacity of E500 tons of paper and 10,000 tons of coal. I v ? " . Mil U m i, .,s ;:3 Ink the smallest factor In printing la consumed at the rate of 1 1-8 tons a day. U rt ' ' 11 I m The rest rooms are illustrative of the attention siva to the comfort and health of employes. m U A ml i m 1 mi - '.;'-' iftfH --; - w jW ' IIEiffl .' Ill A'iJB sBWsimtisWls'iff(ffii " 'SnEISlsSlifflm!lfTTni!!lffiffi riif -M I' &.& mm llllliHUi.aPi ni ILl isl STjgySsWssBSBSSBSBSBSSBSBMBsJBsMsMis -"mSjltaf" 111" Wlilllili m , jBWfebJ-" .sC il i It 4B
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers