EVENING LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, JUNE 27, 1010. 'Uti , i " ' L -- """"" - ' I ' 1 , 1 4 -K i ' - ii - '.j t t 'r """ ' W k - ' - '' ' . I ' !. Afr. Advertising Mart, 'K, ! Convention Ha, - , I Philadelphia, Pa. I f.- t ft ti . l,ta S U "; Jv t '" i V ' .' J-V ' . i.. - .:- fit: V , j- "r '''': ' hl' There used to bo a lot of theory and cruessworic about advertising. Yoa can recal the time and still bo a young man at that when, advertising was only another name for Pretty pictures. And there was a period before that when it was commonly described as X The Great Un known Quantity. Advertising has made some progress since the time when old Uncle John bought space in The Buzz Saw because the genial solicitor had a .Winning "Way with him. t That we are living to-day, in an age of Adver-, tising Facts and Piguros iB duo mainly to the sound constructive work of the Associated Ad vertising Olubs of the World. ' The advertising business is getting on a Defi nite Basis, and the Foot Rule and the Microscope are a part of every modern advertiser's equip-1, ment. There's where we thrive, for the New York American's value to advertisers is something that can be Weighed, Measured, Analyzed and Ap praised. O0O00OO0 Iiisteiir ' The citizen with an income ranging from $3000 to $10,000 is the advertiser's ideal prospect. He has a well-furnished home dresses in good taste belongs to clubs keeps a car is wide awake and open to now impressions. In tho United States there are 276,727 people with incomes of $3000 to $10,000, according to the official figures. , And of this 276,727 not less than 61,132 or 22 per cent live in metropolitan New York. Think of that! One-fifth of all the real Live Wire Incomes in this big country are to be found in an area that measures up about the Bize of a carpet tack on the map. There is on deposit in the savings banks of ,the United States about five billions of dollars. More than one-quarter of all this gigantic sum or $1,356,000,000 -is on deposit in savings oanks in New York Oity. The combined pay-roll in New York Oity's manufacturing establishments exceeds ten mill ions of dollars a week to say nothing of salaries to office people, executives and so on. Last year new Homes for 263,530 people a bigger population than there is in Louisville or Denver were built in Greater New York. And the cost of building not including the ground , was .$.122,794,800, ' -; ... V! 4 - .r ' vi i u 'l mr ;tv,.t-? v Within fifty miles of the New York Oity FU there are approximately 125,000 automobiles. This is-three times as many cars as there are in any 'other area of the same size on the face of the earth. We don't Jiavo to tell advertising men what these Facts mean what a world-beating oppor tunity for Big Results, Increased Sales and Larger Profits is tied to them. There are seven morning newspapers printed in English in New York Oity. The New York American daily has twenty five per cent of the combined circulation of the seven newspapers. Twenty-five people out of every hundred in New York City read the American every morning. The remaining seventy-five divido their prefer ence among the six other morning newspapers. If you could sell your goods to one-fourth of the people in the richest community on earth you would no longer have any cause for worry. All you would have to do then would bo to Speed Up the Plant and start efficiency and bonus systems to develop larger output. It isn't just pure luck that gives the New York American twenty-five per cent of all the morning newspaper circulation in New York Oity. It is a Complete Newspaper and a complete newspaper is an uncommon production. The lest foreign news service the livest local news the best financial pages an up-to-date real estate department a live-wire automobile sec tion an editorial page with a punch the most interesting cartoons and pictures these are some of the features that keep The American on the crest of the metropolitan wave. The Now York American numbers among its contributors hundreds of tho world's most cele brated men and women leaders in politics, litera ture, art, finance and affairs. The Biggest Thing a newspaper can have is Personality. It's the most intangible quality, too the hardest to put your finger on. t . . The advertiser who knows the ins and outs of selling would rather have a thousand circulation with Personality behind it than five thousand without it. Some newspapers have no more personality than an iron fence. The New York American does not belong to that class. It is a fighting newspaper. No fighter ever lacked personality, and the New York American has what Elbert Hubbard would have called Personality Plus. Its readers believe in it. They are all back of it to a man. They endorse its crusades its stand for public morality its battles for the people's rights its honesty and its ideals. This quality' of Personality works out in many interesting ways. The Confidence of Readers, for instance. Here's an incident that shows what we mean? About a year ago the New York American started a department of Information for In vestors. The purpose of this department is to advise the readers of the American as to the in vestment value of stocks, bonds and securities. ItB seirvice is free, and it gives Real Information -not clippings from prospectuses. Every proposi tion about which an Inquiry is made is investi gated right down to the ground, and the results whatever they may be are printed. Readers of the American were advised that re plies to their inquiries would be printed in Sun day's and Monday's American. If we had kept that up we would have had to increase the size of the paper. Inquiries average about one hundred a day and the replies to nine tenths of them are sent by mail. The remaining tenth of general public interest appear in the American. It is a revelation how much money people have awaiting investment. Most inquiries have reference to sums ranging from $500 to $12,000, and letters from people who have from $2,000 to $5,000 lying idle aro an everyday occurrence. The point is: A newspaper that did not pos sess the full Confidence of its Readers would never be deluged for requests for advice like this. There's' a moral for advertisers in this. It is obvious. Yours truly,. NEW .YORK AMERICAN,, ..... v . 4,' . - : J$ " ;" - V ' ' 'vA - v . '. , A '-' V, 'It , 1 ' . 1 t . Ji V 1 , " s . 1 t' " 5, -" I v' " ) ' ft tt f . j ' , v , '' ', K ?','' .. . ,'; 1 St i. ' k ill M - ' .1 1! i ? y , i ..f j ? New York American: Daily and Sunday: Member Audit Bureau of Circulations f-; . ftS 4i .' yt,';t --'m .-&. ,--. -5?i (! war jiw ,' - 'JVWW lTtMifaTt? ' ' x fr3Ffc '' "l . i.- -. mia B mi