.STBNING MBiSJR-PJHILADBLPJEiiA, IDAt, feMUMBER 29, 1816 'A' w ffl ' ' t II II ' u 11 11' v lr lr l I' li II f i r. - i r v. I I ': ' I I I ' I " I I T" . I .-, I t I . i . V heard Every man can be proportion to his voice in jf I i -A't ' The ceaseless struggle of industry is fought in many arenas. One of these arenas is national publicity. There, as in the raw material mar ket, on the financial exchanges, in the labor market, in the field of re tail competition, may be witnessed the battle for supremacy. National advertising, however,r differs from these other arenas in this : The weak has just as much chance as the strong. The young stands level with the old. Every where else the match is un equal. Raw materials can be cor nered. Men can be hired away. Markets can be shot to pieces by vicious competition. Stocks can be driven down, loans blocked, notes called. National publicity alone offers a fair field and no favor. For no one can get a corner on public attention. In so huge a medium as The Sat- urday Evening Post, the nuiriber of contestants1 and the size of their ef forts can never be so great as to close the doors to others. While the big factors are vying with one another, they are constant ly broadening the opportunities for the whole industry. However large the share they may win for them selves, they are also opening up new avenues of trade f or all the smaller factors. The market can be domi nated. But it is too vast ever to be monopolized. We know, among many typical cases in pointy of one industry in which several large firms were using from 25 tto 50 pages a year each in the Post. A smaller competitor en tered with only a f ew pages, and at the end of the year found that his business had received a greater stim ulus than it had ever known before. Whether for firms which are am bitious to dominate, or for those less er firms which do not hope for leadership, and yet depend upon the national market, The Saturday Even ing Post offers a distribution so in tensive that the Vaste of competition is reduced to a minimum and a mar ket so vast that its full potentialities can never be exhausted. ?W t '! kJ ' Vs X'-'JJ.',. -. . $f . -' ' '' -V j '.. V faS1 V THE SATUHPSIY EVENING POST The medium of dominance .. - n . - j.i -"s " j . , I . r V 1 i i i - tiurt;!.-'. ..; ,- V ' ") " - : $w?? . ' "wm A book reprinting the series of advertisements of which this is the last, will be seitf free upon request addressed, to the Advertising De partment, The Curtis Publishing Company, Independence Square, Philadelphia. r i 4??-,fJ - i' ' '!( V. - jr ','. .: . ! 5U "f '' -ft y j " . ' 1 . ..-'11 Jt .i ; ' -' . 'l SElSRm