pgtiHSUtiMMft P" W- s; h t f K V IV :l :, . r- EVENING PUBLIC LEDGEB-PHILADELPHIA', MONDAY," JIAY 12,' 1919 -T I , , The nine McGraw-Hill publications upon whose experience and resources Ingenieria Internacional is built. Though no effort has been made to extend their distribution beyond the United States they arc read by en gineers in every corner of the globe. Engineering News-Record Established 1874; published weekly with an average of ISO pages. The recognized vol.. vf the industries in the field of civil engineer ing and construction. HflNHHLVHHiHRra Established 1877; published weekly with aa average of 422 pages, and consulted wherevat machines and tools are made or used. ELECTRIC RAILWAY JOURNAL , Established 1884; published weekly with an aver-ge of 128 pages; for Jhe promotion of progress and efficiency in electric railway transportation. Established 1907; published monthly with an average of 133 pages. A marketing journal for widening the use of electricity in home and office, farm and factory. CHEMICAL fr METALLURGICAL ENGINEERING Liflllt Established 1902; published semimonthly with an avenge of 250 pages. A leader of thought and opinion in the application of chemistry and metallurgy to the development of new products, new by-products, and new industries. HOME C-f the ton McGraw-Hill Publications, employ ing 1050 people, and representing an invest ment of seven millions of dollars. vf. THE first issue of Ingenieria Inter nacional was pub lished April 15, and contains 232 pages. Ingenieria Internacional The Tenth McGraw-Hill Publication To Develop Industry In Latin America and Spain IF America helps the Latin-speaking countries to develop, American business will share in the fruits of their develop ment. The McGraw-Hill Company, Inc. , has recog nized this fact. The resources of the organization, and of its nine engineering publications, have" been put behind a tenth publication Ingenieria Internacional (International Engineering). It is pub lished in Spanish, and designed to promote the best American engineering practice in Central and South America, Cuba, Porto Rico, the Philippines and Spain, as the other nine publications have served Ameri can industry at home. Fifty Years of Serving the Great Engineering Industries Before a nation can have great buying power it must first have industries. Before it can have in dustries it must first have engineers. The engineer ing industries are the great service industries, the ,r pioneers, on whose broad foundations all subsequent development is laid. For more than half a century since the establish ment of the first McGraw-Hill publication in 1866 the powerful publications that have been de veloped under this ideal of service have been min istering to the five fields of engineering industry. .Lasr year American manufacturers testified to their faith in these nine publications by placing in them 55,000 pages of advertising. The World-Wide Circulation of the McGraw-Hill Publications The problem of foreign markets is not a new one to the McGraw-Hill organization. It has its own large foreign market. Thousands of copies of its publications circulate outside the United States, reaching literally into every corner of the world. No effort has been made to recruit these readers. They have voluntarily paid from $7 to $9 for one of these publications, because it was vital to them in their enterprises. In answer to a similar demand the English edition of the American Machinist published in London, was established. Ingenieria Internacional represents merely an extension of this service to 15,000 Spanish-speaking and reading engineers and their associates. These men for whom Ingenieria Internacional is designed are the pioneers of industry in the Span ish speaking countries, men of the Herbert Hoover and John Hays Hammond type; and their co-workers. On the plans and foundations laid by this gioup of men the future development of their respective countries will largely be built. Let McGraw-Hill Service Help You To all American manufacturers who are interested in foreign markets, the McGraw-Hill Company, Inc., offers the service, not merely of Ingenieria Internacional, but of its whole organization. If your product lies within the scope of these publi cations the Company has the information you want or knows where it may be obtained. It stands ready to help you or your advertising agency, in analyzing your market, laying out your campaign and preparing your advertising copy. A letter ad dressed to the McGraw-Hill Company, Inc., which is on Tenth Avenue at Thirty-sixth Street, New York; or to Real Estate Trust Building, Phila., will put this service entirely at your command. WASHINGTON, D. C. PHILADELPHIA CLEVELAND McGRAW-HILL COMPANY, Inc. JAMES H. McGRAW, President LONDON NEW YORK CHICAGO SAN FRANCISCO SALT LAKE CITY BUENOS AIRES Engineering a MjmgJournal POWER OaiAge jffl MHO' tWtMililafl MiV A9 BCTBtM BHttwPpP Established 1866; published weekly with an average of 144 pages. Records tnd leads practice In metal mining, metallurgy, and smelting, the world over. All American copper is gold on its quotations. Established 1871; published weekly with an average of 196 pages. Recognized by the engineers and business men of the electrical industry as the leader of engineering and industrial thought tn its field. Established 1880; published weekly with an average of 2 19 pages; and read wherever power is generated, whether by steam, electricity or water. Established 1881; published weekly with an average of 138 pages. The accepted represen tative of the coal industry which lies at the foundation of all industries. TTTT i- & 'v m rrvr" A I igm t. b ,7 -A "MJ5 a & fl 'W f A SL '3 .1! tfl "1 A tte.l I 32 SJ T' Ml J- 'S 1 K $ tfl l .31 I $? -tfffl 3 " WKi'J m, vs I 'M3 j i.' 1 . . . "wni. 0 v ,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers