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MILESTONES

At the Dallas Convention

Known Circulation Facts

Where and who your readers are

Circulation Guarantee

Fraudulent Advertising

were discussed. The results will be regarded as
milestones along the line of advertising progress.

With Collier's

A classification of subscribers

by occupation

by states

by groups of cities

by size of towns

A money-back guarantee. (Remember 1908) A copy censorship more rigid than that of any other advertising medium

are distinguishing features of this institution. They are milestones of our history

E. L. Patterson.

Manager Advertising Department

Collier's

THE NATIONAL WEEKLY

P. F. Collier & Son, Incorporated

416-430 WEST 13th STREET

NEW YORK CITY

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DDDDDDDDDODDO

WE

The Net Value of
Conventions

E HAVE just completed a very wonderful convention
down in Dallas.

Marked by gracious hospitality, by good fellowship, by the interchange of valuable ideas, suggestions and experiences.

The question is, Do all advertising men realize what these conventions are for? Do they carry away a full measure of the good and practical things that are to be gained at these gatherings? Things that have real worth-that can be put into actual use. The biggest advertising men in the business are the quickest to acknowledge their own inefficiency as compared to the combined experience of others.

The most efficient advertising man is willing to look on and listen. And he is willing always to change his mind-if the proof is sufficient.

He studies advertising-not academically-not through theories that lead darkly into byways. But by absorbing from every available source the actual, practical every-day things that are the basics of good advertising and merchandising.

Thus, this great business of advertising develops.

The lessons taught by the Dallas Convention were of real benefit. The discourses and discussions were helpful to a inarked degree.

All were made, we believe, to think more seriously about advertising and to consider more earnestly its unexplored possibilities.

The educational work done by the National Association is of unquestionable benefit.

Nonsense is being eliminated.

There is a better feeling today between advertising men the country over than ever before closer relationship-more mutual helpfulness.

That's why every convention is better than the last.
Why we owe a big debt to Dallas.

And that is why we are all going to Baltimore in 1913.

DDDDDDDD

B

Telegraphic Copy

REVITY that leaves out the vitals is not good copy.

Neither is long-windedness.

People are prone to rush to extremes.

One advertiser will demand "Just a word or two-something that they will remember."

Another will say "Tell the story, and get it all in."

There's an in-between point that's right.

Arthur Brisbane has told us to avoid "style" in advertisement writing.

He surely is right if he means to avoid the forced.

Yet they say the highest form of art is "the art which conceals art."

And there is an art in simple, direct writing.

Brisbane's style is peculiar in its vivid naturalness. Yet the student of writing certainly could not achieve a style like his, spontaneously.

copy.

So you have got to study style to be successful in writing

You have got to study word effects. Not to achieve pretty poetic platitudes

But to learn to write convincingly, to avoid repetition, and
perhaps most of all, to cut out the excess verbiage.

Students of direct and forceful style in writing advertising,
or, in writing of any kind, are commended to the article by Erman
J. Ridgway, "Weighing the Candidates," in the May number of
Everybody's Magazine.

There's style to it. Style with a punch-yet no apparent
straining after style.

Ridgway talks in short and concise sentences-he writes telegraphic copy.

And there isn't a word that doesn't belong there.

Not a word left that might be sacrificed.

The trouble with most of us is that we just naturally ramble.
We journey around Robin Hood's barn.

We "lead up" to things when we might as well start right
smack at them.

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