THE LOS ANGELES TIMES:営業広告「THE MAGIC CIRCLES and THE LOS ANGELES TIMES」
箱番号+整理番号
PP292-131
発行主・広告主
THE LOS ANGELES TIMES
旧蔵者
萬年社
内容
その他広告スクラップ
内容日付/文字情報/備考
1921/07/07
・ロサンゼルスの地図を用いて「THE LOS ANGELES TIMES」の販売圏域や規模を表す広告
「大正十年七月七日」のメモ書きあり
THE MAGIC CIRCLES and THE LOS ANGELES TIMES
DAILY SUNDAY (略)
Southern California’s unique position as a “commercial island” has no counterpart in the United States. It is bounded on the north by the San Francisco market, on the south by Mexico, on the west by the Pacific Ocean, and on the east by the great American desert. There are but two possibilities for circulation-expansion; either a newspaper must grow by cultivating the Southern California zone (annexing new population as it pours in) or it must jump eastward across hundreds of miles of almost uninhabited waste, to population centers as remote from Los Angeles as Chicago is distant from New York.
1,000,000 people, or 200,000 families, live within the two circles shown on this map.
The Times’ circulation inside this area is 78,293 daily and 122, 133 Sunday-96% of which is home-delivered circulation. Approximately one out of two families read The Times on week days, six out of ten on Sundays. So completely does the The Times sway the mass of consumers , that all Los Angeles department stores. use it exclusively in the morning and Sunday field.
The Los Angeles Times neither claims, nor desires to claim, any influence whatever in Texas, Oklahoma, or other distant markets, but it does claim, that so far as covering its own market is concerned, it wields a selling power unsurpassed by any newspaper in America, and can be used exclusively in its territory with maximum results.
Los Angeles 1920 Advertising Lineage (略)
図、説明(略)
DAILY SUNDAY (略)
Southern California’s unique position as a “commercial island” has no counterpart in the United States. It is bounded on the north by the San Francisco market, on the south by Mexico, on the west by the Pacific Ocean, and on the east by the great American desert. There are but two possibilities for circulation-expansion; either a newspaper must grow by cultivating the Southern California zone (annexing new population as it pours in) or it must jump eastward across hundreds of miles of almost uninhabited waste, to population centers as remote from Los Angeles as Chicago is distant from New York.
1,000,000 people, or 200,000 families, live within the two circles shown on this map.
The Times’ circulation inside this area is 78,293 daily and 122, 133 Sunday-96% of which is home-delivered circulation. Approximately one out of two families read The Times on week days, six out of ten on Sundays. So completely does the The Times sway the mass of consumers , that all Los Angeles department stores. use it exclusively in the morning and Sunday field.
The Los Angeles Times neither claims, nor desires to claim, any influence whatever in Texas, Oklahoma, or other distant markets, but it does claim, that so far as covering its own market is concerned, it wields a selling power unsurpassed by any newspaper in America, and can be used exclusively in its territory with maximum results.
Los Angeles 1920 Advertising Lineage (略)
図、説明(略)
資料形態
大型古資料
制作者
アメリカ
高さx幅(mm)
426x562
物理媒体/状態
折り込みあり
(h430mm)
(h430mm)
制作日付
1921-07-07