Home / Brinton, Willard C. Graphic Presentation. New York: Brinton Associates, 1939. Internet Archive: graphicpresentat00brinrich. Brinton's 526-page magnum opus. Page 162 reproduces his own 1921 postcard map lobbying for the Briarcliff-Peekskill Parkway crossing Croton Dam, with a caption crediting the map with helping secure the route's adoption. / Passage

Graphic Presentation

Brinton, Willard C. Graphic Presentation. New York: Brinton Associates, 1939. Internet Archive: graphicpresentat00brinrich. Brinton's 526-page magnum opus. Page 162 reproduces his own 1921 postcard map lobbying for the Briarcliff-Peekskill Parkway crossing Croton Dam, with a caption crediting the map with helping secure the route's adoption. 263 words

tart Ma. fclaat. 10 »..al» Walfclaa

Tht Flaurtt lucluit »m»*% » Truclit

From "Our Country, Our People, and Their*" by M. E. Tracy, 1938. By Permittion of The Macmillan Company, Publi»her«. N. Y. C. SCALE .5

B. A Picture of Automotive Transport Facilities in Italy, Germany, Russia, and the United States in 1935 and 1936.

It should be noted that although each man afoot represents ten people walking, each figure in the automobile represents one person.

GRAPHIC PRESENTATION

Relative Size of Oceangoing Vessels from the "Savannah" in 1819 to the "Super- Cunard" in 1935.

1. The universality of the graphic chart language is here illustrated. This chart was taken

from a French magazine.

2. Compare with 13 IB.

PICTORIAL UNIT BAR CHARTS

fAITII TUINOVII IIINOI MOII ftOMI ON ADVIITIIIO tlANOI

^-^ rr?:?

iflT;-'^

TC '■'

Sale* ManoRcmfnt. Oct. 1, 103 7. A. Comparison of Stock Turnover for Advertised and Unadvertised Brands of Goods in the United States in 1936.

According to this chart, people in the United States are influenced more by advertisements for headache cures than they are by food advertisements, and are influenced by advertising in proportion to the unfamiliarity of the product advertised.

National Re«ources Board, "State Planning," 1935 SCALE .7

B. The Growth in Number of Hunters and Fishermen in Missouri from 1910 to 1934.

1. Although the height of the man and the size of the state may not represent the exact

numerical value of each, the fact that there were too many hunters and fishermen in 1934 for the size of Missouri is quite apparent.