Graphic Presentation
Part of an Editorial on Public Relations Entitled A Program for Public Relationi." SCALE .9
B. Distribution of Income of the Manufacturing Industries in the United States from 1929 to 1935.
1. The chief significance of this chart lies in the arrangement of component parts of the
bars so that there is a common starting point for each classification.
2. The omission of a scale or some indication of the numerical value of each row of bars
was unfortunate.
COMPARISON OF COMPONENT BAR CHARTS
FOR tVtRY tlOO SPtNT BY FAMILIES IN THE MEDIAN (tl ?40 »l.«t») INCOME GROUP OTHER GROUPS SPEND
INCOME GROUP
$^00- $ 749 PER YEAR
MIOIAN
BAtI
roODS
)
4i«
CLOTMINC
»U«Nr$MlNO»
tl
»UtOMO«IL(
Pf nSONALCADf
)•
••IC«t»110N
>1
& ^
1.500- 1.749
1.750- 1,999 2,000-2 499
rOCD CLOTHING
Salrt Managrmrnt, Feb. 1, 1438.
A. Comparison of the Disfribution of the Income of People in the United States on Seven Income Levels in 1936.
This chart should be read as follows: while the median group spends one dollar for food, the income group receiving from $500 to $749 per year spends sixty-two cents, and tK» tonno to $2400 group spends $1.23.
SCALE .6
POUNDS
(MILLIONS)
QUANTITY or TOBACCO I92S 1927 1929 1931 1933 1935 1937
U. S. Department of ARriculturc, Bureau of Agricultural Economics.
SCALE .5
B. A Comparison by Sources of the Amount of Tobacco Consumed in the United Kingdom from 1919 to 1937.
1. Because basically this chart seems to be a series of bar charts whose vertical rulings have