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. 258 words

The Use of a Broken Dollar in a Poster to Indicate the Portion of the Dollar Which Was Diverted fronn Highway Taxes in 1937.

HOW NEW VORK CITY U5ES ITS LAND

BROOKLYN

QUEENS

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(iREATER NLW YORK RICHMOND

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The Nfw York Time*.

B. How New York City Used Its Land in 1936.

SCALE K

GRAPHIC PRESENTATION

Ordiiuir>- and Kmcrftcnrv Nffd» That Call For an Outlay of Ten Billions Thi» Year and Six Billioae Next -- The Rrvenues Expected, the Borrowing Required. an<l the F,ffm on the National Debt

The New York Timet.

A. Balancing the Budget for the Fiscal Years 1933-34 and 1934-35.

SCALE .8

National Folk Festival Aitociation, Wathington. D. C.

B. A Folk Festival Bulletin.

SCALE .8

This map was used in various forms as an advertisement for the fifth annual Folk Festival held in Washington, D. C, in May 1938. Twenty-seven states participated.

QUANTITATIVE POSTERS

FARM PURCHASING POWER NEARS '29 TOP

The Chartmnkrrt. Nrw York Cily

A. Farm Purchasing Power From 1929 Through 1937.

SCALE .s

ri

Ainrn. Ill Iron ,..i,l Sl« < 1 InMiMilr NYC

B. Educational Preparation of Steel Workers in 1938.

GRAPHIC PRESENTATION

INCIUOINO THt HUMOROUS TRIOITION AND FEATURES OF ■ ^ X jL K^^

JudRr iiikI Lifr Matsazinr.

A Mountain Made Out of an Increase.

A curve chart is easily imagined as a series of hills and valleys. By putting the points in a curve, a mountain can be formed as in this cartoon. The original of this cartoon was in colors.