The Oregon Exchange Volume 5-6

The Oregon Exchange Volume 5-6
Author: Fred A. Grammell
Publisher: Rarebooksclub.com
Total Pages: 226
Release: 2013-09
Genre:
ISBN: 9781230032016

This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1922 edition. Excerpt: ...vegetables taken in on subscription, and motor cars couldn't be secured by the simple method of trading in a little advertising space. Neither can they now, which indicates to me the wonderful progress in the newspaper business in Oregon during the brief space of years I have been a resident here, for many of the boys ride around in their highpowered benzine buggies and few there are who haven't at least a lizzie on the pay roll. Where'er I go I endeavor to use my eyes--a habit cultivated years before the short-skirted flapper came into being--and the result of my observations in the east--quite aside from mental notations as to the stockier build of the Oregon flappers--was to the effect that middle western papers do not come up to Oregon papers, either typographically or editorially. STILL IN SAME Rm In the Minnesota town where for a number of years I made my home while incubating ideas as to how I would set the world afire when I got to swinging an editorial pen of my own, I found at least one of the papers setting their ads just as they were set 20 years ago and apparently with the same type that had done yeoman service even before I decided that there were greener fields. The other pa per had progressed some in younger hands, but it was not yet above cutting off at the waist-line a picture which came in the boiler plate and did not fit the column, running the head, shoulders and waist at the bottom of one column and the remainder of the picture at the top of the next column. In other offices where I had served time I found the same type that I had handled as a tyro, and tailor-made editorials on one of these papers were coming from a source that was willing to take advertising space for its services. The same ad that paid...