TnnORFCO RTATrsMAX: TnmKnAT. SLIT -23. 1018 . Why to e I I A TI JB in -i jJ EWSPAPERS are so much a part of oar daily lives that few of us pause to consider the important mission they so regularly and there fore, perhaps monotonously fulfill In a world crisis such as this, it is well to give a little serious thought to the great public service the daily newspapers render. ; ' - U j I T They have become at once the chief mouth-piece of the Govern 'ment, and the sole source of public information on the events of momen tous and nation-wide interest now oeturing with such frequency. Nev er has so great amj so vital a news value been attached to the nation's daily publications. , Eager' eyes by-millions and mil 7 Hons literally devour the newspapers these days. Attention is riveted up on them as never before. For devel opments in the World War take pre ' cedent over all else in the public mind. And only through the news- papers can this intense desire to keep step with the swiftly moving panor ama of the embattled world be grat ified. In consequence it is easy to appre ciate the tremendous hold of the daily newspaper on its vast army of readers. It is easy tp sense the men tal attitude of the reader so far as , regards the impressions that brand themselves upon his intellect. And so it logically, naturally follows that he is in a state of utmost menial re- IMe.w x m By A. H. Messing, Publisher, Chicago Examiner. . ceptiveness while perusing the col umns of his favorite morning, even ing or Sunday paper. What belter reason, then, for the popularity of the newspaper as an advertising medium ?x And what bet ter Justification could one ask for its systematic, intelligent use for that purpose? Can I be far wrong in saying that the newspaper of today is beyond doubt or question the one best vehicle for business news, for salesmanship in print-advertising? Analyze your own mental state when you read your newspaper this morning. Your mind was practically closed to outside influences. '' You were intent upon the-first-hand in formation your' paper contained. You wanted, above all, to absorb "current . history," to find out for yourself what had happened and what was happening at home, and abroad. Your facilities were center ed on the paper in your hand, and cn vhal its columns presented. Your mind was open only to the impres sions they imparted. And because your mind was open ed to news impressions, certain ad vertisements must' have attracted you advertisements that interested yon through their promise of satis factorily fulfilling some need ' that you felt or they made you feel exist ed. : ' . rV .. - - In advertising, as in salesmanship, - Bp sip r the first requirement is to have your prospect's favorable, undivided at tention. And certainly this you get in the newspaper.' - This it is that makes the newspaper the medium above all others to carry advertising messages. - Second in order of advertising val ue and importance, I place the mag azine. But because the mission of the great run of modern periodicals is to entertain rather than educate, we cannot expect the magazine to have so great a hold on its readers as has the newspaper. . -. If necessary men and women steal the time to read their daily. They simply cannot get along without it Magazines, it is true; have their part to play, and most of them do it welL ' But none can have absolute com- . mand of the reader's interest as. has the newspaper. . . And then there come in close' for- mation billboards, street car cards, painted bulletins, etc, as next hi or der of advertising value and import- , ance. . The mental impressions one gets from these are casual, however ; they are read only "on the run" so to speak. As supplementary media, and for general, publicity use, they have their place. But when it comes to inducing 'definite , buying action, to accomplishing the work of selling through all its successive stages, the newspaper occupies a field alone and peculiarly its ovn. .