A History of Advertising from the Earliest Times: Illustrated by Anecdotes, Curious Specimens and Biographical NotesChatto and Windus, 1874 - 616 páginas |
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Página vi
... thing wonderful with such a wonderful subject . It will not be out of place perhaps , therefore , to ask the reader to think , that because the system adopted has not been that which would have suggested itself to him , it is not ...
... thing wonderful with such a wonderful subject . It will not be out of place perhaps , therefore , to ask the reader to think , that because the system adopted has not been that which would have suggested itself to him , it is not ...
Página 4
... things continued with very little change during the reign of George I. , but publications of every kind increased abundantly during the reign of his successor . The number of newspapers annually sold in England , according to an average ...
... things continued with very little change during the reign of George I. , but publications of every kind increased abundantly during the reign of his successor . The number of newspapers annually sold in England , according to an average ...
Página 16
... things are as they are . But there are many daily papers in London besides the Times and Telegraph , and all these receive a plentiful share of advertisements . The Standard has , within the past few years , developed its resources ...
... things are as they are . But there are many daily papers in London besides the Times and Telegraph , and all these receive a plentiful share of advertisements . The Standard has , within the past few years , developed its resources ...
Página 21
... things lost . Hawkers cried their own goods . Thus Cicero speaks of one who cried figs , Cauneas clamitabat ( De Divin . ii . 40 ) . But the Romans also advertised , in a stricter sense of the term , by writing . The bills were called ...
... things lost . Hawkers cried their own goods . Thus Cicero speaks of one who cried figs , Cauneas clamitabat ( De Divin . ii . 40 ) . But the Romans also advertised , in a stricter sense of the term , by writing . The bills were called ...
Página 24
... things visible and in- visible , ' Ea quæ sunt tanquam ea quæ non sunt , ' everything was attempted in order to attract attention and to obtain publicity . Finally , as all signs in a town were painted by the same small number of ...
... things visible and in- visible , ' Ea quæ sunt tanquam ea quæ non sunt , ' everything was attempted in order to attract attention and to obtain publicity . Finally , as all signs in a town were painted by the same small number of ...
Outras edições - Ver tudo
A History of Advertising from the Earliest Times: Illustrated by Anecdotes ... Henry Sampson Visualização integral - 1874 |
A History of Advertising from the Earliest Times: Illustrated by Anecdotes ... Henry Sampson Pré-visualização indisponível - 2015 |
A History of Advertising From the Earliest Times: Illustrated by Anecdotes ... Henry Sampson Pré-visualização indisponível - 2016 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
adver advertisements Æsop announcements appeared bills called century character cloth extra columns Covent Garden crier Crown 8vo cure curious customers Daily Daily Courant desire Drury Lane Edition England English favour Fcap Fleet Street fortune friends Gazette gentleman gilt give notice guineas honour horses HUGHES FORDE hundred Illustrations inserted John journals kind King KINGSCLERE known late letter London London Gazette lottery Ludgate Hill manner marriage married matter means ment Mercury Morning never newspaper offered paper persons PICCADILLY Pompeii possessed Post pounds present printed prize proprietor published quack reader received reference regard Royal royal Bible says Sculps seems sell servant shillings sold South Sea Company specimen Street swindle Tatler tavern Theatre things thousand tickets tion tisements town wish writing Yarwell young lady