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Newspaper Page Text
/'' X ' WHO ARE THEY These. 20 Million Readers ? I ’ • . ’ , c . No two trees are exactly alike —but No matter how else they differ, these there is no mistaking an oak forest. three things they are: young, all of The more than twenty million men . . r < 7 . ’ .. i l □ l u ln s he spirit of eternal youth; ambt- and women who read the Hearst .• c . , XT i for their own and their coun- Newspapers are not merely so many , ir . . —nr r j i 7 j try s welfare; progressive in every Bullion individuals; they are a massed ht and > personality—a force of over twenty ° million man-power—rich and poor, It is this combination of qualities that high and low, representatives of every makes these more than twenty million class and creed, sprung from ancestors readers of Hearst Newspapers so great I of a hundred races. a factor in the life of America, such Bankers and brokers, artists and spirited exponents of progress, such • l j i eager buyers of merchandise, artisans, great merchants and keepers ° of small shops, statesmen and students And, more than anything else, these —preachers, teachers, farmers, mil- millions of readers are, first and last, lionaires, and clerks —differing from thoroughly American — because the f eac h other in pursuits, in rank, in Hearst Newspapers themselves are, condition,yet alike in spirit and desire. first and last, thoroughly American, A fl! ISMI , \ truth JBF \ justice / \ public / ItWIT* b MhggwgibWr \service/ z Wfcl Intone (f tke Hearst Newspapers ' ■ * * f'' THE WASHINGTON TIMES TA* Notional Daily TUESDAY, OCTOBER SO, 1026 19