32 MARINE REVIEW. [November 7, THE DONNELLY SALVAGE AND WRECKING CO.,Ltd KINGSTON ONT. Divers, Steam Pumps, Tugs, Etc SUPPLIED ON SHORTEST NOTICE. JOHN DONNELLY, Sr., Pres. JOHN DONNELLY, JR., Vice-Pres. H. B. Foiasr, Treas. Tuos. DonNELLY, Secy. LARGE SUPPLIES OF mem BEST QUALITY Steamboat Fuel at Ashtabula, | ighter Sa i -. Fuel scow with elevators a and discharging spouts. Storage of 650 tons. Dis- Carrying 'charges 150 tons an hour. | 'into steamers while un- Different loading cargo, 4 Grades AE at all...a. Times, M. A. HAN NA ro CO., Main Sele a PLnC EH Giroiaid PCHEBOYGAN BECKING F a 8 15 22 29 TELEGRAPH. A. A. & B. W. PARKER, rastif'v%stiten, Pickands, Mather & Co., PEL WIGRTERS Seeesess ee DETROIT, MICH. ERIE, AT DETOUR MICH., A FUEL DOCK equippew any time during Day or Night. Western Reserve Building, | CLEVELAND, O. AIR PUMPS, all sizes and all kinds. Also, WHISTLES, TANKS, Etc. MANUFACTURED BY The Gleason-Peters Air Pump Co. 20 W. Houston St., NEW YORK, U.S.A. The Erie & Western Transportation Go, ANCHOG, MINE: Passenger Service-- Steamers. <<... c:-..223s 50 <.s GIA, China, Japan. Ports of call... Buffalo, Sault Ste. Marie, Hancock, Marquette, Cleveland, ne" Mackinac Island, Port Huron, Duluth, Houghton. rie Freight Service-- : Steamers........ Alaska, Delaware, Codorus, Mahoning, Susquehanna, Schuylkill, Lycoming, Conestoga, Clarion, Wissahickon. Conemaugh, Juniata, Lehigh, ° Ports of call... Buffalo, Erie, Cleveland, Marquette, Detroit, W. Superior, Hancock, Duluth, Houghton, Sault Ste. Marie, Chicago, Milwaukee. CHAS. H. MARKHAN, Gen. Pass. Agt., Buffalo, N. Y. EH. T. EVANS, Western Manager, Buffalo, N. Y. American Newspaper Directory. Tells the circulations of all American newspapers. Revised, corrected and reissued every three months. Dellars a volume or $20 a year. BUFFALO. We should hardly know how to get along without the American Newspaper Directory. We regard it by all odds the most complete and reliable guide that the advertiser can make use of; in fact, we use no other. Buffalo, N. Y., July 24, 1901. Ro V. Pierce, M-D.; President World's Dis. Med. Ass'n. VERMONT. The -American Newspaper' Directory stands, as it has always stood, the first and best of newspaper directories--the only one which cannot be ignored, the only one which every advertiser must have. No other can take its place; no other is needed--Joseph Auld, in the Bur- lington (Vt.) News of July 3, 1896. ADVISOR. The Advisor accepts the American News- paper Directory as the standard in news- paper ratings. The obstacles which ob- struct its efforts to get true and reliable information are many. * * . * The directory question is one which in- terests every publisher in the country-- nay, the entire world. But in the United States directories are becoming altogether too numerous. In this, as with other books of reference, it is necessary to have one which may be relied on as being an authority on the matter of newspaper cir- culations. There can be no question about the fact that at this time, as for many years past, the American Newspaper Di- rectory is that authority. The Advisor is not paid to make this announcement. It makes the statement in the interests of advertisers and publishers because it is true. One thing the advertiser is almost cock-sure of when he refers to the Ameri- can Newspaper Directory is that the circu- lation figures he sees therein are not over- stated to any great extent. In most other directories they are. Only the publisher himself is to be blamed for not securing a proper rating in that publication, and every advertiser of consequence knows it. Thus the publisher who refuses to furnish a statement places himself under a reason- able suspicion.--The Advisor for June. New York, June, 1901. CHICAGO, Messrs. Geo. P. Rowell & Co.'s Ameri- can Newspaper Directory has long since earned the reputation of being the best of its character. It contains the results of patient, expensive and systematic effort to secure all attainable information of in- terest concerning American newspapers. The work has been honestly done. This will not be questioned by any unprejudiced examiner. The most important question is circulation. In attempting to give this in- formation the editor of the Directory en- counters his most difficult work. It is the Sixteen hundred pages: Price Five aim and necessity of the Directory to give the truth. The American Newspaper Di- rectory is to-day the dependence and guide, in a greater or less degree, of every large advertiser in the country.--Chicago (ill.) Daily News. BATES, The American Newspaper Directory is the only reliable guide for the advertiser. No man who advertises can afford to do without it. What Bradstreet and Dun are to the mercantile world the American Newspaper Directory is to the world of periodical publications. A new advertiser will get from the American Newspaper Directory a better idea of the greatness of his country, and the tremendous possibilities in newspaper advertising, than from any other source. If an advertiser spends only $100 a year he should have the American Newspaper Directory. For his business may grow and his right expenditure of his money become increasingly important. The time to learn how to spend $10,000 is before it is spent, otherwise the spending may be disastrous. Many times the best paper in town costs the advertiser no more than the poorest, The American Newspaper Directory tells which is which. The paper that was the leader in its town five years ago may lag behind to- day. Even one year may witness aston- ishing changes. If you are spending money for publicity it is vastly important that you should know where to get the most of it for the price. The American Newspaper Directory gives not only the present circulation rating of every paper in America, but shows their history by quoting past ratings. The book costs five dollars a copy, and a single reference to it may readily save or make many times its cost. All newspaper directories but one are erroneously optimistic about circulations. The American Newspaper Directory may occasionally err on the other side, but ee makes it all the safer for the adver- iser, My advertising experience began in 1885, ana one of the first things I did was to buy a copy of the American Newspaper Directory. For sixteen years Rowell's '"'The Ameri- can Newspaper Directory" has had a place of honor and usefulness on my desk. Many a publisher is ready to prove by other directories that "Rowell's is wrong,' but few indeed can be induced to prove it by opening their circulation books to the advertiser. Among publishers who are not willing that their real circulations be known it is the best hated book in print. The moral is not far to find. Charles Austin Bates. New York, June 24, 1901. Five Dollars a Volume or $20 per annum. Sent, carriage paid, on receipt of price. Address GEORGE P, ROWELL & CO., Newspaper Directory, 10 Spruce St., New York,