To further elaborate on what everyone else has said, and aside from them being extremely amatuerish, hit counters off absolutely meaningless information.
A "hit" is not the number of visitors to your page but rather the number if items that the server needs to upload to a browser in order to render the page. So, if you have 1000 thumbnail images (I must be out of my mind...) on your page then your counter is going to register each one as a "hit".
Obviously, no one has this many images but it's not difficult to have 20, 30, and more, on a single page. So, unless you're willing to do the math, you'll never be abl to use a hit counter to measure your page popularity. Best to use the web statistics provided by your host - they'll be a lot more meaningful.
As an aside, I once saved a client over $1500 bucks with a coupon web site. The arrangement was payment by the number of people who clicked on the coupon on their site, which was a link to my clients site. They said that almost 50,000 people clicked on the coupon but the web logs indicated that for same time period only 9,000 users - total - came to the site.
There's always a better way. The fun is trying to find it!