' % • • N ". ." * - ..<• . -—• 1 ' - .""-J- Stato Library Philadelphia PoliceßWWe Little Warre HARRISBURG ifisifk TELEGRAPH LXXXIII— No. 67 WARREN M'CARRICK BELIEVED 10 HAVE LOST LIFE IN RIVER Detectives, However, Are Working on Other Theories by Which They Hope to Find Boy REWARDS NOW REACH $6,000 Downtown Residents Accompany Their Children to and From Schools in District Special to The Telegraph Philadelphia, March 20.—Moved by the alarm caused among parents since the mysterious disappearance, a week ago yesterday, of 7-year-old Warren McCarrick from near his home, 619 South Nineteenth street, both branches of Councils yesterday unani mously adopted a resolution request ing and directing Mayor Blankcnburg to offer a municipal reward of $5,000 for the recovery of the lad and the arrest of his supposed abductors. Immediately following the adoption of the measure a resolution appropri ating the money was drafted, read and turned over to the finance com mittee of Councils for approval. Mayor Blankenburg had previously expressed willingness to co-operate in the movement by affixing his signature to the ordinance, ao there seems to be no question that those who recover the boy will be rewarded by the city. Not since the famous Charlie Ross rase, when detectives and police of the entire country endeavored In vain to eolve the kidnaping mystery, has tho city offered a reward for a lost child. .In many respects the vanishing of the McCarrick boy is more baffling than the disappearance of Charlie Ross. Ross' Abductors Unknown Kidnapers of young Ross carried him and his brother away in a wagon and left the brother at Richmond ptreet and Columbia avenue. A good description of the abductors and their vehicle was obtained from several sources, but no trace of either has ever been found. The disappearance of Warren Mc- Carrick constitutes a deeper mystery, In that not the slightest trace of ill* Jad or any one who talked to him has been found after a night and day search since March 13 by some of the best detectives in the city's service. Every clue thus far produced has ■been nothing more than a theory. Dozens of persons have declared that they saw boys answering Warren's description in company with sus picious-looking men, but in each In stance the Identities of the children and their companions were learned. Detectives confess that they have absolutely nothing that might serve as a guide in their investigation. Down town residents are so wrought up over the supposed kidnaping that parents escort their children to school and meet them after the session. Realizing that unless a trace of the lad is soon found, the case may go down as a second Charlie Ross kid naping. Select Councilman Crawford, of the Thirtieth Ward, a close friend of the child's parents, framed the 3-esolution unanimously adopted by Councils yesterday. Almost every member of the cham bers expected that, such a measure •would be introduced and had previous ly expressed a desire to support it. Little Warren is known to have had a fondness for water and it is the belief of many persons now that he wandered to the river and /as drowned. However, some of the de tectives are not inclined to believe this theory and are working on other ••lews. Reward Mounts Up The reward to- the recovery of War ren now amounts to $6,000. Last Sunday City Treasurer William Mc- Coach, a friend of the child's father offered a personal reward of $1 000 for the return, alive, of the missing boy. The City Treasurer's offer does not call for the arrest of his supposed abductors. Two new clues loomed up to oc cupy the attention of investigators yesterday. Charles Wallace, proprie fContinued on Page 10] Late News Bulletins McCARRICK BOY IN ELMIRA Elmira, N. Y., March 20.—Warren McCarrick. the Philadelphia boy, who disappeared from Philadelphia, was. without doubt. In this city Wednesday In the company of a man and woman. The child was taken to a barber shop and his golden hair cut. The barber later saw the boy's picture and is positive that l.e Is the missing boy. The man and woman went west on the Lackawannn train Wednesday afternoon, buying tickets to Buffalo. Buffalo police lia\e been notified. New York, March 20.—The market closed strong. Speculation be came buoyant toward the end. with general advances of i to 2 points. MEXICANS KIDNAP AMERICAN Austin, Texas, March 20.—Charles Ballard, an American, was kid naped by Mexicans Wednesday from Carrizo Springs. Texas, and escaped by diving into the Rio Grande ri\or, according to dispatches to-day to Governor O. B. Coquitt. ANOTHER RESOLUTION PRESENTED Washington, March 20.—Woman suffrage came to the fore in the Senate again to-day and a new resolution for a constitutional amend ment was proposed by Senator Sbafroth, to take the place of that de feated yesterday. It would requiie States to decide the suffrage ques tion for themselves whenever 5 per cent, of the voters petitioned for it KILLS WIFE, DAUGHTERS AND HIMSELF Oak Park, Ga., March 20. J. A. Kubunks. a farmer living near this place early to-day killed his wife and two daughters as they slept, set fire to his home and several farm buildings, and then fired a bullet through his forehead, dying later. ROBBERS GET SIB,OOO FROM BANK Nashville, Tenn., March 20.—Robbers early to-day blew open the vault In the 1-lrst National Bank at Gallatin, Tenn.. 3. r ," miles northwest ■of Nashville, secured SIB,OOO and escaped. The explosion created a fire In the vault which passersby discovered. Meanwhile the robbers had fled. St. Lou is. Mo., March 20.—A debt of more than $3,000,000 which the St. Louis and Sam Francisco Railroad owed Albert T. Perkins, as syn didate trustee, was cancelled by the terms of an agreement filed with United States Circuit Judge Sanborn to-day. Two of the subsidiaries of the railroad revert to the syndicate promoting them. Judge Sanborn was expected to pass on the agreement this afternoon. Wall Street Closing.—Chesapeake and Ohio, 51 U ; Ix-high Vallev 147*6; Northern Pa< illc, 113%: Southern Pacific, 26%; Union Pad lie' l'«0'/2! Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul, 100; P. R. K., 112'4; Readimr' 166; Canadian Pacific, 208; Amal Oopper. 70%; V. S. Steel, 65. MUf RAISED WILL NOT HELP PREACHERS GET BETTER CHARGES Bishop Declares Episcopal Prerog ative Will Not Be Used For Such Reasons HEAR INSTITUTIONAL MEN Better Financing and Centralization Urged in Educational Work To-morrow's Program MOn^rnG—Tlrvotlon*. mntloetnl by Hl* hop Cranston; conference >es nlon. AFTERNOON —Miitnal Brneflolnl AnKoclntioii mertlnit lecture room; Hiiulversary Women's F'oreljcn MinNlonHry Societyl ilevotlonal ser vice, the Itev. 11. C. I'Hriloe, D. D.: reports of the J'cnri Conference see rel»r>, Mrs, T. H. l'urdyt superin tendent off youuic people. Miss \lck crsont Conference treasurer, Mrs. I). A. Slontniuni solo, Mrs. Bnillj- C. Miller) address, Mrs. I. T. lleadlnmli collection: benedictions executive meetinK Immediately following this meeting In the cliureh parlor; Drew Aloinul \ssoclatlon >»nn«|uet, ftlrige Avenue Methodist Kplscopal Church. F.VKVING The Itev. H. 11. Men der, 1). I>., presiding lecture hy the Her. S, Parke Cadmnn, O. 0., "Three lirent Oiford headers—Wycllffe, Wesley and John H. Newman." I Bishop Earl Cranston this morning declared in the corporate session of the Central Pennsylvania Conference of the Methodist Episcopal church that the appointment of no man would be based upon the amount of money he or his church may have raised for Ooucher College or other benevolences. He declared. that the Episcopal prerogative would not be exorcised in any such a way and his [Continued on Page 7] Plan Daily Aeroplane Service Between Two Cities in California By Associated Press San Prancisco, Cal., March £O.—A regular hydroaeroplane service be tween this city and Oakland will be inaugurated soon and the State Board of Harbor Commissioners approved to day the establishment of a terminal station here for this service. The land ing platform will be constructed by Aviators Welden Cooke and h. Y. Lekas, who announced that they would make half-hourly trips between this city and Oakland during the day. The hydroaeroplanes, each of which is capable of carrying three passengers, are on their way here from the east and the service Is expected to begin within a month. Only 157 Members of Kelly's Army Remain By Associated Press Sacramento. Cal., March 20.—1n the camp of the unemployed, north of Sac ramento. there are to-day but 1&7 men, the remnant of the army of 1,500 unemployed which invaded Sacramento nearly two weeks ago. There has been no trouble and none is threatened. Four special deputies keep watch over them. They assured the officials they would obey the laws and assist in preserving order. They also informed the district attorney that they had money to pay for food without foraging. WANTS CABINET IMPEACHED By Associated Press Tokio, March 20.—The Impeachment of the Japanese cabinet on account of the recent naval scandals in connec tion with the receipt of illicit commis sions by naval officers was asked to day in an address to the throne intro duced In the chamber of deputies by the opposition parties. HARRISBURG, PA„ FRIDAY EVENING, MARCH 20, 1914. OISPOSE OF 10 MURDER CASES AT ij PRESENT SESSION John Thomas Faces Jury This Aft ernoon—Hans Solbrig Due Tomorrow I EDWARD SMITH IN JUNE i Judge Henry Assists—Killing of George Strothers Occured in Fight i _____ Two of the three murder cases listed ! for March term of quarter sessions ! will bo tried before court finally ad j Journs to-morrow, unless there be a | hitch In the present plans of District | Attorney Michael E. Stroup. John Thomas, charged with the i murder of Charles Cook, alias Georgw | Strothers, was placed on trtal this aft i ernoon.- Hans Solbrig, charged with the j murder of J. Walukis, an inmate i of the State Insane Hospital, will face ! a jury in the morning, according to ! Mr. Stroup. Edward G. Smith, the youth who is | now in the Dauphin county prison : awaiting trial for the murder of his ; aged grandparent, John Bush, near i lnglenook, will not be tried until June. | With the exception of the murder I cases the list lor March court has been j pretty well cleared. The grand Jury I finished consideration of cases to-day 1 and to-morrow will make its quarterly I report of conditions in the almshouse, r j jail and other county institutions. Judge Henry Assists '! President Judge Kunkel to-day was 1 j assisted in Xo. " room by President i Judge Henry, of Lebanon county. Judge Henry helped out to-day in the absence of" Judge Albert Johnson, of the Union-Snyder district, who had to return to Lewisburg to-day to conduct license court. He will come back to -1 morrow, it is expected, when the trial of Dr. John T. Ensminger, Jr., and i Martha Austin, a trained nurse, : charged with adultery and the lesser j offense, respectively, will be resumed. The trial of Thomas this afternoon | was taken up after some sentences I had been disposed of. Thomas and Cook, or Strothers, as I he was more generally known in this section, had quarreled In an Eighth | ward hotel. Strothers, It appears, was j known to have had a reputation as a j "bad" man and the report in the ward j was to the effect that he was a fugitive from North Carolina, whence he fled |to escape punishment for killing a j man. During the quarrel at the Eighth wiyd hotel Thomas, it is charged, j picked up a bread knife and plunged jif into Strother?' stomach. His death j was a result of the wounds. It is said. Whether or not a first degree verdict j will be asked by the State Is questlon ; | able. Progressives Opposed to Wilson's Repeal Plan By Associated Press Washington, D. C., March 20. j Representative Victor Murdock, of | Kansas, leader of the Progressives in '! the House, in a statement Issued to- I day announced that Progressives In j Congress are substantially a unit ! against President Wilson's plan of re j pealing the exemption of coastwise ■shipping from Panama canal tolls. "The Progressives in Congress," de i elated Mr. Murdock, "are substan tially a unit against the proposition to repeal »he toll exemption clause in the Panama Canal act. Both Dem ocrats and Republicans are hopelessly divided. A little over one year ago all three parties covenanted with the people to exempt coastwise traffic. To-day the Republicans and Demo crats as parties are breaking their pledge. The Progressive party, free from the Influence of sectional or selfish interest, but actuated by prin ciple and united by mutual convlc • tion, is standing by the contract it made with the peoDle. Identifier of "Edgar" Dies in Subway Train By Associated Press New York, March 20.—An elderly man, believed from papers he carried j to be Perrin H. Sumner, who was once i known to the police as "the great i American identifier," died of heart dls ! ease in a subway train late last night. Sumner won the title in the late | nineties by identifying unclaimed bod j ies of suicides as a mythical English ' man named Edgar. The identifications 1 always proved false, and what he wanted of a dead Englishman named Edgar always remained a mystery. 1 Sumner was Involved in many diffi culties in this and other cities through his financial operations and served a j term in Sing Sing for grand larceny. PERFUME, AND NOT CIGARS, WILL BE USED IX CAMPAIGN By Associated Press Chicago, 111., March 20.—1n an ef | fort to get women voters to attend a t campaign meetings to-morrow night, | members of the Twenty-fifth Ward Democratic Club announced to-day. that botles of perfume will be distrib uted as souvenirs instead of custo mary campaign cigars. They also an nounced that lace curtains will adorn the windows In the club rooms as a special mark of courtesy to the women. EX A MIXERS QUARANTINED Albany. N. Y., March 20.—Pour ex ! amlners from the State Department of Ffficiency who went to the State hos i pital at Willard to make an investi ij gatlon of the accounts of the Insti- I ttition were to-day quarantined by the II nospital authorities because they had ! been exposed to smallpox in a nearby I village. The examiners will probably ■ be detained at the institution for thret I weeks. r- I.IFT Ul ARAXTIJiB Quarantine on half of the eighty homes in the West End, quarantined by the Board of Health to prevent the spread of scarlet fever, was lifted to- I day. Work on the new Post Office addition in the Locust street side of Federal Square Is being rushed by the contractors. Nearly all of the excava ting has been already done and soon the work on the foundations will be started. DIMMICK ENDORSES ! BRUMBAUGH AND HIS i PLATFORM PLEDGES Republicans of State Will Be United in His Support For Governor J..Benjamin Dlmmlck, candidate for .Sra*eir BenfttOF, Inst night rie- 1 clured in Philadelphia tliat he con siders Dr. Martin 6. Brumbaugh as j "clearly of gubernatorial timber." •This statement coming so soon after i the expressions of approval of por tions of f)r. Brumbaugh's statement jby Speak<W Alter and J. Denny O'Neil is taken to mean that notwithstanding j the attitude regarding the United j States Senatorship all Republicans will i unite on Brumbaugh. In his statement Sir. Dimrnick says: j"I have read Dr. Brumbaugh's plat- I form and in many respects we stand 1 for the same things; it would be su j pertluous to make a comparison of our ] several planks, for they speak for ' themselves. It would seem as if his | statement that he 'welcomes a cam paign upon the great moral issues of the day' excludes any other thought •than that he will be fighting with us against machine politics that are typi j fied by low standards, sordid motives I and corrupt practices, and that he will [Continued on l'nge I.J ELLSWORTH M DARQN i EX-POSTMASTER OF STEELTI IS DEAD Proprietor of Printery; Had Business and Realty Hold ings Here Ellsworth McClellan Daron, pro prietor of the Daron Printery, ex postmaster of Steelton and one of the most widely-known men in Daup: n county, died this morning at 7:20 o'clock at the Shope hospital. He was in his fifty-second year. Mr. Daron IK survived by his wife, Minerva; a daughter, Mrs. Howard | Merryman, of Steelton; a son, Ward IS., at home; two grandchildren and | hi's brother, Ed. L. Daron, of North | Third street. Harrisburg, who is su | perintendent of the Consolidated Au -1 tomatic Telephone Company, a sub sidiary of the Bell system with offices jat Scranton. and proprietor of the Pioneer jewelry store, Steelton. Mr. Daron was an executor of the Daron estate with business and realty i holdings in Steelton and Harrisburg. Until his retirement from active busi ness about u year ago he had personal supervision of the Daron Printery and took an active part in the business [Continued on Page 7] Earth Opens and Two Men and Frame Shanty Are Lost at Pottsville Pottsville, Pa., March 20. The earth opened and swallowed two men and a work shanty on the mountain side at the Kehley Run Colliery at Shenandoah this morning, and al though large forces of men have been put to work both inside the mines and at the surface, no trace of men or building can be found. They may huve been dropped a distance of 500 feet. George Legate, 53, and John Be Crisce, 18, were In the shanty, a small structure about six by ten feet, at the head of the scraper line and near the public road, when a hole orened about thirty feet in diameter. John Drimes, employed near thvs shanty at the time, saved himself by grasping a steam pipe and clinging on until help arrived. , RUSHING WORK ON POSTOFFICE EXTENSION M'CORMICK'S LABOR RECORD WHACKED BY SENATOR R. V. FARLEY Declares in Hot Speech That Re organization Candidate Is Against Workingmen Philadelphia, March 20.—State Sen ator Richard V. Farley's speech ar raigning Vance C. McCormick as an enemy of labor and a multimillionaire scion of aristocracy has aroused tre mendous feeling among the toilers and mechanics of all classes In'this city. Among other things Senator Farley said: "A man possessed of vast wealth himself, and who believes that It is possible for an American citizen to raise his family in the fear and love of God and to send them to school to be educated and who thinks $1.50 a day is too much for a working man to re ceive [referring to McCormick's veto! of a wage ordinance when mayor], is not. the kind of a man to sit in judg ment as Governor and to pass upon Progressive legislation. "What would he do to a real work ingman's compensation bill? What would he do to a bill to protect chil dren i nthe mills and what would he do in view of his mine record to secure honest protection for the miners? "Mr. McCormick is a type of his [Continued on Page 7] GOVERNOR TENER IS GIVEN RARE HONOR BY ENGINEER'S SOCIETY Made First Honorary Member by 1 Unanimous Vote of Over Eight Hundred Members Governor John K. Tener was to-day tendered the signal honor ot being chosen as the first honorary member of the Engineers' Society of Pennsyl vania. A committee of the society waited upon the Governor at the Capi ! tol and tendered the election in recog nition of the Governor's eminent ser [ vices in behalf of labor anil industry j in recommending and approving leg • islatlon for their advancement. ' This election, the first of the kind in a society composed of over 800 men, ■ including come of the most prominent j men in engineering In Pennsylvania, | residing In almost every county in the State, was by the unanimous action of the society. It was recommended by the board of directors on a resolution presented by C. E. Turner, chief en gineer of the Pennsylvania Steel Com pany, and submitted to the members of the society who voted in favor of it. This referendum was required by the constitution of the society. A committee of five presented the Governor with the certificate of elec tion and he accepted with an expres sion of deep appreciation of the un usual compliment from men who are vitally interested in the Industrial and technical affairs of the State. Governor Tener Never Said There Was Room For Three Big Leagues Governor Tener, president of the Na tional League of Baseball Clubs, to day denied that he had ever said there is neither room or a demand for a third major league in the United States. The denial was the result of a publication in a newspaper of Pitts burgh. Said the Governor: "There Is no truth in the atory emanating from Pittsburgh. I did not have an interview such as the one re ported with a map named Hendrick son or any one else. I do not believe there is room or any demand for a! third major league." 20 PAGES. POSTSCRIPT. FEDERAL LEAGUEMEIi I FIRE FIRS! SHOT IN YEAR'S BASEBALL MR Court Asked For Injunction to Re strain Killifer From Playing in Philadelphia f 1 • • By Associated Press 1 Grand Rapids. Mich., March 20. The first legal shot of the baseball war I of 1914 was fired to-day by the Fed | eral League in tiling a petition with I the United States District Court for the western district of Michigan ask ' ing for an injunction to restrain Wll 11am J. Killifer, Jr., formerly catcher iof the Philadelphia Nationals, from ! n'aying baseball with any other than the Chicago Federals. Kilnler signed a three year contract with the Chicago Federals, but after ward was. persuaded that the reserve cause in his old contract with the I Philadelphia club held him legally to Philadelphia and he joined his former team. The suit involves the legality of the reserve clause, long regarded as one of the bulwarks of organized base ball. The suit was brought in the Western Michigan district because Killifer is a resident of Paw Paw, Mich. Signed His Contract The complaint In which was signed [Continued on Page 7] Fill CUKES CHIEF CLERK WITH 15APPR0PRIATI0N Suspended Superintendent of Car lisle School Hopes to Clear Himself of Charges Special to The Telegraph Carlisle, March 20.—With the arrest ithls morning of S. J. Nori, chief clerk !at the Carlisle Indian school for the ! last seven years, on charges of em- I bezzlement, M. Friedman, who was recently suspended as superintendent of the school hopes to clear himself or the charges which brought about his suspension. j Nori was arrested and held In de | fault of SI,OOO ball for court on infor . mation made by Mr. Friedman that 'nearly SI,OOO belonging to students at the Indian school has disappeared during the past two years. Nori is ' accused of misappropriating money | deposited with the superintendent for |s?.fe keeping, and destroying vouchers ■ and receipts to cover up his transac ! tions. | In a statement issued by J. W. Wet izel, counsel for Mr. Friedman, the Istatement is made that sufficient evl idence has been secured to sustain the charges against Nori and at the same time clear Mr. Friedman of some of the charges on which he was sus pended several weeks ago. | Although J. H. Llnnen, the investi j gator for the Commissioner of Indian All airs who made the investigation which resulted in Friedman's suspen jsion is In Carlisle, Friedman is said I to have secured the evidence he says |he has against Nori without the as sistance of the Washington man. APOI.PH P. A. BANDELIER'DEAD New York, March 20.—Announce ment of the death in Madrid. Spain, yesterday of Adoiph Francis A. Bando lier, one of the foremost authorities of archaeology In the United States, is contained in a cable message made public to-day. lie was 74 years old. SEAT PRICES DROP AGAIN New York, March 20.—The market for Stock Exchange membership after a period of strength, is off again. This developed with the announcement yes terday of the sale of two seats at" $50,000, a drop of SG,OOO from the pre vious price. , SIR EDWIRD CARSON GIVi on IS HE ENTERS BELFAST Unionists Move Their Stores and Documents Fearing Raid by Police EXTRA GUARDS AT BARRACKS Sir Edward Will Consult Command- * ers of Ulster Volunteer Forces By Associated Press Belfast, March 20. —Sir Edward Car son. the leader of the Unionists of Ulster, made a dramatic entry Into tho capital of the province to-day. His purpose in coming here is to consult with the other Ulster Unionist leaders and with the commanders of the Ulster volunteer forces. The great activity displayed at Unionist headquarters and In the army barracks have caused considerable ex citement among tho people of Belfast, who for days past have been momen tarily expecting some decisive move on the part of the Unionist chiefs or tho government. Before landing this morning Sir Ed ward Carson received on board the steamer on which he had made the passage from England Sir George Klcliardson, a retired lieutenant-gen eral of the British army,.who is com mander-in-chief of the Ulster Unionist forces, together with his chief officers. Noisy Welcome As the party came down the gang way from the steamer to the pier they found drawn up as a guard of honor the emergency force ol' picked men in the Ulster volunteers, who had been summoned to the Unionist headquar ters at a late hour last night. A blfc crowd gave them a noisy welcome, cheering wildly and firing salvos into the air from their revolvers, i During the night automobiles had been kept busy moving stores and j documents from the Unionist head quarters, apparently fearing a raid by the police, who have been keeping close watch on every move made by the Unionists. Precautions of a rigorous character have been taken at tne Victoria mili tary barracks here. Extra guards are on duty day and night.. Urgent in structions have been sent to the mili tary authorities in the south of Ireland to dispatch reinforcements immedi ately to tho garrison stations In Ulster. EXPRESSMAN INJURED Special to The Telegraph Mechanicsburg. Pa., March 20.—■ While at work with the Adams Ex press Company In Harrlsburg, where he Is employed as one of the night workmen, Clarence Peterman, residing in East Keller street, met with a pain ful accident on Wednesday night when a large box which he was moving fell on his left foot, crushing and cutting It severely . Medical aid was sum moned and he was later brought to hla home. i For llarrtsburK and vicinityi Pair, continued cold to-night and Sat urday; lowest temperature to night about 20 degrees. For Kastern Pennsylvania i Palv to-night and Saturday) moderate to brisk northerly winds. lUver The Susquehanna river and all Ma tributaries will fall to-night and Saturday except the loner por | tion of the main river, which will remain about stationary to-night. , The report iiiat tne tee was gorg ed above the Clark's Ferry dam was found on Investigation to be untrue. General Condltlona The storm central over Northers New England, Friday morning, has moved off t«- the northeast ward. The Texas disturbance has moved rapidly northeastward and Is now central along the eoast of North Carolina. The temperature Is below normal generally throughout the United States, except along the South Atlantic coast. Temperature! 8 a. m., 22. Sunt Rises, Oill a. m.| acts, 0114 p. m. Mooni New mooa, March 20, 1 108 p. m. Illver Staget 8.9 fee* above low wnter mark. Yesterday's Weather Highest temperature, 84. I.owest temperature, 27. Mean temperature. 33. Normal temperature, 39. \ Helping Those Who == Help Themselves That is a function of the adver tising printed in this newspaper every day. It helps those who want guld , ance in judicious buying. It is the story of the market place telling you what is best for your wants and where it Is sold. Frequently prices are present ed in competition with each oth er. and advertising readers are a'ways posted as to where their rnonev will do the best work. It Is as foolish to purchase without llrst seeing what the ad vertisements say as It .would be to purchase without looking at the goods themselves. Advertising does not compel you to anything. It mere ly posts you so that at all times you can purchase to your best advantage. It is only by making tho ad vertising pay you that the ad vertisers can hope to make It pav themselves. Get your full service out of the advertising in this news paper.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers