\X?O(Y)en Dressing For the Office By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. | One of the prettiest girls 1 know i made the blunder of coming down to her place of employment recently; dressed in a ruffled white silk that, would have been suitable for a garden I party. At'a garden party she would! have been* delight to the eye. In a business office she was an offense. ! Lucille writes me the following: "I | have nowhere to go after I leave j work. I have very few frienus. as j 1 am a stranger alone in New York. 1 /•.There are some nice girls and young men in my office. So instead of net ting party clothes for which 1 have no use, I get pretty thir.ss t6 wear to work. And the other day one of the girls told me that she took a dislike to me because 1 had worn such fancy dresses to work. "1 like jewelry and I have all that belonged to my mother. 1 have been wearing a necklace and two pins,' i some jeweled hair pins, rings, a I bracelet and a watch to work. And 1 1 like low-necked muslin dresses better than suits and shirtwaists. 1 doing wrong to dress to please my self?" i My dear girl, you are making a grave blunder. Wear simple linen or pongee or taffeta dresses to work If you can afford to dress as you choose. But have them made on simple tail ored or shirtwaist lines. And don't ' wear an entire collection of jewelry. I It makes what is probably genuine < and good look cheap and ordinary, i You will not make friends by over-11 dressing. In fact, you will repel the i best of the girls and young men in j I jour office by the very means you arej< using to attract. Fluffy muslins and organdies and j < laces are not suitable for business. < At the end of a day's work they look's crushed and soiled and rumpled. But|] trim tailored effects stand the strain h of a day in a dusty office, and the I ] heat and humidity of a city's streets j I do not take all the freshness frotnjl them. |: S Pork and Beans You know that beans are extremely nutritious. You know that beans are one of the most economical of foods. You know that there's nothing tastier than a plate of beans. NNow then, find out whose beans are easiest for you to digest. Remember this, only digested food nourishes the body. Absolutely No Pain ®' y latest Improved nppll -1 am-cs. including an oxygen- S ,y hwl air apparatus, makes fJt ■6extracting and all den tH' work positively k painless and Is per fectly harmless. (Age no objeo- EXAMINATION / / eeth . . U.iltf I nprp ,S « Gold fllllngs JI.OO f IVxj CJ .•» \1 Killings in silver - \ alloy eminent 50<\ w ~ Gold Crowns and Rejrfstered S i \ * Bridge Work. $3, $4, $5. , T 1 22-K Gold Crown .... $5.00 Graduate V Office open doily <K&O JU X X m. to 6 p. m.; Hon., Wed. Assistants \ 7 ▼ and Sat. Till • p. m.; Mondays, \T 10 a. m. to 1 p. m. Bell Phone 3322R if • EAST TEKMS OF~~ S S PAYSIIuATS I^^/ // 320 Market Street X Harrisburg, Fa. it DM>'« Hurt • BI« P AIITIfIM I When Coming to My Office Be unU I lUIi ■ Sure You Are in the Right Place. g —— —, =■ Warf Map il|X°Up°ll Latest European War Map Given by THE TELEGRAPH to avary raader presenting this COTTPOW and lOcmktoeonr promotion expenses. BY MAIL—In city or ontaida, (or 12c. Stamps, cash or money ordar. This la the BIGGEST VALUE EVER OFFERED. Latest 1#1« European Official Map <5 colors)— Portraits ol 1# European Rulers t all statistica ana war 4 ata _A.rmy, Navtl and Aerial Strecath. Populations, Axes, Capitals. Distances between Ciuea. Hlatoriea of Nations Involved. Previoa* Deciaiva Battle*. His tory Hague Peace Conference. National Debts. Coin Values. EXTRA S-color CHARTS o( Five Involved European Capitala and Strtficsio Naval loemxinfc ifcl 111 i with kaadaoiES cover to fit th« Backcl. Try Telegraph Want Ads. TUESDAY EVENING, ' HARRISBURG <£&££» TELEGRAPH NOVEMBER 3.1914 | The business women should look j neat and business-like. This effect 'she cannot produce with jewels and j cliitton. j Tawdry finery has a wilted look i that is never charming. I Wear simple, workmanlike clothes !to work. Don't try to be conspicuous, ; for the attention you attract will pro bably he unfavorable. ! A simple hat on sailor lines and a 'si.nple blouse of the same sort almost always become a young woman. !Clothes of this type will give you a [look of neatness and trlmness that will attract men and women alike. The woman who is modestly dress ed need never feel unpleasantly noticeable. She has a look of simple modesty that attracts everyone. At a recent dance where there were many Paris gowns and Fifth avenue creations, no one looked more charm ing than a young gir. who wore a little white crepe de chine drens with no ornament beyond white organdie vest and collar and cuffs. It had cost sl2 and was serving as her "best" Summer dress, and her escort seemed very proud of her girlish daintiness. At the end of the evening, when chif fons and laces were mussed and wrinkled , the wearer of the simple frock looked as cool and dainty as wnen she hat' come. The srirl who is overdressed, how ever, has a self-conscious, arrogant appearance that does not attract kindly admiration. If she gets praise it is the grudging sort that wonders how she can afford to dress so elab orately on her salary. Don't go to work or or. a day's ex cursion to river or shore in a filmy dress that will come home looking sadly draggled and limp. Wear sim ple tailored clothes that can stand a day of dust and heat and dampness. Don't go to dances in starchy linens that will muss and crumple during the evening and make you look warm and uncomfortable. Bordeaux- War Capital of France | Dr. "Walter S. Hoke, brother of State Senator John W. Hoke and H. M. Hoke, private secretary to the At torney General, has been a dentist In : Bordeaux for thirty years. HIH prac tice Is among what was the old no bility of Southern France. He has written the following Interesting let ter to his brother in liarrisburg con cerning Bordeaux during its occu pancy by the French government: "About noon of September 3 the president of the Republic and his min isters arrived here, and on the after noon of the same day the president, over his own signature—Raymond Poincaire—issued his proclamation, announcing that a state of war existed which necessitated a transference of the capital, and calling upon French men to light loyally for victory against the Invaders. "Now, why was the government brought here to Bordeaux? An old saying-—probably as well known all over France hs here—ls most descrlp tlve.of the Inhabitant of Bordeaux. It Is: "Je ne aula pas Francais—je suis Uordelais." ("1 am not French—l'm a Bordelais.") This saving is so old that one Is tempted to liellve that In ISTO, as well as in 1914. it was thought advisable to transfer the French gov ernment to its nearest colony. "But, firstly, in a war with Germany an overland invasion is quite improb able, while, owing to the forts at Ko yan, at the mouth of the Gironde, and those at Blaye further up the river, an attack by sea is an absolute im possibility, Secondly, the resources of Bordeaux are many—eusv communi cation with the frontier, facility of ac commodation to a suddenly-increased population, and n surrounding country of unsurpassed fertility and wealth. Moreover, It is the military center of the whole southwest of France. There is no other French city, under exist ing circumstances, where the welfare of the nation could be considered with happier results. "A Bordelais (inhabitant of Bor deauxl resembles the average French man aa little as the Scotchman re -81 mbles the Englishman. He is, above all, a sensational sensationalist. lie is as indifferent as the American Indian to anything you have to tell him. The only difference is that the Indian grunts.the Bordelais shrugshlsshould ets. Nothing will arouse his enthus iasm. He has already seen something far greater, and waits with painfully apparent impatience until your tale is ended so that he can tell you his. Absolutely nothing surprises him. Consequently, lie heard of the coming of the government with indifference, and would not go out of his daily path to see the president himself. The government here interests the aver age inhabitant less than the traditional and semi-annual fair held on the Place des Quinconces. Besides the Government, so many eminent men are here that the newspapers said that the boulevards of Paris, its well as the government, had been transferred to Bordeaux. But the papers sneak no more of them. Nobody can live long here without being saturated With the spirit of indifference. "The war came upon Bordeaux In a way that would have surprised an American, but one would be justified in believing some here have not even heard of it. But. in one way, it has touched them all—financially. This is a truly vulnerable side of a Borde lais'. AVhen the mobilization became ine\itable, there was a veritable run on the banks. In front of the Saving MI-O-NA QUICKLY ENDS INDIGESTION Eat Your Favorite Food and Never Fear After-Distress There is a way for you to eat what ever your stomach craves and do it over again the next day. Many will say. "How 1 wish 1 could, but 1 have tried and every time it nearly kills me." The real trouble is that people who suffer the untold agony of indigestion do not properly care for the stomach. Every stomach has a lot of work to perform in digesting the food and if crowded with extra labor it rebels and kicks up a fearful disturbance. Ml-o-na, a simple, harmless, inex pensive and most effective prescrip tion. easily obtained at any drug store, will quickly stop this disturbance. Mi-o-na was especially prepared to I regulate out-of-order stomachs. It not ! only helps the overworked digestive ! organs by increasing the flow of gas i trie juices, but surely and safely builds j up and strengthens the stomach walls ; so that the stomach can care for the ; food as nature intended. It's needless for you to suffer with ' indigestion. heartburn, biliousness, j sour, gassy or upset stomach, for : MI-o-.nii should give prompt and last ing relief. Do not delay, but get some i of these health-restoring tablets from |H. C. Kennedy to-day. If Mi-o-na S does not banish all stomach distress, ' there will not be a penny of expense. | —Advertisement. "NeedFess to Have Superfluous Hair" Says Mrs. Osgood After years of disappointing experi ; ments, Mrs. Osgood lias found a Won ! tier- Itemetly that quickly and safely j removes all signs of superfluous hair on I face, neck, arms or elsewhere, without the slightest annoyance, or risk of in juring the skin. No nerveracking i needle or evil-smelling depilatories. ' Simply apply the prescription as dl- I rected and all unsightly embarrassing | hair quickly disappears. Mrs. Osgood's Wonder Is sold on a , Money-Back basis by Kennedy's Drug | Store, who reports many satisfied cus- I tomers. All flvst-class druggists and I department stores carry It now. Get j this famous prescription to-day—at j once—and rid yourself of every trace tof superfluous hair without delay.— ! Advertltement. Cumberland Valley Railroad TIME TABLE In Effect May 24. 1914. 1 TRAINS leave Harrlsburg— I For Winchester and Martlnsburg at I 6-03 •7:60 a. m.. *3:40 p. m. ! For Hagerstown. Chambersburg. Car ! lisle. Mcchanicsburg and Intermediate i stations at 5 03. *7:50, *11:63 a. m.. • *3 40 5:22, *7:40. *11:00 p. m. I Additional trains for Carlisle and ' Mechunicsburg at 9:48 a. m.. 2:18. 3:27, 630 9:30 a. in. For IMUsburg «t 5:03, *7.60 and • 11:53 a. m.. 2:13. *2:40, 6:32 and 6:30 P ° • Dally. All other trains dally except Sunday. H. A HIDpLE, J. H. TONGE. G P. A. Banks in particular, where small sums had been deposited, hundreds awaited their turns to draw out their mites. Millions were carried off, until the gov ernment limited- the demands to low percentages of the deposits. To allay a panic, on account of anxiety for the future, la moratorium commercial et financier regulated the payments of outstanding debts, promissorv notes, house rents and the like, so that the debtor now owes practically nothing, at least for the moment. Present confidence is thus assured, but what the future will bring, should the war last long, nobody can say. "For a few javs provisions rose to ridiculous prices. The demand for pro visions caused visions of woe and star vation. but that also was checked by military authority, so that all edibles have now fallen to normal prices. Meat even is being sold by the soldiers in one part of the city, and at prices exceptionally low for the poor. The city being full of strangers, enough money is naturally in circulation, and everyone seems to have sufficient to live for the day; that is. there is money in small quantities—absolutely no gold, very little silver, but plenty of five and twenty franc notes issued especially for the war. So many men having gone to the front, that their wives and sisters, as far as possible, have taken their places. The conduc tors on the street cars are nearly all women. "You will be interested to know just how the government is being run in BordMUX. I.et me tell you that the government is not being run in Bor deaux. It is beinK run, and probably will be to the end of tho war. by a short, heavy set man, who, at a glance gives the impression of indomitable will and energy, a man whose word is now supreme law. General Joffre is now mightier than a president. He is an autocrat, running all France, and. through him. General uudard Is running Bordeaux. General Joffre lias assumed this command involun tarily but by natural right. It has been thrust upon him by the confi dence and will of France. "I had the honor yesterday to talk to staff, having Just left the front for his weekly visit here to the Minister of War. "What sort of man is Gen. JofTre, and how does he stand the ter rible strain?" I asked him. He an swered: "He has a sangfroid terri ble, and. besides"—he hesitated and smiled significantly—"it is going bet ter now." Was the general anxious before the llattle of the Marne or are we to expect good news soon? "It is almost a certainty that Par liament will not meet for sometime. France now wants a united people—a repulillcan people who, if they do not openly uphold the republic, will keep antagonistic ideas to themselves. Roy alistic and Socialistic speeches would be detrimental to the end in view— patriotism a l'outrance—(patriotism to the limit.) To prove that revolu tionary ideas still exist in the France of to-day, let me tell you that, .speak ing yesterday to the Marquis de a nonresident of Bordeaux, I remarked that the inhabitants had been so un concerned about the change in the city that few of thein had even gone, out of their way to see the president. "Well," she said, 'l'm glad to hear it.' She would not be a marquise if she were not a Royalist, and a Royalist is never an admirer of the president of a re public. If Parliament, therefore does not meet during the war the reason will be evident. "The Bordelais is the hardest and most inoffensive kicker in all France. On an early day in September, when the Germans were near the Paris for tifications, 1 met two old friends who j treated me to one of the most scath i ing harangues ever heard outside of jail. One, a sensational Royalist, ex j claimed: "Why, nom de D .we | haven't a single competent general, no I guns; we haven't even any powder." j "You fellows make me sick." I cried, |"I am a foreigner, but I have more confidence in General Joffre than you | have and I'm far more patriotic." I left them both laughing, and, looking | back, I saw them clapping their hands !in hearty approbation. If one wants to keep in the good graces of Royalists or Bordelais. especially the latter, you must let him see you arc his friend, but you must do it in the most violent and abusive language you can com mand. "One story of Bordelais cunning. On account of the many refugees in the city who could not afford to buy different editions of the papers, call ing aloud the news or even the name of the paper was prohibited. The other day on the Cours Tourny I saw a vender, a man about thirty, ges ticulating violenily and talking indig nantly and vociferously to himself; "Oh! the pigs! They have destroyed our Cathedral at Rheims. They are going to pay for it." Everybody had heard of the destruction, but he sold papers. "But the inhabitants of Bordeaux can rise to a height of patriotism of which France may well be proud. Nothing has so impressed and moved them as the exodus of the troops. The seines among the crowds at the St. Jean station were beyond description. Many were there out of curiosity, but the majority were bidding godspeed to | some dear relative or friend. Without distinction of class, the biuecoats mingled freely—the marquis and count to the workman and peasant who toils in the fields. Each man had come in answer to the same call" each one to offer a life of like value to one cause. Mother, with children in arms and leading others, were there; sons too young and father too ol,i to fight were there. At night the sight was especially thrilling: Arc lamps sput tering, locomotives shrieking, guards crying out the trains, streets echoing the tread of marching feet, the song of the 'Marseillaise' an,i M.e Chant du Depart' ('The Hymn of Farewell') an inconceivable outburst of bitterness, goodbys. abnegation and patriotism. The gates swung onen. and, with a kiss and an embrace here, a hand shake there, Georges, Charles or Rp bert was gone. "Some have come back and been R GORDONS I^JBROMOSODUS \\ hy suffer? Take Gordon's "BROMO SODUS". Quickest and surest relief for dull, splitting Headache. New Ef fervescing Headache Remedy, guaran teed absolutely pure. Much more pleasant to take than powders or tablets. Gives instant relief without depressing after effects. Ask your dealer for it and in sist upon getting Gordon's "BROMO SODUS" on sale at all first class drug gists, soda fountains and department | stores. Buy a bottle to-day, your dealer will refund purchase price to any dis satisfied customer. If unable to obtain quickly, send 25c • for large bottle to BROMO DRUG CO., Harrisburg, Pa. New Gratifying Successes Daily Our ninth year just closed has been a gratifying one to "Kaufman's Undersell ing Store." The attendances were record-breaking in size—thousands of new custo mers have been added, and all this is pleasing, because it marks the absolute approval of Kaufman's policies and Kaufman's methods. We find ourselves thankful for the generous treatment accorded us by the public, and, if possible. MORE THAN EVER DETERMINED to merit the confidence which have been so strongly placed in us. Starting of Our 10th Year Wishing to Celebrate Fittingly the Starting 10th Year We Present 10 Items at a Saving of Nearly Half | THIS EVENT IS FOR WEDNESDAY ONLY | ——™~————————————* FOR WEDNESDAY ONLY FOR WEDNESDAY ONLY Women's Misses' and Janiors' Women's, Misses' and Juniors' SUITS, Worth up to sls SUITS, Worth up to S2O SB.IO sll.lO Beautiful Fall and Winter Stylos in short and Elegant styles, many shown for the first time, long font models: all-wool Serges. Cheviots and Handsome materials in the newest colors. AU Crepes. All the newest colors In all sizes. In short and lons coat styles. ————————————————* / N FOR WEDNESDAY ONLY FOR WEDNESDAY ONLY Women's, Misses' and Juniors' Women's and Misses' DRESSES COATS, Worth up to $5.00 Worth up to $6.00 $2.10 $3.10 , „ Newest Fall ailil Winter styles, in Serge and Splendid styles in mixtures, just the coat for Satin combination models: also plainer styles, now and later. All sizes. Mostly black and navy blue In all sizes. / v FOR WEDNESDAY ONLY FOR WEDNESDAY ONLY FOR WEDNESDAY ONLY Women's and Misses' Women's WAISTS, SILK PETTICOATS, Cloth Dress SKIRTS Worth up to $2.00 Worth up to $2.50 Worth up to $4.00 sl.lO I sl.lO $2.10 Dainty white Voile Waists: Good quality Silk Messaline: „„H lace and embroidery trimmed. all colors anil black, made with Newest styles in serge ami Shepherd plaid materials. All sizes. , pretty deep flounces. — \ / I > FOR WEDNESDAY ONLY FOR WEDNESDAY ONLY FOR WEDNESDAY ONLY Women's and Children's Women's and Children's BOYS' OVERCOATS, TRIMMED HATS, TRIMMED HATS, Worth up to $3.90 Worth up to $3.00 Worth up to $4.00 $2.10 sl.lO $2.10 Warm chinchilla Overcoats. „ . .... Blue and gray; belted backs and Newest velvets and plushes In all Elegant Plushes and A civets In button high. Sizes 2'A to 10 shapes and colors. all the newest shapes and colors. years. found among the wounded. Many alas, will never come back. They never send back the dead. They are used along the line for filling up deep gaps in the ground with forgetfutness, lost identity, earth, quicklime and sod. "Three brothers from Tarbes, who passed through the station, were all killed in one of the first battles. Two days after the news came the mother, who had been almost prostrated by their departure, suddenly ceased to weep; in fact, she seemed to have for gotten her three boys, the youngest of whom had scarcely stopped climbing to her knee. Nobody blames her — she had gone mad. "Bordeaux is now a vast hospital. Fifteen thousand lie wounded. Red Cross flags flutter everywhere. The sol diers patiently bear wounds too horri ble to describe. Men, whose chests and abdomens have been pierced through and through, walk about, al most ready to return to the front. Some Germans are here. They are, almost without exception, hurt worse than the Frenchmen. The French ar tillery, the awful 76 —75 millimetres, roughly three inches—is the most frightful engine that ever belched a shell. Its effect is indescribable. It lays the bones bare of flesh, and, without a single scratch, blots out dozens of lives from the power of its explosion alone. "Bordeaux is not only a vast hos pital—it is a morgue. The Angel of Death passes along dally, pointing here and there at some cot. From tetanus, from shock and sheer exhaus tion, the soldiers are marching to the great beyond. A priest, a few men in uniform, a hearse, a tricolored flag, and we bare our heads as the mourn ful cortege passes. Then another priest, other soldiers, another hearse and a white sheet—and a poor Ger man goes by. "To-day Bordeaux is making his tory for itself; history that will be standing when the towers of St. Michel and St. Andre have fallen, when the ruins of the Palais Galien (remains of a Roman have crum bled to dust. But the Bordelais is not thinking of this now; he'thinks of the dear ones at the front. The mother is hiding in the cleft of the Rock . f Ages, kneeling at the cross of Christ. Sunken-eyed and haggard, the father stares toward the east, toward the river Meuse, across which the dead formed a funeral bridge. He listens for that mighty snout of victory— death to the "Watch on the Rhine;" birth of eternal neace. "O God, quick, quick," he pleads. "My laughing child, tnv merry boy was carrying the gun only this morning; he may go down in the gaunt gap to-night." "But, with majestic, yet unrelenting fury, the blue-coated host from Al geria, from Morocco, from all around the, Pyrenees, the land of the ancient Basque, is still sweeping through the old city, following their country's flag, offering to German shrapnel their, young lives, their now Jeopardized am bitions and hopes. Our hearts go out to them as we wish them a fervent godspeed, while they—as we see by their faces—are saying to the last man: 'Forward! Death is nothing to the destiny of our country.' "How I envy you all living over there. God's country it certainly is. You don't know what you possess in living there." PENNSYLVANIAN GETS QUICK RELIEF FROM DISORDERS OF HIS STOMACH I. E. Beckwith Says Mayr's Wonder ful Remedy Gave Him Great Help T. E. Beckwitli, of Harrlsburg, Penn., was a victim of disorders of the stom ach and intestinal tract. Me tried treatment after treatment. Nothing gave him relief. Then one day he discovered Mayr's Wonderful Stomach Remedy and soon was happy. Mr. Beckwith wrote to Geo. H. Mayr, the maker of the remedy and for twenty years the leading druggist of Chicago. "I believe that Mayr's Wonderful Stomach Remedy is the greatest stom ach remedy on earth. One dose would convince any one who is troubled with his stomach of its wonderful merits. It removed some of the most awful look ing stuff from my stomach. I have taken other remedies, but they never helped me." AIOSE AND HEAD STOPPED UP FROM GOLD OR CATARRH, OPEN AT ONCE My Cleansing, Healing Balm In stantly Clears the Nose, Head and Throat—Stops Nasty Catarrhal Discharges, Dull Headache Goes. Try "Ely's Cream Balm." Get a small bottle anyway, just to try it—Apply a little In the nostrils and instantly your clogged nose and stopped-up air passages of the head will open; you will breathe freely; dullness and headache disappear. By morning! the catarrh, cold-ln-head or catarrhal sore throat will be gone. End such misery now! Get the often lies in the braasiere. Hundreds of thousand* of women H wear the Bien-Joiie Brassiere for the reason that they regard ■ ■SWiHffwK 't it as necessary as a corset. It supports the hust and back and gives the flgurc the youthful outline fashion decrees. mjflv msm JT arc the daintiest. most serviceable MB Rw I WH yjiUiou-u __ Karmpn(H ) majrin able. Only the I HBP> r UI1W11& best of materials aroused—for In- I ViVI _r« A tr c 1 "'"nee, "Walohn". a flexible bon- I m tJKAoJitIvtJ initofgrentdurability—absolutely I W I £ They come in all and your local Dry Gooris dealer Wa ■ » ■ will show them to you on request. If hedocs notrp.rry them, Wl H ( *»• be can easily get them for you by writing to us. Send for HE] an illustrated booklet showing styles that are in high favor. I I ' M. \\ ll] 50 Warren Street Newark, N. J. II Just such letters from users of Mayr's Wonderful f taota Remedy; In all parts of the cou: .y. It is known everywhere. The llrst dose convinces —no long treatment. Mayr's Wonderful Stomach Remedy clears the digestive tract of mucoid accretions and poisonous matter. It brings swift relief to sufferers from ailments of the stomach, liver and bowels. Many declare It has saved them from dangerous operations; many are sure it lias saved their lives. We want all people who have chronic stomach trouble or constipa tion, no matter of how long standing, to try one dose of Mayr's Wonderful Stomach Remedy—one dose will con vince you. This is the medicine s<» many of our people have been taking with surprising results. The most thorough system cleanser ever sold. Mayr's Wonderful Stomach Remedy is now sold here by Gorgas' Drug Store and druggists everywhere. Adver tisement. small bottle of "Ely's Cream Balm" at apy drug store. This sweet, fra grant balm dissolves by the heat of the nostrils; penetrates and heals the / Inflamed, swollen membrane which lines the nose, heud and throat; clear# the air passages; stops nasty dis charges and a feeling of cleansing, soothing relief comes immediately. Don't lay awake to-night struggling for breath, with head stuffed; nostrils closed, hawking and blowing. Catarrh or a cold, with Its running nose, foul mucous dropping into the throat, and raw dryness is distressing but truly, needlesß.. Put your faith —just once—in Ely'a Cream Balm" and your cold or ca tarrh will surely disappear.—Adver tisement. 5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers