8 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Established i&Ji PUBLISHED BT THE TKI.ECiH.4PH PHIXTIXG CO. < K. J. STACKPOLE President and Editor-in-Chief I F. R. OTSTER Secretary GUS M. STEINMETZ .Wanafinf Editor Published every evening (except Sun dav) at the Tlegrnph Building, *l4 Federal Square. Both phones. Member American Newspaper Publish ers' Association. Audit Bureau of Circulation and Pennsylvania Associ ated Dallies. Eastern Office. Fifth Avenue Building. New York City, Hasbrook, Story & Brooks. Western Office. Advertising Ttuildlnr. Chicago. 111.. Robert E. Ward. Delivered by carriers at <TTifT&fftik v S«tr> six cents a week. SJaOtiP' Mailed to subscribers at $3.00 a year in advance. Entered at the Post Office In ITarrls burg. Pa., as second class matter. Sworn dairy averagr circulation lot the three months ending Oet. SI. 1915. it 21,357 ★ Average for the year 1914—21.589 Average for the year 1013— l'. 9 *! Avernge for the year 1912—19.549 Average for the year 1911—17,542 Average for the year 1010—16,201 The above figures are net. All re turned, una "Id and damaged copies ne lieted. MONDAY EVENTING. NOVEMBER 22 It will often lighten your burdens if you tcill try to bear the burdens of others. —Anon. REPI" B LICAN ASSISTAN" CE PRESIDENT WILSON, having found that he cannot command the support of the Democratic members of Congress In behalf of a national defense program, haw asked the leaders of the Republicans In House and Senate to come to Ills as sistance in the passage of a defense bill, or series of bills. The Republicans have announced their intention of responding right wil lingly. But they will not support blindly a program devised by the Pres ident and his cabinet. They ask for detailed explanation and the privilege of suggesting changes should it ap pear that changes are necessary. This is no more than reasonable. If Re publicans are to vote for a program of national defense they ought to be permitted to have a voice in formulat ing it. If the President Is wise and really sincere In his desire to give the pi >lic what it is demanding he will take these experienced and practical Republican leaders fully Into his con fidence and permit them to make rec ommendations, even as he will expect them to accept many of his own sug gestions. All legislation is the result of com promise and the success of an adequate defense program at the hands of the next Congress depends largely upon a recognition of this principle by all con cerned. The nation is not Interested in the pettiness of personality or to whom shall go the credit for formu lating the program. But woe to the individual or the party that permits narrowness of vision or politics to stand in the way of putting the coun try in a state of defense against a pos sible invasion. Another large farm on the West Shore has been abandoned for agricul tural purposes and turned Into half acre plots for building and develop ment on the outskirts of New Cumber land. Thus the West Shore towns are heing linked together. Each is stretch ing out toward the other and the Greater Harrisburg of ten years hence will embrace both sides of the river. THE PEOPLE'S BUSINESS WITH a high appreciation of their duties and a sincere desire for * proper municipal development, the City Planning Commission is giv ing consideration to every question i hat involves proper street alignments and such regulations as will prevent the opening of streets not uniform in width. It is strange how frequently pri vate owners of property have been permitted to open streets through new territory without regard to abut ting streets or the conditions which necessarily follow the carelessness and indifference of such owners. For tunate, indeed, is it for Harrisburg that these five patriotic citizens com posing the Planning Commission are giving so freely and Intelligently of their time and thought to tfce solu tion of the problems which confront them and the city at large. There is no question now before them more pregnant with important results to the city than the changing of the lines of congested streets to the ehd that as time goes on these condi tions may be removed without, serious loss or damage to property owners. Their plan is to provide that when ever a building is remodeled or rebuilt it shall conform to the new lines. Not infrequently half a block is opened through new building operations and the removal of old structures. Under such circumstances. It is compara tively easy to establish the new width of a given street without serious loss to those interested. Such procedure In a few years would change the whole r-haracter of many congested sections of the city. After the great Baltimore Ire, miles of streets In the very heart af the business district were widened »nd, instead of being damaged, prac tically every owner of properly was enormouslv benefited, the Increased light and air changing the entire character of the district. So it is that the City Planning Com mission is doing a great work lor MONDAY EVENING, Harrisburg—much greater than the average citizen In the hurly-burly of his own activity realizes. It would be a good thing for the city if the Planning Commission could have a public exhibit in some hall, covering a period of several days, and showing what is proposed to be done in the way of correcting old condi tions and improving new areas. This exhibit might be made of wide public interest through a showing of proper housing conditions, the advantage of detached houses, and the improve ment that follows the setting back of buildings from the house line so as to afford ample light and air. The long and short of it is that we are headed In the right way and at the right time. It Is for all the peo ple of the city to co-operate in this great work. Nobody doubts the necessity for a new Central High School building. It has passed the discussion stage and it Is now regarded as an absolute neces sity. It remains only for the School Board to properly place the fact be fore the people and they will do the rest. But it ougiit to be remembered that the location of the building will have much to do with popular interest In the project. ITTURIST "MUSIC" NEW YORK Is to have what is to be known as a "futurist school of music." Where Beethoven. Schubert and other great masters of musical composition strove for har mony and melody the futurists will endeavor to produce the most striking discords imaginable. Apparently, the more discord, the more noise; the more consistent and persistent ugliness in the music, the higher the performer and composer of the futurist school will stand among his fellows. We doubt if ever the futurist school will become very popular, but It ought to be a grand place for worn-out talking machine records, broken down street pianos, busted buzz saws and dis carded foghorns. Up to this time the Society for the Prevention of Needless Noise has taken no action in the mat t«y\ Grosvenor Dawe. in his rather un usual address before the Chamber of Commerce the other day, drew attention to the universal error that legislation is a panacea for all Ills. He declared that over 60,000 bills had been intro duced in the last Congress and these were augmented by thousands more in the Legislatures of the oOuntry. On assuming office at the peglnning of the present year Governor Brumbaugh, and later Lieutenant Governor McL&ln, called attention to the multiplication of laws without reason. It might be a good thing for the country should the lawyer be excluded from the halls of legislation for a period of years. CHAMBERLAIN'S VIEWS SENATOR CHAMBERLAIN, of Oregon, chairmun of the Senate Military Affairs Committee, who will address a noonday luncheon of the Chamber of Commerce next Wed nesday, has declared his intention to stand by his letter to Secretary of War Garrison that experts of the War Department and the army should in form Congress of defense needs and let Congress take the responsibility for deciding what should l>e pro vided. While Senator Chamberlain has in formed the President of his intention to support the Administration's mili tary program, he does not regard that pledge as preventing him from sug gesting modifications in the Garrison plan, it is said. The report of the General Staff will be published soon after Congress meets. Senator Chamberlain is a man of courageous views and a possible clash between the Oregon statesman and the Secretary of War has interesting possibilities. From the standpoint of w'ide pub licity, the statuary controversy of the "Chocolate King" of Hershey and an Italian sculptor has • Its interesting phases. But after all, the sweet stuff itself is the best advertisement of the most interesting suburb of Harrisburg. ONCE MORE THE HOTEL AT the risk of a contemptuous snort from the "knocker" ele ment of the community, the Tele graph is impelled to again call atten tion to the fact that once or twice during the last week it was prac tically impossible for many persons to obtain hotel accommodations in Har risburg, owing to the large number of strangers In the city attending con ferences, taking part in fraternal meetings and transacting private busi ness. While there has been some dis couragement over the hotel proposi tion in the past among those who have given of their time and energy and have even subscribed to the cost of a proposed hotel, the need is so great and the conditions are becoming so intolerable that it would appear almost necessary to have a mass meeting of citizens to consider this important question. Surely there is enough ginger and public spirit in Harrisburg to determine this matter without further discussion. All who come this way realize the need and nothing is doing more to injure the city than these occasional visitors who take away with them a wrong impres sion of the most progressive city in Pennsylvania, save for this one seri ous short-coming. It IS a short-coming and nothing else. We have need for every hotel now doing business here. A new one would simply fill the gap between what we have and what we ought to have in the way of hotel facilities. We heflr more or less frequently of new hotel movements and proposi tions, but "hope deferred maketh the heart sick," and the fact that the mat ter has been drifting so long increases the difficulty and makes all the more serious the situation. It is no longer a subject for jesting. Every individual who "knocks" the hotel proposition should be given his proper place as an enemy of his home town. It is a "booster" proposition and we are still hopeful that the Chamber of Commerce and the Ro tary Club and all the other wide awake organisations will get together and put up a hotel as a monument to the live wires who have already done so much for the improvement of the Capital City. WIDEN THE SUBWAY NO longer do we hear of the dam age that would ensue to owners of property through the widen ing of the Market street subway. That monstrosity must go and in the going the making of a subway similar to the one at Mulberry and iSecond streets would be a distinct benefit to the prop erty owners in Market street, Instead of a loss. Instead of damages these property owners would probably be glad to pay benefits, inasmuch as un der present conditions their holdings are steadily depreciating in value. The discussion of Vice-President Marshall's renominatlon is interesting —and it can have been provoked for but one purpose, namely, to prepare him and his friends for a refusal to name him again. Mr. Marshall Is not exactly persona non grata at the White House, but he is mighty near it; and Woodrow Wilson does not hesitate to visit his displeasure. Moreover, all the precedents are against renominating a Vice-President. How many have been renominated in the last fifty years? Just one. T>otaxc* u *7 > C-KKo4^C£4'Kca By the Ex-Committeeman The first definite announcement of candidacy for any of the state-wide nominations to be made at the pri maries on May 16 was made on Sat urday at Connellsville, Pittsburgh and Philadelphia by Harmon M. Kephart, chief clerk of the Senate, who threw his hat into the ring for the Repub lican nomination for State Treasurer. Mr. Kephart s declaration surprised a good many people because there were rumors that Speaker C. A. Ambler, Montgomery; Chairman James F. Woodward, of the House appropri ations committee. Allegheny, and J. Lee Plunimer, Blair, as well as Sen ator Charles H. Kline, Allegheny, had been talked of for the place. Colonel James E. Barnett, Washington, was the last State Treasurer from Western Pennsylvania. Mr. Kephart Is a big factor in polities in Southwestern Pennsylvania and one of the widely known men In Republican affairs. He would probably have behind him the strength of Senator W. E. Crow, which Is greater than many people think. Philadelphia also got word yester- • day that there was something to the story that Public Service Commissioner William A. Magee might be a candi date for United States senator after all. This story was sprung last week by the Pittsburgh Gazette-Times and industriously denied, it would seem that the denial was caused more by premature publication than anything else. Speaking about the conditions pro duced by these reports and the pres ence of so many prominent figures in the political life of the state at Phila delphia on Saturday, the Public Ledger says: "These announcements created a deep impression on Philadelphia's political leaders and indicated to them that a coalition was being formed of the Crow-Magec forces for use in next year's campaign. Such a coalition, in spite of the fact that Mr. Magee is an appointee of Governor Brumbaugh, it was felt, might work in co-operation with the Penrose State organization. It is asserted in political circles that Mr. Magee is not at all in sympathy With the Governor's local option pr«j jfram." Governor Brumbaugh told friends in Pittsburgh and Philadelphia that he would make a statement on presiden tial matters a®d what he thought about the Republican nomination later I and Senator Penrose said yesterday in I the West that he would talk when he J got home. The Philadelphia Ledger lets off a war cry that the Vares are lining up v.'Vth the remnants of the Washington party to unhorse Penrose and for the Governor as leader, while the Philadelphia Record says that the Vares and McXichol are certain to spilt over national delegates and calls attention to the way the Vares are coddling Mayor-elect Smith. One of the interesting stories pub lished on Sunday was that Major John C. Groome. head of the State police and former national guardsman, was to become director of public safety in the Smith cabinet. This has been printed before, but the Philadelphia Press intimated that a number of Pen rose men would also be named. Democratic newspapers are just now playing up the Republican presi dential matter very hard in order to hide the ruction brewing in their own ranks. There will be a big fight be tween Wilson and Bryan men and the reorganizcrs.and Old Guard will fight as to which shall be considered as the real Wilson man. —Third class city officials are fol lowing with interest the proceedings at Corry, where owners of a theater opened for a Sunday performance in defiance of the orders of the mayor. Erie county was one of the strongest backers of the commission govern ment bill. —lt cost M. U Chadman, candidate for mayor of Lancaster, $3,520 to be defeated. Working it out on a per vote basis, it means 10 cents a vote. —Philadelphia has raised $50,000 of the SIOO,OOO needed for the national convention fund. Tt*e Quaker City's plans will be made at once and an active campaign Inaugurated against Chicago and St. Louiß for the conven tion. —Blrdsboro post office, one of the 103 to be filled by Democrats, has about seven aspirants. —John F. Ancona, Democratic leader of Reading, may be the next city clerk of that city. —Norrlstown may make another try to become a third class city. —lt Is expected that the Philadel phia city loan to be issued shortly be cause of transit will aggregate about $25,000,000. —The Knox boom gathered force In Philadelphia on Saturday as a result of the prominence given to the former Secretary of State and it is expected that the next month will see things started in his behalf In a number of the central counties. The Babcock people are understood to be awaiting the return of Senator Penrose. —The (Jommittee of One Hundred has gone out of business In Philadel phia and the Franklin county chiefs are planning to take over its activities until they can trot out their campaign stunts again. It looks as though the Franklin party would fall heir to the Independent strength In Philadelphia because there are many voters there who are not happy unless "Insurging." ANNOYING , Sunday Golfer —"Something has put mp off my game this morning, caddie." "It's them church bells, mister, they hadn't ought to be allowed." —Life. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH When a Feller Needs a Friend • * BRIGGS ; ' • ——> /sw?, A WALLACE- / TV) ' /_ BRi»J6 THE. \- **■ / mote AND / C p. / 'REAO IT lo * 1 n / THE 6CHOOL / \ mLD Vjfi|| |: ' / \ Mill -s "^3>; TELEGRAPH'S PERISCOPE"! m —We know one industry that is go ing to thrive after the war is over— geography making in Europe. —Scarcity of dyestuffs threatens to force manufacturers to turn out pink overalls. Oh. well, the workman wear ing them will be blue, at any rate. —lf we gave a little more thought to the normal children who are alive than to one defective baby that is dead, the world in the future would have fewer defectives. —Gettysburg students who fled ffom college to escape quarantine are dis covering that Dr. Dixon has an un usually long arm. —lf the early settlers had practiced disarmament tactics there would be no question to-day of national defense. The matter would be decided about an Indian council Are. —Most of us complain bitterly of the high price of turkeys—and then go out and buy one. •—The open season for deer and deer hunters begins December 1. 1 EDITORIAL COMMENT ~| An American manufacturer has sold a million cans of Irish stew to the French army. We suppose the stuff will be used instead of dynamite bombs when attacking the Germans. —Macon News. Combinations are not always in re-' stralnt of trade. The tricks that are being turned in the steel Industry tend .to make trade the merrier.—Philadel phia Evening Bulletin. "I have no use for men who neither drink, chew nor smoke."—From a speech by a member of the Franklin and Marshall faculty. Nevertheless, we venture to predict that the fooball team will continue to use such men in preference to college boozers. —Philadelphia North Ameri can. WHAT A WOMAN CAN DO [From Picture Progress.] The other day a letter came to the editor's desk from the president of a woman's club in a nearby city protest ing against the showing of a certain motion picture in the theater of her locality. She pointed out the elements in the picture which she designated as unsuitable for boys and girls to view, deplored the exhibition of such a pic ture and requested the editor's aid to have this picture withdrawn from the market. This woman, with her complaint, represents but one of many thousands throughout the United States who are Interested In the education and train ing of boys and girls. They recognize the screen as one of the most influen tial educators of the.day and are dis turbed when sensational, or worse, pictures are shoWn In their towns. What these women everywhere can do is to visit their local theater owner and ask him to show In his house the productions which feature the highest grade stars playing In the besl plays (often dramatised from books) and to provide them with these plays regu larly. The editor knows that plays of this character are procurable, and knows that they are within the reach of any exhibitor anywhere, no matter how small the town. If he cares to get them for his patrons. Therefore, to this particular cor respondent, and to all other women who are facing a similar problem, we would say go to your local theater man and tell him what you want, WEALTH IN UN By Frederic J. Haskir. ONE of the most tangled bits of wilderness in the United States Is located In the generally well tilled and thickly settled county of Lowndes, Ala. Centuries ago. a tiny creek here flowed through a rich bot tom. Some upheaval of the earth lifted a dike of rock across Its course so that the surrounding lands became a lake In the wet season and a swamp, covered with tangled Jungle, when the creek went dry. Rich cotton lands are all about this swamp, but within its tangled fastnesses the black bear and the water moccasin are supreme. The surrounding farmers derive absolutely no benetlt from this swamp except the sport of shooting wild game, which is annually driven out of It by the floods. Vet this cotton bottom swamp, twen ty miles long and from one to Ave rnile wide, contains a deep black soil formed by centuries of rotting vegeta tion, as rich as any in the world. It Is potential wealth, food for millions, lying fallow. All that are needed to make It yield yellowing harvests of corn and white fields of cotton are drainage and clearing. This Is not mere speculation, for experts of the Department of Agriculture have stud led this swamp and are agreed that It is one of the great opportunities for capital in agriculture, of which there are so many in this country. The Trinity Bottoms in Hale Coun ty, Ala., are another great area of ex- Qur Daily Laugh ; VIEWPOINTS. M b:T"* U' Wifey: When IW.hl I married you I yl r thought you'd / Vljrflf! ■own your wild ( 4 3 vl ° a Hubby: With /jISVS 'Lflj all your money. my dear, it would t l/|r~ have been a Jj ihame not to II ■tart »noth#r \cv\A doesn't make a 1 No, but It often make* one fall. THE ORHiINAI, KIT By Winn Dinger Wifey said: "Dear Hub, golf-playing Soon will be all o'er for you, For the snow will soon be flying Then, what are you to do?" "That won't bother me a 'minute," To dear wife t quickly said. "For when golf-links are snow-cov ered I will use a ball that's red." Wifey answered: "Without questlok, Without If. or and, or but. You deserve the prise for being The original '*olf-nuW" NOVEMBER 22, 1915. actly tlie some sort, formed in the same way, and there are many others in various parts of the South. These great swamps could not be drained piecemeal. The natural barrier thrown up by some dynamic convul sion of the earth centuries ago would have to be pierced, and the normal drainage of the country re-established. Then the forests \yould have to be cut; but this would not. add greatly to the expense of the undertaking, for much of the timber is virgin hardwood of great value, and nearly all of it could be used for ties, posts and cordwood. It has been estimated that within the United States there ore 74,000,000 acres of unreclaimed syamp land like Cotton Creek and Trinity Bottoms. The great majority of this unused land would be worth at least SIOO an aero If drained, and cleared and most of it couKl be reclaimed for a great deal less than that amount. The estimate has been made that the drainage alone would not cost more than an average of $25 an acre. The fact that these swamp lands lie fallow in the midst of prosperous farming communities is no reflection upon the energy or enterprise of the local farmers. These men have used every bit of land which they have had sufficient capital to improve. The areas remain unreclaimed are big propositions, offering big returns, and requiring big capital to develop them. THE STATE FROM WTO EOT That big storm last Friday did an enormous amount of damage all over the State, causing losses in some local ities to the amount of SIOO,OOO. Imagination, the desire to imitate, and a thriller in the movies were responsible for the death at Wilkes- Barre of a nine-year-old boy, Anthony Adams, who shot himself in the nead with a revolver. Not more than a month ago the same boy was shot in the back during a scene which he and his brother were enacting. The will of Philip Miller, an Allen town confectioner, long a circus athlete, gives his $15,000 estate to his wife, but provides that when she makes her will she devise a quarter of her estate to the Topton's Orphan Home. Orvis Walker, of Rebersburg, Cen ter county, has been so successful as a breeder of Black Minorca chickens that he Is now trying his hand at copperhead,snake hatching. The Reading Dental Association will turn over Its equipment free of charge to the Reading School Board, which will establish a dental department in the Administration building. Beware of gypsy girls, especially the pretty ones, Is the ultimatum delivered by Dr. King, a Heading physician. Ho had his fortune read at his office by two of the aforementioned maidens, and Is now poorer by $47. When John F. Mcglnness, assistant circulation manager of the Williams port Gazette and Bulletin, reached the age of 21 his father, W. W. Meginness, handed him a deposit book In a bank ing Institution or Willlamsport show ing that the late Mayor W. G. Elliott had deposited a su.il to his credit, to j become his with the accumulated In jterest when he reached his majority. The money was deposited early in Jim. Ebernng Qltjat For over eighty-five weeks Dr. Samuel G. Dixon, the State Commis sioner of Health, has been. glvin < practical advice on matters of every day life In the form of a week-onil article, embodying such excellent com mon sense and well put medical knowledge that they have been print ed as a feature by over 150 daily news papers in Pennsylvania and comment ed upon by newspapers outside of tho~ State. Beyond a doubt the newspapers have unloaded on them many, many articles which they have not the space to publish and which while contain inu matters of high importance to the writers or the person affected or some branches of the State government frankly do not interest the great read ing public. Many articles of this class are part, of publicity schemes pure and simple and designed to boost. How differently the average man and woman regards Dr. Dixon's comments upon health matters is demonstrated by the number of papers printing them regularly because after all, the editor does not put into type news matter or articles in which bis readers arc not interested. Some of the advertisements of the stores are read religiously every morning or evening by unknown thousands and while many a person would turn lip his nose at such matter when classed as "news" it interests just the same. Hence it has been that every week newspapers print something from the State's commissioner of health be cause he not only speaks with author ity, but enlivens the articles with apt illustration or str»!.ing similie and but tresses them with such plain speak ing that, they carry home a useful les son. For instance in an article pub lished to-day the Commissioner talks about the importance of keeping thoroughly informed about one's bodv and suggests that it is just as vital to know whether every part of the won derful human meeliunism is «vork ing properly, so that one may know where to make repairs or to brace up. as it is to be sure that the machinery of an automobile Is in order for a trip. Dr. Dixon came to write these articles nearly two years ago in response to requests .for advice or guidance which used to reach him in every mall. Ho picked out the subjects In which the people appeared to be concerned and the public did the rest. That Ex-Governor John K. Toner is a prime favorite in Harrlsburg was pretty well demonstrated on Saturday and yesterday. He was the guest of friends while here and he was as busy shaking hands as he was when he was holding office. The former governor was welcomed at every turn while on a walk about the city on Saturday morning and in the afternoon while on an automobile ride he was sur prised at the greetings for him. While in the city Mr. and Airs. Tener were showered with invitations. They may visit the city again during the holiday season. The coal pile in the ruins of the Country Club of Harrisburg was still burning away yesterday and the mem bers of the club who visited the site or who played golf on Saturday could see real money going up in smoke. The winter stock of coal had Just been laid in the club a fortnight before the lire of last week and the heat still thrown off by the huge pile was *•> great, yesterday that one could not within several feet of it. It will b# several days before the fire burns out. Speaking of golf it was notable the number of .people who played on courses about the city on Saturday in spite of the high winds. Eacli one of the three courses had its devotees and they appeared to be playing with as much vim as in the middle of sum mer. The courses hereabouts have laid out their winter greens and the number of players is a commentary on the popularity of the game. » » • A couple of men walked up Market street the other evening wearing large grins and bearing large turkeys. It was hardly the time of the evening for poultry stores to be open and yet the birds were much alive and while uncer tain whither they were hound took an interest in the bright lights and the passing throngs. The men did not advertise where they had bought the birds, but the "kidding" to which they were subjected raised some doubts in the minds of passers-by. Rumors of raffling were in the air. # i * Dr. J. T. Rothrock, former head of the State Department of Forestry, who was here last week, says that there are some splendid tracts of for est land 111 sight of the State Capitol dome and that some of them ought to be secured for posterity's sake. * « * Thomas D. Taylor, who was ad vertising manager of the New York several years and is known to a number of Harrisburgers, has become the publisher of the Phila delphia Evening Telegraph. He was appointed to the place on Saturday by Rodman Wanamaker the owner. [ VEIJL KNOWN PEOPLE —Judge John W. Kephart. of Ebensburg, made a motor trip across the State. —General W. G. Price will command the Natiofial Guardsmen when they greet the Liberty Bell at Philadelphia on Thanksgiving day. —Minister T. H. Burch, who is home from Portugal, is being enter tained by friends in eastern counties. —G. C. Hetzel, the Delaware coun ty manufacturer, has been spending some time at Virginia Hot Springs. Judge F. J. O'Connor, who haa been ill, is improving. 1 DO YOU KNOW 1 That Harrisburg Una more churches to population than any city in the State? HISTORIC HARUISBURG This city was a mobilization for troops in the War of 1812. " "" u Dead Money—A Talk to Storekeepers Every article you have on your shelves which doe* not Bell repre sents dead money. It is not earning anything. It is taking up room. It is growing less In value as it gets older. It does not sell because people do not want it. It inay be a good article but they do not know It or believe in It. People PO KNOW about the good being advertised in their newspapers. If these are good goods they •will want them. It pays the retailer to co operate with »ewspaper adver tised products, to show them In ■the windows, and to push them.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers