8 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Established its' PUBLISHED BY THE TELEGRAPH PRINTING CO. E. J. STACKPOLE President and Editor-in-Chief F. R. OYSTER Secretary GUS M. STEINMETZ Managing Editor Published every evening (except Sun day) at the Telegraph Building, 216 Federal Square. Both phones. Member American Newspaper Publish ers' Association. Audit Bureau of Circulation and Pennsylvania Aseocl ated Dailies. Eastern Office, Fifth Avenue Building, New York City, Hasbrook," Story & Brooks. Western Office, Advertising Building, Chicago, 111., Robert E. Ward. Delivered by carriers at six cents a week. Mailed to subscribers at $3.00 a year in advance. Entered at the Post Office In Harrl.i burg. Pa., as second class matter. Cnora dally average circulation (or the three month* ending: Nov. 30, IDI3. Xh 21,794 ★ Average foe the year I*l4 Average for the year IBIS—10.J*? Average for the year UK—IJ.JJJ Average for the year lttl—lT.M* Average for the year 1910—18,-»1 The above Ngurra are aet. All re turned, aaaold and damaged coplea «e --dacted. SATURDAY EVENING, DEC. 18 For unto us a child U torn, unto us a son is given; and government shall pe upon his shoulder; and his name shall be called Wonderful, Counsellor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace. — ISAIAH 9:6. CHRISTMAS PLANNING THE coming week will' be given over to Christmas planning. It will bring with it long hours and busy days, but you should take joy in the preparations. Christmas isn't a season —It is a state of mind. If you haven't Christmas within yourself there is no Christmas for you, and if there is no Christmas, life isn't worth the ltvlng, for without it you are a selfish, take-all-give-nothing creature whose loss the world would little mourn. Eut if you have the Christmas spirit, what a world of difference It makes! Burdens are lightened, shopping is a pleasure, giving is a delight and the bleak December world becomes a land of bright good cheer and kindliness. Then the stocking at the hearthstone wakes old memories in your breast and you tell the little ones about you of the Christmases of long ago; you recall with warmth in your heart and a catch in your voice thoee dear days of childhood that live but in your memory; when Santa Claus* pack, most likely, contained few of the elaborate presents of to-day. Back in the little home it was indeed a boun tiful Christmas when the stocking con tained more than a few sticks of candy, a few nuts, an orange and per haps a Christmas horn or a jumping jack. But in the light of the afterglow these trifles take on a luster beyond anything in the toy stores to-day, and your boys and girls catch the true spirit of the great holiday as you tell them about , Santa's visit when chimneys were all of a size capable of accommodating even his rather pudgy old bodv. And thus the Christmas fires are' lighted in their young hearts and thus are blown to flame in yours the coals mayhap you thought long dead. . , _ Get busy with your Christmas plan ning it you want to get the enjoyment the day holds for you. Be young in thought and generous in deed. T*iis Is a children's holiday. Celebrate It as a child. Thus at once you serve your self and the world at large, for Christ mas has grown beyond faith or creed, in it are embodied the best thoughts and the customs of men of all races and all religions. It is a feast day, a joy day. a love day, for all the world. N-ow that the Board of Public Grounds and Buildings and the City Planning Commission have exchanged views in formally regarding the proposed treat ment of the Capitol Park zone and the city's relation thereto, we may expect things to begin to move in the way of definite development. Governor Brum baugh Is understood to be strongly in favor of plans and specifications which can be submitted to the next Legisla ture and upon which final action may be taken with respect to the grading and planting and other features of the extended park. A BUSBNESS LEGISLATURE ALREADY we hear discussion of the Legislature of 1917. By reason of the early primaries of the presidential year there are pre monitory signs of political activity here and there. Names of prospec tive candidates are occasionally heard. Albeit the wise bird on the party roost is keeping one eye open and doing little crowing. It is not always the early bird that confiscates the worm. It's going to be a local option year, cays one, while his neighbor pipes up with the emphatic statement that the real issues will be humanitarian In their character. Still anottier Insists that revision of the State's revenue system will engage the attention of the lawmakers and that this Issue will be paramount. And so It goes— a general hunting for alleged issues with which to give the campaign an appeal which it Is hoped will enlist the attention of voters. Realizing the importance of sub mitting the question of local option to the people in some acceptable form and the necessity, perhaps, for s'omo SATURDAY EVENING, equitable revenue legislation, thls| newspaper is nevertheless of the | 'opinion that the Legislature of 1917 will be choaen with reference to the fitness of the members of the Senate and House to consider and act upon measures designed to protect and en courage the great business and in dustrial interests of Pennsylvania. These interests have already suffered to a degree little realized by the tlioorlsts and demagogues who have been given wide latitude in the en actment of a body of laws that in many respects are practically im possible of enforcement, thus Impos ing upon the great interests affected burdens unreasonable and without excuse. Nor have the theoretical gentlemen with their legislative panaceas been | entirely to bis me; much of the re-1 sponslblllty rests upon the politicians of all parties who have sought to gain ' favor wherever possible by giving their support to measures which they privately admitted were unwise, if not positively a menace to the welfare of the State, but which they had not the courage to oppose. Business Interests and the armies of worklngmen whose welfare de pends upon stable industrial and manufacturing conditions are likely to have a good deal to say in the choosing of the next Legislature. This Is a great Commonwealth In which we live and its prosperity rests upon the resources which should be developed for the benefit of all the people. Our manufacturing prestige should be maintained and these things depend upon sensible laws, wholesome regulation and fairness to all con cerned—both capital and labor. It ought not to be necessary for every businessman to employ a staff of legal advisers, and a Legislature composed largely of businessmen, In stead of lawyers of a certain type and others indifferent to the substantial business Interests of the State, would be a refreshing change, THE LOGICAL PLACE IT is to be hoped that when the Workmen's Compensation Board meets here next Tuesday that Jt will promptly move the headquarters of the referee for this district back to llurrisburg. Just what prompted the moving of the headquarters from Har risburg to Lancaster when the district is composed of Franklin, Cumberland, Perry, York, Adams, Lebanon. Dauphin and Lancaster is beyond comprehen sion when one considers that the referee is to be the public servant of the workers of the district, not their master. Commissioner of Lubor John Price Jackson, who is ex officio member of the board, has lived in llarrlsburg long enough to appreciate that this is the logical center of State activities, especially for this portion of Pennsyl vania, and Harry A. Mackey, chair man of the board, must realize the same thing from the time he has spent here preparing to launch the compen sation system. It was not the idea of Governor Brumbaugh in outlining the districts to have the headquarters in one end of a division. In selecting Wllliamsport, Scranton, Erie and Harrisburg he picked out centers. It would be a good plan for the Compensation Board to get the same idea. CHANGEABLE CONGRESSMAN PAGE, of North Carolina, Democrat, and a mem ber of the committee on ap propriations, has written a letter to Josephus Daniels' newspaper, the Raleigh Observer, in which criticises the President's plan for preparedness. He points out a serious defect in the President's counsels by emphasizing the fact that a year ago Mr. Wilson regarded the question of preparedness as "academic." He may change his mind again within a year, Mr. Page suggests. A TIMELY HINT SAYS Health Officer Raunlck in his current Health Bulletin: "To prevent housing evils is more economical and humane than to wait and then cure their victims." This is another way of putting the old saw which has it that "an ounce of prevention Is worth a pound of cure." Dr. Raunick has put into a very few words the whole doctrine of the advo cates of proper housing conditions. Mali is largely a creature of environ ment, and while there have been some who have gone from the log cabin to the White house they are few indeed, but even they are more numerous than the men and women who have attained to high places from the slums of the city. Dr. Raunick's bulletin is interesting and helpful. The city Health Bureau, under his direction, is working along advanced lines and the report of its activities reachihg the public every month through this little publication brings it Into close touch with the pub lic and Improves relations that ought to be cordial and co-operative. Y CAN'S DOUBLE ROLE YUAN-SHI KAI is the Dr. Jekyl and Mr. Hyde of the nations. He sheds one role for another with startling rapidity. He is a light ning change artist of a type that would have made Old Sleuth green with envy. First a monarchist of pronounced opinions he swung rapidly to the front when it became apparent that China was shaping itself for a republican form of gov ernment, and when he became presi dent he likened himself to George Washington. Then, when a return to monarchy was first bruited, Tuan emitted the following sentiment: "I have taken Washington, not Napoleon, as my model. Who Is the most admired figure in history? It IB Washington. Why should I want to be a Napoleon when I might become another Wash ington V Two months ago, asked what he would do If pressed to don the Im perial Robe, he replied: "I shall be [compelled to go into exile and spend the rest of my life under the protec tion of a foreign government." Yet to-day we find him the ac knowledged emperor of China. Per haps Yuan was sincerely an advocate of the republican form of govern ment at the start and changed his mind only when he saw It failing, but the probabilities are that from the beginning ho played his cards so as to keep himself head of affairs no matter what would happen and with the throne as a possibility in the back ot' liis head all the time. T>oUtcc* uv I'~pt>uvoi{ttra>vta By the Kx-OommlcteemM Commissions for over 500 county officers elected at the November elec tion are being prepared at the office of the Secretary of the Commonwealth for new officials whose terms will be gin the first Monday in January. A number of them have been signed by the Governor and sealed with the great seal of the State, the required bondß having been tiled. This week the commissions for the three Superior Court judges and other judicial officers elected in November were sent out and 'over 1,000 justices of the peace have also been commis sioned. In the list of county officers who will receive commissions are 46 prothonotaries, 57 registers of wills, 56 recorders of deeds, 61 officials known as dedimus potestatum, who have cer tain powers In administering oaths, 51 clerks of quarter sessions courts, 50 clerks of oyer and terminer courts, 56 clerks of orphans' courts, 43 sheriffs, 53 coroners and one county treasurer. Although the next primary election will not be held until May, State offi cials have already begun to prepare for the riling of nominating petitions, which will be In order In the Spring. The blanks for the petitions are being prepared and will be ready for candi dates when the time comes for them to be Issued. To nominate a State ticket next year will require 2,954 signatures. Presidential and United States sena torial candidates must have 100 sign ers in each of at least ten counties; tor State Treasurer. Auditor General and congressman-at-large 100 voters in each of at least five counties; for Congress and State senator, 200 voters, and for legislators, 100. No petitions may be signed before February 18. —Congressman John R. K. Scott has sold a residence in North Sixteenth street, Philadelphia. —Ex-Auditor General A. E. Sisson Is said to be thinking about being a candidate for national delegate from the Erie district. —Three of Ilazleton's school di rectors have gone on a strike, refusing to serve on the property committee, v —Counsel fighting the election of W. T. W. Jones as mayor of Coates ville yesterday issued a challenge to Jones to assume the office. The pro ceedings are under way before a master. —Calvin B. Jones, a Philadelphia taxpayer, yesterday brought an action against the municipal court In Phila delphia, contending that it was con ducted in an extravagant manner. —W. C. Harvey has been appointed postmaster of East Pittsburgh and there is a row on among Democrats because they contend he is a new comer. —Members of the Central Demo cratic Club talked until late last night on their plans for the remodeling of the property bought for a clubhouse. —Mayor Smith is working out his plans for the launching of his admin istration and yesterday received one of the leading Franklin party men, who assured him of support In council. —>-The prolVe of Pittsburgh's munici pal affairs appears to have gone to smash. Witnesses refused to be sworn. Scranton papers say: "James E. Roderick, chief of the Bureau of Mines and Mining, with headquarters at Har risburg, has been officially notilied of the action of the local Judges in ap pointing David T. Williams as the new mine inspector in this county. The ap pointee Is to report for duty January 1. Chief Roderick/Is to reapportion the districts meanwhile." Governor Brumbaugh is understood to be working with the object of clear ing up all of the big appointments which he has to make by New Year's Day. The Governor hoped to have the matters in shape for announce ments by Christmas day, but it does not seem likely. The appeintments will include the Supreme court Justice to succeed the late John P. Elklns and the Public Service Commissioner to succeed Mayor-elect Thomas B. Smith of Philadelphia, neither of which se lection the Governor will discuss. Brigadier General C. M. Clement, of Sunbury, senior brigadier, is said to be in line for the major generalship of the guard; E. B. Dorsett, of Mansfield, Tioga county, for deputy secretary of agriculture and C. D. Wolfe, of Wil liamsport, has a look in for State Are marshall to succeed Joseph L. Bald win. Announcement of a number of appointments In the Workmen's Com pensation and State Insurance Fund bureaus was expected to-day, but none came. A. B. Hitchcock, former legis lator from Tioga, secretary of the Re publican State committee under the Wasson regime. Is slated for a place, but everyone at the Capitol is keeping quiet about it. Otn CHAMBER OF COMMERCE [From the Johnstown leader.] The Harrisburg Chamber of Com merce. having taken thought of the need for a building code, urges mem bers to place sprinklers In their build ings, thus reducing their fire insurance premiums and protecting themselves against loss of trade while recovering from tires. The Harrisburg Chamber issues a circular to the businessmen, giving them advice on the sprinkler question, and using the advice to point the way to a good building code. The plan is excellent. It is not necessarv for a city to wait until the last detail of a complete code has been written and enacted before getting busy on some of the improvements which can be made at once. SOON OVER By Wing Dinger In the foreman rushes dally To my office, and to mo Bounds Ills warning of the dead line Very, very forcibly. Cares not that I'm almost crazy As with piles of work I fight. Simply says; "Bat out some verse, now. Or there'll be no poem to-night." Some days, in this busy season. Desperation I did face. And I'd plead with him to give me Just about ten minutes' grace. But with heart of stone he'd spurn me And rush out in his wild rage, Grab some type, fill up my column, And proceed to close the page. Thus upon my nerves he's worked, bo. That I dread the hour when he Will come rushing to my office And defiance hurl at me. Glad this rush will soon be over For the strain's begun to tell. And ere long I'd have to order I For myself a padded cell. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH When a Feller Needs . bv^iggs TELEGRAPH'S PERISCOPE | —After considerable yowling the suffragists have elected aa national president Mrs. Catt. —"Why not revive the ancient but very beautiful custom of lighting candles in the windows of all our homes on Christmas Eve?" —Erie Times. We're doing it. —A prophet of the new year fore casts as follows: "A stormy national election Is prophesied. Bitter, unex pected political complications and a party split of far-reaching effect are foretold. Army, navy and civil ser vice problems will be much discus sed." This is what is technically known as playing it safe. —Somebody ought to censor the war news coming from the Oscar 11. —As yet no city has offered SIOO,- 000 for the Bull Moose convention. 1 EDITORIAL COMMENT " Italian soldiers get a little wine each day. But we seem to miss the old-time Roman punch.—Columbia State. At his wedding President Wilson may realize how it feels to be as unimpor tant as a Vice-President. —Chicago News. "Our idea of a sinecure: lock-tender on the Panama Canal."—Wall Street Journal. Ours is stoker oh a German liner. —Columbia State. The Italian army would be able to make more progress in the trench war fare if it would let military traditions slide and call the generals foremen.— Boston Transcript. |/" \ % £ That Candle For Your Window Have you made arrangements for burning a candle in your front window on Christmas Eve? Harrisburg will revive this charming custom of Old Eng land, and many burning can dles will send forth silent greetings to the neighbors. Your house should have a candle In every window. You will surely want to be one of those who will observe this most delightful of customs. > THE PEST OF THE SOUTH By Frederic J. Haskin THERE is a wild animal In the United States which causes more annual loss In life and property than ever the tiger did in India. This dangerous animal is the ma larial mosquito, scientifically known as "Anopheles." The latest estimate by a scientific authority, Dr. W. Deade rerick, of Hot Springs, Ark., places the annual cost of the ravages of Ano pheles at $100,000,000 and at least half of this falls upon the southern states, where the mosciulto is most abundant. The damage done by the mosquito in this country is due to the transmis sion of malaria l>y Its bite and the problem of preventing malaria Is sim ply and wholly that of eliminating the mosquito. In the Philippines and in Panama this same mosquito has been almost completed exterminated, but in the United States conditions are en tirely different, and a great co operative plan to study them is now under way. Leading scientific men of twenty states are taking part In the study, which is conducted under the auspices of the bureau of entomology of the Agricultural Department. The Delta valley of the Mississippi river, which has been selected as the scene of an intensive study of the habits of the Anopheles and the best means of killing him. Is one of the richest agricultural regions In the United States. It extends from Cairo, 111., to the Gulf of Mexico and Is from fifty to a hundred miles wide. Long ago an arm of the sea reached up the present Mississippi valley as far as Cairo, and this estuary was filled by the river with the sifted silt of twenty states, making a soil of incomparable richness. The region is extremely low and fiat and cut by innumerable creeks and bays, in which the malarial mos- m STATE FROM W TO DW This is the first time in many years that the river has closed before Christmas, and many people living in Marietta and other towns along the Susquehanna have been making ad vantage of the freeze-over and filling their houses with ice. It is too rough for skating in most places, however. "Adam and Eve" have made their appearance In New Castle as the twins born Into a family of foreign ers recently. One says that they will surely find New Castle to be the proper setting for the .Garden of Eden into which they have entered. Operatic selections for the Ma hanoy City miners who work In the colliery there were the pleasant treat given them by eight Chicago Univer sity girl students, who descended into the mine to bring a little light Into the dark bowels of the earth. A Milton (vouple yesterday made a visit to Reading on a still hunt for a baby. The husband applied to the city authorities and took them Into his confidence, explaining that he wanted a baby to give to his wife for a Christmas present. Their search was fruitless. They would have done well to come to Harrisburg, where the babies are just waiting to be taken away from the Children's Aid Society. "Sweets to the sweet" and "Nuts to the nutty" are old axioms, but in New Castle they are giving "Moose to the Moose," who recently had a big celebratory banquet and were fed with the luscious gastronomlcal-Joy glvlng animal. [ The famous Conwell lecture, "Acres DECEMBER 18, 1915. Quito finds an ideal breeding place for his myriad offspring-. The whole re gion is inosqulto-infested to an ulmost incredible degree and malaria Is ex tremely prevalent. To determine how much the pro ductiveness of this region is actually reduced by malaria is one of the main purposes of the Investigation. The dis ease Is almost wholly confined to rural communities and is especially preva lent in the South. Its death toll is not the worst of its evils. Malaria is one of the most enervating of diseases. It saps the energy of a people and causes them to lose an Immense pro portion of the working days every year. To Give Lectures lantern slides, charts and tables to be used in connection with lectures In rural communities are being prepared. This material will graphically explain to the farmer the menace of the mos quito's presence, the economic loss he causes and how he may be extermi nated. The destruction of the wigglers In the pools and streams and the screening of the houses are the most Important measures in the southern United States. For the destruction of ' wigglers various small species of fish have been found the most effective means. In Panama the water is already alive with fish, and it is only necessary to cut the grass and brush In the shal low water so that the fish can invade It. and destroy the wigglers. In this country, however, wiggler-eatlng fish are not so abundant, and it is neces sary to breed them in large quantities and ship them to all parts of the coun try. This is the more Important be cause the oil, which has been so effect ive in Panama, cannot be used in agri cultural districts, as it damages the crops. of Diamonds," which is being given in this city to-night, might well have had Its moral applied to the region around the home of J. F. Brown, of Philadelphia, yesterday morning. Inadvertently $3,000 worth of jewels were thrown out of a third story window into the street, and the next morning before dawn crowds were searching in the snow for the lost treasures with matches and lanterns. Our Daily Laugh j * W OF A KINO jaL ( Creditor: You i-V c ouMn't go ■Ate« around in your fine automobile if V3pjj]l]; HrTvP you P* 1 " 1 your Debtor: That's I'm glad you look at it in th« tame light that I CHANGED. JWTIJjLI She: Tou used to make an awful exhibition of M yourself when you \\ He: And now I'm an exhibition ~V~ THK Stoning (Eljat The Christmas even candle lighting movement inaugurated in Harrisburg by the Telegraph hus spread like wildflri- Dealers have been compelled to orde* special quantities of candles and iw sonic homes candles arc being decoi"* ated in colors, holly, poinsettlas atii. spruce being the favorite designs tvnd red and green the colors. The Tele graph has set the example by purchas ing a very large candle, some feet ill height and as thick as a man's l<fl| which will be lighted on Christma* eve and will burn until exhausted, the movement has had the hearty en dorsement of Mayor Royal, of many clergymen and of many clubs, includ ing the Harrisburg Chapter, Daugh ters of the American Revolution; Key stone Chapter, United States Daugh *®, rs °" 1812; Harrisburg Walking Club, the Story Telling Club, the Com monweal Club of the Young Women's Christian Association and the Roberta JJisbrow Lloyd Sunshine Society. • • • Some rare old pen and ink sketches of ( amp Curtin in its palmiest days are more or less informal exhibition in City Clerk Miller's office. Mr. Miller got the pictures from a friend who is trying to dispose of them and while i the negotiations are 011 between the salesman and the city clerk the casual visitor to the city offices gets the bene- I 11 " le ar * exhibit. The views are all of earlier days of the camp and | show the scores of citizens In all man ner of dress, drilling in the "rookie" I squads; the uniformed soldiers wheel ing and marching and countermarch ing; the trained troops en route to the • trains in the old Union Station. » » • C hristlan Jacob Huttor, who found ed the Unabhaniger Republikaner, the Allentown newspaper which suspended a few days ago after a career of 1« years, was the great grandfather of Frank L. Hutter, of this city, and of other members of the family in this section. The paper was in the Hutter family for twenty-live years. Harvey M. Watts, who is to be one of the speakers at the Lafayette Alumni dinner here next month, is one o! the most widely-known news papermen in Philadelphia and also one of the best authorities in country, uncaught by the government, on meterology. MY. Watts is con nected with the Philadelphia Ledger staff which also contains Herman L. Collins, another Lafayette man. Mr. Watts is a frequent contributor'to the editorial page of the Ledger and his signed articles cover a wide range. • • • If what men who observe tNe at tendance at moving picture p>aces say is correct the display of toys at the stores is attracting the normal crowds of youngsters. "Kids are go ing to see the toy displays Just the same as they did last year and the year before in spite of the movies," said this man. "I heard that the movies were such an attraction that the boys and girls were going to sec them and neglecting the toylands and similar places in the department stores. Don't you believe it. Go see the toys yourself and you will see the usual number of kiddies about the spaces." « » • These are the days when Postmas ter Sites is living the life of the hunt ed. Nine out of every ten persons who have a complaint to make at the Post Office insist upon seeing the postmaster. No one else will do. As the business Is mounting and there are occasional red cross stamps on letters instead of postage complications are bound to arise. » ♦ » "This is the first time I have been here for quite a while," said ex-Sen ator Lewis Emery, Jr., of Bradford, former candidate for Governor, on a visit to the "Hill" yesterday. "I have had some strenuous times in this city ' and 1 recall my days in the Legislature : as big ones in my life." * • * Senator Charles W. Sones. of the | Wllliamsport district, was here during the week looking into matters con -1 nected with workmen's compensation. J The senator will probably be a candl date for re-election from his district. " at the next election and his friends say 1 that he will have no opposition for ' renominatlon. ; | VEIL KNOWN PEOPLE —S. T. Bcdine, elected a director ' of the Lehigh Valley Railroad, is head 1 of the United Gas Company. —David A. Reed, who was here a 1 few days ago on workmen's compen ' sation affairs, was chairman of the 5 commission which framed the original ■ acts. 1 —I. K. Campbell, Allegheny county ! commissioner, spoke yesterday at the f freeing of the nineteenth bridge in that 1 county. —Thomas A. Wright, new head of s the State Street Railway Association, ' <s head of the Wilkes-Barre railway ' lines. —S. D. Dimmick, of Scranton, has ' been made chief engineer of the Lacka " wanna's mines. —A. H. Storrs has been nominated ' for president of the Northeastern ' Pennsylvania Engineers' Society. I DO VCXJ KNOW 1 That Stcelton steel is used In bridges in almost every state? HISTORIC HARRISBURG n a French duke was one of the ilrst 1 foreign notables to visit Harrisburg e ifter it had been laid out and he com mented on the number of inns. t ■ LETTERS TO THE EDITOR 5 - * ? 2 SAYS SMOKEHS COULD HELP , 1 To the Editor of the Telegraph: I am a newcomer to your town and have been reading your account of the I half-fed and half-clothed school chli -1 lirfn iii this city. lam also a smoker. I It has occurred to me that if we could get one thousand or more of the ' smokers in this city to contribute, say twenty-live cents of their cigar money, each week to the relief of these chlV dren It would be a great help. We oug&i to be able to get from one to fo;* thousand contributors in the city. Could you get the lady who first brought ibis matter to your attention to head this movement? If vou care to take this matter up, or think It worth trying, you can use tUf In any way you see proper. KeßpP< \'!i:wis HOOVER. §O9 North Sixth Street. Footprints of Success "Watch your step" if you want vour footprints to spell success on the sands of time. And especially watch your step" when it comes to advertls '"fjon't wander off into the by paths full of thorns to ci tch your '"stick to the main road. Use newspapers and bring the force of your message directly into the home 1 The advertising success paths of to-day are marked with news- I paper guide posts.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers