ao <* o Cm ° ° t%] = Tubltsking = J //r 1" a Newspaper | J*\ : m| | for Business-folk —4 | |^T || Opportunity Wears A Mask if j| | That Is Why So Ij| 11 Recognize Her When She Calls § 1 RI And Opportunity never wears the same mask twice. One f||\. day she may come as a beggar, and we turn her from our §££>• f! door, and lo! before nightfall we realize that we have missed frjm | fortune by the breadth of the threshold. 1 1' I And the next day we welcome the beggar and lo! Oppor- | I tunity is not there, but has passed us by in her limousine. |; | j It is not true that Opportunity knocks only once in every | | man's life —she knocks many times, but because we have no | J iff insight we cannot see beneath the exterior, and few only can | jf recognize her. | How can we come to know Opportunity? 1| By studying her in the myriad aspects that she wears —by =% knowing her habitat —by acquiring that sixth sense which sees I beneath the outer veil of things as they seem into the true iSf L inwardness of things as they are. 3^ I It i& the constant aim and purpose of the Philadelphia | 1 PUBLIC LEDGER to present things as they are. It has | ! advertised: "The News As It Is, Not As It Seems." § A wrong viewpoint in the newspaper means a wrong § \ viewpoint in the home. The PUBLIC LEDGER is unveiling | Opportunity every day. It prints the business news of this | great business community and country and lays before its § readers, viewed from many angles, the meaningful develop- | ment of life in all its aspects. | Those who want to know Opportunity when she knocks, | should read the newspaper which is able to recognize the § essentials in their distinctiveness from the non-essentials, and i to treat them journalistically as they should be treated. | PHILADELPHIA | ) PUBLIC sga& LEDGER i e 2 Cents Daily § Cents Sunday; Sy % m MEMBER OF THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS 1 == Your neivtman will Trin§ |§ 5= the Public Ledger to your ' -S EE door early every morning. S! WEDNESDAY EVENING, HARRfSBURG TELEGRAPH MARCH 8, 1916. 7