ITublishing lAi a Newspaper I ff|\ for Business-folk —6 i /CST Look at the Sky Line 11 Instead of the Pavement || Who has his feet on solid earth but his vision in § the skies, travels with ten-league boots. 11\ Practicality and imagination united have brought | jjT 4/ | the greatest achievements in every lineof endeavor. | Mr § Too many travel life with the line of vision down- I|J | ward and see only the small things and the im- | | minent, and seldom the Big Beyond. | If The pavement is tracked and the pavement is - | If uninspiring and vision-confining, but the sky line | If of the city is the biography of its growth. § ¥ And it is this way with life. ¥ Comparatively few young men realize that it is their own lack of vision—their own unfamiliarity with things beyond the immediate scope of their JE present activities —that holds them back from ¥ achievement. j | T HE Philadelphia PUBLIC LEDGER consist- | | ently has endeavored to give its readers some- | | thing of the sky line of life. It has sought that | | news which is prescient of the future; and its edi- | | torial policy has been strong, virile and uplifting. | Those who believe it worth while to know of the | , | higher and broader significance of news will find § | in the PUBLIC LEDGER a textbook of life and § | , ideals that will prepare them for graduation into | I the success class. I | PHILADELPHIA | 1 PUBLIC LEDGER I 2 Cents Daily 5 Cents Sunday jf Your newsman will {"L deliver the Public Ledger H to your door 9 early ' S every morning . MEMBER OF THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS |§ f§ ic J. H WEDNESDAY EVENING, HARRIBBURO TELEGRAPH 'MATtCH 22. WIS,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers