♦ <> <► ♦ W UVA SECCA I ♦ La Ditta PASQUALE GIUNTA SONS, importatrice di ♦ generi alimentari, del numero 1030 So. 9th St., Philadelphia, X Pa., avvila la sua clientela che ha ricevuto 2000 "UVA X SECCA", è che vende a 15 soldi la libbra. | Volendone affrettatevi a mandare l'ordine. i La Ditta Pasquale Giunta Sons, può fare prezzi ristretti t per generi di grosseria, cioè: Olio d'Oliva marca ''Romana', ♦ olio marca "La Siciliana'', olio marca "Melillo", olio marca X ''Stella' 1 , dlio marca "San Domenico", Maccheroni, marca ♦ "Giuseppe Garibaldi", Maccheroni marca "Rinaldo", Formag gio, Caciocavallo, Salsina, Ceci, Faggioli, Fave, Baccalà, Stoc co-pesci, etc. Scrivete subito e sarete servito in massima esattezza e pun tualità. / . PASQUALE GIUNTA SONS v- n or ■ 1030 So. 9th STREET PHILADELPHIA, PA. tti Social Program For Churches To Be Outlined By World Leaders Syria Mosque, Pittsburgh, Headquari THE directors of the Third World's Christian Citizenship Conference to be held in Syria Mosque, Pittsburgh, Pa., from Novem ber 9 to 16, inclusive, declare that fully one-third of the Bible consists of God's specific messages to nations rather than to individuals. They say that the Bible is God's text-book in relation to world civic and political programs, and during the Pittsburgh Conference several bible students of international reputa tion will interpret these messages of the Bible in view of present-day needs. It is hoped that growing out of the discussion there will be evolved a program for which United Chris tianity throughout the world may stand, and that this declaration of principles will result in definite action on the part of churchmen the world over. The conference will, however, be non-sectarian and non-ecclesiastical In character. It will be evangelical but not evangelistic, the leaders say. It will be unique in that fully a *core of prominent statesmen and social reformers are to come from various foreign countries. Following Is a partial list of representatives from other nations: Dr. C. Telford Erickson, Overseer of Educational Work. Albania; Hon. Dr. Calderon, United States Ambassador from Bo livia; Dr. Ping Wen Kuo, Chairman Educational Commission of China; Mrs. Theodore Cory, and Dr. F. Her bert Stead of London, England; Mon sieur Paul Bellamy, Mayor of Nantes, France; and Madame Avril de Sainte Croix, Director National Council of French Women; Joaquin Mendez, Ambassador to United States from Guatemala; A. Hume Ford, Editor! :ers Christian Citizenship Conference. "Mid-Pacific," Honolulu; Dr. J. L. Pierson of Holland; Policarpo Bon illa, Former President of Honduras; Dr. Danjo Ebino, pastor Japan's lead ing Church, and Mrs. Danjo Ebina, Editor "New Woman"; Pierre Chotch, Minister of Justice of Montenegro; William J. Hanna, Ex-Chairman Board of Public Works. New South Wales; Bishop Bernt Stoeylen and wife of Christiansand, Norway; Countess d' Ursel, lady-in-waiting to queen of Belgium; William Thomas, Pastor ot Vaud, Switzerland; Dr. John Thomas and wife, Secretary Citizen's Union, Wales. Most of the speakers however will represent the United States. The Labor problem will be given a prominent place in the program of the conference. One of the nine world-commissions will report on Cap ital and Labor, Dr. Samuel Zane Bat ten of Philadelphia, its chairman, having spent two years in preparing this report. Several leaders in the economic field will give addresses on this sub ject, and Dr. John Royal Harris, in charge of the Department of Indus trialism of the National Reform Asso ciation will present tke results of his investigations of Bolshevism and other radical movements. On one of the Sundays it is prob able that a great labor mass meeting will be held for the discussion of in dustrialism, when one of America's leading authorities on the labor ques tion will talk. While the main meetings will be held in Syria Mosque, which seats about 5,000 people, it is confidently expected that over-flow meetings will be held in Soldiers' Memorial Hall, seating 4,000, and Carnegie Music Hall, which accommodates 2,000. , Oldtime News Service. In 1832 James Watson Webb, of the New York Courier and Enquirer, es tablished an express-rider service tween New York and Washington which gave his paper valuable pres tige. In the following year the Jour nal of Commerce started a rival serv ice, which enabled it to print Wash ington news in New York within 4S hours of its occurrence. The most notable express-mail service of all was the "pony express," which carried messages by relays of riders across mountains and deserts and through hostile Indian territory from St. Louis to San Francisco, covering 1,960 miles in 10 days. Rusty Steel. To clean rusty steel, well oil the rusty parts and set aside in this state for two or three days. Then wipe dry with clean rags and polish with emery or pumice stone. When very rusty and a high polish is desired rub the article with a little slack lime. Youthful Diplomacy. Pretty Teacher (severely)—" Joh nny! Johnny Stubbs! You are whis pering again." Johnny (a smart boy) —"Please, I am only telling Winnie Wingles what nice things all the gen tlemen said about you when you walk ed along the street." REV. JOHN THOMAS Noted Welsh Preacher. REV. JOHN THOMAS, general secretary of the Welsh Forward Movement, will address the Third World's Christian Citizenship Conference to be held in Pittsburgh luring Armistice week, November 9 to 18. He will bring a personal mes sage from his friend, Lloyd George. ' i SCOTLAND'S GREATEST CHURCH SENDS ORATOR TO PITTSBURGH THE pastor of Scotland's greatest church—Dr. Norman Maclean— is to be one of the score or more of speakers from abroad at the World's Christian Citizenship Confer ence to be held in Pittsburgh, Novem ber 9 to 16 inclusive. HK £■ m i"v ■ ';5 ,>? % I'*'''£"o DR. NORMAN MACLEAN He was appointed to St. Cuthbert's Point Church, Edinburgh, in 1915, which now has a membership of near ly 4,000. Dr. Maclean was born in the Isle of Skye in 1869, and was the son of a schoolmaster. He was the second of three brothers who were ordained in succession ministers of a lonely Hebridean parish. Then he became minister of the romantic parish of Glengarry, made famous by lan Mac laren. Afterward—or to be exact, in 1903 —he became the minister of Col inton Church of which Robert Louis Stevenson's grandfather was minister for forty years. In 1910 he succeed ed the Very Rev. Dr. Donald Macleod as minister of The Park Church, Glas gow, of which Principal Caird was once minister. And in 1915 he was appointed to St Cuthbert's, Edin burgh. The Candle In History. The cult of the candle plays a large role in Roman, Jewish and Eastern ecclesiastical history; and many are the customs that have t£elr birth In some magical or ritualistic use to which the candle has been put. In some parts of Ireland, for instance, it was usual on 1 Christmas eve to burn a large candle which no one was per mitted to snuff except those who bore the name of Mary. Mendoza Is Old City. Mendoza is the metropolis of west ern Argentina. It is a city of some size carefully planned and able to stand comparison with any town in the new world or the old one the point of municipal beauty. It looks distinctly new, but as a matter of fact it is one of the oldest towns in the western hem isphere. It was founded fifty years be fore the well-known settlement of Jamestown in Virginia, while the fa thers and mothers of the Pilgrims were still living peacefully in England. V/hst 12 Genius? Genius is a handsome name fre quently si von to hard-working men after they have finished a tough job.— The American .Magazine. On the Move We can say this for the somnambu list —he is no idle dreamer. —Bostor Transcript. V Qt> L * GEORGE FITgV, Author of At GoodVOic 3Tv/ash v <5/ » A etenograpner is a young lady who takes denvn t!le hard thunk thoughts of her employer in a note book and afterwards edits and im proves them on a typewriter, as soon as she has done up hor cuffs, re vised her hair, manicured her nails and modified her complexion. There was a time when there were no stenographers, and business offi ces were gloomy places, in which men swore and wore hats, smoked cigars and kept their feet on the tables and their coats on hooks in the closets. Then the cheery sten ographer was invented and through her coming, most of the gloom ha* been dispelled. Stenographers are manufactured by business colleges out of shop girls, farmers' daughters and assistant housekeepers, with now and then a high school graduate as a prize pack age. They have good educations and can spell almost any small word by ear. However, the memory of the average stenographer is somewhat defective, which makes it almost im possible for her to understand her notes after they have stood for 8 few minutes. ® Stenographers are great linguists and are forever inventing new words find phrases A stenographer will write "Supreme Cuff." "snubopgin aiion," "Witnesses be noses and says" and other remarkable improve ments on the language, without giv ing ft a thought Indeed most of them are very modest over these ( irtikiwpenti and will take haiX an Work Involved in Making Rifle. The English rifle, the Lee-Enfleld, fires 34 shots a minute. It is made In 94 parts, involving over 1,000 opera tions. Good Nurse. When it comes to coddling Imaginary wrongs the average man is a faithful nurse.—Cincinnati Times-Star. Fa-cs and Figgers. A ' Oman's face is li«»r fortune for !!»*» !' t-' a that with it she usually is • !•> hi ml a man who measures his bank account in six figures. Went Him One Better. "I Nive yi.u very much, papa," said V r-ye;:r-o!d Edna, as she climhed on knee. "I love you, dear, '• n > >u ire a good girl." replied her < !•. "Hi::, papa," said Edna, "I 'IM! even when you ain't 110 good." STENOGRAPHERS. hour of their rateable time to convince him he is entitled to all the credit of the improvement. Stenographers get from a week to $lO,OOO a year and earn lees and more than this. A poor stenographer is dear at (3 a week, while there is always a waiting list of eager em ployers for the $l5O a mo-th stenog f i They sometimes spare a moment to typewrite a letter or two. - rapher who sharpens her pencils in her spare time, and writes letters which can be "signed but not read." Stenographers should always dress modestly and refrain from anything but business convocation during of fice hours. Unless they do this, thea tre very Likely to become million • aire's wives, or to meet some other equally terrible fiat*. «t
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers