( Dar* UVA SECCA 4> \ «► 'La Ditta PASQUALE GIUNTA SONS, importatrice (li ;; generi alimentari, del numero 1030 So. 9th St., Philadelphia, Pa., avvisa la sua clientela che ha ricevuto 2000 "UVA * SECCA", è che vende a 15 soldi la libbra. Volendone affrettatevi a mandare l'ordine. \ <[ La Ditta Pasquale Giunta Sons, può fare prezzi ristretti 1 per generi di grosseria, cioè: Olio d'Oliva marca "Romana", olio marca "La Siciliana", olio marca "Melillo", olio marca * • < [ 6 'Stella", dlio marca ' "San Domenico", Maccheroni, marca o "Giuseppe Garibaldi 1 , Maccheroni marca "Rinaldo", Formag • j; gio, Caciocavallo, Salsina, Ceci, Faggioli, Fave, Baccalà, Stoc • co-pesci, etc. 0 Scrivete subito e sarete servito in massima esattezza e pun j ; tualità. 4 ► % Il / , . ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ »»♦»»♦» PASQUALE GIUNTA SONS ♦ | 1030 So. 9th STREET PHILADELPHIA, PA. 4> # 1 > aa A AA4AAAAAAAAAAAAAA\aaaaaaaaaaaaaa AA AAA A aa^^^^ Case in Vendita Si vendono Case formate da 4 camere ognuna, situate a Plain Field, N. J., fornite con tutte crmodi tà, e cioè: Acqua, Gas, Elettrico, ecc. Si vendono al prezzo di $1.700 ciascuna Si vende a prezzo di sacrificio per ragioni di rim patrio una bellissima casa di 7 camere, con rimesca e pollaio, ed un estesissimo lotto pel prezzo di S3OOO Si vendono otti lotti nel New Brunswick, N. J. vicini alle linee tramviarie ed a poco distanza dalla stazione. Per informazioni scrivere Box 103, Indiana, Pa. Le spese di viaggio sono pagate | FROM A CLEAR SKY By AQNES C. BROGAN. Rosalia walked beside the tangled hedges of roses in her garden and look ed wistfully up and down the road. "Reckon," she said, "we may as well give up looking for some one to coma or something to happen Susan, we'va been looking a. good many years." The black cat who was the lone little woman's tonly companion, answered by a sympathizing purr. "Seems," Rosalia went on, "that we ought to get over expecting. If anything new or pleasant had been coming our way, it would have come when the old house was fresh, when father tended the rose vines" and kept them neat, when carriages drove past our door with happy folks coming to town for holiday, or stopping in to visit." Rosalia sank down upon a grassy mound and drew the cat into her lap, silent with her memories. "Carriages come no more down our quiet lane," she told the cat, "it's autos now, great whirring autos fly ing along the great white road." Rosalia rose to her feet smiling whim sically upward, "anything that will come our way these days, puss, must drop from out a clear sky." And as the woman stood gazing absently upward, a whirring sound coming not from the main road, rent the air. Then she saw it —the wonder thing with the out spread wings of a monster bird sweep ing the sky. And before Rosalia could catch her astonished breath, the won der thing circled, drooped, and still cir cling, came crashing toward her own neglected garden. Like a throbbing monster It lay in the wide space beyond the rose hedge; and Rosalia, trembling, rushed to a man who frantically beckoned from ita •ide. He was a young man and dead ly white. "You'd better get someone," he gasp ed, "to help carry me Inside. Nothing but a broken bone, I guess—awful Jar, bnt made landing—ln time." TTien the nan of the airplane fainted. When she returned with the assur ance that help would soon come, the young man turned upon the cushions *he propped about him. "It's probably nothing to worry about," he said slowly, "but you nev er can tell. Might be Internal injury. So I wondered—if you'd be kind enough—to write a sort of—message to a girl. You could mail It to her from me in case —" he smiled faintly. "Well, In either case," he said. So Rosalia brought her best note paper, and seated herself close to the great broken which had soared toward the sky. "Yes," she prompted. . -'Begin, it." the man said, steadily. 'Dearest,' that includes everything.'^ "Dearest," Rosalia wrote, and wait ed. "Today only, do I dare to tell you that which has long been in my heart, I love you. Always, I think I have loved you—" She still waited as he lay with closed eyes apparently think ing. Rosalia was thinking also. She had wished for something to happen. Something miraculous had happened, the 'something' had darted into her solitude from out a clear sky. Ro mance itself, was close to her, and she, as usual, but an onlooker. She thought of this dearest 'girl* far away, won dering If she had listened wearily for a step that never came back. But the 'Dearest girl' did not live, she was sure, In an old house set far back from the road, where briers and cares grew thick, to screen and choke young f!fe. The dearest girl's lover had not gone away years before. He was a young lover still. Neither had heart less parents sent him abroad to finish a medical education, killing romance— country romance they had called It, with one blow. And after twenty-five years the memory of that broken ro mance still had power to bring a mist to Rosalia's blue eyes. He had married—her own lover of long ago—a gay creature abroad, who had not lived long enough to return with her husband to his home. And when he had returned, taking up in later years his father's practice of medicine, Rosalia kept resolutely and proudly out of his way. As an auto rounded the curve, Jumped apprehensively to her feet and hurried Into the house. It was the same step she remembered, which now crossed the porch, as the doctor car ried the aviator upon his own broad back. The same confident laugh which echoed back from her sitting room. Presently the doctor sought her out. "We shall need you," he said, but his eyes were upon her, as he talked with his patient And later when Rosalia and her lov er of long ago stood_ together beside the airplane in the garden, the doctor bent to pick up a piece of paper. "Dearest," he read, "today only, do I dare to tell you that which has long been in my heart. I love you. Always, I think, I have loved you." He turned, as he was leaving, to put the paper Into Rosalia's hand. "I will come again this evening," he said. And as she would have continued the young lover's letter, she saw be neath her own handwriting a hastily added line: "This is my message to you, Rosalia, the message I, myself, would have written." And when the moon shone through the old house windows at evening, she found herself again listening for a step. (Copyright. 1319, Western Newspaper Union) £ What's All This Commotion About? "1 Should Use Judgment. Teacher —"When little George Wash ington told the truth about cutting down the cherry tree his father for gave him. Now. Henry, what lesson does this teach us?" Henry—"lt teaches us that we should learn when to tell the truth." Conception of Cultivation. Cultivation a generation ago meant acquaintance with letters and the fine arts, and some knowledge of at least two languages and literatures, and of history. The term "cultivation" is now much more inclusive. It includes ele mentary knowledge of the sciences, and it ranks high the subjects of his tory, government and economics.— Charles W. Eliot, in Atlantic. Not Always Happy. It is customary but I think it is a mistake, to speak of "happy" child hood. Children are often overanxious and acutely sensitive. Man ought to be man and master of his fate; but children are at the mercy of those aiound them. Mr. Rarey, the great horse-tamer, has told us that he has known an angry word to raise the pulse of a horse ten beats in a minute. Think then how it must affect a child! —Lord Avebury. Why Teachers Enjoy Life. Felix Novakowski was absent one morning, and when he came in after dinner he brought his teacher this ex cuse. "Plees teecher exkus Felix Novakowski he got lat vwen ve stud up de klock she stant stil unt blige his mother." * Vibrations Make Sound. Anything stretched is likely to be thrown into vibration, or made to tremble, by the force of the air blow ing against it. If it vibrates so fast as to produce the air waves that our ear can hear, then that is what we call sound. This is what happens to the telegraph wires when they hum; and if we put our hand on the tele graph pole we shall feel that the wires vibrate strongly enough to set the whole pole to trembling, too. When the air is quite still you will not hear the telegraph lines humming. Not For Him. Mrs. Newlywed—"Henry, do you re member Jack Watson? Well, he has just been married, and to a girl of ab solutely no family at all." Mr. New lywed (looking sadly around at the collection of his wife's relatives) — M A-a-a-h-h me! Some men do have good luck!" Love and Potatoes. A member of a well-known club, on t» 'lng asked to define "love." compared it !<• a potato—first, "because it shoots iroui the eyes," and secondly, "because it becomes iess by paring." Color in Sick Room. Have you tired of taking fruit, candy and flowers to a bedfast pa tient? Then take her an attractive box of handkerchiefs having a touch of color, a colored hem, a colored in itial or a colored flower embroidered on it. The color will enable the pa tient to quickly distinguish them from the bed clothes. Game in Mexico. Mexico cannot be said to offer a field for hunters of big game, and the term, "a sportsman's paradise," which is sometimes applied to it, is an ex aggeration. Among animals may be enumerated the peccaries or javelines, deer, rabbits, hares. The reptiles in clude alligators, turtles and iguanas. Whales, seals and sea lions are en countered on the Pacific coas\ —New York Telegram. HCAV TO Remove C'nders. to A medicine dropper nay be used i ! i :_- »<)(! rifect 111 removing cinders nun the eyelids !»y drawing them out !y suction al«»ng with the fluids that 'iave formed. A litrle pointed roll of oft paper also may prove useful. "*he Inept. Some people would try to <1 >dge a flood by hiding in the cellar. —Lafay- ette Courier. Our Sawed-Off Sermon. It is sometimes better for a young man to get the marble heart than to marry the girl and hr.ve to cat her marble cake. Turned White Overniflht. A black cat which was accidentally locked In a safe at Athens, Ga., dupli cated the feat of Marie Antoinette and a few other celebrities, if a dispatch to the Buffalo Express may be be lieved. When the safe was opened next morning the cat walked out, un harmed, but perfectly white. Caustic. "I tell you, hearing those star opera singers on the phonograph is almost as good as hearing them on the stage." "Far better. You can shut them off whenever you like on the phonograph." Words of Wisdom. "A man should inure himself to-vol untary labor and should not give up to indulgence an* pleasure, as they be get no good constitution of body nor knowledge of the mind/' —Socrates. Point to Be Remembered. The dog may be an enemy to quail, but before we tax him out of existence let us remember what a good friend he Is to man.—Charleston News and Courier.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers