♦♦♦♦ I SST UVA SECCA ♦ X La Ditta PASQUALE GIUNTA SONS, importatrice di ♦ generi alimentari, del numero 10Ho So. 9th St.. Philadelpliia,* X Fa., avvila la sua clientela che ha ricevuto 5000 Casse | di "UVA SECCA". i . Volendone affrettatevi a mandare lordine. La Ditta Pasquale Giunta Sons, può fare prezzi ristretti . per generi di grosseria, cioè: Olio d'Oliva marca "Romana", olio marca "La Siciliana", olio marca "Melillo", olio marca f 'Stella", dlio marca "San Domenico", Maccheroni, marca o "Giuseppe Garibaldi", Maccheroni inarca "Rinaldo", Formag gio, Caciocavallo, Salsina, Ceci, Faggioli, Fave, Baccalà, Stoc co-pesci, etc. Scrivete subito e sarete servito in massima esattezza e pun o tualità. o » PASQUALE GIUNTA SONS Ì[ 1030 So. 9th STREET PHILADELPHIA, PA. o • o • 1 V' 4> , * 4 > i < J • . _ .i PDsrisCN WsV dov ; \'OU setif rilM WSSTf w oCM - } U&C wg£K 16 LCCK TcR A 3bD < ..O ®EFCfc~ V • W- •, i>'7i SOMET'INIG SOFT',., ffe! - 1 ill 1 10 EES JTD ITy - ®v- J ; Hadn't Got to That. Philanthropic Person —"Have yon never striven ray friend, to attain a higher life?" Mundane Marmaduke— "Weil, mister, we ain't got past corned beef an' beer yet, but whether well ever reach champagne and chicken I can't blooratn' well say."—Sydney Bul letin. Tea Testing. To ascertain whether art!fl< lal color ing matter has been added to tea. place a quantity on wl.tte paper and rub with knife to a fine powder. Now brush the paper with a brush, and If any prusslan blue has been used there will be llttHl streaks on the paper. Hired Man's Life Saved. James was bowlegged and felt It his duty to whip every boy that re minded him of the fact. When he vie- Ited in the country the hired man laughed and told him he couldn't stop r pig if ho tried. James told his moth er what the man had said then add ed: "He's pretty big, and I'm mighty glad he didn't say I was bowlegged." Production Wins. Wealth does not come by rhe most diligent saving, but by the most dill gent producing. Men and nations who pinch the pennies hardest are ueve* the richest DO YOU KNOW WHY -- - The Right Kind ol Advertising Pays ? jjg faw I OUtHT TO MOLD S eOtIpHTCTDQ- eAOw*->. | ; % M *^A CxRT.'ON :V Y " ' Mendozn 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. Invisible Airplane Wings. Wings of cellulose acetate, being transparent, make an airplane Invisi ble at the height of a few thousand feet, also increasing the operator's field of vision. Sheets one one-hun dredth-incb thick are about as strong as the ordinary wing cover, and the weight of nine ounces to the square yard is but slightly greater. The rap- Id spread of a tear when started Is a disadvantage that may be overcome with a re-enforcing of loosely woven silk. Went Him One Better. "I -'ivc yon vry much, papa," said • r vr- i Kdin. as she climbed on •r •' •'»<••• > !;>»••>. "1 love you, dear, i m .1 ,i :>oo •;! c\rn w hen you ain't no good." Y.'f. !: Is Genius? Gen in* N f handsome name fre quently gi\e:i !o hard-working men alter they have iinished a tough job.— The American Magazine. Strongly for Education. We have always believed in the high possibilities of the movies and mors particularly since a charming girl told ns she had found you could hold hands just as well at an educational film as any other.—Grand Rapids. Free Board. A restaurant in Yuma. Ariz., dis plays a sign that reads: "Free board every day the sun doesn't shine." At first sight the offer of free board every day the sun doesn't shine might seem a reckless one, but, as a matter of fact, a day without sunshine in that desert country is far rarer than black berries in May. If it rains at all, it Is only for "a very short time, leaving most of the day for sunshine, so that the sign would only catch a tender foot. Not as Interesting. I.i know thyself is better than try ~ri to find out ali about the neighbors - -Toledo Blade. e Oidtime News Service. In 1832 .Tames Watson Webb, of tin* New York Courier and Enquirer, es tablished an express-rider service be tween New York and Washington which gave his paper valuable pres tige. Tn 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 48 hours of its occurrence. The most notable express-mail service of all was the "pony express," which carried messages by relays of riders across mofftitaHis and deserts and through hostile Indian territory from St. Louis to San Francisco, covering 1,9(10 miles in 10 days. On the Move We can sty this for the somnambu list —he is no idle dreamer. —Bosto?j Transcript. Be Slow to Condemn. Why condemn an individual or In stitution before you hear both *idesl Does a jury convict or a judg- sen tence a prisoner before the evidence Is heard? do ad - QU_s iw*fib" * & » POLITENESS. Politeness is the lubricant which enables people to crowd past each other without friction. It was in vented, when men were still savages, to cut down the death rate. People did not understand each other in those days and used to bash in the heads of strangers who jostled them, In an endeavor to find out what their intentions were. Later the r.pology, the amende honorable, the "After you, my dear sir," and many other useful forms of politeness were invented and warfare was cut dowa 75 per cent. Politeness has now been developed Into so fine an art that some people can get along entirely on politeness without the aid of any manners at all. But politeness still remains the language of strangers. The more in timately we become acquainted with a man the less polite we are to him. When two men salute each other as scoundrels and punch each other in the neck with fond smiles they are very close friends indeed and do not r?ed to resort to politeness in their dealings at any time. When people belong to the same family they understand each other very well and can not only lay aside all politeness but almost all consid eration for each other. They may re veal their true selves without any patent leather conversation as dis guise and can be as disagreeable as they please, knowing that the fam ily tie can stand the strain and that there will probably be no murder in consequence c Whenever we hear two people talking to each other with comprehensive rudeness and no dis orderly results, we may be sure that they are relatives and love each other so dearly that politeness -would be as out of place with them as dress suits at breakfast. Nations are ten times as polite as individuals because they only have one-tenth as much faith in each other. No mere man could use the W* *3s^ wATtw People ttsed to bash in the heada of strangers who jostled them. kind words and gentle conversation with which the powers of Europe conducted the preliminaries of the big massacre last summer. Because of this fact we should not put too much faith in politeness. It Is pleasant to the ear, but a rough tongued friend with a loving heart is worth a thousand well-bred con versationalists with beautiful man nero and prospectuses for get-rich quick companies in their pockets.