Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
| viceroy; _ THE EVENING WORLD, D, MONDAY, q eee Ways in Which Gaelic Language Revival IRELAND (S AGAIN IRISH, HER FUTURE FOUND bY REMEIGERING HER PAST Evening World's Commissioner Tells How Revival of Ancient Lan- guage Has Rebuiit Industry and Made New Nation. | Helps Make Ireland an Irish Nation Again : [r This is the first of a series of articles on the great transformation 7 mow in progress in Ireland, which is fast taking the Gren Tale out | of the misery that caused her to be described as “the most distressful | ' eountry that ever yet wos seen.” Other articles will be printed frome | time to time describing industrial, patriotic, artistic and educational = | changes in the four provinces of the country. @pectal Correspondence of The Evening World.) BY MARY SYNON, Special Commissioner from the Gaelic League to Report on the Irish Reval. QUEENSTOWN, Ireland, June 21.—An old man, who had stood at the fhow of the groat Atlantic liner ever sinee the flock of seagulls had heralded the nearness of the Irish coast, sighted the low gray line of hills rising from the sea almest before the lookout in the crow’s nest gave the signal. The dusk was drifting seaward, and for a long time the old man gazed tensely across the whipping waves of the Atlantic, straining his vis-| fon toward the dim, misted coast. Then he turned to| & group of his fellow travellers, a cosmopolitan eddy of | — men and women—an Australian actress, a Greek bro- ker, an Englishman who had been game hunting in the! Canadian Northwest, a Turkish consul, an American | THE Caer ed ES WHERE CHIL ORER, an pan TE SE 2 "SPEAG should be telling the story of the Queen Who led her legions because her husvand had dared her to niatoh his porsesvions? And where else would) She eine ae you (nd children on thelr way home e hour o! ir from school Hstening to the old runes?| And It brag Ansa MELODY QUAINTLY FITS THE|tana”™ GAELIC CLASSIC, Down the road a little boy, sturdy in his tweeds and balbriggans, came sing- WANT DR. MACARTHUR ing. The words were Irish, but the TO RETURN | TO CALVARY. melody procia'med the song to be “My a oem 9 Troy, the | Baptist Church “May Persuade For- ish have no | eritage to return mer Pastor to Come Back Hiren by the roadside Iawsica and listen to the rune of to Old Charge. et Calvary Baptist Church, It is typical of Queenstown, as of the! known yesterda: other parts of Ireland Anglioled tn) Rev, Dr. Rober! speech, that only a few of the very ol4,! back to the pastor the teachers and the children have the| months ago to beco: * woh, lack {t, and/tist World Alliance, physician, and two American girls three generations re | nelle ‘ na ely feragi ies these are c moved from thetr Irish ancestry, begin to feel their he became pastor of the Baptist mountains And the hearts of her chiefs were true. She hath stirred at last in her sleeping; She ts folding her dreams away; En it decame ie trying to get the MacArthur to come Hoe resigned some JULY f, 1912. | Stomach, Liver and | they dearly love its delicious taste. Drowned Sallor Is Found. The body of a man, suppowed to be a }member of the crew of the Hollands America Hner Ryndam, was picked up in the North River to-day off Fifteenth | street. Members of the crew of the Ityndam, while executing a Hfeboat drill in the Hudson on June 22, were upset head on into thelr boat. reported mise- tng after the accident. IF YOUR CHILD NEEDS A PHYSIC. If Cross, Feverish, Tongue Coated, Give “Syrup of Figs” to Clean the Bowels. Look at the tongue, Mother! If coat-! ed, it is a sure sign that your little one's insides, the stomach, liver and 30 feet of | bowels are clogged up with putrefying waste matter, and need a gentle, thor ough cleansing at once. When your child is listless, drooping, pale, doesn’t sleep. soundly ii bI breath bad; has stomach-ache, diarrhoea, sore any oa of cold, give a teaspoonful Figs, and in a few hours all the fe Toul, constipated waste, undigested food and sour bile vil gently move on and out of its little bow- els without nausea, griping or weakness, urely will have a well, happy child again shortly, With Syrup of Figs you are not drug- ging your children; being composed en- tirely’ of luscious figs, senna and aro- matics it cannot be harmful—besides, Mothers should always My Syrap | of Figs handy. It is the on! ‘momeck, | liver and bowel cleanser aa regulator needed. A little given to-day wi save a sick child to-morrow. Full directions for children of all ages and for -erown-ups — printed on the At All James Builer Licensed Stores Monday—Tuesdav—W ednesday Claret I Is de TU Les Fils i from PP sclected vintages, bottle. . Califoraia Claret lutely p wine? bottle Port and Sherry, Choice California selected vintage, bottle. . Princeton Dry Gin, Favorite for fizzes, rickies, etc., bottle .... Princeton Cocktails, Martini or Manhattan, bottle. . Kingussie Scotch, Splendid for hot-weather high-baiis; bottle. 25° 69° 63° 19° Guinness’s Stout—Bass Ale Imported direct from Dublin and Burton-ou-Trent breweries. One export quality 2 et 25:3 Q splits 25° pti NZe, or the world over.. 8 Lowest in America. Butler Bottling is Perfection— the ones who are revealing their con-|at Atlanta, Ga. “Phere's Ireland,” he told them, and there were tears in his voice as he went on, “I left her forty-two! yoars ago, and I've always enid thet I'd never come hume till Ireland was a! nation once more. But I'm comfag teek'—his tone rose from its sorrow like the sun rising over mist—‘to wateh her became a nation again.” Te was the Greck broker who broke | town, that I came on the silence that followed the off man's| ranged against a outburst. “You mean the Irish Ke-| with them vival?’ he asked. “Tell me, how can| mother of Roste, & purely Uterary movement like the} goiden-hatred beauty of ten years. The y revitalizing of @ half-dead Yanguese| wore talking, all of them, In tho soft- make over a nation?” ened accent of the south of Ireland group of children y }of such beauty that wise American hue * | bands never tell thelr wives of the place, “If you hadn't kept your own Greek | An@ all of them were speaking in tho @own there tn your corner of Europe, | language of the Gael. whom do you think would be ruling] “She doesn't speak English,” Kathleen your country now?" the old man e-| of tho iue eyes explained in answer to manded. the greeting I gave the old woman. Tie Greek amtled slyly at the rotun4| “She comes from the country.” Turkish consul “You'd probably be] “Do you all speak Irish?” he eatd to him, “Yes, ma'am. We all learn Irish In WHAT 18 THE REVIVAL, OOING . FOR IRELAND ITSELF? Tho Amerlean physician frowned over a problem he had to present. ‘T know that there is an Irish Revival,” nd I know that ft has been of a new romantic move- ment in, English lerature, but what tat doths for Ireland iteait?” “You've seen but the shadow," sald the Irishman. ‘That's all U've seen, too, perhaps. But I've known those “Do your people at home speak Irish?" “No, ma'am, Only Ro uu the stories?” “Yes, ma'am,” with quaint shyness. The old woman nodded, then resumed had been telling, It sound. | nt as who half-intoned tt | heard on the atr who've seen the sun arising, and they tel. me of an Ireland where the chil- ren questioned her. ry about?’ I asked nection with the spirit of the revival by thetr Interest in the revival of Irish industries, Down Harbour Row are| this week, when the question of Dr. shops filled with Irish goods, One of] MacArthur's return may ve definitely | them handles nothing else, And the MacArthur preached at the | laces—Limerick and Carrick-ma-crose| © and Point and crochet and Youghal—are For the shop represents the hay the workers have made while the sun of fashion shines on Irish lace, And every piece of lace ls as strong @ part of the| revival of Ireland as is every Gaelic word, For it means work, and work means the ability to stay at home, last week only fifteen emigrants left Queenstown on one of the largest trans Atlanuec steamers, Five years ago no ship went out with less than a hundred and fifty, not surprising under a gov- ernmental system that subsidised emi- gration, The answer is the American market the Gaelic League has opened to Irish cottage crafts, AND 80 AWAKENED LANGUAGE RESTORES NATIONALITY. And eo it ts that wlements of re- awakened languag have made even elty once more, city where Irish is n the churches and taught In the schools. And on thé cathedral terrace beside A meeting of Calvary Church mem- bers has beon arranged for some night | rday and de! in his ser- 9 had had any trouble with land B. MoAfee in the Lafayette Avenue Presbyterian Church, Brooklyn, and was by Dr, McAfee in his sermon told that theological students of to-day are vaguc fa thelr echolarships and unsound in their doctrines. He said that in his new ephere at McCormick Seminary he | intends to train young men to be better grounded, and he put high spirituality and clear thinking above high educa- tion. GIRL LURES POLICEMAN TO GANGSTERS’ AMBUSH. Lured to @ quiet corner by a girl who, with pretended tears and great distross| and excitement, told him two men were | trying to kill each other, Patrolman) Joseph Haley of the West Sixty-seventh | station was badly veaten early| by gangsters at Kightieth street | nd Gecond avenue. He is in the Ke- ception Hoa! with many cuts and de bruises about the face and head, His A CARRICK-MA- GROSS | LACE WORIKER WEARING | AN IRISH CROCHET Rope Save 14 of Your Clotics Money Low price arguments are not enough to hold cu;tomers. I liver styles at prices that win on their own merits. home is at No. M14 Madison avenue. fered, 5) iebmann’s or Ruppert’ 8 tasting, genuine anything else of- old. reiiable. Stamps FREE with Case of $ LAGER BEER for the Leading Home Brews. At All the 200 James Butler Inc. Stores In order to help our customers to keep down the cost of living, we continue these low prices until Wednesday’s closing:— Imporied | Sardines French, Portuguese, paredelaa, Smoked, packed in oi!.... Kippered Eerring Aipeecuiie’s ae sal North Sea | Silvoceas. . ‘ | Moe Levy, { i My Only 419.125 Walker St., N.Y. ij Policemen Clancy and Murony found Gus Speriine, twenty-one, of No. 219/ East Eightieth eereet, hiding under a water tank on the roof of No. 216 Healey {dentified him as one of his as- sailants. when ft was done. “"Tis the story of Queen Maeve," waid Kathleen of the blue eyes. And @rén speak Gaelic; where the boys and girls are looking forward to living at ' home, not emigrating; where the old music, and the old dancing, and the @l4 stories are heard, and where @ mation ts finding her future by remem. That's what I'M ross the reading of Ethna s lines from “A Gaelic Song,” “It was the soul of Eire Awaking in speech she knew, When the clans held the glens and the Biore, ween't it part of the fitness of all things in Ireland that the old woman Creamery Butter We congratulate the housekeepers in and about Greater New York 4 for their excellent taste in judging the quality of this butter and their |; generous response to our low price. Our sales last toryry P| week are away ahead of all former records for this season, We are receiving carloads fresh daily, and have pleasure in continuing the sale for ae ana days at the exceptionally low price b OF, a ‘Belle California Prumes @ather, and his father's father died for @eland. ‘Tis another age now, and “de Isieh of the Irish I'll be when I @ad myeeif in an Irish Ireland.” be wes ollent again, for the | Moastiine rome more grimly. And the } ir him were silent, too, 1 | the , the peetry, the momortes of , } thet land flashed with the Fustnet Light, ' Wer ever them came with the mist some | fGen of the great movement that is } i; | ASldvertisomont F JOHN DAVID: Edited by Gama Aldvertisemont ¥ JINDAVID <3} bdited by Gasmadk, URS being a Specialty Shop within a Specialty Shop, we feel that we specialiy specialize in Shirts. We carry oniy good Shirts—nothing that sells at regular prices below $1.50. We count among our shirt customers @ cans Loe Ireland again before the limes of the panorama of nations. To e Irish Revival was a I IMPLY to say, “Stein-Bloch,” is to say simply, “Best-Tailored.” When the circle is squared——when water runs uphill—when 70 seconds compose a minute—then you may . of Intellectual int em it tneant more, fi Is strong. brary the dignified prest- handy little picnic cans Extra ch average i deat of the Hudson River transportation be able to buy better clothes than Stein-Bloch, many members of the “smartest” New York to Ib. ...... eres Tench Gemen wae clubs, because we serve only the best-dressed men. | Choicest California c My to pee the piace where he was bern, H a Lemon Clings, in rich aay tete alf-Yearly Sale of Essie Peaches (rm ne: | I AR a all : ol Half-Yearly Sale of ' Syrup; large @6c can Yansuare restoration Stein-Bloch Smart Clothes. : : Picnic fC | @OING HOME TO THE SINGING, John David Shirts. Ss e a e e2ans can H a BANGING ANG PIPING: net Our whole stock of Stein-Block Paney Three- comers wos planning his return, “I'm | Suite goes on sale ‘Tuesdoy morning, July ‘ | : ee : i $1.65 and $1.50 Shirts now......... 95 Cents } going on ty Mea Wan saying, “to ro days before “the Fourth | j the sing ya Alea Seana $2.25 and #2 Shirts now...........0065 $1.20 In the Bean, or } 4 era €2.50 and $3 Shirts now... AGAIN: $1.65 Ground to Suit, lb. : { “ a| BRO SUIS Tow cca iiicr twas avaen $14.75 88.50 Shirts now... anne } t for tt 1 Mr, su BEB Suits now. ss sseservevereneeees $18.75 Pure Silk 85, 86 and 87.50 Shirts now....$3.95 ats “S, & H.” st } ea | ap bh Seat ae ae a eRe natn at $24.75 De Luxe Silk $9 and $10 Shirts now,....$6.45 pone eh, : ithe holy bls!” 10 835 Suits now $28.75 i 1 t there o Plain or Pleated Bosoms a al “| > wt > i vy) : rim bat Mark you, these 1-Ploch Clothes Double Cuffs in Madras, Merceriz Surety Stamp Day Surety Stamps FREE | ; and this is our regular (Yearly Sale, Linens, Flannels, Crepes, Chambra Kept A (one set for each book) to Neither the eh nor the > any kins All colors—all patterns—all sizes—all sleeve: To-mcrrow, July 2 all purchasers to-morrow. j Queonat: HEURES eRe Re BoE ON lengthe—all our Witte Negligee Shirte incluced These 10 Stamps are in addition to all Stamps regularly given with purchases, } sewn ne an eric round town at preposterous prices, —all garments made expressly for (his summer t tt ie Owning a Stein-bioch, you've got something. and for this shop—all our regular stock. From the National Biscuit he c was Mey agen Sale starts Twestay morning, Every gare Sale starts Tuesday morning. Shirts are Uneeda Biscuit, package........4 [Brit ant, juicy Messinss....0 tor & patr the p sand ment has its original price ticket sewn on it, exposed on tables for convenient fingering, with 10° of na knakicind aot Extra salesmen-—no wait hourly deliveries Reauaatheliaeaiantathcatign a Eien tncniit Nabisco Wafers : ae Ribbon, je thin, pkge.. 7 of parcels by a battery of special messengers guararmaed. Money back without any “back (oo. | Red Grinams. Package. ANIA Liberty Pickles, | oOo witys at Social Teas ... All kinds, fresh packed, bottle. . os ‘Jeti a J°tIN DAV “GAC oF Surety Stamps FREE with AM Purchases mene : JYHN D AN iD ID woe or Surety Stamps FREE with All Purchases br Srew-BrocuSmarrCiorues "4! Double Stamps FREE Next Wednesday Sron-BiocrSmarrCrories toned wen s broadway at 92 Street Broadway at 32% Street HN i) Mme puma cayeue rat ee a , -- WORLD WANTS WORK WONDERS, .