PAGE -EIGHT ~ #TI-IEC iiannortnrown GUARDIAN JANUARY 1_5. 1916_ gg _ e vwstwl wan :.---~~~~»~-~~--~~~-------~-------~---~-- l '~‘-lr P/tvs to im: in this Pmvmcu ' -_W. K. McGOUGAN, Globe Fox Ex- change. ia Guardian Agent in Summer- alde. . -APPLES BV THE BARREL- Baldwin, Greening. .\Illnii; both Num- bers one and two. per barrel $3.75 and $4.25. R. T. ll0L.\lA_\'. LIMITED. Summerslde. 6584-1-15MEll. -PASSEPARTOUT PICTURES. as- sorted subjects, slzc :’»x7 illches. Each Sc lit lioralill~o at tho time rogistcrcd 47 below zero. A number of the workulcn had taken refuge fl‘oiil the cuhl ill tllu vuboosc of thc work- train. The impact of the engine partly tlnnlagcd the caboose. killed Section I-‘orc-man lllagcc und, it is thought twclvc others, besides injur- ing it illlinber. 'i`lic cause of the ac- cident hes not _vet been ascertained. ns the Conductor of the worlr-train is among the injured. Trutllc was not delayed." DECORATED FOR DAIRING EXPLOIT. LONDON. January 13.- The oiiicinl Gazete states that Lieutenallt~Colonel Commander Kenneth Duff Dunbar has been awarded the Distinguished Ser- vice Order for the torpedoing of a German auxiliary vessel, protected by a screen of small craft on December '2url. VG_Zit>`__.`1`é"` of these Fancy Clocks ' ‘ Beautiful clocks these. made in carefully wrought pattems of fine bronze, with a fine move- ` ment thatmeans better timo- ltoeplng than is usually found in fallow dloch. One of-these would make a moat attractive and useful oma- mont for your -Dggk -Dreaaer -Mantel _._-.'|"¢|,|¢ _ when a small _clock wma!! malta a right iluiahing touch. A big variety ofdlfferent dawn. ` . up. .. .. .-.» .. H..-. ..- & Co; Illiilllll llillllli 'llllllllfiiliillllii MONTREAL, January 12.-It was a fascinating glimpse into an-.l other world. whit_ill'wus vouchsafed to the large and interested audience which gathered the ,ball-room of the RitpCarlton, olifBaturday night. to listen to the'-lecture on Irish folk- lore. delivered _by"Lady Gregory. dra-` hour Lady Gregory held her licnrcrs'l close attention by her recital, ill the oxquisitoly modulated voice and choice English diction, of which sho is a niistress. at the quaint and bcau- tiful legends and ,beliefs of thc pea- suntry, handed down through thc centuries alid constantly supple- lnentcd by their personal exper- iences ill thc supernatural. ot' whlcll Lady Gregory gave numerous in- stances as taken dowli by her frolli their own words. In opening, Lady Gregory said that fifteen years ago she had declared. in a paper, written for the Specta- tor. that if by some miracle all evi- dences alld remembrances of Christ- ianity were swept out of the world. it would not change the belief of the Irish people in the world iilvisiblc, things eternal and the life to come. The intervening period had but coil- liruxed hcr in this opinion. As in the Scriptures it was said that the sons of God walked with the dangli- ters of mell. so from earliest times ill ireland there existed the belief tllat the angels came and talked to the Fenian heroes of old. because. as one old man put it, the Fenians were "so nice and respectable." The Irisll, Lady Gregory held, had never lost that inner vision which ull nations probably' possessed in the earlier days of belief. This continuity of vision was shown in the manner in which the attributes of the irish deities were later applied to some of the Christian saints. Thus. the god of Lugh, whose face was so bright, that none could look upon ft. and who was the protector of poets. found his prototype in St. Colum- cille. All old man told Lady Greg- ory tllat before the end of the world there would be a great war ill Ire- land. but the valley of St. Columcille would be spared its horrors. in like manner. Brigit, the Saint of Leinster, was invested with the same qualities as her predecessor of lrisll mythology, Brigit., "tile fiery arrow, whose sway was noble and who pro- tected the pcople. St. Briglt. who is credited with bringing to his death Strongbow, Earl of Pembroke. first English invader of ireland. is to this day the healer and helper of the Con- naught poor. One old woman told Lady Gregory how a little fish in St. Brigit's well had restored her sight. St. Colman. son of Rhinagh, was an- other potent personage who still ap- pears under various manifestations to aid ills friends. A little boy left to scare the birds from a wheat-field told how the saint had come aild driven all the birds into a. barn, so that the lad could sleep without neg- lecting his duty. f‘A li\tle gray mal1". none other than St. Colman, had held a. lad's head above water for hours in a deep well. A farmer who ilovor failed to visit St. Colman's wcll every year until llc grew too ft-cblc was hollored ily a call from tllo saint iii person. “THE HAPPY PLAIN." llozivclil said Lady (Prcgory, was known to tho Irish before lin- cuill- ing of the Christian teachers. it was called 'I`ll'~llnn-Og. "the country of the young" or "thc happy plain." Lady Gregory cited some curiously close parallels between the legends describing Tir-nail-Og and the celes- tial visions of St. John, as told ill the Revelations. Tho puasantry still confuse the Iicavcil of lioly Writ uild Til'-nan-Og. ‘ There is a universal belief in the supernatural world, wllose people are known~variously all “tho Sllec", “the others," “thc gentry." and "thc fairies." They were a race of im- "l0l'U1lS HIWHYS close to humanity, occasionally niukiin; tllcmsclvcn via- iblc, and solllctlnicil inocklni-1 und nt other tilnes llclping mortals. Opin- ion was divided ns to whether they were the defeated nncloiit gods or fallen aillkcln. Sometimes they ap- peared zls little people with green cups. and at other times tall as lill- iilan beings. but much thinner, and with shilling eyes. I-“lb” Gregory recited several ills stances or odd visions by old and ut- tcrly illiterate men and wonlen, whose liichlems were apparently substantiated by historical and ar- chaeological lore. and she advanced the theory that if these were not pure visions or dreams, they might be _the result of what scientists are beginning to call a “memory of na. ture," ln which some shadowy es- sence of the events and personages 0! the past hover about a locality aiid are perceptible to certain sensi- tive minds. ri-is new come Buick. Sir Oliver l.odge's._`frece1ft state- ment that be had proved that the spirit survives death and could come back. while creating illberelt ln the W°\‘ld at large. weu|u»hgnno1sui-prlap to the people or Co aught, whb W°\1ld SAYS "We know that the dead live and that they como back. W9 look for them and are not afraid of them." An old woman who had tolli of the death of her son, wg “keg bi' IM! Gregory tr the had seen him yet. "No. not yet." was the answer, but often the father and I go img the garden at niglilf. thinking “Bill h will came." 'rms ballet-in the u returllinlf. says 'Ladyrbliga talr away much of the-leur-[Ml th anti makes tho mourning IMI" acute. Ca- . .....¢.._. matlst, author and mystic. For an, bins are kept clean at night in ease "some poor soul might want. to come` back." and a llsht ia placed in the \vindow_ for the first few nights after a funeral in order to guide the wan- derlns spirit. Mothers are always supposed to return to their children.‘ and it -is believed that no child thrives so well aa the orphan whose. mother comes back to Buckle it. "Often I call tn my mother when i need her," said one woman. "and it's‘ often the` dead are troubled with the‘ living.” _ l Long before _tlig Christian dispen- sation the_lrls_h believed in_an inter- mediate state' after death, before tlicl tlual disposition of the spirit, and in ,some of the lileasantry this belief is connected git the sites of prehis- toric forls. which are found in iuanv were in the old fort nearby, and that two of them had come back to licr. Tile dead are supposed to help the llvlng ln various wa s. A woman in` healing was so great that the fame of it spread even to tho British army- Dlll<=¢B» Ollc woman. who had lost ’ Jive childrt-,n.' said that their spirits, Y the West Country, whose gift of( in India, was 'held to have secured it from a little dead brother. The thought that perhaps intuition was once again to take its place as a force in the world, as in the elder days. At the conclusion of her lecture, Lady Gregory was presented with' two bouquets., in acknowledging which she thanked those present for. “listening so patiently and being such a. nice alidience." Yesterday afternoon Lady Gregory had a sleigh-ride around the Moun-1 tain. getting her first sight of suc`.:` winter sports as snow-shoeing, tty, bogganlng, skeliig and bob-sleigliiiigf Slle left last night for Lewiston, Me, RECOVERED FROM ATTACK OF “FORD|T|S." LONDON. January 13.- The Daily Express says today that Andrew J. Betliea. lieutenant-governor of South Carolina, and a companion from the Ford peace party, who have been de- tained at Tibury. opposite Gravesend. having satisfied the British authoriti- es that they have no intention to prose- cute a peace campaign in England. have been given permission to proceed to America, and will take the first boatl available. cmnnu trips _ rg__gonsuu|Pr|oN Caiarrli is as much a blood dis- ease as scrofula or rheumntism. it may be relieved, but it cannot be removed by simply local treatment., It breaks down the general health, weakens the lung tissues, and lead to consumption. Hood’| Sarssparilla is so suc- cessful in the treatment of catarrh that it is known as the best remedy for thi! disease. It puriiles the blood. Ask your rlruggiat. for it. bnttle which King Arthur saw Wag-' _ ,,€_ ed between an els and devils over a | '- - - ~ lgg ' . _ . - K . . .. .. . ._ ,. chapel in the forest is still fought ~ _-_----.-.--~ above the thatched and broken roofs % ------- -~ ~' " ‘ ' . of Connaught, for the dead come i £3 _ » ' back to resist the powers of dark- ___ _ _ -=---"" ness, who are seeking to take sick ' ll" ,/22 relatiies. "'Tis well that Martin " Z *fi* died, for he saved John." said an old / ' k / man, the morning after the crisis in > - ' Q ' _“I , V _ . A 5... Q .- _ , " _ g _ "' ' ‘ cf _ /_J .... ..-».,_» ‘. SEPTU soar Package Same prion--and A larger package ot' ASEPTO than of other washing compounds. Yet ASEPTO ¢lu'es_'what others don'l. ‘It STERIL- IZES everything washed with it - Makes clothes more healthful - Annihi- latcs all disease germs present ill bedding and dishes used in sick-room. Cleans better 'than soup. Odorlcss. HARMLESS alike io fabrics and haarll. atmvracrunnp nvt _ ASEPTO MFG. CO., ST. JOHN, N.B. a boy's sickness had passed ‘1 i 0 <99! heard his voice last night as they 5 \` L_ were fighting over the roof." » - When reason and logic were cle- . 2' "T vated to such a high plane by the ' '°“`¢ I , l , FQ/JVnZ,7{.V¢ Greeks. lt ‘was thought that they gg `v I ‘ _ | I ' would solve all problems. Reason, ' \___,_» l however. h'ad apparently reached its- _ 1 ..-.-.-.-.-.-,-_-_-_-1-.-.T\\‘ , . limits, and in taking down her frag- ' ,_,;;L_;.-"*";'l555.571'*'.’$=5"` ,- l mentary records or lrisli pellets and SCHOOL BAG ° -_ ' 'P' 'nf . ex eriences, which seemed to be ' -~ r" W "" J " ' _Yi \ nova mb c.uu.s-1-ill. i. ti.. .ww ai mf lile Inga! \.lulnaal»eh»clar`a_ou\dt. that wnseverodsrod. .lan real what it enum: onsl»i;i»masi_u|m alas English iiziwol hal. one line .linnl lol-\11f-1111 VH' with thneextraégld finished nlba. una all-steel, silver ilnlahed van ln . one combination aatatr pen and lt,a bum gun rmzlr-.1 autos with .tx rawaot 5:2. mls amifii ii>l;§~n-ada asa lwulll. I °“°P"!°“ pax vim leak many. a mlueswpe or mllhlmvl glam. one box of line ci-arena. one box nl fine lwlnll emtolninl Nadia". una lmrsnhoe mag net. one mmol compel. onelaanch ruler. and last but lmtluast. a hm: ww. It in a woadu-ful anim for you. Bead us your mme :ua maart-u tam-ly,r~\d we will und you. paatano pu-.d, a tres sample pu .lun-t» ni “Igiq B"-rig," the dellgiittul. .sw Ci-tum randy ousted Breath Puiume, and just 32 lame ice. pn-":»§»¢ iointrodunumongyour lncniis. Open yourlreepaclrnlze THE REGAL MAI'-'L'FACI`L'RfNC F0 P . . _ .. _ , 5ii'i“iie§ie§ii.fiifauslliiifgfgi-?e§.li'ud till? IE I Grand 28-Piece Sclltiltlr S -,_, _,_..----;. -T she had been actuated by the Utlllll illlfl 3 Dillflylilg Clllltfa .., X.. if andaak all your lrtanda lvl \ \ 1 mtl-v s'l='-lrraarrr - “ \,' , - ‘ 'riisrll like time im 4 K muah that curious ' ' N; will w:nt a paellruge or . ./- tvo a once. ul one little“F-lry Dorf!" willpurlfythemani-h.awaa@a|ad perfume tha breath, and they am'lrreal|la\l1 deliolvnn. Everybgdl .lust loves them. You ll all tbamall m al hour. FaI.r1Borrl:~a aallllhavfldfira. 'rum rf-gain eu|;&I;§0 ima 1-alvln aggifouna 1: this arm comp vi~=°»=bv Ml' 0 INN? represented: and a beautiful lull alan Eilllllll IIB Cumern(v|Ll\iaSl.60l willllao be Mui ¢D10\'l lui' lbblllll your grand Bcholnrl' Pulht. In Your frlcnrll llid ldtllj only tour uf them to all our goods and earn marine pn-mluma. aa you did. We an--nga to :Mud gunna of all transportation charges cn your outlt.. rlln lo- day right. new -~‘ vm :nliiii ol lt. Addreaa | iiupi. S 21 rt`ilt0.\l’l‘0. ONT. IMA ev- .; - V Stylish, Strong, and Serviceable You get more than a suit wlleii'you i Suits for Men | buy at Tupllns- you get really good clothes- that fit well look well, wear well- alld a store service that assures certain satisfaction. ’l‘uplin's suits ure noted for the good cloth, the boitor-tliaii-tlic-average fail- oriiig. the individual style und really good fit. r Sonic nutty styles horo now ill fancy t\\'<‘ods and worsieds- all sizes. Call -you’ll llllld your suit iicre. l Reuben'l`uplin&`Co Kensington l _/ ' l 1- -I 'l TRYON the Wariii Sims Underwear for Men Tryon rwear frat. ii, . r _ » Try on a suithlffote the right fit at neck. shoulder! and chest. Comes well up on the neck, ~ tits anus at' waist. cuffs and ankles. _ . Note how each gannentiflts as thuush it were made for you _alone-you get perfect tit » frvm Your properlplze 'of TRYON - f q W , -..._ .$¢¢ai\slp.l'°¢l?i1l\° '"4' 2.1’ -- :A-~-X f* finish of-Tryon Wear \'The _iuercerlzed silk sewing Zhalid ,worm the ,pearl buttons. the 'well finished throat and lin- ed waistbalid. J The .suspender loops that won't pull or tear out and the hand-finish (shaped) button holes._ V ;_'l'lt_lf().\' is well-finlslled under- wear. V 1 .., ar r ~: ‘lu "1 ... _ _,,, ) l _ _!_} 'IRYON Underwear You Rely Eltamine the; _Fabric - .`.:“" 4 . of Tryon - ‘ ,lt's all wool-not cotton and in wool. Note the soft, 11806;' lllp, the silky niluli. the-careful iinlt. 'rnvolv underwear 5-will' not' sllrluk. for tvs mana' all wool and is not For ipeirgnly, typ ptdoap, throo wol5lt`$l» .Ill plan. Alb your dealer for Tl7.\*.08. ,.11 ‘