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December 23, 1916, Che Gaelic Amenican. 9
" LETTER FROM FROM VERDUN, % of the greatest nations in the world stained heel tram: \
. pled ber into the earth| FIRE, | PLATE GLASS, LUFE
ENGLAND’S BLOOD were to make it clear to the whole TO SHAWN AWN BUIDHE. | and you robbed her of everything she HEALTH AND ACCIDENT.
orld that by agreement such as that, ou cructied ber, O Shawn, as| LIALILITY BURGLARY,
Young German Off Officer Writes to
an American Friend in the
“University of Nevada.
The U. of N. Sagebrush, a student
publication of Reno, Nevada, in its is-
sue of November 21, Dvilshes a very
interesting jetter from a young German| because
officer at Verdun to an m American friend,
with an introduction, as follow:
Profe fessor Maxwell Adams of t
chemistry department has rece:
letter is months old, having been with.|
held by the Censor for some consider.
sable ime,
“In the Bloody Test—
“Hell Hole of Salon.
‘My Dear Professor:
a Teceived your last Jetter about one
onths age
Britien tloehade ha ha! Since Febru-
ce, in front of
juards. For w ad no end of shi
gneounters w ‘h the French, Our casu-
alties were gloriously heavy; it is not
80 Io 2 ago that.my present company
Jost all. officers... If it mene again,
80 much more to our taste; ai i
so the French fad Britishers get ‘inele
fill. The Russia:.s have it already.
e have
2nd a half million prisoners of all
shapes, and colors and nationalities in| $V
our camps, (vide
“Permit a business question: Do any
of you mething |
abéat, artillery: firing, called in your
r French friends’ onguage.ta/ can.
“forty: four, here of Uncle ‘Sam, And
0 fill his pockets with very
Interestingly formed fragments of all
sorts of calibres of U, S. made shells.
we send you enough, also “de:
“to fll iwenty Rockefeller Unt
enatty collection: in the State
‘as
chemical analysis of its tevin com-
pos
a fond veal of the U. S. made guns
are busy now here against us in tl
duel “ot about 15,000 guns competing’
fort “drum:
ar
Be
ig fire” whicl
in “the States, and which,
_your countrymen’s sake,
never pe beard there!
“We from occasional American
o papers that the’ good long-headed Yan-
-kees
I hope will
the a feel the pip, 8
‘Anyhow, what's. the matter with
your “triend Woodrow W.? Has he been
vaccinated with the Edward baccilus?
‘e here i ermany believe still
the
nd
e} Society, the true aim of
in spite of the|
8
seattered over
hen} have ‘the Parli
_. STAINED EMPIRE, ©
(Continued from Page 6.)
Zealand and the islands of the Pacific,
and having stilt possession of Canada
American industries
symptoms of a di
politic by the Anglo: ff America
working In co-operation with England's
schemers, like Cecfl es Andrew
‘arnegie and Lord ‘4
‘ecil Rhodes, ember of the Brit-
ish Privy Council, the Builder ot Rho
who founded the
‘o and for the establishment, pro-
development Sec
which and
e extension
ton rom the United Kingd
elihood are
enter:
significance of
out hypocrisy. or
d it “the re-con-
quest of the United States of America
| P for
ever afterward there will be between
two and three thousand men (meanin;
Rhodes graduates) in the prime of life
the English-speaking
world, each one of whom Will
impressed upon his mind at the "moat
susceptible period the dream of a. union
of our people.”
ndrew Carnegie, the eee Anglo-|a
subsi-
lowing statement, printed. ov.
name in the North American
“Let men say what they will, I sa:
Pi
reunited State—The British American
Unios
outlined ‘in an address delivered in the
Gilfillan Memoria 1 Hall, Dundes, Mon-
ee follows
“ here only 0 e way 9 you can make
ards the unification and con-
tliation at the English-speaking race,
by bringing this little ts
progeny she has
d throughout the world. The
first step will be taken nthe ‘great mis-
ston of the English-speaking race, for
it will then ful: that. our
race will be the arbiters of the world
and can force disarmament, and if any
two nations undertake, to draw the
sword, it will be prepared to say: “Hold,
command you both.. The man that
stirs makes me his foe.’ Beyond this
Engliabe speaking race become united we
jiament of man, the fod-
eration of the world.”
“National urriotiam or pride can-
not prove a serious obstacle in the way
of. reunion.”"—North American Review,
June, 1893.
He disposes of our political parties
as follows: “All party divisions sink
into nothingness in my thonghts com:
eastly war befor pared with the reunion of o1 <
what they are about. Review, June, “Tas.
what they ought to a for their o “Whatever obstructs reuni
sake! Otherwi ¢| pose; whatever promotes reunion,
of bitter regret, P favor. I judge all poutteal questions
the White from ghia ‘—Dundee, Sep-
“Now, tember 14, 1
wishes for
with. my sincere
" ; Yourself and your dear family's re weiter,
: rien
sincere and t
Geran * sens,
‘Stud Phil.”
“Your
30, 3 16."
——+-> ——
NO “HORE pxoursiy TRAINS IN’ ‘7
AND.
fol owing, statement has. _been ;
ist br the ish P Press Censot
ce
the war.
_, {ne the period ommunicated o wi all
way com: antes. ‘
¥ comp Press CENSOR, Inexa%D.
in,| land's as follows:
e fiscal eltey of the ‘Unitea States
poses to subordinate to Eng-
“ do not shut.my
that reunion, bringing free entrance o
at
terests near the Atlan’
have been built up under the [Protective
ledge
American Review,
188
Pg racial influences which might
wich a uni
and two
, June, 1893... .
“But supposing {It took place,
e| Americans sitting
riea | beginning of what in the end may: make
ae
ing to carry out this object he} m
e| ted it, and I think n
Ei
eyes to the fact
8] Irish race,
union he ais: render
'd
be exposed ve attack
trom a third nation who jot enter.
ed into such agreement. 1 “think it
would probably lead to their following
‘eement that tl ey would
Join with each other in any case in
third Power by which- arbitration was
refused,”
The foregoing was conclusive as to
the effect of the treaties,
Mr. Carnegis
herein set fort
‘The New Yor American in elucid-
ating the same views, published the fol-
“Britain,
France and the United
parts.
nsive power. A re-
Anglo-Americans Consist-
ing today of 708,000,000 which fifty
years hence more than
200,000,000 would be unassailable upon
nate the world."—North American Re-
view, June, 1893,
he people's rights and capitals of
this united government he suggests as
jotlows:
“The act
all these elements
tion of a Congress elected by
differ
leges of the people, from a Congress of
in Ottawa, or, froi
the action of a British Parliament sim-
Harty elected sitting in London. No
citizen of any of the present States
either, British or American, would have
occasion to fear the loss of anything
ich he now holds dear
union.” —North American
June, 1893,
Lord Haldane,
Review,
at Montreal, before
advocates” have
special opportunities to | further *
And I be believe that it sea
a body, in our minds and | hearts, “nfghiy
resolve! \ w r the general-recog-
ition by society of the binding char-
as they arise within the Anglo-Saxon
y 8
tangible instrument, and yet intangibie
s it is, ft may be enough to form the
the whole difference. - Ideas have hands
leas of a congress
public opinion
80>
great interna-
ciati the of a
tional centenary, can be mean,
and asy to let such an occasion
pass with a too timid modesty. Should
we let it pass now I think a real op-
portunity. for doing good will just
theredy bare been missed by you and
me. need say ‘nothing; we need
pass no ‘cut and dled resolution. It ts
the spirit and not the letter that is the
one thing we would
Tearn to swim we must first Bet into the
ter.. We must not refuse to begt
our journey until the whole of the road
ve are to travel Hen mapped out be-
And
I have a
al
pressed, what T hed ia mint
ton has seemed to me sienit
mething beyond even its
splenatd omit.
symbol of
limits of this asse
the desire that we should teadiiy, “ae
rect our thoughts to
into the closest harmony the nations
of a race in ware a of us have a com-
mon pride. ye now a wide-
inclination, ‘then, indeed, may
the people of three sreat oo
te Jerusalem, ‘Thou a!
le ‘Thy tovndation shall be
3
a
2
The children of the sea-divided Gael
ave a destiny. Some have thou
that destiny to be founding of a spirit
ual autocracy In Innisfail. Others
unwittingly thought that it was the
carrring of ross and Shamrock to
utmost boundar ‘ies gf the British
mpire; but all.who know the philos-
=
Irish Nationality. might live and
their lives personified the idee of the
leaths gave
to that race a dladem of qlory. They
believed that Ireland, which hed been
nation for a tl ind years and re-
fused. for seven hundred years to sure
its jationhood to nglan:
should and of A right ought to” we free
and independen
They velleved” Ireland had the same
Hight of nationhood as is enjosed hy
quarrel, “with a| answered
Tm"! hordes,
should stand for prince
e
dj hate tyranny, the
On His
, Long Deferred Demise,
Well Shawn, you're dying at last, and
God knows ‘tis about time. You have
have prayed that
the curse of the Living God might fall
upon you, an fhetr prayers have been
“Whom the gods
dage, from which
Shawn, that the gods did n
goes without saying thet 1 wincerely
hope you will,
you have been the gr reateat scot
that ever cursed the world,
waters of the ocean could not wash 0
the fnnocent tlood that sow have shed
in your age-long and unhallowed orgie
of assassination and crime, There is
| scarcely a corner of ne earth that bas
not been befouled by your tainted and
diseare laden presence, and there fs not
a race of people in the world whom you
have not sought to destroy. You suc-
ceeded in destroying most of them, “hue
Usten, Shawn, there was
could never conquer,
knows you tried hard enough to do so.
our servants and Ministers told you
time and again that that race was at
last exterminated, but the
sun found ft again facing you and again
death grips with your embattles
That race was bef
Shawn, and it fs aliv
now, and you're dying; Sha
you're dying, and may the ghosts of all
the millions whom ‘you hav.
ly and so mercilessly slain, haunt
your last moments and meke
your death a long:
zed nightmare?
You dug a grave for the Germans, and
oh, Shawn, behold how beautifully you
fell into it yourself,
ve and trtumpbant
drawn out and agon-
Your soldiers wi
annihilated on 8
torn asunder on sea, and your proud
cities will be leveled with the plains, as
we are wild -with Joy and Jubilation, and
all the poor and outlawed of the world
are singing canticles vot fuankegtving
because of annihilation ¢ to-day.
erlamd
mad Mon will never be
gain.
We told you, Shawn, all down the cen-
uries, from the prison cell where you
sent ‘us, from penal _fettlements
whereto you transported us, and fro om
the gallows tree whereon on hans
us that we would yet triumph over
your tyranny, aon at we would be
and prosperous and a
Approaching and Too hee
n,
falgent
r¢
is love die young” is
ot. don
t who will say
“
all the
nit | 4
orning’s| 4
‘ore you were,| 4
9
th. é 120 W. 32nd iste New York
rane
: toe w the Re
| toruers,
could iudomitable
epirit, nor could you ever quench the re-
and shinin:
maged-
come upon us it
would not be she, oat you, Shawn, who
would go dow you are “down
now, Shaw down in Sefeat and
disgrace and death, and the ne |
a word of Psmpathy
you, or regret, or sorro
eee
3
“You have drunk the blood of the holy
God.”
You shall drink of the wrath of
é SINGING F FS OF ERIN:
+
LLEANGR eoctas COX
eres
i
2
2
"Miss Cox hus a great reputa- 2
3 ton a h poet, and in this ¢
eally wonderful book the heart
of Ireland is expressed, with all g
its loves and longings, ite powers §
and Francisco 2
i
y
>
g
3
nuyste evies. — San
the most magical
that has ever come out of
Trelend "—Miss Jessie B, Ritten-
=
+2
“This spirited and eloanent vol-
of — Don
ume Marquis,
> Evening &
JOHN
Price, - One Dotlar ¢
> poecseronsensonsen:
BOXLE, 3008 G. Sr—iu pucsuccoe of an
niet of Hon, Joua P: Cobley « surrunste
7 us 01 -
Fran ie
‘Tork ou'or betare the ‘of
Dated Now York, the ‘ti, “devot
Joram H.
‘aministrator,o. a,
Claude V. Pallistor,
Atwomeéy tor Administrator,
ugh of Manbattan,
Abr
OWNEY, —In of an
oruer of usa ota P. Cobsian,a surrorate
of the County of New York, notice ts hereby
given tow claims against Kate
| A Domes. late of the Counts of New York, de-
to Ith vouchers.
teannaeting
nei pinoe 0 vot
No, 3
x
‘ow York, on oF betore’ the
ner
Dated, New York, August 21, 1916,
ze w. Sterling.
eorge H. Church,
Execat secular.
Jobe Ae Garver, ms
jor Executors,
Age Wall Stree
w York.
Wee. ROBESKT P.—In pursuance of an
Fo ret of Houurable Joau Cobalas
u
inoreoy mivon to all
Kober B.Wardy te
ney
enorertber, at ane tines
huntnens, at the office of ber at.
Mersin. Schutte & How
Sontarun Street "In the torouah not riya
eon
we have.triumphed over you,
ty ot
and we witnessing and) Suri pew Yor «caro
laboring for your destruction now. fated tr, New York, the 22nd day of
annot but have heard of her| SPtember Tessie D. Ward,
beet ed “the Poor Old aon ttogem ‘Admbitstratria.
woman.” Ah, Shawn, ‘Alinrueys for Admalnistratrix,
ways old. e was yo 01
radiant and beautiful until your blood-
aration of Ireland from England; . they
believed that Ireland should ni
zation male by her
land she haa demonstrated to the world
that she is still the premier butcher of
the nations; that she !s still the enemy
of liberty; that she wi
if she. scone, the flowe
her anit tot
spirit ‘that impel
ruthless
tame spirit
testant patriots o!
is the same English spirit “that followed
a
the Irish across the oceans igma-
tize them Im America; that it is the
me English spirit that shot. th
Sepoys of India from the mouths of
cannon in 1863; that it isthe same
English spirit that overwhelm e
Boer Republics and destroyed the Boer
‘omen and children in the Concentra-
tion Cai f South Africa; that it is
the same spirit that tried to assassin-
ate German character when it could not
meet German
The Irish that Tove Goa and fear no
man, the Irish that love Hberty and
Irish thet stand for
principle and abhor pe
tl
Switzerland, Holland, Belgium, Nor-
way, Sweden, Greece, Roumania and|tfed to the cl arto wheels of the Em-
Bulgaria. They believed in the right] pire and that e dominant thought of
of the people to the ownership of Ire-' twenty talllions or the Trish race is the
land; they believed in the absolute sep-
destruction of that Empire.
No. 18 Montague, Street Borough of Rrocklrn,
Now York City. «alMehizy
Just published by the
The latest and
‘Sir Roger
taken in Germany prior to
picture is beautifully finished, framed
Place in every Irish-. ‘American home.
United States,
220 WEST 42D ST.
POONA
$326:
ofa
fate torough ot rieatetian ch iy st
a
AN ARTISTIC PHOTOGRAVURE,
UNDERNEATH ARE THE LAST WORDS AND FAC-SIMILE
GRAPH OF IRELAND'S LATEST MAR: YR. Size,
~ EUGENE O'SULLIVAN
NSURANCE
56 MAIDEN LANE
Tel. 3120 Jobn New York City
FOUNDED IN 1835 .
Tikes steep
4 Weekly Journa: Devoted to the
terest Irish Race
ri
tie
of the
in Al
for Thirty Years the only frishe Amerk
can Journal tn the Nort!
=| Circulated Extensively Throughow
est and Nort
Oficial tan of the ane sete of
and Ladies Auxilla
‘the State of Minn
aN EXCELLENT ADVERTISING aEDroe
Rates on Appitcation
SUBSCRIPTION Cue
Per Year $2. nthe $1.0¢
The Irish Staniard P Publishing Ca.
Minneapolis, Minn.
LEGAL NOTICES.
SUPREME COURT, NEW YORK COUNTY.
the Sartor ef the applicauonm of Sarah
E. UcGraw and Mary Waiey ve sequire the West
Sige ane ob tig eCity or Nex York to pay ores
by ‘ead apple
le. October, 2,
PLEASE: TRE ROTICE: that ia, the Sav
rg Cour of the, State of New York at Spe-
Tern, tee UT pheyect held “ie and
ey a ‘amount
™
hE.
of det
Sixt J eto Hundred ($6:
ee
LEGAL NOTICES. Srey and ‘notce in "hereby gives cia
mi de that any person having the
Sontiel to prodece ae
ete 18 ‘p.teat West
Rew ‘York
y due
CE ALSO that at the expiration
of ihe. tine ‘ot, the Bublication, of his
- Sen
jank of the
Trvorder. deel
ana ‘airecting the payment ‘ol
roney to denosited in and held by the said
together with interest thereon
SARAH UE ae
MA’
Rated, New York, Qader
By L. W. NAYLOR.
fy. for Penton.
41 Park Row, New York.
Wise RICHARD T.—In pi
order ef Hon. John P. Cohalan,
1@ County
Otis S. Carroll,
fs
‘Attorney for the for the Administrators,
‘New York City.
GUeunist, PHuur. yuance of an
‘order of Hon, oun. TBobtaus a areas
of the County of New York, notiod ie hereby
ven to all persons Philp
Stoke Inte of the Count), of New York. de
ot ‘SS aeelles hos s
Silane the Tih da iat Rem Fer. on
stone the litt day ‘of April next,
ned, Now Fork. the Son dey of 4 sepeonten,
Katherine Gilehrist,
(Ape ‘Administratrix,
» IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT! =
Wolfe Tone Company.
best portrait of
Casement
his departure for Ireland.
SHOWING FULL FACE;
AUTO.
26x13 inches. The
in derk Flemish oak and worthy of a
Price, $1.00, post free to any part of
Wolfe Tone Company
NEW YORK.
SIR ROGER
Laurenc
Price $1.50 postpaid. .
The Only Book Containing Articles by the
Great Irish Patriot
The Only Patriotic Irish Member in the English Parliament
—and by —
THIRTY THREE other distinguished Irishmen and
rishwomen in Ireland and America
“THE GLORIES OF IRBLAND”
Order at once from rhe Gaelic American Office
itn
mtitance sbould accompany or
CASEMENT >
BY —
e Ginnell
The edition i is limited
MOERSESENE ODED REE EER EST ERE HEH oEeceseooeE
iemminseetttas oSetese a ced” a tnane Settee EH