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December 23, 1916,
The Saelic Amenican. : : n
Tons Gictinent of English heartiessncss, “The
‘ vg[ Fo “DR, THOMAS ADDIS
’
- . : x TH E MEN AND TH E MOVE: “A million a decade! calmly and cold ’
; ESTABLISHED 197% iE ] “rhe unite are read by cur atateames| EMMET’S BOOKS
a neemmeres zy sage; ———
% MENT OF 1848 Little they think of a nation old “freland Under Englia! .
¢ ° | Fading away from History’s poge. | Piea for ibe inti” "ewo. volumes:
. £ q Outcast weeds by a desolate sea, |svo, eix dollars per ser; postage
ISA AC GOLDMANN CO s . Fallen leaves of Humanity. United States 30.ccnts; second edition
. 2 e :
° ¢ By JOHN KENNY. ela mefliton a decade—of human wrecks— of same me Fi; Fenriten ° d enlarged:
é 8 lying iu fever sheds— tions, “Incidents of My Life,” l:nited
a . corps “huddied on foundering dec edition; one volume: .
; shroudlees dead in their rocky'| pr: ese bo9 «8 are out of print and
\ f . My memory reaches back to the)a student of conditfons, a man who beds. but a few remain on hand. They are
. Pp R I . decade immediately succeeding '48,|!00Ked far Into the future, To enter Nerve and muscle end heart and/useful and lasting presents and valu-
® upon an analysis of his character, an rain able additions to eny ibrary. Order
N T I N G when moet oe the Young Ireland men! exposition of his doctrine, or a survey Lost to Ireland and fost in vain.” |through THOMAS P. TUITE, Agent,
: ‘0 still living and the “Young Ire-| o¢ the work which he projected would| « Emmet Butlding, 89° Madison Avenue,
OF. EVERY DESCRIPTION land” organ, The Nation, still % retained require, not a few minutcs, but an en-| But the wail is ever’and clways suc-| New York City.
and in ire evening. A day will come when,| ceeded by the ringing note of Sone
HL how t Itke Shakespeare, or Ike Tone, he wili| which was signified in her own pen| OO ae
be found to stand { fe estimation | name, &; van, end in ths followin LEGAL NOTICES,
ALL MODERN LANGUAGES tn-thewoot O'Connetites resarded’ the} head aud shoulere arove: men whos-| lines! ne is tie fetiowiog on
. Young Ireland men and spoke of them | reputations now overshadow his, He OMAHION, | THOMAS
. In about the same way that some people| realized that ireland bad not only an| “Then not in vein my wonsn's hand | theGaunty af New York. notes
—_—_—— speak of us to-day. The great bulk of} Memy in England over the sca, but| Has sume the rold harp while I stand oh abn ite of pe my af hw Yor anes
well. "| that Ireland hed an enemy in its toson aiting thy rise, = ‘he saree ere thereof tothe,
. hove pele were wetlmenning 40 50+ oid by every tle of selfincrest to| Loved ‘reand™ See wae eee
80 LAFAYETTE STREET » They ap y the} remain an ally of England. Other men . Leb vente, Boraich of Mar the City of
oratory of O'Connell and the glamor of| recognized ft, too, out few had his per-| The Influence of the Young Ireland) Ney Yorkso2 ok jaa ta tat ea April newts
Franklin to White Street the great Repeal meetings. An instinc-| ception and none but he had the {nitia./ leaders still continues, the inspiration . oka Gorman.
yan tive droad of revolutionary doctrines| ve. the resurce, or the courage to/ of thelr genius ts still felt; the €l0-| risdture Sattler, Execotar.
y still aurvived in the national mind, 2 foneelve, to devise and to advocate pub- quence and sane Sy Meagher, the ‘Attorney Zor Exeeuror, wan.
| / } @/iely the putting into oreration a way| teachings of Duty and Davis, the Incld Avenue, Manbe
TELEPHONE, FRANKLIN 4520 NEW YORK consequence ‘of the excesses of the! of ‘dealing specdily and. successfully | aad vigorous thought of Lalor, the| NO SeeCo: CAPD.
a . French Revolution, awhile the estrava-| with the problem, Any amelioration |Hizging notes of Speranza mingled with | BRUKKg, WiltUGET.—tn paruance ofa
. . font speeches and writings of some con-| which has taken place in later years in| the gentier tones of Mary ‘or iog. Jona P. Colausn,a surrogeia of the
temporary agitators on Continent| that. direction may be traced to the|the roctry of Davis, Mangan and Me. Comat Of New Yor autioe tpraped Surkeciata
tended to confirm them in thelr pre-| doctrines and the counsel of Lalor,|Cann, while the remembrance of the| o¢te County of ew Fork. 4 to pre-
judi Had the bulk of the rarty Lecn in com-|eturdy and rncompromising sttitude of | St tke, sane is plage of vast
‘There can hardly be any question but| plete accord with hin the worst of the| Jolin Mitchel still serves to fortity the | tae often of be attorse We
that the excesses into which the Span-| famine evil might have been obviated, |spirit of resistence to English rule. | SAV 5S7 Houeay STaatewsaet Bey
ish Jew, Marat, and his two accomplices| The physical and temperamental dis-| Of all the Young Ireland leaders! ne:
' carried the French d-mocracy during| advantages under whicy Lalor.lahored| there are two whoce influence at the| Dated New York, speenaria Barber es 118
the Retgn of Terror really served to set| precluded him from taking the place| Present day would seem to be the most ior.
k the cause of popular government | before the public which his great abil-|lasting—Mitchel, through the spirit of [PRN Selb he oton
ie for a century, The readiness with| ity would otherwise have warrented SS tireadway,
; which these old O’Connellites entered| Had he been abic to do so his influcnce| o: Actas]
: ~ into the spirit of Fenianism* demon-| in shaping the policy of the ‘43 move-/Lalor through the Ieaven which he set
: strated the fact that they were sincere| ment would have resulted in immediate) to work im the minds of hie countrymen Dita oroer of Hon, sous't ve, cones Sarce
and that the spirit of nationality| benefit and in far-reaching gate of the County of york nottoe Is herel
: was‘not dead in their hearts, but only| quences. He had the clearest percep. §"Drammond fu sabia east eaten Mobo
. that it had been lulled to sleep by the| tion of Ireland's needs and of the PEARSE TO IRELAND. dcoratea-togresrat the samo with voucherstbere:
same soporific methods which Jobn| methods of supplying them. He had the! Sisloere: at the once of
Redmond and his band of paid Partia-| best understanding of Irish problems Mother Erin, I have loved thee, ¥ . BL Chambers Street, B, the City of
. COMPLIMENTS OF —~ mentarians have used in the years just] an most effectual and quick With a love that knew no fear; nex noe Sale ihe eleventh day of Sun
passed, ‘The spirit and teachings of| way of solving them. He rese enabled T have drawy the sword to free thee, ated, New York, the 4th day of December,
. | Davis, Lalor, Mitchel, and their asso-| Mitchel, perhaps influenced Mitchel, in| At the flowering of the year. me Waiter J. Drummond
clates in the Nation and other ‘48 pa-| the stand which he took concerning Ire carane! Executor,
: , || pers continued to leaven the Irish mindj land's attitude towards England. Ire But “ Rend wee ee pmite me LYSE SAROARET Ja, peraanes of as
. ‘ and later when Denis Holland’s paper, land, to him, was not a beggar sinpeat 8 I stooped to kiss TOW, Conbinn s Karrogave
Louis D. Conley the Irishman, supplanted the slavish | ing to te world for sympathy and afd an the arm thet would have freed thee | or the County of New Forks notioe by
Catholic. Telegraph. In popular favor.) but an Treland. robbed and. desroiled, my side hangs helpless give vine cletmgaeaine! Mare
. the way prepared im ireland for| boldly demanding the return of what cedaed, 10 recent the eam
the work which O'Mabony and Steph-| belongs of right. T have lived and loved and eae Sas tet
ens‘ were then planning in Paris. With| There was another large figure of|, With @ Patriot's heart an oem Ine tar the Borcust ot Manmaceaa,
“48 as with ’67 the rising was a failure,|that day which might have become in-| That the dawning years mmiehe tnd thee ithe City of NewYork, on oF beforethe th day
but the movement was . success. fluential in the ’48 movement, that of| Fearless and unfettered still. seek New York, the 12th day of December,
A disposition exists on the part of|Feargus O'Connor, the great Chartist
some historians to class the Young Ire-| leader, but the ealousy of O'Connell | | 8m vanquished and my comrades Joh Je eat
2 Iand men as merely a group of very bril-| caused him to transfer his activitics| , 1 the glorious fight have bled. | Pet Morey Tor Bxecnton,
cs Mant agitators—orators, writers, and| wholly to England, where as a co-work-| ANd the dauntiess hearts that loved oa ™
* ~~ ~[} perhaps a few not wery profound think-j er-with -Ernest Jones the Welshman fest ¢ the silent dead * New York Ctr, N.Y. (233anel7)
|| ers—men not endowed with the -capac-|and John Frost the Englishman he among the silent dead.
. ity for Practical work—ereat construc:| shook the foundations of the British CP vtoraet of Glen Joan Condian a Beret
tive work. t 1s a mistake, as may feudal structure, ‘The Chartist_move-/ BU ‘twere nobler thus to perish ‘ Soanty of Rew York notice ls hereby
be seen in ‘the * subsequent. careers of ment, like the Young Ireland and the wine w York. ¢
maby of them : Fentan movement, Sean at the ‘same With the distant voice of freedom cased to press thesacae with vouchers ther
Take, for instance, the case of Davis,| time a failure and a success. Most of| Echoing in their dying ears, gens ences maeacaote
who is usually regarded as the ablest the boasted Iiterties which, the Enstish Rrosdway, Borough of Mans
among them. It 1s said that O'Connell] people now enjoy are the fruits of the| TBan fo stand o8 ‘camer minions The h seer ner
cm ye ~ looked upon him as his successor in the] Chartist agitation and not of the vaunt- conqueror’s race,
TELEPHONE, 4548 MADISON 8Q. « leadership. This was after O'Connell| ed Magni ‘a. It shows the abso- with {be clapking chains of onda ge Teint
. . had given up the hope of being succeed-| lute ignorance of the average American ling of our deep disgra ‘Bxecutors,
: . ed by the only able and worthy son he| spouters and scribblers that they never Pas inline far execute
had, Maurice whose unfortunate marri-| allude to the Chartiet agitation. It is| When the quenchiess fire of freedom, 120 Bi oe Y Oty. aeMagin
. age had clouded his life and spoiled his| an historical fact of which they seom Bueke cing through the gloom o Fisker gown baisqipue ore
promising career. What would seem to| to be entirely unaware, ier ana
Pp GALLAGH E R have been the least practical part of] Leaders Uke Tone or Parnell would| Salt have Mashed upon the pitttop | ot tie County of New York, notion is hetese
™ “ : Davis's work was the making of verses.| have availed themselves of the oppor-| Conqueror of blood and tears; easter eaerie County of New Forde
t that was undertaken with a purely| tunity which the Chartist agitation Pre-| 44.04 @ guture race shall find you onan, to ae with toucherashere-
. « practical purpose in view. It was felt|sented, but O'Connell declined to do so. fo,ine, mubeer Storr Aree
y the founders of the Nation newspa-| just as Redmond declined to avail] , Dauntless still and undefiled, ton 8e. 8 stares ecg kee
: per that there was needed amongst| himself of two similar opportunities! Men of Erin ob rememter SRA Gmaipareerae Bie
. other stimull, stirring verses, breatling| O'Connell eveu refused to treat with ‘as for Freedom's cause they died. oes G. Hackett
Contractor and Builder a militant patriotism, to arouse the| the leaders of the Scottish Highlanders John Nieolect Mnainisrator
; people after the effervescence caused by| whose organization at that time was a|,TheY Sre gone and | must follow “Attorner for Administrator,
. the great Repeal meetings had begun} cause for serious concern on the part| 70 the golden felds above, 3 proran Street, Manbsttaa Boroogh
to subside. At that time the group of|of English statesmen, Where the matghty God of Jastica Osten
‘ poets who afterward made the paper| There was just one fllogtcat conclu-} Shall reward a patriot's love, YONG, DENIS J.= Ta parwuance,of an order
: famous, had not begun to write or were|sion arrived at by the Young Ireland
1181 BROADWAY ; still unknown, so Davis undertook to/leaders. O'Connell had failed io ‘ob- Sect * was to live and on thee,
write poetry to order although he had| tain Repeal through constitutional agi-| . sweeter far for thee le:
: \ Sl never before tried his hand. He suc-| tation, and affirmed his belief in the| With the fower-clad hie around me
NEW YORK ceeded as he did ineverything he under-|“one drop of blood” doctrine, while| Pcbo!e back thelr last good-bye, :
ook. » | they announced thelr determination to oo Se
Charles Gavan Duffy was a man with) fight for ft. If they took up arms for| Asquith got tnfuensa immediately of New dork on or before ie frat day of
great constructive ability-a fact which| the partial freedom which Repeal would | *fte? Bolng out of the Premforship, and| DA! New York: Anewst. Th Nate
fe demonstrated as Prime Minister in| confer they might more reasonably have| L!0¥d George got a chill immediately Terence 3; penne
‘Australia, I spent a few years in Aus-| decided to fight for complete freedom ater going in, which {s nothing to! stimson & Wilila Beecutore
tralia when Dufly was at the height of| for the cost would have been no great-| “bat both of them will get in the near| “Atiormess for Fxecators,
his power, He rose to high position| er, It is but fair to assume that some| ture. iS igre Street, Borough of Manhattan, New
through the sheer force of his own un-|of them secretly intended that if they
{ =. aided ability and he maintained ft in| took the first step they would follow it
spite of anttIrish, anti-Catholic, pre-|to the logical end. Men like Mitchel} //~
judice because the bulk of the colonists|may have had in the back of their
became convinced that his retention| minds a reservation like that which THEY ARE SELLING FAST. )
was for the best interests of the colony.| was implied In Parnell’s famous word
) During his Premiership and that of his|“You can set no ot nce WE NOW HAVE ONLY A FEW OUTFITS LEFT OF
: au fetlowcountryman, ‘John O'Shannassy.|of a nation.” A man of lesser
RUN MW Ne the colony made great strides. John Redmond, since then etsayed the H
‘ E YING COMP ANY While Duffy accepted English rule in| task, but it seems now as if he will be
. an Hnolisn colony, unllke D’AteyMeGee,| overwhelmed by the advance of the
' BRE he never hesitated to declare himself a| nation whose march he has tried to FOR THE TEACHING OF IRISH. EACH OUTFIT CON-
: rebel against English rule in Ireland. | stay. SISTS OF A CYLINDER PHONOGRAPH, THIRTY-FIVE
1 It ts the misfortune of some to be| I shall just say a brief word about PHONOGRAPH RECORDS AND TEXT B -
Stapleton Staten Is and dented the credit or the rank which Is| woman's part in the ‘48 movement. Up T BOOK OF LES-
’ «|| thete due Such were Nolrneus, Rors | to that time women had taken no part in SONS,
O'Mo} Art, MeMurrough, | Irish politico-literary work. Clever, tal- THE PRICE WHILE
_—_ -, « Malachy, Morann, and others, This i ented women there § ‘were—women of real THEY J AST IS
: ” : true of others besides Irishmen. For {n-/ genius—but they did not venture out-
for Bottled B stance, Shakespeare was but little Tead| cide the literary field or social cfr. ‘ORMER PRICE WAS $45. 00.
A Master-Brew for Bottled Beer and Mitle thought of for one hundred|Lady Morgan, Lady Dufferin, Mrs. PRICE OF THE GAELOPHONE TEXT B00:
years after his time. Occasionally pos-| Tighe, Maria Edgworth, and others had OOK ALONE 250,
terity gradually grows to recognize| distinguished themselves in literature
merit and at Iength accords the rank|or in the salon, but the '48 movement FAIS TS AN UNUSUAL OPPORTUNITY TO GET THIS
oe that 1s justly due. Shakespeare 1s now| enlisted the services of a group of pa- NT METHOD AT THE LOWEST PRICE
= WHOLESOME NUTRITIOUS regarded as the greatest figure in Eng-|triotic wothen Hke Speranza, Mary of|" EVER MADE. IT IS TRULY A BARGAIN,
’ lish Iterature. And, by the way, 1/the Nation, and Eva,
. may digress to say that Shakespeare) | In the sorrowing years following the you hon ising votes of Dr Be recteat ray {0 learn, trish—
AND REFRESHING was not an Anglo-Saxon, Ho was a| famine the national spirit seemed to bi Professor John BMecNellly Very Rev. canon Petes O'Leary, ee
Briton, that is, a Celt, Another fact| completely crushed, At this time the MacEor!, Daa wd Mr, Patrick O'Shea, eter O'Leary, Job
. . but little known 1s that he was a Catho-| spirited stanzas of Speranza served to gy and your faniiy will enjoy the Irish Dish
-_— Ne, and that was a fact but lttle known| keep it alive until the day when the Totes, Recttsticns and ‘Songs. hod. will de mere Fork
* in his own day an obvious reasons Fenian movement fanned it into a ish 1 jo “more for the
<n cist aa egat the men to rien | nen Irish Ianguage and real genuine Irish y patriotiem thea anything yet
CALL TOMPKINSVILLE 480 FOR A SAMPLE nas not’ done justice fe James Fiaten| At’ times there ty & wail in her poetry ed
) . Lalor, one of the ablest and most orgin-|as 1€ she seemed almost about to give ORDER THROUGH
al of the '48 men; a deep, clear thinker, | way tothe ‘reeling of despair which
al of the “4 werd "Duty nents re ee THE GAELIO AMERICAN, 165 William St. New York.
. : bas - y, *They all became separatist or physt-' land to Pe the dissecting} \\ . Remittance should accompany order.
oe cal force men after ‘G7. table.” Tia heard in that scathing in: A