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“ December 9, 1916.
The Saelic Gmenican.
oe ' 3
Judge Cohalan’s Speech.
(Continued from Page 2.) « . -
how England, in spite of everything she could do fBnancialy, ts in
position where she has poured out her wealth in order to get-from America and
world the things whh which ¢
h
of
0 do for themselves, and what all the Allies they ave, been able to bring into
‘their coalition have ingloriously failed t
REBELS SAVED IRELAND. \
ese men in Ireland knew what they were avout when they made this
fight against England; when they took thi r hands: and
race live
‘land as a world Power is only a memory, and an unpleasant memory
t Applause: :
i These men saved Ireland. . They saved the Irish race; they kept dll that
is left, only a pitifully small number, of the manhood of Ireland in Ireland;
they kept them from being conscripted into the English at
help England do the work which England could not or would
more than that, it will
Dody else
rawn in on the English side into this miscalled fight for civiliza-
tion and justice,
other words, Americans of all the Bloods, not alone of our Mood. but
of all the other bloods, ewayed back s0 tauch vulsion from the England
which was revealed in the Soverning powers that stood these men—sen ft to
grace any position in life,
made at the time of surrender, to death—there was such a revulsion in America
againet that England that, let them make what effort they may, please God,
they will not succeed in bringing America in to do the fighting that must be
done fox England’ if England is to win this war. (Applause).
ADE IRISH FREEDOM POSSIBLE,
Under those conditions 1 say that those men will have made ay the
finishing up. o! ork that will have to be done, for, as Dr. 0 Meyer
poiated out to ow to-night, in one or ts o ways it can be proved beyond. “aemone.
tration that in this feht that will g
until one has to go down, tl
certain victory can come t
Ireland, but by helping the Trten people in.Ireland and Irish people abroad to
gain liberty for Ireland, for Ireland wants no Mberty, sven to her by Germany
or by saved cise. (Applai ze).
h people are ‘ne position. where they are going to insist before
this contest ‘ie ended that they will have liberty for themselves., They are going
to take, of course, the assistance of Germany, because Germany is on nem? of
England, just as our forefathers in Ireland in, the old days took the assistance
of Spain when Spain was the enemy of England, took the assistance of France
when France wi
tion here, sought
“the aan of Germany will be gi
the world bringing liberty to the oppressed nations,
ut that they believe that the enlightened veitintersst of
iil compel*Germany to do what can be done towards assisting the
be away from an ee port, should be kept away from ‘comii the
sea—if they succeed in getting down o: east, in spite of England, to the
sea, and i can also succeed In helping to set up or helping to bring into
existence on the west of England @ country that will cut off Engl it it
hostile, from the sea, or will at time be in a position, even where it is
friendly, where England will have no longer the single mastery. of the seas
that lead’ to Europe, that in that way they are strik more fatal blow at
‘ngland can only continue to be a great world Power
put herself in position as she did during our Civil War here, when having alded
arming the Confederate privateers
she drove the American flag from the oa, and ft has never gone bac!
considerable American mercantile marine since she hi
e have been paying to than three hundred million dollars a year
d's power is her con-
fund's dominion would be shal
whom she has oppressed, and almost over night liberty would come to oppressed
ations all over the world .
CONSCRIPTION CANNOT BE ENFORCED.
men in Ireland took the, inevitable step that would have to -be
taken if the Trish race were to be preserved in Ireland, and in spite of every:
thing that can be done now by England's ne ts in Ireland, Redmond and
his Friends, ‘or in England, Lloyd George and Asquit
, forsooth, they are in position where Conscription éannot be enforced in
tela for these men’ of Easter their example, by ‘their display. of
energy, by their aieplay of military skill, have demonstrated that the invin-
ibility ot England is is a'myth, yea, is a joke,
are men ‘nough in Ireland, rea with the arms that are in’ Tre.
‘y test of having to fight to the last
some other nat tion.
And under those conditions there will
there will be no Partition of Jreusha, (applause) altho
order
be no Conscription in Ireland and
eh England ts doing
and in order, to do what
she ‘hes tried every:
where having been
with the en:
which will come to them from
race all over the earth, and with the power that will come to them ander their
“flag, they may we on prosper in Ireland and for Irelai
AY WE HAVE PRAYED for cour.
. 11 be just that if we are the old tradi-
por rest “i ‘ going to be true ‘0 the rod ‘traditions, that the
tions, and I am sure we are
fay ¢ ‘the tyrant will have run to closy nd the day for which generations
of Irishmen sighed, the di for which generattons of Irishmen pled. the y
for which generations of Irishmen aed, at at last, in the providen: f God,
t Power—and the world Is fan of the
in the Revolu-
evolu |
| ual spirit 0
S| hi
4) sifted man; Dut no, the inspiration and the help must have bee!
Thom
and that means the boasted power of Dalene, than can | 5
Week in Dublin and what it m
20
+] precincts, because
her—but the full Independence, the full self-government, the full Republican
form of government for which other generations of Irishmen sighed, hich
m died, and for semen present year of oe Lord
Dublin noder , Materialistic age, went
y ‘and tleotully ‘and willingly, In order to bring life nod
O’Neill Ryan’s Address.
Splendid Tribute To John Mitchel And Assertion Of The Final,
Triumph Of His Principles,
of the
ieder of Hou. dou P.
iiven to ull persone having claime axainst PDIlip
uot
LEGAL NOTICES.
HBIST, PHILIP.
DR. THOMAS ADDIS
EMMET’S BOOKS
Jn parsaanee of an
Cohulan, & Burroxate
County of New York, notice 16 hereby
attorney,
Ynrks guar beigre the tan car
RITZ, HENRY.—In pareuance of an onler
iberty fo tetrad . : > on . oqusod t9 present the sarge witn vousbers orm ae “Ireland Under English Rule; OriA
JRELAND & NATION ONCE AGAIN, sole fubecr! her place of tramsacting | Plea for the Pleiutit;” two volumes;
this war hes Gnally conclided, has finally finished. | pattie User in the cl ark ‘ow York, on or| §¥0; six dollars per set; postage in
whether it Gnishes, as many think {t may, by a truce under which the Central | ParMelte' Tat t day of Aprib nents United States 30 cents; second edition
te a New Yorke oe ee | ot ork; renritten 7a enlarged;
~ atberine Gilchrist, | sami Also his personal recollec-
ae stiosinmibrl. | tions, “Incidents of My Lite,” Hmited
BOYER, JOUN GJ; —jp marwacee of azoraer| edition: One volume; large Svo; same
of Jour Conan. 2 Surovais of | price, These boo ts are out of. print aud
hand. ar
a sot te able ad ‘tions e any br Order
8 Pi rid ide ae Pointe anaatris a Uae through THO TU gent,
Light of truth, will come to feel that the only way fn which Liberty can triumph i New York, on oF before | Wonmet Dulin, So “Madison” Avenue,
will be by the victory the defeat of atte ot Octoien, ma |New
that, and whether we move in the matter or not, 4 believe that Yoram Hc Nichola
the result is inevitable. I believe there will come a tim! eland, after | Cesae Vv. Palister. inrstraor, | queer ES
all her centuries of struggle, of slavery, of sorrow of destruction, will be| “Attorney for Administrator. LEGAL NOTICES.
put in position where the dreams of Mitchel and of Davis—and going back fur. 25 Broadway Borougl of Manhattan, |) |
ther, Wolfe Tone, and Emmet, and Fitzgerald, and all the men who down McMAHON, THOMAS In pursuance. of, a
through the ages have struggled ded for her—even to e wh and | RoyLe, JOHN C. sr—iu pursuance of au | the Gounty of New fe Yor Bote ca i hereby ven, 9
fell 1u Easter Week—will have reality in fact, and where, having come to full 1b- | B° drier of (Hon. John P.Cobuiay, hogan Mee
erty, in the language of Davis: “Ireland, long a province, will be a Nation once Bran tal per Peteons hav en
again.” (Applause), - tate of the oun ty of Nom
oaed tS pr the same with Pouches ii
seo to subworiber. at, iB
Cty ot Ke
fpril? next
Bated) Now Work, the 40 dolor evober, ins,
-d, New Yor! ve Sate
tT eee Adah, ee Lg ee
Claude V, Palliste ith Avenue.
iAttorney Cor adminlxtrator, ‘New Yor (Apr
SifBroadway,orousl of Manhatten, nn
New York it GAprh) || BOKRE, BRIDGET —in pareagn
on
Cobalun, &
County of New York, notioe 13 Sreress
Persons having claimé against Bridget Borke, late
re
Judge O'Neill Ryan, who was received with great applause, sai ‘ f ibe County of Sow York. deceased
| Our friend the toastmaster, Mr. McGarry, {s always most gracious, an eicthe aiichin tins Ra ge busin
i suspect he must have Kissed that Blarney Stone from the neighborhood of m the office of his atcorney. Jobn We Bul
friend, Judge Cohalan’s erstwhile summer residence, (Laughter). And I om He crondmay, "torough, of ivnbayeadin eCity
preciate, my dear friend, the most courteous way in which you have been good next.
enough: to present me to this body of our countrymen, assembled here to-night, | York.or ot bet Tepruaty nexe. | Dnted New York, the ard day of October, ce
not to do Feverence to the memory of John Mitchel, the Irishman; hut to yield| Dated New York. heck uay at Augie ete ‘Bxecutor,
our tribute ect and admiration and adherence to the principles for which "recuton *Rhoriey fot easetton
ze johng Mitchel, ‘the Irish Rebel and the Irish Republican, stood during all the VKtbenay fer Executor, No, 264 Bro
days of of Bis lite. (Applause) a a; 4d Boadway. Manhattan, furewn Xow bistadiied
hat was mortal toxlght of John Mitchel Iied in the old town of] New ¥en re
Newry but hls spirit and ble purpose end his determination lived tvoush the ACKETT, GEORGE Eninpu 2 ace ol urorset of Hoa. Jota Pca
generations of the past century and into fe first ‘he present, and CRETT. GEORGE 8,10 pursuance @ ot an | 9g of the County of Ney York, notice is
aster W jose memorics were inimortalized in| of the County of New York, notice is hereby bereby & fren ton atl pes seninst
the beautiful apotheosis so excellently rendered by your daughter, the daughter | E"NRce,al prrgouahardee claims aratnar George | Now 'Yong, Koc ar, ‘ae of soeat Goats
i ier Xt y ghter, Hackett, late of the sera Kew York. de- | Nin shocker “chereai. > Poe athactibet
Unitariap minister, n 0 say, of the Covenant stock, bu!
Irish of the Irish, or, as Samuel Ferguson said: “kindly Irish of the Irish,
neither Saxon nor Italian,” and there was in his blood the spirit, the strength,
the courage, the undying hope of the Irishmen of the North who, in the
providence of, Got, shall yet stand with the Irishmen of the South beneath that
a Ireland a Republic amongst the Republice of the earth. (Ape
ifted? Rarely so. Cultured? Perfect, exquisite, blooming flower
Irleh culture. He saw hls countrymen oppressed to the earth beneath the brutal
domination of Anglo-Saxon pow
bis words, and it Is as true today.
“The Anglo-Saxon race worships no
prays to no God save It would buy and sell the’ Holy Ghost for money,
It believes the earth, the world was created, is sustained and dominated and
wal be saved by the immutable tremendous and almighty power of the Pound
erling,
‘kad he or that mercenary spirit, so different from the exquisite, spitit- |
e South, crushing his countrymen until almost all lfe, political
een entagula ed.
e a friend of Thomas Davis. Some have sald he inspired that
n alike, mutual.
mas Davis, whose splendid
dered tonight, “The West's Awal
ein this magnificent metropolis of your great State who stand for the
highest and the best and the strongest and the noblest of 0
js true In so many ns, by the mei
we oras
affected here~as
Anglo-Saxon insidious spirit of adoration to rand t Ith and to the
incidents of material pi ity; or do you, lieve from your ye
esence here to-night* feel in your hearts, coursing through your veins,
the blood and the spirit of Mitchel, of Michael O’Brien, whose memory we com-
memorate in this same month of. November;
gallant heroes who laid down their lives on E:
that Ireland may take, through your power and mine and the power of the race
wherever we may be found, her r place, the place where Emmet would have placed
her, a Natfon amongst Natior
“What matter that at diffrent times
ur fathers won this sod;
What gration at what diffrent shrines,
ray unto one God.
ime we're bound
in steel, *
ave in the other's weal.
‘That was the spirit of John Mitchel. That is the spirit of all true men
women of our race. We care not at what altar they worship their God,
fo that they be but true to Ireland and those principles of eternal Iberty tor
which our race has stood in every country, and where th d their
friend Judge Cohal I ton Tent, upon the Easter
And J stood beforg him and were
to stand after him, in the dock in the old courthouse | in Green Street. Some of
you have doubtless, 8 s has been my fortune, stood within hose, to a, hallowed
they wore sanctified by the tinte and ¢ moment by the
Dresencs and the heroism and the courage and the fe fortitude of the great men of
rai j@ last vibrant not ce to Enatiah
the bench, it was. to multitude
beyond It fo the multitude on the ates ot
carried dn by my countrymen? Can I promise
‘Tho cry came back in the face of Her lasers
Promise for me Mitchel;” “Promise for me;” “Pro:
for you, and you, and you?”
mytmidons; “aye,
to »
“And 0, my countrynen, let us say here tonight; “Aye, Mitchel, we
promise for you, the men for whom you stood, and the principles for which you
died, that sq long as breath is in our body, mortal spirit
dominates us, we shall st y and for—aye, we shall die, eed be, for the
principles for genten you were willing to offer up your life on ‘hat fateful day in
Dublin in 186!
"and new went from there to Van Dieman's Land, and he suffered those
exquisite tortures to which only a man such as he was could have been sub-
ve heen. by so inl ohuman amd un-Christian a Government
uu have—read that marvelou
and who
spirit and purpose of John Mitchel, and that 1s John Devoy, the Fenldn and
rer In the leaves of that diery, my friends, are to be found.the gvidence
of that exquisite grace of mind and charm of expression which marked all that
John sitenet touched, had a wonderful command of exquisite and sloaient
expression,
and enriched those pages with “auotattons from the classics and with the
tyranniz ate ee
orld, that were kindled again in Ireland by men,
called Home Rule such as Redmond and the others would have imposed upon
(Continued on 2 on Page 7.)
fe said of that, if I can recall in accuracy | s
. Re:
power save the power of money. It] of N
Ne
John Nicotsen,
Auto
ON
Leonie DENIS J.
Stimson & Willia
‘Atiomevs for
941 Sixth Avenue, -
Between 53rd and 54th Streets. es
ct i
ra the doth day of Fobra
| gm forthe ah
Dated, views York, steteibday of august 19/6" | gig fw York, the 12th day of September,
fackett,
Administrator. Frank J, Curley,
Administrators. t a
ey FOr Administrator, -
Street. Manhattaa Borough,
cléFebi7)
ork cl
ork City.
Meni,
th of an onter
. John P. RA WFORD, CHARLES: G—In parsnance of
we Cc an order oh op, john P. Cohalan, a Bt
gate of th ww York, notice is herehy
given toal persoas, baving ms af
be |G. cra nion late of te con aunty of
ce to present thesame with vouchers there-
ofr the subscribers. at rosin piace lof transactin
business, at the office ir
Broadway, yr Boroves of Maohattan,
New Yori ra OF before the 6th ieday of jay.
eee New buh day of Nowetaber,
Ygodee,B, Orawtord,
‘J. Patterson,
. Bxecators. 1
Patterson, Ei ough & Day
sTlopters lor tescava
_ ANS Broadway. NF City.
33
fecutors,
tor Street, Borough of Manhattan, New
Say \2AFebi7)
eMart
GOOD CLOTHES ARE HALF
THE BATTLE.
- The well dressed man men has @ tremen-
. dous advantage over the other fellow,
and ft choose the
PATRICK J. HOEY,
LEADING IRISH TAILOR,
New York.
Tel Circle 1783,
7
\S
.. THEY ARE SELLING FAST.
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THE GAELOPHONE METHOD
FOR THE TEACHING OF IRISH. EACH OUTFIT CON-
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THE PRICE WHILE
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PRICE OF THE GAELOPHONE TEXT BOOK ALONE 25c.
THIS IS AN UNUSUAL OE aan TO GET THIS
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EVER MADE, IT IS TRULY A BARGAIN, -
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Professor -eNelll ery Rev. canes Peter “Ouest, John P,
MacEnti, M. D. Patr’
‘ou and Sour family. wil enjoy” ite Irish Dialogues, Folk
Teles, Recitations and Songs. This method will do mote for th
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