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AJOURNAL DBVOTED TO THE GAUSE OI‘ IRISH INDEPENDENCE, IRISH LITERATURE AND THE INTEEIZSTS 01‘ THE IRISH RACE.
Vol. XIL, No. 19. Whole No. 608.
NEYV YORK, MAY 8, 1915.‘
[Hand an-ear-d.cia.a nlatlur.K)r1 l. no-s.at uh. Panomra ox
Nut Yuri. N. 1.. man mmur lnallill M auras, II
PRICE FIVE GENTS.
lRlSll RENEGADES AND FRENCH ATHEISTS UNITE
form An Alliance To Convert “Pro-Iiermaa lrisllnlen in America" To The Cause Of
; England’: Supremacy Of The Seas And The Smashing 0f German Commerce-
; 0‘Coilnlir And Devlin Tell Viviani, Who lioiisted Tllat lle llzid “Pat Out
"I
i
eiy. but
The Lights Oi lleaven" ‘ilini Ireland llas Forsworn ller ltlcals
And Principles-An Effort To Offset Casemtnfs Success
in llerlin ‘Frenchman Dill Not Talli Seriously Anti
Were Silent lln American Proposition.
army of F
rilnco-Irish
state
shouters is
if ‘H
now several banks oi dark
oloudsfoverliang it and a bail alarm is
re n .
the little
So, a
lriehmen," at our
Tay Pay apoke so cont
nndfui oi
am John R
“lwro-German
almond and
enmtuously he-
cau e at the assurances received lrom
must
ona
sooner.
The first inkling
taken
be convened
ne
"immediately, if
desilti
ay in London.
resolutions in the Freeman,
nlnortnnce and
not
as
5:-
'w-aa a sort oi recunnoilrins move-
ment to locate the enemy and ascertain
his strength. Here it is
PARIS. April 28.-A
to tell the President why
u
T11
the Irish Nationalists are standi
- ‘iv
the Allie
a. v
=: on Saturday
the delegation is
1 honor at s
t
nan
‘n Irish dele-
o
are expected to make most lmi.or-
taut spcerhe
, i The ohicct
s.
or the ,iriah visit is to-
,send a Franco-irlsh delegation to
Irishman there
views to the viewpoint oi the Allies,
LOTS OF FUN PROMJSED
so
the contemlrtlllie
men" or
he were not W0
handlul oi “prov
rtla
atithe,ooilce. ed t a he
question, to give their reasons for lg:
faith that is in them, In mi‘
speech unri resolution .what they th
5.-
=
o
of liv n
lot:
iota
Fr
I 3. A
0! other
0! (Ian.
on! th
nd the
things.
Ie chaplains. but II Inldlerl
3‘ that Vlvliln
. ill want to
’ “so there will
i
s I Co for
:
?-‘ea
he
rrcnch dale:-Ms “W “'3'
u
want an explanation ol the new on
i hlmseit can’! come.
FREAKING THE NEWS GENTLY. I
we got at this when
‘as '
o from to
to let into their meeting the pro-Ger.
man irlalamcn whom they want to mm
veri. why there are lots o is in
evc ‘ rlty and pic i [Ira-G-rmhu
irlshmen to all them and nienr of men
British attempt to murder
Casement in Nor ' -
Minister.
xx
. by l-‘lndla
Irling tinder the in-
stntctiona oi sir Eclwarcl Grey, the
British lrorcign secretary, and can pro-
duce convincing proofs. They have
vholograpllir: Jareimile or l7‘lndlny's
written guarantee of a reward for the
murder w it he wanted committed in
the territory at a neutral nallomiof lin-
ner or the Bri
a.
oi
w r i Europa lor the sordid
nose or destroying the trade or
in vIl. with I number of other
interesting things, can be thrown on
the stream and will make s most. altran,
tlve 2). so that the traitors
who have sold‘ Ireland fur'E'izg1lah 10
w it really he the means or providing a
aplendid anti-English Irish campaign
to the Ylciflc and
from the Great Lakes lo the Gulf.
WILL THi‘l" IIRIXG THEIR FLAMES
A.vn THEIR .IAGsI
nur-
co
m.
we is an Ant rlcun nnd tho Amdrl
people are very much interested in any
or their countrywmn oh marry
prominent Europeans, ilerhnne Tay Pay
sent round
rI<'ll Llberllla to obtain
no to eqcct a rcttlc-mt-nt and the
hiring in an r can con t t Tay
l>dy‘s proluiscuou ltmcliira as ntevcnt-
As these English ilrt)'lVlel1lu to 0'C
nor for tile expend?! ol his mistresses
arepart oi the debt or rratltuda the
lrish r
it those lnnslarllonl
give evidzllfe ,
But ocrhups. as Tay Pay has now "got
red or T. .
lllled that mlrlliml at t h
rention in lilsi and he rric-rred as the
‘o Dalrloia were by I:’n'-’d!Vl.‘'- "3 I
nigger hallhoy.
And will Private stehilcn Gvrylln be
one or the delegates and nrlng with him
o.
?.
=-:.
a
n
it . There are other eligible undi-
datca like Tom. o‘(:onnor Gou .‘ who
might sing “God save the King" in
lrlall, and Long John O'Connor in bi-
uoikncy accrllt, plastered over a Cork
hrosuu would entertain the audience:
with his irllliliuble story, “Why
broke my Fenian oath and became I
Loyal Plarehunler."
THE "PARTY" CAPTCRES PARIS.
While we were waiting ior informa-
the conlnoaliion ot the Franco-
irlah Siioutlns B sado. the Pa.rliInIen-
an Com lttea hurat on Paris and
interviewed i=rcrnicr,vivlaal and Car-
dinal Anletta-but not tolzothtlr. Vivi-
Inl ha. not yet explained name little
new movement [OEI on. T v
had the following deal-latch in its issue
of Friday, April 30. under the heading’.
“lrelund Loyal to the Allloa:"
PARIS. April no.-inland‘: tym-
nce in the present
a
war who olced here to day
delegatl n ol! 1: din lrlshnlcn
headed hr 1', P. D'Conn
or. . and
Joseph Devlin. ll.i>.. president or
the Ancient order-at Hihernlann.
Britla rarllameot. lve
hy Pl-e dent rolncars antrx iter-
ward hy rdlnal Araette. Arrh-
hisllc oi Par. To h. ad.
dressee outlining the iriah position
wera presented.
Premier Vivlanl. Henry Franklin
n Ind Denys Cochin, mem-
ot the chamher or Deputies,
a 1:
nd I) always conlldered
the greatest Callie nation.
Inc! he always granted asylum
to exiled irlsh ehieitalaa Ireland
truly is gratedul. Now that the an-
nslllld hu been
nghtlng with
France
my and the rights; or small nation .
‘Ind ior universal us ce in-lan
‘to-day u..:.:., by Fr co .ra'.her-’
great struggle against invasion or
a militant nation. All lreiand
iolne tadIY ll'I‘l.lIe cry ‘Vive
Fr a'’‘
due .
President Poincare was deeply
touched hy the address and express-
ed hirnllelt as xi-ea Y P d over
the assurance that ireland -ynlpa.
ti-ilzed with his country.
JOE. DE!‘ 5
E
2:55.
The addresl made td.CIrdinal
Amette was by tar the strongest ut-
ierance yet made by a catholic or-
ganization on the present war. in
part it read: X
"The Ancient Order at Hiber-
hints, in convention Iasemhled re-
r
dreaming that help would Come
ll‘ Fr tire.
of
centuries conrllct
NHiIy Ire
and J a 9.
slot: of the right oi Ielf-government '
rl Ila has onrlled the mlal ol
the iris to Great Britain. The
(intent: (‘ordidie hetween Franco
and Enl dxalso exists between
France and '
Ireland.
cause or the Allies it our
cause. The durres r the Allies‘
will he a step iorwsrd train the bar-
hariilm at militarism to a new an
or progress Ind hope."
WHAT DO THE IRISH HISHOPS
THINK or‘ 11'!
What do the Irish
this new ivrosralnnle
oi
Birhovt tillnll
of an Illlnnce be-
at ireia . as the Ho a
trait. and the atheist: oi France who
hate desnolle the Church, closed the
dl-iron the priests inio lhe army: Some
at iheln-only a lew-hare ea is
coming lo lrlall towns the sclldlrra and
nllnrs or the most immoral army and
nary in e world and hai-snow on
(hair hand: the ilrolllenl or the "war
baitlu” and r mothers, they
ever read the English papers in which
women dear he uatortunate
nlrlthc making a laudaole patriotic
ucriace ior their country by providing
men ior tile next wart
That the nlllnrlly oi the Biahrlpa and
priests are on right to-day we have
not he ellnecled to say all they thlnlr in
nuhllc. taut alirely they cannot at ow
. P O'Connor. one or the most notor-
lously immoral men in London. whore
MLAUGHLIN IN BOSTON.
National President Condemns Par-
ll.-imentary Leaders for Asking
Ii-iallmon to Fight for England
and Scouts the “Prlendsllip for
Frilnca" Humbug-Hopes Eng-
land Will Go Down.
non-ro.x'. May 8.-Cheer: and
lhlllvlullr lIllmllillK (If (06
nallants n Enxlurl and the Attack on
the Irish Pliriilllibllilry leaders uttered
by Jtlleph “(‘LIllghlin. Xlllonll Presi-
dent ofjha Allrienl Order of Hibernian!
It I rnasl meet d reception given
in his honor in Faneull Hall Inl him.
The apeerh 0 President lllchnughlin
came I: I complete Illrpriss It the close
aiirlam, Bcnlumin J. Fitllllirlrk We‘
allied
Prdnldent llotaughlln, alter review-
in; [HQ Vl0l'k Of ‘HG Hibernian nrlInl:a-
and her own.
to express my thought; here tonight
“I cannot agree I t the oncotrusted
supremacy among tn na ot -
N i on ot say an: word ahout
the tent nnaell with sayln
this, that I cullid not ask our young men
to accept England‘; ahilllng to nghl.
under England‘: bluodrauined Union
c .
“We are laid we should sympathize
M. II of old. Ila, h
r:
to hanlah the Jesuits and the lint to
rl nuns and brothel’: Ind in
eonlIsra),e“thelr properly. As goo
athotrc nrewre called upon to tight
[or a degenerate and Ilhelllt France?‘
The audience lumped to its feet and
shouted "X I no!" and tha anhlanse
lasted eoma nllnltteei’ President M6
Lauslllln conrluded:
“i cannot ulldcrniand, attain, how we
;
on
3
5
during the weekday‘. still,
is
and dialer l-iihernlans, to pray, wit
Your lult hreath. Ior these two Ihinnt
First, that France, once d
C
r, Ind, semtld,
s
VII y so down. ior lsnod
or
Illdlence,
lnore.
Thu ii to touch llpnn lrlah
tloulll qllealianl w a the Rev. John
Ryllz. Sula ChnplIln of the A. 04
who Iid:
aa-
.r.
H
"1 none to ace. when this war allall
rlone. two new peoples-an independent
Poland and In lndsaendcnt lrelaa’u-
hain tuning their places among the has
tltml ot the earth,"
CROOKS GET COMMISSIONS
IN TIIE BRITISH ARMY.
They're scrrins a line class or olmre
in the English army, according to .
desnatch sent to the New York Tribune
ti
5 Landon tornvs nndent. under
date of April 2: it aa
General I-‘rent a
a now ende
mission: in the arm
rraclr regiments like the Guards.
Rllle nrlgnda nnd Tl-nlh llltssars,
o hy lae prclenred, Those ol-
nrers have ltrraule ltllorrll in the some
and in the military clubs in London us
the hmit Hundr . ‘
tour nlllcers in the Brit-
ante were cashierad and
in England were 9
Wired oi tncir rorllm
mrll are adventurer! ol
These
lsslo
the worst type,
id ml 5 it I [hid
-eniurer to as o are in t
Guard or other crack regiments a void.
their particular illentl.
to ohtnin a rnnlnlisaloll in its Irnly an
applicant must give a reference to .n
onirer or field rank. but these rsterencaa
llersilip la lying (if Ille
Papers, ilne ‘Falsifier
The Cort Theatre, Welt Fortyetstlth
strut, -as Wlrkeli in ovcrrlnwlox on
with no earnest ludlv
e, the orrnlirln twirl; the third sca
lion of armn
united sum Io
lzuropa and .-iiarl
orruillrfl the rhnlr
(‘OLOXEL E.lIERFI),V’R Annrurss.
Colonel l-Zmerlu-in hrxlln his discourse
uy saying that hr iolneu tho American
Truth soricly nouuna he in an Ameri-
can Inc] a believer In Truth. l-la Wu
tilted to speak on his alibi!-cl. hrcausa
la a military man that waa his special-
lty He enumerated lxta many activi-
lien, both In I in man Illd It WI!
cnrrulmlldellt in
and aura
more than one
nx torrea in
Alrrcd J. Talley
an e (hind x
once had convinced him that the qua-
n r
more in rrnting and perpeiuallnr
the humorous revolution: and rebellion!
that occur in l a Latin-American no
huhlic ’
"wars." continued the speaker "have
rlrma like the Union Metallic Cartridge
Corrmany. the wlnhhertcr and other
commni-s roilld aurlniy them with Irma
and ammunition in large quantities.‘
They had inarancca or the some thing
in Central America. and the trouble
with Nicaragua was not yet ended.
IAKIVQ ursn-an lv.l'nl.uno!<lI.
Detlllnx with the Mexican situation.
Colonel limoronrl anld that ior twenty
years non Pamrlo Dllal hnd ruled Mex-
I a hut his tmltllle hcsau when Ameri-
(‘In arms were unit in orcr the Notthern
r
sea
ever since they could sea for them.
olrea. - '
He was with (ll-nrral Huerta a
military ohm-rvcr tor the rolled slate-
rion when that
I'M the
hit at tho hatiln or xi-ur-o chnpolle llred
away more ammunition than was used
during the entire South Afrirhn wnr.
The Gorxllarl rher It the lllnrrl
due to the lame rnurr --.l--ct so long."
continued the l!l"’Mwr, inns are ex-
ported lrom tliia 4-olllllry, the war is
going to horn on."
lie had awommnled Villa. he said.
on his mum. on Tnrreon. and as tho
qllmllon or rnilurl stairs intrrrtrlllon
w s then bring dt-hated ha asliod villa
whnt he would do in lulrh n roarin-
xonry and he replied that he would cer-
tsialy go luitainct the United slates.
tic icolonel l-zmorsoni sent that report
to w ahlustnn an
-1
. it raards the annular; oi munitions to
General Villa was stopped. But when he
was In; the ammunition Iu Ilill
going in and American rltltens had re-
celreit nn ordt-r to clcar out and be
quick ltboul. it g
Arlrslcixii lcitnu or Aslrnli-Ax lIl'l.LETS.
The American hllwlackets who tell
tiurlng the-occupation or xera Crll:
nera killed with American hulleto. -The
accupntio vura Crux had new
I
hmusllt ahout by the shipment or arms
and ammunition t Go
At that time it was is
her a.
m nresenled that
the ahinnlent w n G
re
erlllnn Ih
ma
5.“.
t e tw rresldcnia. they were
lira! lent to Odelsl. and fret Odessa
Io ambltr from Hlmhtlrg to
are In oitcn as not not inquired into,
and lo awindler or adventurer hy dlh
‘ (volfirluel ml Paul I.)
(continued on Pay: 5.)
WARS MADE FOR llllJNlTl0N MANUFACTURERS
Colonel Elllcrsoa. llciore ilreat Audience At llcciing (ll American Trnill Society.
GiltsSome L'dansll'eralllc Facts About llis Expcriemes in Europe Alltl Mexico-
Tlie Factories Are Kept Going lly lltlolntions in Latin America Fitment-
ed in This Country-Students Testing Aeroplane: For England At
Corncll l’nil'ersiiy-0'l.eary Exposes Tile Disgrauinl Part-
Anglomaniai: New‘ York
iiakts in The Other.
and it was derided to tilt Yhalembargo
and
Illoled to hIvd Ill tha'arnls
ver a shipment at arms
about which all the tronhle van raised
was landed a little later down at Perm
a. .
ll) be ill
he vrnntnd.
a
:
3
Kill .FIIL“l"IALl‘I'Y.‘ ll‘! RIIXAFITY.
The question at the sale and expor.
lion or arms ‘I a use or non.
ll n
trality. hut or humanity. Although an
a conversation with a proiesaor at Corl-
h
nell valve it . 1,,
the line or pol as y Ger.
man at e. (Colonel Eineraon) ulrcd
him it it w r. [0 K,“
y mean: or chlorine gases than
to lend iron into their moist
"II. II Iudt II inhuman to sell Inn!
in to sell two on, and a. it 1. .
t-rims under the Sullivan 1‘
esa
e contention or the manu-
ll I18
racturcrs at arms in
on
delegates a
a declaration against the use at poigqn.
and gases. That dou not mean that it
in rIshL it is the same with the sale
or arms.
AS ro utnhoonl.
C ox. colonel Emerson dealt
exhaustively with the gunman og ,,.,,,
hnrsoea on Irml. as it vru dealt with
by President: waehlngtoa..1aclrsoa. Lin-
coln. ‘nit. R on and W1
ation or a to and sec..."
that country is at war ouid he an in.
Justice Ind a breach or neutrality.
Washington color h. mm,
"" lily a no -
lion or 5.000 and practically no armyp:i:d
no niiry.
"They had the backbone.“ interrupted
a woman in the audience, Ind camel
Emerson smiled driiy,
was turiher mntendsd. he contiau.
ed, by the international lawyers [nu
the arms and ammunli
VI‘! A
that he needs tor his dctanco.
A)IlKirAV AEROPLAVFS rnr In-LIWI.
“I was in Ithaca
nell rnlvrrslifi and i
planes dying about, and I apol-ca to in,
they said they
were making these tests for the Brlugh
hlanca helonglng to the British Govgm.
H it
HIVIIIHI Ind thence to Ye I Crux. Then
lh A‘. B . Powers stunned in Ind
manned to arranu I modlia vii.-eltdi
meni.
He said thlt if I brought I writ-
I
A.