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M'X1,,No.-13.‘Whnle' No. 550.
- ‘llie Flee Tolls Provision 0l'The
Prevails in into Vast
gar York spoke ‘out with no llnr:i-r-i
uis tound‘on President Wilson's at-I
the S In
,,,,,,,t to im) t consres into
rumering Amerlc rights in the -
, cm, at great meeting in csrnegio
nail on l-‘rlilay e ening, March
[35 o lsrges ruost united and most
ititlrlnlued gathering ever h
a
was ruled.
door had every seat occuilled
men, who could
not and seats anywhere was packed ite-
iuui the seatsin the yes .
Tile galleries were all lilies and the
. o rows or boxes were not only full to
uronvenience. out a great crowd stood
the pasasgen-ny,outslde and loolccd
onto; to the great ct-on
possible to set a complete list or all
the prominent men present Ethlhe meet-
ug, hut anions them.
mitts. wore: morrner
note wiilarn ' A. .Day. lilalor John
aisslow, Justices or the supreme Court
Jnlilt W. Goihiisnlni I-1, cohainn, Airrod
hes s 1
Secretary of
R, Page, John ortl, Mai-tin‘.1 Keogh,
Silpremo Cciurt. Justice Benton 0!
Rochester, Emtn
Henry
Sherwood,
‘ 1)..‘ William J.
aoaln, Orlando Von Honniswitz D‘
Gr W. Wiithridge. Joseph Yehklia K. C.
S. silinlnon. Lewis A. Vim Doom, Ham
John D. llloors. Martin T. Mouton
This grant xhtherlnsr representing
"err
is
<
‘-2
-<
. is were nevcr
“" '0 report a meeting than they sent
night. .
a
my meeting was a model good
these poini-l were
it was s singularly
"lied audience and no speakers
6 heiter lists“
A
N‘ ‘Pliny
if “looped hy the ushers, quietly
. ehiseivca side by side in what‘.
Gathering-ltlilitant, American Spirit . Characterizes The
Speeches And Resolutions And Perfect Order
e . ‘Anllcongressimeu Warned.
Panama Canal Act-A Historic
Assemblage-Senators
cvar souls they could get. They were
nearly all Jews, but there were two or
three colored men among them and ‘one
drunhen irrshmun. a blatant Redmond-
o. elr manner, and espetlnliy their
"The star-spaugled Banner;
trotted the attention or some in
or the committee and n guotd or sturdy
vi’ ad
ten wa laced roun, tlirm, re
to act at tho slightee sign or disturb-
ance. when the lend was summarily
rem V d‘r‘thS -mutt Ed Ilil9I‘flIl1Ll0rl!
suddenly ceased and star the rent or the
evening MP3‘ were its mute ll MMG.
There was also a.’El1liSh IKE!!! than
n a pr-orurnent seit with a persistent
uI‘oI‘l on.hla ‘aft. H3 9]?! h
n "The Star-Spangled BIDHBI” W35
Supreme Court
speech which w
or thrcnse
The meeting was called to order by J.
Murray liulhert, a line looking young
on with a voice that ran; through
the great hall, and, as it to show the
rintlrs freedom of the me ins. took I
the election or .iuslu-e Seahury
te was linuui
V it (or Adverse
E
E
u ti Ear Aasorlstion,
stepped to the front oi the piatlornr and
proposed the resolutions, nilivh will he
ound in another part of this paper.
They were read in a clear and resonant
voice hy Mr. ilullrert, and Judge ea-
hury thensnnouooed thatthe silukern
resented
M
instantly caught the attention or the
audience hy his clear, incisive and
epigrsmnrstin style or speslrlns and hr
his ready Ysnhsa humor. rlu was fo-
lowed hy Bhllibrldge Colby, whose elw
great hit and wh
E
:2
=
on
<
America
tion of an Englishman.
audience as.
The last speaker was Eourklz Cochran,
all, it was prooahiy
Ho laid the
had heard him tweni.v<i'Ire W"! I80
‘ hyslcial ehsngr. occu-
mstie whst man)‘ W“ "'9" "'“‘ ‘“
m.,,,g pins tile greatest or his whole
me.
No anon grmlpliig of Me sivmk-‘rs has
' it me:
over heen made at s New ler tips
in living moluory- A '1 “'3' "“"‘
1 pr r at should he no. for
“" a mo cment
that meeting inuuglli-stod
that will he momentous in its
rnnrnl-ter
mu ulry
has
t man (I!
rontinue to govern itsolr or
relations and nlllrh or
doulestio legislation diuiatcd an.i di-
rected it-our London and Olrrlrld lo; "M
icon Iiitstrlimcnhi OK I V
(’.imt:rrnniont Judslnx by the -9"“ "‘
o- 4.
.
ha o’lts
i
F.
o
-<
that
meeting. t
ilnal result
most
JUDGE SEABURTS SPEECH.
Opens the Great Meeting With A
Masterly Statement of the Case‘
Against Repeal of Free Tolls.
hnd Strikes the Keynote of the
Evening.
Th: l’lUl'D47ltI
woeirlngtoa
Alter a century of etiort. the Unlml!
stood in the way or the construction ot
the canal. The treaty entered into he
tween the United slates and the Repuir
lit-
5
o
=
to
<
9.
is the greatest engineering achievernt-ut
or mankind and its Niel. In the united
states will exceed four hundred in iliou
is tha arhiovement o tn
United Stntrs limit.‘
a its creation.
United states his dono everything requi-
dollars,
adln
it
Thu lrnportanou or the prints pro
tost consists-not in the; not that it
lla-nut in the claim which
is involved In that protat. that not. In
withstanding that the united states has
heroine the lioverelgn over the territory
in which the canal is hu
the luturo hear the so expense or
maintaining and pouring it, Great Brit-
a ll. so tar as tho henailts are con-
erned, 0 Bl treated M In equal pl!!-
ner in the enterprise. I Q,
it is a wall established rule or inter- t. m
nntlalzasl law.
relates to to
an
E
=
‘i:
E
.3
2
a
:
:
a
=.'
2
E
at
E"
t
the Unwed states.
h the sole Ind exclusive prop
is as muc
erty ot the United States as it the on
d been bll t Xro
New Orleans.
7
o
a
9
present situation, on
rention coimd id
recognize the ohtngcd conditions no-
British protest concedes
that some or the roridiilonl or the treaty
existing. The
ave n odiiied hy e
events. If that he so then the whole I or the re
uty is to r I the state or is ohrlou it-orn t
things which was the vital condition or artl
the treaty no longer exists he who
it chsusrs so vital ii
party to the compact. .
Ev-en ii’ the HSV-Pilllllrefnlo Trsdty is
in be regarded as still
rltert. notwithstanding that the condi-
hlhlt Illa rxrnipllun M tho Amerlrlrl
COISIWIIB trlda hon: lnlll. Thu tahlrd
represcn Lsti ve
here
at liiis meeting is to prov
test against tito surrender at American
is the Plannnin Canal. in View.
out in rdvoming Brlllull if
rn
out regard to party. llliniild Issenihlo In
El 5 and Mind
against the m‘0Pi‘vsPd surrender on U!
of Pi: lllll
political diiviruitit-s. arid the energy an
the llnitrd Siastu haw tum‘:
able at the option or either
be y to q
I
English and American writers nod pop 0, go”,
There is no more reason
for contending tlist lite Hay-Paunceroie
other provisions or the treaty shall con- lat-rt
d
NEW YORK, Mnhcg‘ 23, 1914.
sperliii-s the rlgh
cohutlned in
w ht-n inn l'rliu-d
eul.
ii
a lawn
tnnir protest
uni]
and
doses
removed the legal uld
in ooilstr-it-tion
Smother nution
Now that the
not vioialo til
" trade. This law
taastwi-e trilde.
to
So for
a never rrole. Ind Inc
policy in rs-i
The Fun ms
waterway‘ Ind not
body of water.
in]
In Sun I-‘nntluo to
iii-abia in it than there
rogaleti. Either all or
5 upon the other
1
a
:2
..
in lull force Ind
was made it o
604‘:
canal llirh
‘ tint treaty
m. Nlcahia to tho united .
the British interpretation or the
treaty is rmrecr. then
stairs, it is llill clear that the Alt
ma enipling cosstwiss trullo irorn tolls does
a HIyvPailnr(fot.e Trelty.
wh exists in other n tion
eludes farlclgtl nations (mm ellgagliix in
reign commerce V! the
and the loreign boinmorco or
r nation upon term.
It. provides lhal Amer]-
null
or the Congressional Committee on
ei-state and i-'oreigp
claimed that the Panama C
entirely t
mcnl rrriude rnreig
tion. or Idinlt. them upon any condluoin
, A JOURNAL DEVOTIJD TO THE CAUSE OF IRISH INDEPENDENCE‘, IRISH LITERATURE AND THE INTERESTS OF THE IRISH EACN, V - i
L.n....s ......u.1..aa team. In! ., IV t.<slIt-It.4as>Qae-I
htutiiotiut. .uaderraaaa:mt.u........4xan..uy.
New ;iYOr.li’s JMigh’ty‘ Protest Againsit Wils0n’s A Surrender To England. ;
Greatest And Most Representative Meeting Ever Held in New York Crowds-
carnezie Hall And Demands That Congress Maintain American Rights
And Safeguard American Interests By Rejecting The Bill To Repeal
Alnoriean f Irilliu or the treaty deals Illh the neu-
ran be no doubt o( the trulirallnn or the rlnli, iuid in in oral
i-dlllhlunh provides
that ills canal
in the vessels
all nations
on lsrrrul or entire eonailiy, The treaty
is which the
United
4 confer upon
is
rlghtli nu
uimn it. it the
ruaed inlhs lmnly.
ht-id Illpiiclbie
Fustr-s, then all at the other iiniiuilions
are equally hp
stair:
to the rrlilcd
in time or war
Stntu hi I ht-iii:-ir
tho Urlltrd states t-auntrt
blnrlllulL'
. lu rltprevsenlluvi-n
a must open tho lot-its I.nd.m
tort tiimugh ihs canal s hostile foreign
lleet intent upon making an altu-it upon
our tout. .1n short. It tho
Untied Sutu should become a l-eiiiger.
tilled in that lrehty, do lnrludr: the Untied
United
run of entire
Amer]:-nu
“That cilnslls are part or the territor-
spec we territorial states,
he TIL1. that thviy are
u
ex-
am! 2:-
oi ai>
at we burn
tre-led our loreign commerce and that
xii nniloril upon
t) u the rxemilllon or
coastwise tndu is concerned, it is pu
I regulation or our own doniesl
. a mutter or no concern
ioreign government. and it
lrnpertinrnce (or any
attempt tu lnterrero with U1
2 on n
:3
is an
farelln nation to
a domestic
n command
which this country ml)‘ see lit to haunt.
In an
In lntiematiannl
in the majority report
5‘
ii
rough Fron-
PRICE FIVE CENTS.
Galaxy 0i‘Able And Eloquent Speakers Oi Dillerent Political Attil ation: Pre-> ' i
sent UnansweisbIl$Arguments For The American Side, Arralgn E no‘:
lnsoient Demand, Condamn President Wiison’s Abject Surrender Of
His Country’: Rights. Which He Was Elected To Defend, And
His Astounding impeachment 0fAiiterican Honor-Speeches
Ofsupremd Court Justice Seabury, Former Cnngress--
man Littlefield, Bainbridge Colby, Frank Moss
And Bourke Cockran. ‘
she ‘rioiared the treaty made in
e cont . e- im ronternint n.herlea it the coast
national uw, Vol 1. p 3.“, Sci-. mi ;ol Kelfoundllnd nod lAbr-don 55!
it is claimed on trehail or Greu arit- ‘ reiiwiediy "Wl-lP;1- Isl-lmil the express
sin rim she only risk: the l'nll.ed rsralra mole 0! II-a lnitedrsl-I-vs. Ibo pro
to II! lowartlu P
a Hit
me lilies. apart from special treat: Irr‘ lriz.
ra l.
w r his I is not true.
N'oi.vi'iuIIi.-driding the provlrlolir-or the
corruption or Conllinnllnnlii“. ureat
iirltain rpnrdn the suns can
prdtprinllry irody or -alor and not as an
inlarrinlinntal n-sterway.
n n hi
intcrprcration or thegilay-Pauncelote
‘lrcntv, notwithstanding t:lc,lsct that
the:-oudiliona in reisrenre to sales that
' DEVG aH.0K,eKhEl'
changed. '
mllll-t the acquired the island ot Perln. The anal will soon be niirned by the
‘him she also lorlll-led. llaving 50- United slam to the commerce or the
rt lortilied ulna iuuns d on mr and reanonahle terms The . .
Aitvlrltaxe, Great Briulri then occupied question tor this ro-mtry not In deter-
; m mine is whether it stlltll adopt an A
er-icon nasal no 1. or whether it shall
adopt an Anglo-Antler!
sma canal is the gateway that - c
is deatlnerlo open to the united stain . i i
an opportunity to secure its share, in, - '
the mmhaaira or the world. eril-an
enersytand elltcrpl-lse have noilt it. Am- ’ i
rpayen. hare p:ld‘!or it. it is i
it
tornplr-tori her own eontvvl. alie iormaily
repudiated the principle or neutrauty.
At the Paris Commission in June, mas.
Sir Julian Paunrotote nnnounced that
the British delegates relt ll their duty cried
to (arm cvrlst listed on American soil and is sub 1 .‘
to the rip!-llmtl-l:l.A1l-the lnulxvnnd Jen. is .Aanerlc.ad. sovereignty. . ‘ . 5
s not routs it! Why should .
Dinner
in its benents, nithough we done con.
tiune to beer its mlrdens? - '
Justice to our own people, ioysity lo
luding upon
of rieutrhltty I'3I not
Grut B Lain.
The Sun Crl.l'laL theretare. la nut in-
ternationalized, nut is under the ar-
t-iuhlve control ot Great Britain. it
in evident. ihercrore, that Great Britain
the Suez
rlnma
hindin: upon other -er . n Angls>An:erit-an
the L ed may be re: dzd In All! rice as to this control ol our own
pound the P arna cuts
to that policy in
canal. so tar In Great nritaln herosit
is concerned. ahe ply: no heed to i. As
a rule oz can not lor others only. the
proclaims the necessity tor neutrality
in sue: and in anama. she holds her-
anii not bound hy lht rule that the ap
plioa to olher nations. hut
and tverywhere consistent with the 1ltn- M, “,1
damenul pr clplo or her iorcign policy.
soltea whate 'er one an, holds oil that
ans has. and proclaims loudly her
sire to preserve equal rights and to dis-
trlhuta the heneilu or her christian
rlhtllullon.
The Brllllh protest rert-ra lo the pro-
vision or the rolls Art Ihlcli exempts
rrom tolla the vessels or the Eevubllc
oi Pan-mu. Till: exemption la nude in
delerenra to our treaty with
and in part or the consideration which
the united slates pay. tor the. grant or
sovereign rights which the Rennbiic ol
Panama hsa ceded to IL in the report
or the maiority or this congressional
committee. it is said that this exemp
tion dou not violate the llay-r-aunoeloto
-rreaty, it the exemption to Puum
see not violate the truly. their the
eaenlption or coastwtso trade does o
violate the trout)‘. it said
am “vat: her toils tor all time in her
contrihutlon to the enterprise." it this
the same reason exist
exemption to the
MR. LITTLEFIELUS SPEECH.
Illr. Llttiedeld, who received s warm .
welcome. nia-
i Droleal against striking [mm the
law oi the land lhe ioilowing vrordr
' non vessels
coast-ise trade oi the
A.
5
P-
Unlled Stlteo? I115 L Ihd United
Sutu "contrihuiion to the -l
enterprise?‘ If the exemption It-corded '
to the United states as to its coastw
trade is in conliict. Ilth the truly. then
the exemption accorded to the Republic
or Pannmn is in oontllct with the treaty.
> ilrold mule
xou see the oolect or that. don-t
Yon! (l9Dhlls9L"
As s. m tier or (Act. the British pro ile then stated in his usual telicitous = l l
t t does ni ohiection to the ex mp- manner one or the great tundnmonm‘
ti o aoco Plnum a d. lsudahle nllrptises oi this rihrtlrulllr ' .' r ’
pose. that were long. in detcrence to lcgislttlos: ‘ c . l
"We don't east the railroads to :
compete with thcnrselvea. hec
In-ldarsupd liil‘. '
nun! Wnlor
Ioverzlxn rishts over to. territory in
winch the canal has been ullt.
‘no nation among all the in.-
lions or the earth that has so flagrantly
and persistently violated treaties
Great Brihiln. Her policy in this re
sport has heon tonsplcuoualy shown in i
r on n she has violated rnnsnia (‘uni ‘
e Hit: the united sister. ‘ lie made in this srwrvh specihr mi - -j .
lvmsu the rolltlllent. a
ills party having. on July 2. WW. do ‘
elated that. "We lavor the exemption .-
rrom tolls a( American illllvssengagvdi A r . i
in coastwlse trade passing thmusg me; .
er
2
sho rioiruod the Treaty oi Ghent which trnlnm to that plans haylut: -re...
Wu made at the close or the War of pistlorin in not nioisssu to catch nits,