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Vol. XL, No. 33.’ Whole No. 570.
NEW YORK,‘ AUGUST 15, 1914.
llIhu'v<aJwuui <1-an-tIrv.Oetv,lrr) 0wIN-MOMBEI
A JOURIIAL DEVOTED TO THE CAUSE OF IRISH INDEFEIIDENCE. IRISH LI'l RATIIEE AND THE INTERESTS OF THE IRISH RACE.
PRICE FIVE CENTS.
Ten thousand lrishnien. assembled in
d cit
mu k. Long Isla lust
snnilay it the Field my or the First
iierinrent. voiuntee or New
York. repudlzted rohn Redmond‘: omin-
lee that the Irish National volunteers
would deiend ireiund for England dur-
nerrnnuy and de-
ru es a traitor to ireiond.
in
,..ne we id t the llherallon oi
irelaou, Poland. I-‘lnl nrl. lnvlia and
[:3 Inhtea oiholrlingireinn ror
rnglzoo
-.:nIzc press (1! New
Nation o! the news nod lu aitnchs on
Germany.
The scene when the resolutions mak-
In; these declarations were adopted was
r iiy
men came rrom Philadelphia on o sneclei
nccomoenyinig u battalion or the
Seventh Regiment. lrlsh Volunteers, or
int n commend or Mllol‘ Bernard
3
-‘I
k
erry teams were engaged in o
untertul roothuil gums and when the
hriotinre interval eorne Lhhrill husie
blast startled the crowd. Then all eyee
were turned on the Volunteers who were
iuenroiin
but nniority or the Irish people
'‘'")'‘'here.
The crowd had came running uh. huh‘
Md: rnulted tho tence rind took a short
" arose the menu from the other
I . The crowd knew oy Instinct
u“.I'aa connin and on a heart)’
an before Lieutenant Phibbs hnd
3;! to utter 1 word. .
hen he put the megaphone to his
In
or
"Iii-tire
m and rervor or,ine crowd Inv
yegolutinns Passed At Monster Gathering At Field Day Of Irish Volunteers
In Celtic Park Pledge Sympathy To Germany In War With England,
Denounce Parliamentarian Leader As Traitor To Ireland And Affirm
That Kaiser's Troops Would Be Welcomed By Irish People As
Liberators-German Victory May Free Ireland. Poland,
Finland, India And Egypt-The Kaiser Gets Three
Rousing Cheers From Ten Thousand Irishmen.
ans lrlsh cheers. When he came to the
denunciation or John Eedntondn trait-
orous promise to England the crowd
broke into your or execrotlon und
rniseroul
and for Castle labs.
nation via
Fnlhbs had in pause in his reading untll
It nub ded.
When the reading wae concluded there
was 8 prolonged hurst at cheering and
Mayor Nolan had to wait for oi chance
or railing tor the role. when he l'lnBlI)'
put the resolutions U! re was a deal)
roar oi ".1ye" that one would think could
heard In London and from end to
when he called (or the
d
Then Valor Nolan called for three
cheers for the Kaiser
Ah the Ilag or the Irish
n-ierlc: II n tricolor of
Green. White and Orange and they :1-
wnyh citrry a green ring with the harp-
oled him somewhat tor the
ireiond no
for something stronger than reqolutlons.
in the ongoing ooutesi, the football
match hetween the lam: ot the First
Regiment lrlsh Volunteers or New York
in the second hal
Th team: were
Fl t he; lnent. llm. New York-
ciurir ichotoin) iiclsohnn, Keiieher.
Moynnn. O'Brien. welsh. Plover, cor-
mody, Welsh. Bhstihle. Hnrnn. Sullivan,
Casey. O'Brien, Murr V
Philodelphirteom-Rynll (cnptnln),
, edler,D'Drlscoll.T c ionun. J..1.
Kglly, arit>'..Nolon. Reilly. sinrkiey.
Kenne y.
The nssoult at arm, which fella"!
gerund or the y and An
ionio Menu, zencing mute! in Annun-
. . .
in the contact with foil: Liout. Mo-
carhhy. lltor o ttliz bout. was declared
winner by 2 point-, SIEWY‘ M95“ Cm‘
Ins second, with the hroadewordn Lleut.
McCarthy eiso proved himself e meter
at the ore and won r close mlrmr
slgnor hieeso 11 anti 7
tended to them
or the Irish volunteer: and
fH'1e'b:ahurlln5 rnutch between the Rob
Emmet. teen: or Philadelphia and
the Limerick huriero of New York
ter contest than the more would
were me
1
n.
Cognlnn. nrieeoii. xiely.
Km, Twamey. O'Donnell. Shauzhnuv
Quinn. Ry
‘'1 Ind round exnresoion in vigor.
, w and u n.
M:1I‘jhdeul:nnt:.tn:1:tween the mcir 4: no
hogs‘.
We. Irish Volunteers and citizens of New York. assembled in
our thousands in Celtic Park. on this ninth day of Allgilst. 1914.
and voicing, all we know we do, the sentiiiieut of the overwhelming
majority of the Irish people in the United States. extend to tho Em-
peror of Germany, his Government. Ills people. his army and his
allies our strongest. sympathy in the war which be is now waging
for the integrity and interests of. his own country and the freedom,
of Europe from ti combination of RUFITIGIIJ despotioiii and English
commercial greed. ,
We hope and pray for his success. iiot.lilone for the sake of
the benefits it will confer on Germany herself and the liberation of
Europe from the menace of English commercial and industrial
domination, but because we see among its secondary. but iiiel'ii.ahlo
coliseqllerlces the freedom of Ireland 7’0l1r.d. Finland. llillil Md
Egypt. and the destruction of the Er li Empire which holds in
political bondage and industrial stagnation so many IIllll!0l"iS of the
irorl<l's people. for the benefit of England alone.
liowiiig that England is the real fomeriter and iilstigator of
this war. for Wliich she has been ilitriglliiig and preparing for many
years: that the Triple Eiitente had such fl war erninriy
for its sole object and that the miscollej “Peace Treaties" were ill-
terided. not to promote the peace of the world. but to commit the
Uiiited States to support of England, we denounce the monstrous-
ly unfair uttempls made from day to day by the Aiiglomniiiac press
of New York to deceive the American people by presenting to their
readers only the English version of the news from Europe and their
editorial endorsement of the falsehoods and misrepresentations in
their news columns. We emphatically deny that these subsidized
and corrupt papers represent the opinion of the citizens of New
ol'k. whom we know to be ill sylli itliy with Germany.
We repudiate and denounce ed treason to Ireland John Red-
mond‘: statement made in the Biritielt Parliament on August 3 that
the Irish National Volunteers will hold Ireland for England; we
know that the majority of the Irish people throughout the world
would welcome the landing of 3 German army in Ireland as their
libemtors and we fervently pray that the iortiine of wzirmoy
bring such rill event about. or thac,ll1e destruction of the British
.No.vy ma V‘ 7
‘of theiriccuntry. .
But in victory or defeat. our good wishes go with the German
Army. Navy and people in this war and we await only the oppor-
tunity aiirl the means of taking rt military part in it and striking
an eliective blow for the complete liberation of Ireland.
m
in
.7’
rootholl tenroo of Cork and lterry WIS
n rrror,-niocent one. All the ii
of the game were sluiwn hi:
on lroth rides Ind Whru the ruil limo
whistle rounded the Cork men were vir.
toriour hy the narrow rnnrizlu or I point.
The more Wu: rry. l naval and i
point‘, Cork. 1 goal and 2 Points.
The teams were:
The quarter or n mile regimental race,
..r.e;n
Company G, nine of Ntw York, tn:
tlllrd.
l teem. mrnprn-n In the medll or
honor ram. Srrizvrnnl. Korrruegh or
Cork-Cnsev iaptslni, hlrxeuna (‘oil-loony c and rent or Company i-'
curroil, iiui-pity. Tully, ucxr-unu, H, ‘. '
cur-thy, Kenneiiy. Klssni-la. wn-n, ion.
rhri, Barrett. . Moriarty. Klssann and
urroii. '
Iron that n no J. Ryan
or Cnrnvnny M uri-r second. and J.
lirnnn and P. Roche. .Also of Company
ii, were third
Mrlntyrem lrisri rniunreer Band run
hi
KPVTY-Canny (clnthin), Collrtehhy,
Brown, Brennrin. Alcock, J. suiilvnn, .
Sullivan. 1-‘. 5 Huh, C. i-(ell-her, G
Kelleher, Moyrllhnn. Finn, Duly, Leroy
and O'Connell.
d
dim irrrri Ute burn nod girl. busy at
jlgn, reel. nod hornulpeh.
W
. y <1’
. we we
1.
Is s
' >Ov6.gAvy an-.o.-> . -nun,“ WW4-on-a-age".
Omcvrn or the First n tolion or the nuhlln Nttlannl-Volunteer: reporc
in; to the uincer or tho my It Flther Mathew Park hetoro mrung on tie
gunrnlnnlng he to Havrui
1, iiiontolih; 2. Ilodlrin (Battalion cornrrreudorl: :i, only:
rignn; Ti, Mcnnnoughz '1. Monte.
4. Judge; 5. Ken-
oaxn. Nor course‘. r.v corrrry. Hollovrad.by the mourning conch, pro-
WEXFORD..II1lr 51.-A conln. which reoded tonr-on wextord and tuned
Instead or containing a eoroue no ililo.i through I114 town about 9 P. 5
nt noeulnre Pler direction or suunrlerocourr graveyard.
the other day rrorrr the evening rteorner l >Wb<-n the eruveyml was reached the
orrlvins from Flsbnlard. met 2 homo nrid coach deported. end the cot-
wag
hy three young men In mourning nt. (in mistaken concert. which wu HYIVQQ
Hrs Ind conveyed in I henna "ll!-ll l“'lY- The rifle: were dlslrlhlllod in
ll; uuuldu (H0 station. Thu heorne. the nellhbarhoad.
eD’i.l)lB'Il'l‘l'3l‘1l2:i8ll tliemr lveayto npsplllpllsllvtlla>I[%(lQ113'm,‘
NEW Ylllill IFIISH-MEN IIEPUIJIATE REIIMIINII DECLARE THEY STAND ll‘-.’lT[iGERMANY FUl.IEll'llEPlIllTS UFTIIE DUBLIN MASSABRE
Scenes Arid Incidents 0fThe Gun.Ruiining Exploit At Howth Which Preced-
ed The Cowardly Butchery Of Unarmed Dublin Citizens By.The British
Soldiers Who Had Run From The Volunteers At Fairview-Heroic
Conduct 0fTlie Boys 0l‘The Fianna In The Skirmish-Captured
Two British Rifles-The Slaughter In The Streets-
Soldiers Fired Two Volleys lnto Unarmed Cr,owd- '
List Of The Dead Avid Wounded. ' ‘
in: round quickly rushed thelr nurtuerl
with t eir bi,-oneu. Three young indie:
returning from the Phoenix Park were
mercilessly set upon wldlera.
in the general melee which ensued
one soldier oer knocked elem hy the
crowd '
Then. without any warning, without
the slightest indicouen thet they Iere
eoout to lake such a dendiy step. some
two dozen saldler: iorining three or
Last Week T1117 GAELIC Ailvhlch.-r was
l
i
EDI)‘ MACNEILI-.
CI'Il.ll"mFI'l of the Provisional Committee n( lhltlrlnh
LVotionu'. Volnntezrm:
The rllushter or the unnrn-led citizens
hy the covrnrdly
ii run [ram tha
Volunteer: at I-‘airvlew I: thus described
in the lndcymrrte-or or July :1:
nllllntlnx scene in yeaterdnyrn
tour rnnkh in the rear turned-round
oinruiinneouriy. and deiiherntely-ierel-
led their rmel-nlfthe crowd.‘ i ' " 1
Before the unrortunute people ,'hod
eve lime to ilee the riiles rung nut..
lnnnrenlly ll the command or tha hm-
cer in'chuge. , y ‘ i‘
“men they It ilret en the ring: point.
soottieh
erern, resulting in tour denthn
some nfiy wounded.
The crowd who ourronnded the poi-'
dlern increased II the mllltlff E0! lnw
Irrlew. end hy the time
. reached xeieon-n Pillar o
eenee ntherlnx Iurmunded the demon.
men ‘
Ind
t.
The niiiinry lined up (icing the Fill-
In And In excl
the Royal Blrrdck: the: thing: begun
to iool: nIst)’- ‘ ‘
Time Ind mun the crowd Pressed the
rear or (ha detachment in . rnoet threat-
ening me er, :1] e stnnes u not.
ties were Hung Into their Sew.
erll mes I number of soldier! in the
[ugly mtrut. This continued until the
Plrttel had reached the Metal
where the tragedy of the evening 00-
c . r '4‘ .
Pnctlcally I10 mlulleh were thrown
It the nilllnry ll they proceeded IJDDS
the ouhy. .-rho pur-sulns crowd headed
hy iuveniiee hfmvly Jecred and hoored
Lhe iaorderero. Thor WIS no provocation
beyond the iIIuu.l hostile dlsplly at u '
crowd who h-d no denim to try conclu.
clone with and wine . :f‘::;:$"[
ed
il. .1. JUDGE.
or the Provisional committee. who 5
eelved bl-Ynnet wounds in the left
- Irm Lnd it o.
them the crowd name no
. hough no oiurni um diepi. .
. i th M tnl Brl - - Y
..:::.:..'=.: :. .;‘::.'.J::..:: - = we an
up to the re-r at the not-dgrl. who QIIW ‘ V, (oonrtouu in Pain 1.)
i...
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