The evening world. Newspaper, August 3, 1912, Page 10

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

{ | AATONAL CANGUAGE F NEW IRELAND'S REAL NED, 1S HEAD OF LEAGUE Industries Are Being Revived Everywhere and Youngsters Are Taking Up the Gaelic Tongue After School Hours, in Sec- tions Where It Isn’t Taught. Special Corimissioner to ARV SVHON patter ‘This ts the FIFTH of the series of articles arranged for by The ‘Bvening World to give ite readers the full knowledge of the making ever of the Bmorald Isle, a process which is producing extraordinary Semults tn the industries, arte and litereture of that country. BY MARY SYNON, ireland for the Gaelic League of America, _ DUBLAN, Ireland, July 27.—Ireland, after waiting for some one hundred QWare for a British Parliament to give her back the legislative independ- @@6e that British laws took away from her, has taken the measures for reiter in her own hands. While the House of Commons struggl te Home Rule bill the new force in Ireland keeps steadily away from thee goods of Irish renege hey the restoration of the old songs, the ot the old dances, the J Walbrely weatthy tn all’ Europe betore example of the work of, movements—tho Necesity for the re- with purely political activity and steadily building for a national and economic Independence that will make Ireland imperviows to British legislation. This new force in Ireland, which is standing by in a crisis like a great warrior of the old Saga who sent only his vanguard into the battle, ts in reality the slumbering giant that forcea England to listen to Ireland's moro immediate demands. But in the mean time the rebuilding and re-| 4 vitallzing power of Ireland—the Gae- lic League—ta concerning itself en- tirely with its own business—tho | establishment of the Gaelic language in all ghe schools, the establishment | of Irish industries, the finding of| markets at home and abroad for thi time of {ts conquest al all the children of Ireland ar have a nation plain Maggie Roe—wh 4ou BVENING WORLD, SAKURDAY, AUGUS New Industries Started as Result of Movement to Restore Ireland’s Greatness | the chance here for your children, and We hope that bofore jong there will be better chance for them. A @ language of Ireland then ts of nattona’ pad rev I, but #® golden-ha hat will take her place again among the nations of the world, not on sufferance, but because she once more ali the elements of nation. altty.” It ts the eleme the children at Br: & SHOE FACTOR’ IN CORK. nd when speaking shall we ALWAY ty that aled tos It was the same tune that and it wasn't “Over the Hi) r Away,” at that. Ie he Mayen: iie| Sundays since the Fels cam and F WOOLEN MILL IN @ n Ni.) ffom noon till dusk without once stop- {good humor, mirth and genuine en- aha feab fl Piecealt sae aane Ping. And, as weil as one might tell, |Joyment, wall_and with e diversions of the long af- i thet made. Irish tite the most In-| nt Meehan ard Margaret O'Moara and|ternooa, It way tie ee thee ene Thore's a great difference in thi back,” a former Lord Mayor of Dublin who 8, Ivia. IN ONLY TWO CASES | vious Good Records; Others Get Long Terms. But two prisoners of the {their freedom on suspended sentences, | Both had been convicted of assault an character. cheok for 40; firs two or three years. BY JUDGE MULQUEEN. Russell Sage, thirty-five years old, plended guilty petty larcen and chain from barber at No, 722 Am- sterdam avenue, three prior convictions, penitentiary one r and %00 fine Louis Rosenberg, seventeen years old; Max Kabka, seventeen years old, and Hyman Tepofsky, elghteen years old, al! pleaded guilty petty larceny, stole | #2 from woman on Wost Fourteenth street, econd offenders, petitenti ‘one year and $600 fine each; Ernest Bow- en, thirty-nine years old, pleaded guilty petty larceny, stole purse containing % from woman on Fitth avenue, ex-con- viot, penitentiary one year and $0 fine; Geda Roma, twenty-nine years old, pleaded gullty burglary, broke into an apartment, No. 823 East Wighth street, second offense, State prison four years and five months; Lorenzo Battisto, twenty-eight years old, pleaded gutlty carrying revolver, first offense, peniten- tlary one year; William Lawson, twen- ty-two years old, pleaded guilty carry- revolver, first offense, penitentiary year; Michael T. Connors, twenty- { years old, pleaded gullty carrying blackjack, frat offense, penitentiary one | year. ffense. BY JUDGE C’SULLIVAN. a sentence | suspend 1 convicted of assault, A first offense, rt J. sault, ¢iret offen Benjamin Leventh Philip Hines, containing $1 from passenger In subwa: first offense, penitentiary one yea and convic' tried to train, three former cony 1 purs from pas! OUT OF TWENTY Were Given Benefit of Pre- score are |raigned for sentence yesterday ‘in \the |Courts of General Sessions were given |were given the beneft of former good State Prison tol watch y | Abruptiy Richard Fay, nineteen years old, tried Main, nineteen years old, pleaded guilty of as- sentence suspended; . twenty-four years old, pleaded guilty attempted grand lar- ceny, stole wallet worth $81, ex-convict, State prison two years and three months; twenty-four years old, pleaded guilty petty larceny, stole purse Louls Brown, eighteen years old, tried attempted grand larceny, nger on SCARES BRONX MAN TO DEATH IN ROW Plain Clothes Cop on a Ram- | page Disappears After His Victim Falls. a . ‘To-day's record of violent death began with a man belng scared to death in \the Bronx when a policeman in plain clothes and on the rampage pushed « revolver under hla nom fter fh 2 The sentences imposed wero as fole)\ ieantb “ts pinta, lows Walter ) 2) Third aven BY JUDGE ROSALSKY. was the v his weak heart William M. Waterbury, “thirty-seven | nad been stopped by fright, the ambu- years old. Pleaded gutity to forming | tance surgeon sald. William Warren, Meyer and five other men, whose names the police did not learn, wore sitting on stools in an alle night lunch place, at No, 427 Third aves nue, near 2 o'clock this morning, and all were engaged In a discussion of the Rosenthal case, Two men pushed through the door, and as soon as they got wind of the subject under discussion one of tem, @ big, red faced fellow, who wore @ mourning band about his derby hat, began to take @ vociferous part in the conversation. he antagonized all at the table, and before any one could tnter- fere he had pulled a gun and hit War- ren with the butt @ crushing blow be- hind the left ear. Warren staggered back and sank to the floor, Meyer went to hia assistance, but as he bent over the form of his friend the man with the revolver pushed the muzzle of his weapon under Meyer's nose and com- manded him to stand back. Meyer suddenly pitched forward on his face and lay still. Then the In- truder held off the others in the lunch- room with his gun while he reached for an !vory police whistle. He blew re- peated blasts on the whistle. Policeman George Groot heard the Whistle and came running to the linch room man with the gun thre back his coat and showed him a poli shield, keeping one finger partially over the number, Th could see were two of the number. “I'm a cop,” the redefaced man tn- formed him. “I came in here to stop a Uttle row and this fellow"—pointing to Warren—"I had to tap with my gun. I don't know what's the matter with the other guy.” The policeman in plain clothes and the other man who had accompanied him in the junch room stood around until an ambulance came from Fordham Hospital, then they slipped out of the only digits that @root evidently the -fiest 4 ending th etons for} door and stieappeared. Dr, Gillette, f can be set dowd t of a I language, | beauty whose name on t modestly declared that he was a attending the Hray Head festival] qsorderiy conduct, Elmira Heformatory’:| the ambulance. aurgeon, found. that fact that while the Irish néwepd- t eVery one of the three hundred | n't happen to be set | Ceopekieerdye tld gOM Gat HLL At han's. remarked to ‘is host. ‘They| CAM, A: Younk, forty-five years old.) Warren had @ bad wound behind the wero filled with accounts of the|°OmPetitors nt Fray hax learned Irieh | ChAracters=were the sons of an trv.) Atl, Jused to.be as long and as dull as if | Digeded SUNNY Otte aerorris ‘Sloger,| oar and ned him carried to the ambu- Rule bill apeeches, while political le sctioot hiourstearned it on| land that led Rurope in civilization and © were Connecticut Puritans—he | ay Ppa rete +] lance. Then when he examined Meyer ‘secthes with excitement over|/4@78 when sen and sky and hill calted| culture while the Britons were still |looked at the one American present Seeine see eo eat te Ata aeieioe, he discovered that the man was dead. < to longing ttle bo a clinging to rade tribal forms of are the sani teps that) furtively to see if he had e | ceiving stol ‘operty, r hen the surgeon heard what had hap- dest ncem and oye and girls, learned | » y if et Oa ate - con. |!t While wilt flowers beckoned from|tsinment. The chants that doing mes lallp of the tongue, then reassured, Fev he att Aree ggenee eeity Boned he did not hesitate to assign the nM and Mary Case. oO! id a h 008 rm A—~""bri o i a 3 . ‘odene. itmit with tie topic af the tate the detae outside, studied in playtiman patitors tn the cania ef gicla unéer wicl ®t the cr Mea ean thee teen [eee oe we thee lant e Pein eeknt| burglary, broke Into apartment at No.| Capt, Price, in charge of the Bronx Gf the bill and while the Ulster minor) ea an ineradie Fava i in the Trish | Moen yeara of age, all of them of the] Watching the fleet fect of the dancers. [on there's a Fels to be preparing for, | Hast Fortieth etree detectives, began an immediate inves- ity Keeps insiatiag oy & division of the)’ 4 neradlcable desire to be one) vvenial prettiness of the girls of | "Go ahead and do them ‘ous| And every one has something to look | State prison four years; tigation when the news of the affair eopatry the Gastic 1, which has ie his country ff he in given but) Wiviow, flung out upon the bay} veung man invited her. on with! forward to, Why, during the week, | twenty- {n the lunch wagon came to his ears, & chance, : b i Ireland nF South, a Hteelf only eyproaching cereny Parliament of the Ga in the Rotunda hy | 1S ANECEBBARY., epoke at the at Bray Head. and ht Ponce tynte bAhef an tt wu than the yawttation down if) of the noth the barrje nation. ed thto Bngliay Made fpgNea? etieution Wo ae tewth of Ail the iupdera nations: When American Gaweigr 8 no other factor s.nce éaye of Brian Boru, joing North Catholic and Protestant, th tte Fels and of the ard whieh ine VDE CAYS 1RI8H LANGUAGE plas Hyde, , president of the ’ Bhri,.or few apeoch Ato depths whern ied his that| uae of | For) range of aring. Malk shat started in trish, bet thac| fault that you did not hecause Bray Head | of-your education, feomch yet an, treh-eponking centre, Bi “Keeping Healthy in Ho Ten years ago there might have heen a few old people in| Bray Head who were native Irivh| Kers, although there js no rocord thelr residence aftor that time. In the old town of Bray iteel?, fur-| ther up the hill, there were possibly | ¥’ ten old men and women whose kno: ede of Irinh had come down to them | from thelr fathe and mothers, But | fa oe the fashionable mummer resort, flected the Angilcization of ovine -inany of you underatand me | Dr, Hyde asked thom ivhen he had end- Miscourae tn Gaeile and Plated by the few Caelts aw id the many children tn the “Well, ‘us not your ‘Tis tho fruit! ai When you went to Scbool (here was no chance for you in st} hours or gu; of hours to learn the Iane }muage of your own land. But there ts heon aj holax 11s a Woman a Citizen? Wenona Marlin Panama they made her pay $4 alien head tax because she couldn't prove she was an She tells how she got came citizen. her $4 back in the SUNDAY WORLD MAGAZINE Other articles especially interesting to women are:— breenes ree | to danc as oa Ireland | reels, wan most complete tn the vicinity | threet 1 the question of tie !o€ Dublin, ity | three Seosam had the win ha And the thrilling run infan O'Sullivan told was the story of Cuchullain In his chariot OUNGSTERS DANCED OTHER DOWN IN JIGS. But it was around the orm that the crowd grew the younger genoration, dwelling tn} the iittle boys and the little girls arose | > each other down tn th he hornpipes, the » nd reels and Etleen rine Hawkins a nd Un 8 after long tines nd jassios had risen to the and swung thelr feet to the rhythm o the old Addier's tune. It was «@ wonderful fiddl the Feta Bhri, were (he ones that the wom | of Wicklow chanted before ! Tolls and Mary # Maureen Birde « ler that they he ye,” she at the likes of me ye want to be at, but the purty young kirls the crowd joined her in the la the youth, purty tiin Dublin The: speaking of coming here to-day. that reminds me, father. Jecesso: Cronan’ in the pulpit young girls,” coming dowa EACH | fro: n their dancing was over, W king in ins, {informed o Tivery lassie 1 y ( A! his at-'! him triumphant! gre her family, who awalted her In fond |}, t to that pai site the #1 -4tos with their air success, thet to give them p: fe Jigs and| Were crowned with the prize, And rvenstrouse down, 1 ale stared: “He to preach here at |nan’s one Sunday train, He went over to @ car near the O'Connell Bridge, ito a driver, ‘I'm going to Bray.’ 7 aeked the driver. ‘Yes, ending the car, The drt his whip. the clergyman, when and Mau- sympathy J enthusiasm runs hth runs deep, Bhri, as ari was @ quiet afta’ {than a Coney Island or here was you'll have t rudeness * gibes at horsepl: nd loce) BIRtoean South Haven neas—in Ireland | the are} 6) was passing, 8 man exp his way to p ed back from t Weather” By Mrs. Julian Heath “Captured a Marquis with a Million a Year” “Dangerous Ground”—a Real Experience Story by-a Girl- Drummer “Right Angles in the Fall Gowns” You Can Get FREE A Magnificent Photogravure (Size 203x15 inches) of Woodrow Wilson Democratic Nominee for President NOTE—It {s the same style as the famous “Series of Presidents” photogravures, India tint paper, I but more than TWICE AS LARGE. HOT pressed surface, ‘a a score of people Did you ever | hear the story of one of your pre-| of Saint Father Colalan smiled his desire to be , Somewhere ular tale before; but 1s one of the old schoo! of gentlemen pride at her efforts, whether or not they /and the hint never grew larger, So the and ho missed the |ing that ‘stand | listened stopped in sheer terror, then and says |euddenly pulsed into quicker surging. For the music of the war pipes rose the frat |was alive, that muste, never m going to Bray,’ the ki!te The driver part that vieted grand larceny, second offen: State prison two years and six months And Mamie Life, seventeen years old, plea tory for Women. time, but I'M take ye there.’ story when on the sea wind r0- the heartbeat of one tare | with the wind, shrieking, whistling, , short-stockinged, beribboned onneted lo not know—some o! he. was |and through sald |no ruin, could ever bring tt bac to cross Special F On heavy John White, twenty-six years old, plead- ed guilty burglary, third offense, State prison three years and eight months; ed guilty grand larceny, stole % from woman, first offense, Bedford Reforma- ‘They were atill laughing over the there wounded @ note #0 piercing, so thrill- who ahrilling, as down the hill there came What they played I ing hosts—but it brought back through ‘That'a what he's going to do.’ Then |generations of westward-going people 1 arasangs of distance the ‘at |old Ireland as no manuscript, no relic, for tt He sent out orders that all policemen in :|the Bronx upon whose shields the num- bers “S"" appear shall report to him for a Uneup and he instituted a gearch for policemen known to be wearing mourning. moemeneiliaientiets WHITE PLAINS LINE ALL OPEN ‘The extension from One Hundred and Hightleth street to the Harlem River at One Hundred and Thirty-thind street of the new Ine of the New York, Westechoster and Boston Rallroad to White Plains was opened to tramMe to- .|day. ‘The terminal at Westechester avenue, White Plains, is also finished, |so that the entire system, which has been in active construction for three years, 1s now open to the public. Since May the road haa been running to New Rochelle and more recently an far as Mamaroneck avenue, White Plains, ‘There is to be a service of 28 trains a day runrfing to Mount Vernon tn 17 minutes for 10 cents; New Rochelle, 16 cents, and White Plains, % cents. [SENTENCE SUSPENDED |POLICEMAN'S GUN |YOUTH SLASHES MAN. = INFGHTAFTERHS: ATTEMPT TO STEN With Mask and Wig Immigrant Goes After $500 Rents, but Is Caught. Screams and yells from the second floor of the five-story tenement at No. ;2% South Third stroot, Williamsburg, | throw twenty families Into excitement Jearly to-day «nd brought a dozen | frightened tenants to watch a flores |strugkle on tho fire \ Mortin Sternhonse, the jantt Max Wittenders, eighteen, who Ives acroma the hal! Sternhouse, who i about $70 rents, collected tn the fast two days, was awakened by footsteps in his kitchen, He saw a masked and wigged man. They grappled. While Mrs. Sternhouse screamed the fight got out on the fire-encape, There the tm- truder drew a kniféand gashed Stern- house's head. By this time the house was In an yp- roar, and the nolse attracted Policeman Petors of the Bedford avenue station, who arrived tn t!me to ¢atch Wittens berg as he ran out The knife, mask and wig were found on the prisoner, who has been in thtx in his bedroom cbuntry onty a few piths and tw supposed to have rd get-rich- quick methods. Dr, Finer of Willlame- burg Hospital took several stitches im Sternhouse's head, and Wittenberg was arraigned in the Manhattan avenue court to-day on a chargo of burglary. PICNIC DINNER BURNED, NO PICNIC FOR THEM Mrs. Mahoney Had Pressed Little Mahoney’s Clothes, Too, but Fire Spoiled Holiday. Mrs, Rose Mahonoy, ter husband and their two little children will not attend the clam bake and piente dinner t on the shore of Long Island to morrow. They planned for it for Weeks, and all day yesterday Mrs. Ma- honey femained in their apartment en the ground floor of No, 431 West Nineteenth street, pressing up their Sunday clothes and arranging for the day in the country. ‘This morning, happy in the thought that she had brought the pionic din- Mrs, Mahoney stepped into the hallway to talk to neighbors, leaving her children, William, aged four, aad John, aged two, playing on the fleer, A few minutes later Charles Kramer and Mrs. Marie Bainford, to whom @ve was talking, smelled smoke, Mra. Ma- honey rushed to her flat and found the interior a mass of flames, Die- regarding her own danger, she rushed through the fire and dragged out Ber ables, who were unhurt. There was @ small sized panic in the tenement house, scores of women fleeing with their babi: ‘The firemen confined the flames to the Mahoney epart- ment—— But all the picnic clothes and @tn- ner were destroyed. Sweet Breath — Clear Tongue Health - Given by The Doctor in Candy Form because this delicious pepper- |mint Candy Laxative Purifier regulates the stomach and tones up the whole diges- tive system. At all good drug st: 28c, |e, or Partola Cor 160 24 jeg glcan - ENP OM AO GIR BLABY ALI OSA OMIA ATI GBI BTID BIO BI IOL IN OID BLING L I OLIVA L IO PL IOGLIIN BIO BI AI IOBIIO II OMI SLIP ALIA BIIO OI SID With the Coupon Printed in To-Morrow’s SUNDAY WORLD MAGAZINE Frozen in the Middle of May Probably you’ve forgotten that the seasons are reversed south of the equator. New York clock salesman hasn’t. the Andes last May. in the SUNDAY WORLD MAGAZINE. iction Feature The conclusion of Anna Katharine Green’s great mystery story, ‘“The Gray Woman.” Special Art Feature “Bob’s Turn’’—a new Kitt drawn by the iineatnad Montgomery Flagg. 16-Page Joke Book Free With the SUNDAY WORLD every week is issued “FUN,” always funny pictures, jokes an puzzles. A youn He trie Read his story Cobb picture artist, James jamined full of

Other pages from this issue: