The evening world. Newspaper, June 30, 1917, Page 6

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ngesnen ERT a) RES a ami (Continued from First Page.) to give her self-government. There ‘was a real love for Ireland and for er catse among many millions of Englishmen. These changed senti- ments had been moulded into hard facts by the greatest transformation ot @ nation that had ever been wit- Heased. This wonderful change was brought about by the passage into laws of sticcessive schemes of land 4 other reforms which the British Parliament backed, which had been urged by British votes, Thus then the old Engiand and the old Ireland had begun to vanish into the same past as that which envelops some of the bitter and bloody wars and re- ligious differences that took place in tie Middle Ages. RUINED BY ENGLISH REACTION- ARIES AND IRISH DREAMER What a tragedy it is that all this 00d work of reconciliation which had ‘debn accomplished by the best men of England and Ireland should have een destroyed by the folly of Eng- lish reactionaries and of Irish dream- ers, But so tt ts, All we can do, who have denounced the folly and © brutality of the one and the foolish- ness of the other, is to keep on fight- ing the battle of common sense, of achievable freedom and of reconcilla- tion, No other policy will ever re ceive our adhesion, I do not mean that we have any doubt in our minds to_what_will_be_tho final result Dontt let m troubse your good time esinol als sick skins “Tcan't haveany fan! Iam such a fight with this ecrema that people avoid ie wherever I go. And the iéching nts me so that I don’t get any ace, anyhow." - Don't be discouraged! Even In se- vere, well-established cases of eczema, aye or similar skin-troubles, Res- Ointment, aided by Resinol Soap, lly relieves the itching at once and tiexy clears the eruption away. Deetore preseribe the Rosine! treatment All drag: ‘sail Kesinol Ointment and Resisol Sous BRTAN'S BLUNDERS DRVE IRISH TO MADNESS, DECLARES “TAY PAY" [of the struggle between our reason | and our good falth and the unreason and the very bad faith of at least some of our opponents. As Lincoln people all the time, but you cannot fool all the people all the time. The Iriah people will not be fooled forever | although they may be fooled for some time longer. 1 will suppose the im- poanible—even the poxsibility of our party being defeated—not at a tow bye elections, but after the appeal of a general election, beginning of the end, Some of the opponents of Home Rule profess to want a republic and to belleve that they can get It. 1 don't belleve that many of these gen- tlemen really believe what they say, or that the Irish people think they believe it. There is another section Is called the Hungarian policy—name- ly, the policy of abstaining from at- tendance In the Parliament in West- minster, Which reminds me of an impassioned Sinn Fein orator at a reat national convention in Ireland who began by a long denunciation of our having basely betrayed the dig- nity of Ireland by appearing at West- minater, and went on immediately to demand that the Irish Party should pass, during the next session of Par- Hament, an act for tho relief of the oppressed town tenantry of Ireland, So the policy of abstention will not stand criticism or trial, SEEKING TO DESTROY IRISH PARLIAMENTARY PARTY. I might go on until you come to the inevitable conclusion that the one policy which unites these dis- cordant elements of honest fanati of knaves exploiting them, of dream- ers of impossible dreams, and of re- actionaries who disguise their hatred of all Irish berty by professing the ultra gospel of unattainable liberty— you come to the conclusion that the one policy on which these hetero- geneous elements are agreed is that of destroying the Irish Parliament- ary Party and the constitutional movement Well, if Ireland can find abler, she cannot find more honest and more disinterested representa- tives than the men who have been fighting for her rights, some of them for half a century. If she can find such men, let her have them, If new leaders can do as mtch for the next balf century as we have done in the Jast half, then indeed will Ireland be happy. Let mo suggest one little dimeulty which Hes in the path of the party which is planned to be built on the wreck of the present party. It haw been a leading, a vital principle of our party that none of us shall take place or pay from any British Min!s- try. We have kept our word to the very letter. t one of us has & sald you can fool all the people some! of the time, you can fool some of the That would be the| of the opposition that proclaims what | U. S, Army Band to Aid Americanization MRS. KIESO SICK {Fy | | | | received a penny of Government | money. But we will go on with the | effort to fulfil our mission—to secure freedom for Ireland Who aro the high-souled patriots who are assailing this party of almost fifty years of disinterested and pure service? Count Plunkett, their nom- Inal leader, was a paid Government |offictal up to the time of rebellion last year, He was a sturdy applicant |for almost every job that became | vacant until he got one. There was an organization called the National League founded to destroy the Irish Party, Its call was signed by seven attorneys, Four of them had been persistent applicants for Government jobs. They had made the lives of men Ike Joe Devlin and others mis- erable by standing on the doorsteps and filling thelr mail bags with ap plications for Government jobs, To. day five of them are assailing the arliamentary y as a party kers, Was there ever in history a more grotesque or para- doxically incredible instance of men being denounced for a erime, which they had scorned even to contem plate, by men who wero committing that very erime te Indeed, those men and thelr dupes attack us for accepting the salaries which were voted to all member of Parliament some years ago. We have helped to carry all the measures which have crbated the new Ireland. What is the new Ire- land? ‘Three hundred thousand heads of families, absolute owners of their Jands—-the landiord, gone; the bailiff, Kong the rent warner, gone—even the rent office gone! Every trace of the old, hateful, tyrannical landlord system has gone. NORMAN BARONS HAVE BEEN BANISHED FROM IRELAND. I wonder if many poor people have ever put these two romarkable facta in juxtaposition, In 1066 Norman barons came to England and conquered the Anglo-Saxon inhabitants; took from them their lands; reduced them to serfs 1 hin that cultivated the An Announcement Us. cote Beatning Ghost Scneet ‘Vana - Artur A. Sis9re: prinetpaL Miss land, In 1177—It will be remarked Just a dentury and eleven years later the Norman barons went over to Ireland, conquered a part at least of the country and stole the lands from the inhabitants, and reduced the peo- plo to be serf cultivators of the sul. But look at the two countries to-day. The Norman baron ts still the lord of the English soil; the Anglo-Saxon laborer is still the {ll-pald hind—14 shillings @ week is his wage in soine Engilah counties—the Norman baron has been banished, from all parts of have had some great leaders, but they haven't done as much for thelr o pressed farm laborers the Irish leaders have done for theirs. When I entered Parliament the Irish laborers were in a terrible posi- | ca Ww tion, A family of half a dozen or | to even @ dozen children lived in one Jit- | Pu! le cottage. The men were ill pal, | il fed—oft § gaunt specimens of humanity as those French peasants who were described by La Bruyore in | bY his celebrated book that forecast the French Revolution, To-day tho: hovels and those conditions appear | ch only In the oppressive memories of the generation now passing away. he country Is prospering and gro ing more prosperous, throughout the land there is smiling part sentatives in the House of Commons, | !“! We have given the Irish youths the first university since tho Reforma- tion; we have thrown out the land- rds from almost every place of power and authority in three-fourths IDAHO, NAVY MONSTER, 1s | 5,000 Moshelelice Miners Threaten LAUNCHED AT CAMDEN Min Granddaughter of State of State's Governor ‘9 Sponsor for Sister Ship of |‘ mn Penney ania, | 20.—Another ne for the navy here to-day from the yards New York Shipbuilding Company When the superdreadnought Idaho, als-) \ter ship to the Atlant Henri Band marter white” ternoon at a meeting at Washin Mayor Board of | Clyde Forum Celebration; Woods Chief Speaker ss Wilson to Review Childret Monday Afternoon; Preside at Night Meeting. | Tho chief speaker on Monday af-| Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, the Amerteanization Fo- rum celebration will be Police Com-| Every missioner Woods, who will make a! States is cordially invited short address on the value of using | the Lydia the schools for community purposes. Margaret Woodrow Wilson, dent's daughter, will preside a on Irving High Ireland, and the Irish serf has been | School, Irving Place and Sixteenth transformed into the well-to-do and|Strect, at § P, M., which Is open te independent freeman, and, indeed,|the public. The main topic will be ruler of to-day. Tho English masses | the wider use of school hous Mitchel will alse Willcox, President of the Education. Kelly of Pennsylvania, whe mes from Washington for this o sion, spe itiam Cong sinaar which school buildings may be t, especially during the war, Mr. authority on the subject. j00n performance the children, T 2 will be a m © will be nd the Spirit of "1 ht hu children will evidence of the change that has been | de" the direetion of Principal James To keep the organs in har- effected by the peralatent, determined | the puline Tenatterer rao from | mony—when there is need—use and united effort of the Trish re rtment, will have a Be delegation of boy police, Miss Wilson and guests, after visit- ing City Hall, will view the activites children at four principal parks, of Lreland; > ‘ rlaced fame |< tanton Stre t Lai Avenue C, Tomp- allowed we shall soon have it’ put into Avenue B, and De Witt ( ‘inton Park, Sold everywhere. In boxes, 10c., 25¢. operation, | }ifty-second Street and Eleventh What then ts the troubl | Avenue, ; The trouble te that English stu-|,, Carnivals, flag drilts and other ac- __SAVINGS BANKS. pidity, or at least the stupidity of her, U¥iMes will take place in various ~ soldiers, ny’ of them reactionary | P4TkS throughout the city, Px £6) be ot controlled by English n the evening befo: the speakers | have driven Ireland mad by wudience the | thelr follies and cruel executions, dren repre SAVINGS rANK By all means let Ireland mourn her tlons in front of Washington brave dead and bitterly hate the mon living o a School. Two bands wiil and the polley which brought on those) 44d to both occasions. crimes, But she i not avenging her| In the afternoon the Catholic Pro- ¢ PER ANNUM honor by destroying her own hopes| tectory Band will play and in the n all ume of jof an immediate or an early realiza- ning the United States Army Band tion of those institutions which will| will be at Washigton Irving High iberate her and all her future gene- | School. tions from Maxwellism and thene-| Mrs, Will Grant Brown, Preat-| | veo cessity of rebellion and the horrors| dent of the State Federation of Wom- ‘iruw Interest from J of the shambles in thesfail at Kil-len's Clubs’ will act as temporary Accounts mainham, T. pc O'CONNOR. | chairman and will Introduce Iss Borkiet, ** Wilson, WILTIANE J ROOM, —>—____ to Strike, -ENVER, June 20.—James F, Mor sident of the District N e Workers of America, day that 5,000 miners will call a ike (on the Colorado Fuel d& Iron npany, the Roc 1, tinless diffe Take Every ‘ Precaution AGAINST DYSPEPSIA the will set forth the various uses bids falr to outrival anything given before & chorus of 200 schoo! Iren, Patriotic tableaux are ar- d for the children of Public ol No. 14. These tableaux will sist of Miss Liber the Spirit of take in the human American flag, un- yard Park at Hester and » Hamilton Fish Park at SEVEN MONTHS Restored to Health by Lydia E. | Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, “for seven long months I suffered from 9 fenmle trouble, with severe paing in my’ beck and sides until ws weak I ardly walk nervous I would jump at the slightest noise. I was entirely unfit to do my ‘house- I was giv ng mp hope of ever being well, | Waen my sister « dd me to try Lydia Pinkhan's Vegetable Compound, f k six bottles and ay Tam a be to do m_ own every suifering Pinkham's Compound, and find out es how good it is.” Mrs. v ¢ ARL A. KiSSO, 596 North Ave. praty UI Aire great number of unsolicited jtestimonials on fie at the Pinkham Laboratory, many of which are from jtime to time published by pe ission, | re proof of the value o lia | the treatment of female ills, ing woman in the United » write to '. Pinkham Medicine Co, | (confidential), Lynn, Mass., for spe-| | cial advice. It is free, will bring you \ health and m we your life.— Advt. t h Hl , Sandy Hook Route | North "dereey | Coast Resorts | n , eptember ad. Will not rua July 4th or § | Good Health good appetite, ood spirits— | mean no discor in the body, | BEECHAM’S PILLS JOHN. 0, GIUSWoLD. CITIZENS’ tues BANK 56 AND 58 BOWERY CANAL ST. LIATH SEMI-ANNUAL DIVIDEND, COR i duly Int, dent, "| H Mo: Duly LOUK will, HENRY SAY EDWIN A Dry Dock Savings Institution retary, Special: “A Page of Flag Sunday World Magazine For Window and. Wall Decoration. TO-MORROW’S An Article That Will Set People Thinking In Sunday’s World GEORGE se PEPPER, Chairman of the National Committee of Patriotic and Defense Societies, says: “We are fighting for bit me just as much as France is. "We are fighting against a repetition in our own land of the awful fate which has befallen Belgium, Serbia -nd Poland.” DR. HENRY VAN DYKE, Former United States Minister to the Netherlands, Tells in Sunday’s World why he hates the “predatory Potsdam ang which rules Germany, and which fas led her to dishonor, crowned her with oe and smeared her face with The Famous Pictures of An Unknown Artist Who is the most popular living American painter? What is the most widely known patriotic picture produced by an American artist? To answer the second query first: The best known all- American picture is unquestionably “The Spirit of '76,” sometimes called “Yankee Doodle’—that blood-stirring his- torical reminiscence, in which an old nian with white hair and eagle eye, beating a drum, a wounded fifer, and a small drum- mer boy in the regimentals of the Revolution, are marching over the triumphant battlefield playing the saucy martial tune of our fighting forefathers. Ever since the Philadelphia Centennial Exposition of | 1876, where it was first exhibited, this pictrue has been @ favorite in practically all cities, hamlets and homes through- out the United States. It has circulated by the million in every form of reproduction, from old-fashioned chromo to modern photo-engraving and candy box lithograph. Yet how many persons, even of those who profess to be connoisseurs or students of art, can tell you the name of the artist who painted “The Spirit of ’76,” or whether to-day he is living or dead? The “Who’s-Whos” and art directories are strangely shy of information on the subject. His name is Archibald M. Willard, and he lives in Cleve. land, O., a stalwart Civil War veteran of eighty, who can paint about as well as ever when occasion may prompt. Only last year he did a life-size replica of ‘The Spirit of '76” for Secre- tary of War Newton D. Baker, who is a fellow townsman of the artist and a former Mayor of Cleveland. A full account of the remarkable career of A. M. Willard, with color reproductions of his masterpiece and of other popu- lar pictures on which he has been receiving fat royalties during half a century, will be found in The Sunday World Maga- zine To-Morrow. A SONG HIT Xo the jeeremony INDIGESTION WEE A 98 BOWED ESC On and after Sunday, July 1st, 1917, the maximum price for Edison nity PARA ul ose wee. tA toah CONSTIPATION six months enti | Service on Manhattan Island and in the Bronx will be 7 cents a set ahaariant outiennene vend OR MALARIA LLANE entiled there BY THE kilowatt hour. The full schedule showing the several discount steps sis At ie: Sonhapvania bad = TRY = taaiine Datele un aad aie duty te 4 is on file with the Public Service Commission for the First District and at all of the offices of the Company, It may be conveniently ta made on or hefor July 10 will be en- nero from ti i ANDitHIY, MILL ATERISON. VS Pr 1, WESTIE | Seon HA Ten Wood HOSTETTER’S Authors and Composer of STOMAGHBITTERS PROTEST AT UNJUST TAX. ein ae consulted at these places or a copy will be mailed to anyone upon request The rate does not include the supply of incandescent lamps, which may be purchased under a lamp renewal agreement at % cent a kilowatt hour, or without reference to the use of current, at prices on file with the Public Service Commission, representing the cost of the lamps to ourselves Ournew rates make electric energy still further available for domestic uses, including ironing, coffee and toast making, vacuum cleaners, washing machines and many other purposes, through which the home may be more efficiently and economically conducted The New York Edison Company At Your Service Irving Place and asth Street—Stuyvesant 5600 Branch Office Show Room: for the Comveniance of the Public Addven 424 Broadway 126 Delancey Street 10 Irving Place 124 West gad Street Telephone ae Canal 8600 161 East 86th Street Orchard 19) 1§ East rasth Street Stuyvesant g600 36a East 1g9th Street Bryant 5262 Night and Fmergency Call Harlem 4020 Melrose 99x Farragut yooo All Show Rooms Open Until Midnight rm Witting to! Iminat Newspaper Publisher: Do Share, Wa he Publishers’ tion of York City, repr ew York | daily newspapers, has indorsed the pro lent of the American Newspap |ishers’ Association against |discriminating war tax in any form to |be levied against the newspaper busi | nema, been adopted | Hesolutions have tly an tingust ¢ st promotive fore be crippled the that in strong ton the Jness, should not vernment should seek Ne in Dust that the | diuim of coufiscatory and unjus tion, nit ts also potntod out that the press tx one of the Government's most important | Jand ‘powerful. weakons In this time, of |War, Newspapers now pay a tha of ber thelr corporation | tax _ Phoebe Snow on War Diet. — | WASHINGTON, June 30.—War tions In dining cars and elimination of nearly 1,000 passenger por the res nT portioned on the same scale. HOTELS AND RESTAURANTS, Coolest Resort Near N, Y, Be IGHTON Hotel) « EACH DEAL PLACE TO SPEND FOURTH, Andre Sherri’s Revue aturing K, the S' GIFFORD, and 30 Fascinating, Typical Sherri Girls. TWICE NIGHTLY ,at7.30 & 11.15 The Most Expensive and geous Revue Ever Staged. The Season’s Sensation William C. Sweatmann's New Orleans Jass nd and En- tertainers on Veranda, ew Features — Ballroom seating 1,500 Largest Dance Floor in Reception Rooms. Manicure Parlors, Billiard Room, Palm Dining Room, New Management. ROOMS $10 A WEEK AND UP. ‘Phone 500 Coney Island, Moderate Prices, NEW YORK SAVINGS BANK N. W. Cor. 14th St. and 8th Avenue Dividend July 1st, 1917, at the rate o (FOUR PER feel 900 On Ditaw ation Maiden Lane Savings Bank 170 Broadway, cor. Maiden Lane 4% PER ANNUM Deposit on of before July 10th ill draw interest from July Deposits reseived from 9 A.M. 10 3, etumaye to J, HEYNEN, ‘Neo Sour SUNDAY WORLD WANTS | WORK MONDAY WONDERS ‘Poor Butterfly”’ Words and Music in To-Morrow’'s Sunday World ENTITLED “We'll Stand By Our Country” Words by John L, Golden and R. H. Burnside. Music by Raymond Hubbell. —= Order To-Morrow’s Sunday World From * Newsdealer in Advance. Edition Limited.

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