The Orange Daily Tribune. (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 188, Ed. 1 Monday, October 20, 1902 Page: 1 of 4
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. ; v ' —— ■
8HE -ADDRESSED A GREAT
DIENCE IN ORANGE.
mim role is sep-coidemed.
, ■. „ ...........
SIS TREATED NICELY M THIS CITT.
• business, in if
It SCCODBt.
on to the vain/
- .. '.i r V !mWw*oiie»W'
Ireland Haa a Smaller Population To-
Day Than It Had More Than a
Century Ago.
Distributed Hatchet
Vitriolic English
From a I
Literature and
lore—Ejected
DRUOS-ONE KIND ONLY-
,,----------THE best
7EMAN
nLM p n
DEALER
ALL KINDS OF FRESH MEATS
constantly on hand. : s : '•
CORNER FRONT AND FIFTH STREETS
..................-........... .............. ■! : ......
By ABBoclated Press.
London, Oct. 20..—Irish nationalists
were much la evidence at questioning
time in the House of Commons to-day.
They bombarded Irish Secretary
Wyndtham with all kinds of queries,
interruptions and contractions of hla
statement anent imprisonment of
Irish members. Wyndtham’s replies,
though given a conciliatory tone,
Carrie Nation, the Twentieth Cen-
tury anti-rum crusader, delivered a
lecture in the Oreen Avenue Baptist
Church, Saturday afternoon. A chowd
exceeding five hundred gathered to
hear her talk. The church was
crowded and perhaps a hundred peo-
AND C
vance guard of
airy, came a regiment of
slouching along the road, in
rlety of patched and tatterei
once Bky blue. Some of tl
two shoes of different patt
of them none, t The majorltl
men and mere boys. Rifl
patterns were stuck promise
the back of any unobjectlom
Bach large band instrument
In solitary grandeur, the 1
pack camel.
"When a mishap necesel
packing a load in the midi
road one got a glimpse of <
pets, of tents with walls of
ora, of robes of honor, silk)
ders, quilted bedding. I
there a silver ewer of plecw
French furniture, tied on w
a bit of i0ing, kept clank
side of a mule. IS
"Ofllcera of the houaeUM
ver staves; flunkeys iHiJgS
high state officials in
black coats, mullahs *■*■)
white turbans, Persiamgg^
ed in ample black dr?
thick, white veils, jo,
ed confusion along t* ,
groups in the rest 1 ’|Ftl
"Further on well
camps of the lnipwf'? (^f,
ly commanded bSjanjpfa^'
rone to meet 1 VTlIkjE..
•The total cofl J Avi*
grImage probSf
$200,000.’’ joys’ Clot!
The MnRnectiOb
By AssodatC^S^ '
\v;ikesi»snr^T^y?
coiimltt«e J||Hi
this afterno
line of linen and a few other staples,
are almost destroyed by English com-
petition, which has every advantage
that wealth and skill can give, her
youhg people are, in a great measure,
cut oft froth skilled labor pursuits, and
agriculture is the only other alternate
of employment. The best lands of
Ireland are held by alien and absen-
tee landlords. 'The worst are occu-
ORDER YOUR MEAT and let
us keep it in our refrigerator.
.
in the most attractive of tht season’s
toilettes and this was made a feature
of Mrs. Nation’s talk. After the lec-
ture small souvenir hatchets were dis-
tributed among the audleeee.
Garbed in a plain white pique dress,
with a cape of the same material,
wearing eye-glasses and her cordial
smile, the now celebrated wrecker,
delivered a talk full of interest and
plain words. She told of bow she came
to smash her first saloon. She said
that it was at Kiowa, Kan., in Bar-
ber county where she was president
of the W. C. T. U. From Kiowa she
went to Wichita, and was there ar-
She told of her experiences
kept busy suppressing demonstra-
tions which threatened to develops
into the disorder line.
President Ffnerty, in opening, said
they again assembled in the dual ca-
pacity of American citizens and allies
of their Irish kindred, to lift up their
voices In behalf of Ireland’s tillers
of the soil to own the land they culti-
vate. Now 60,000 Irish husbandmen
are farmer proprietors and they are
so because of the labors and sacrifice
O’Brien. Dillon,
■MU-** I •■»'»*»
Bread as we make it is not
a load for servant or master
—or the master’s stomach—
for no dyspepsia lurks there-
in. Made from the beat flour
purchasable; made by bakers
who know what they are do-
ing, Bunn’s Bread is a syno-
nym of purity and whole-
somenesa
Try Bunn’s Bread.
process of confiscation. These lands
belong by heredity right to the Irish
people, but the Irish people do not
ask for a new confiscation, but for
condemation and purchase by loan on
terms of easy repayment.
When, instead of 66,000 600,000
heads of IriBh tenant families become
proprietors of a touriequet will have
been applied to the bleeding arteries
of Ireland. The young people, the
pride and flower of their country,
will remain at home, and, beneath the
geniel skies of their native land, make
her fertile soli blossom as a rose. And
with prosperity will come liberty, Its
handmaiden.
England herself must be grown
tired of the cruel Irish landlords,
whom she upholds by her sheriffs and
her soldiers. Bauour and Wyndham
are making a last effort In behalf of
their cdlients.
of Parnell, Davitt,
Blggar and Redmond, who followed in
the track of the pioneers for. Irish
liberty..
To-day there are other Irish patri-
ots, the brothers and friends of Ire-
rested,
and work from that timd to this, and
likened herself unto Moses, when he
smashed the golden calf on Mount
Sinai. She also cited other charac-
ters in the Bible and said that all
Luie Christians had "smashed” and In
most cases used hatchets.
Her Hkk resolved itself practically
into a stump speech for the Prohibi-
tion party. She lined the Republi-
cans, Democrats and all other parties,
calling them the breeders of criminals,
builders of breweries and distilleries,
and protectors of gambling.
She did not employ very choice lan-
guage in her talk, referring to confirm-
ed drunkards as "old soaks,” and poor
whiskey Ks “rot-gut.” These terms
convention,
land’s delegates
wearing the convict’s clothes, and per-
forming hard labors in Irish Jails, be-
-»W»4♦♦w-W
cause they have dared to tell the En-
glish pr,ime minister that his rule In
Ireland is founded on invasion, usur-
pation, confiscation and the breach of
treaties, which even savage virtue
would have respected, but which En-
glish greed and jealousy systematical-
ly violated-
The Anglo-Normans, at the close of
the 12th century, introduced their foul
feudal system into Ireland, Before
they came, the Irish lands were the
property of all the'people, and were
held In trust by monarch, prince and
chief. But the Invaders did not res-
POND BROTHERS & CO. B
We Roast and Grind
oar Own Coffees
THE 8HAH OF PERSIA.
Strange Spectacles Which the Ameri-
cans Enjoy Very Vigorously.
By Associated Press..
New York, Oct. 20.—In a descrip-
tion of the hurried Journey of the
whole of the Shah’s court along the
Teheran-Resht road, in order to wel-
come his Majesty at the frontier o>i
the return of the potentate from his
Turojrean tour, the correspondent of
thiS Times at Teheran cables, by way
of London:
“It wy the strangest of pictures, |f
” The best Coffee
on the Market.
Try our
ed ancient Ireland, and were in the
main models of wisdom and justice.
On the contrary,
from the first, am
fathers and brothers in the field or by
traitor methods, they married
BOTH PHONE* 1S8
HA - . ■ . ■ ... .
errode them
vanquishing
* • - * r
......... —--------r ___—1 the
daughters by force and laid claims to
the land which was the common,
property of the Irish people and not of
a favored and privileged few.
Ireland did not tamely submit to
this new and violent condition of af-
fairs, but,. as history tells, has fought
' for liberty. The
i! system was
Parnell,
the finest ppfftacle the eye of tin
ejected. She told them a few things
and went away. ’
This episode she made a part of her
talk, and heaped all kinds of abuse
on tbe saloons.' She called it a hell,
and for the space of perhaps fifteen
minutes smeared the place in lan-
guage calculated to have the same ef-
fect as a coat of black paint.
She then opened up on the cigar-
ette. This subject was one that af-
forded a wide scope for the strong
words and sentiments she directed
against-the weed. Tobacco, in any
form, she said, was an Instrument of
suicide. From her point of view the
United States government is working
directly against the homes of the peo-
ple; is being paid, in fact, to permit
tobacconists and saloon keepers to re-
main in buainess.
After talking liquor and tobacco up
one side and down the other, she start-
ed in on ladies’ attire. This is where
she got in her fancy strokes. She told
them how she had at one time worn
frills arid feathers, ruffles and other
furbelows, but since receiving the
communication from above, the had
discarded all these, and called on all
women to do the same.
ssE s ajawssas
long and persli
Anglo-Norman
paramount in Ireland until
supported by the Land League, of i
which the United Irish League is the ,
lineal successor, made a branch in Its
brazen shield. Catholics and Protest-
ants alike were persecuted and the '
outrages forced them to emlgate to
the American colonies, where they •
took their part In the war for Inde-
pendence.
Since January 1, 1902, Ireland has
been, to all Intents and purposes, an
English province. The union act
wiped out, aa far as parchment and
seal could do It, her distinctive na-
tionality; but the hearts and hands
of tbe bulk of the Irish people have
been and are inflamed and raised
againat the provincial condition. They
have not accepted the brand of social
and political Inferiority.
English rule stands self-condemned
by the official reports of its own ser-
vants. which show that Ireland has
to-day a smaller population than ahe
had in 1861. And that, within the last
sixty years, 1,260,600 of her people
starved to death; more than 2,000,000
were evicted from their holdings, and
4,000,000, at least, eotfeht refuge from
British tyranny in this and other free
countries. A government, whether
native or foreign, that could and can
find no remedy for this wholesale de-
struction of an ancient and highly en-
dowed people has no right to exist.
It has sinned against the beneficence
of God and the inherent rights of
mankind.
Under more favorable conditions the
Irish people would be entirely Justi-
. . ________i.1__fhla
UTZ < DUNN’S
Women’s Shoes
Ever watchful for our
terrains. |
Holland Hotel
10 pieces BROWN
face and fair na
42-INCH ANDErI
dressing; wortf*.
I?*,#;
CHILD’S Eft*
lag; a 65c i
WOMAN’S T,
rows of sad
known FAH
ship; apeK
27-INCH B|P
our priomfe
W© ©r© reviving ©v©ry f©w dftys ft
nice Ha i of the celebrated
ADAM SCHAAF PIANOS
of Chicago, direct from the factory to
your home, at a cloee margin tor caeh
or slight advance for time payment*.
All these Instruments are fully war
ranted for ten years from date of pur-
chase. The Instruments are strictly
high-grade in every respect. We also
handle the Behr Bros. A Co. of New
York. Che, m.k.. „„„
Manuf’g Agent
For tale at
;e JEWELRY 8TORE, Orange, Tex.
THE 8CHLEYJINTOURAGE.
The Admiral Presented With a Lovini
to decide
i m
:
mmmmmm m*
IE &■ mm
3ISfe
3B5r£!^ *nirtWa w*• *®«*-fl* •'*<**■
You get
(he
1
Doctor
Otfius......
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Ford, A. L. The Orange Daily Tribune. (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 188, Ed. 1 Monday, October 20, 1902, newspaper, October 20, 1902; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth642578/m1/1/: accessed April 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.