THE MORNING OKEGOXIAX, MONDAY, KOV i JU5EK 25, 1907. SING PRAISES OF IRISH PATRIOTS Order of Hibernians Honors the Memory of the Man chester Martyrs. LAUD THEIR PATRIOTISM Fortieth Anniversary of Their Exe cution the Occasion for Eulogy In Song and Story by Mnny Admirers. The fortieth anniversary of the death of four Irish patriots. Allen, Larkln, Condon and O'Brien, known as the Man chester martyrs, was commemorated last night by the Ancient Order of Hi bernians in Arlon Hall. A programme consisting of characteristic songs and instrumental selections was rendered. Willlom McGarry delivered the address of the evening. The exercises were under the direction of the following committee: Chairman. E. H. Deery, D. "W. Lane, J. W. McGinn. John O'Hare, Joseph Casey and Patrick Murray. 'The event which we commemorate tonight," said Mr. McGarry. "Is one of those tragic events in history which In fluences the human race either for good or evil. As an incident It is not dif ferent from thousands of others which have darkened the political relations of England and Ireland during centuries of unrelenting persecution. "It was only 43 years ago yesterday that Alien. Larkln. Condon and O'Brien were executed on the scaffold of an English prlron. They were members of the Fenian Society, who had quietly and In the exercise of their lawful rights entered the city of Manchester upon purposes absolutely innocent of any criminal liability. While thus engaged, two of their leaders, Kelly and Deasy. . were arrested without complaint, hurled Into prison and tnere detained In flagrant violation or every recognized principle of criminal law. They were denied the privilege of ball and starved In a gloomy dungeon under the pre text that some unknown crime had been committed some time, somewhere, and that If they would only confess and end their days In prison, the bail de nied them in England, the good Lord would grant It to them In Kingdom Come. "Now, Kelly and Deasy were cer tainly Fenians. They were men whose whole lives had been spent In reflect ing upon the miseries of their native land. They may indeed have been dreamers, and they may have seen In their dreams the Emerald Isle, 'when Madacl wore the collar of gold he won the proud invader.' And in their dreams each hillside may have appeared melodious with the laughter of chil dren and the songs of happy men. Each valley may have glowed with abundant harvests and every fireside reflected In their sparkling warmth the warmer flames of hospitality with in the. native heart. Deasy and Kelly may have been dreamers, but their dreams were nourished by the manly sentiments which inspired the cohorts of Gideon with Irresistible might against the satanlc powers of Baal; which fired the patriotic heart of Ar mlnlus to rescue the virtue of Ger many from the abasement of Imperial Rome; which illuminated the gloom of Valley Forjre and cr6wned the arms of Washington with the laurel of en during freedom. "Neither Deusy nor Kelly had been guilty of any overt act authorizing their detention. They nad been denied every right guaranteed them by the British constitution. They were held unlawfully; they were suffering be cause they sympathized with Ireland. All"n, Larkln and O'Brien resolved to rescue them by force. When the van conveying the prisoners from the po lice court to the Jail appeared, they demanded the release of the prisoners. Sergeant Brett refused to deliver the men, and someone In the crowd, doubt less a detective, tired Into the van with the evident purpose of killing one or both of the prisoners and thereafter accusing the patriots of murder. The bullet glunced and killed Sergeant Brett. The prisoners escaped, but a different murder than that intended had Indeed been committed; nut they were ready for any emergency, and the very man who did the shooting dropped his pistol In Allen's pocket and swore that he saw Allen do the shooting. "Allen, Larkln and O'Brien and many others were arrested for conspiracy to commit murder. The trial itself was travesty. The English law provides that when a criminal conspiracy has been accomplished the conspiracy itself merges into the completed crime, but as this rule would authorize the con viction of only a few men it was Ig nored In favor of the charge of con spiracy so as to admit statements of everybody who sympathized with the patriots, and thus accomplish wholesale convictions A packed Jury did the rest. These men were sentenced tq, be hanged, and hanged they were without delay before any opportunity could be given them to make an appeal. "Each of these men died protesting his innocence. The last words of poor Condon wero 'God save Ireland.' And from that day to this 'God save Ireland' has been a rallying cry to Irishmen in every portion of the earth. The in temperate and hostile attitude of 1R07 has given way to confiding faith in 1907. Ireland is moving onward as Irishmen are moving upward in the Bcale of social progress." The musical programme was well re ceived, each participant being com pelled to respond to encores. The com plete programme was as follows: Salute to Erin Orchestra 2&J M'rmr.1 By.. M1 jtorisKErtt Irish-American Fantasia 7. ... The Webber String Orchestra. CllrZrl 'Be"e MP' If "ll This. Endearing- Young charms . ... .. ...... .Mtm Rolna Mcintosh ..v -""neTed Orchestra Accompaniment ... 2a. Armagh". .Master A. Hyland "Let Erin Remember the Days of Ola" - M-";.' U!8" Len" Hanrai tfgR ; I;::::-.::- "ggss. STTh. River' Shannon" .B" - ' Jo Thompson (special ) CHerture OrchMtrn Kathleen M avourneen" xr.'i. v:.' Ml Petroneila Connelly '" selection Miss Margaret Hogerty Overture Orchestra "Star Spannl-i! Hsnner" Audience GALLANT SOLDIER DEAD lieutenant C. J. Ward, Old-Time Portland Man, Passes Away. Lieutenant C. J. Ward, a well-known resident of the city for the past 24 years, and a ITnlon veteran of the Civil War. with a distinguished record, died yester dA" afternoon at the home of his son, Wilbur Ward, at 28 Beech street. Al blna, after an Illness of about two weeks. A year ago Lieutenant Ward fell 111 and was not expected to live, but partially recovered. Two weeks ago he was at tacked with neuralgia and suffered se verely until that attack left him. It was the Immediate cause of his death, having weakened him so that he died from gen eral collapse. Lieutenant Ward was born in Summit County. Ohio. June 23. 1837. and In early llfe moved to Indiana. When the Civil War broke out he was among the first to answer the call of Governor O. P. Morton, Indiana's war Governor, for troops, and went with the Seventh In diana Volunteers, which became Incor porated In General Wllder's command In General Thomas' brigade. This regiment afterwards became a regiment of mounted volunteers, and was the first In the Army to be supplied with Spencer seven-shot repeating carbines. SEES BRIGHT SIDE Pastor Says Crisis Will Have j Its Beneficial Results. I GRAVES!! UNREST IS PERIODICAL ........................ : t i The Late C. J. Ward. Mr. Ward received three promotions for bravery: first as Sergeant, then as Second Lieutenant, and then as First Lieutenant. His commissions were all signed by Governor Morton. While he was reticent about his record, his com rades say it was brilliant throughout until his honorable discharge In 18. His regiment bore the brunt of many en gagements, and he served as a staff of ficer under General Crook. Lieutenant Ward came to Portland in July, 1883, and engaged in business. His wife died in 1890. He was a member of Sumner Post. G. A. R. He was noted for his cheerfulness, and at all times saw the brightest side. In his last hours he was ministered to by his sons and his G. A. R. comrades, and died peace fully. He leaves two sons, Wilbur and Mllo H. Ward, of Portland. The funeral will be held tomorrow afternoon at 1:30 o'clock undr the auspices of Sumner Post. E FEW NATIONAL- INSTITUTIONS INSOLVENT. Plea Made for Better Regulation by State Legislature Imposing Added Restrictions. In response to an inquiry, T. P. Kam. deputy contsoller of the currency, has written H. C. Thompson, of the Davenport-Thompson Company, of this city, advising him that onlv 12 national banks were closed during the year end ing October 31, 1906. Four of them, being found solvent, were permitted to resume business. The same letter fur nishes the Information that there have been but 468 receiverships for national banks during the history of the sys tem (about M yenrsi, and of that num ber 26 were permitted to resume busi ness; 376 were finally liquidated, and the affairs of the others are still In process of liquidation. "The average loss sustained by cred itors of insolvent national banks." writes Mr. Kam, "that is to say. banks the affairs of which have been fully settled, is shown to have been less than i'O per cent." The inquiry of Mr. Thompson of the Treasury Department at Washington was suggested by a communication in The Oregonian from a correspondent who had asserted that more than 300 natlonnl banks had failed during the last year. "It seems to us in justice to banks that have been doing a careful and legitimate hanking business that these facts should be made public," said Mr. Thompson yesterday. "It further ap pears to us that the present want of confidence In banking institutions by a few timid depositors has been brought about largely by the suspension of two banks whose methods of doing busi ness, no matter how good the inten tions of the officers may have been, are open to public criticism. Had the Ore gon legislature passed a banking law at the 1905 session tt Is safe to say there could have been no suspensions or failures In Portland for. working under the legal restrictions that would be Imposed thereby, the methods of these banks would necessarily have been more conservative. "I see that Governor Hughes, of New York, has appointed a committee to recommend revisions to the banking laws of that state. Why cannot the Governor of Oregon follow this wise step and appoint a committee to draft amendments to our hanking law to be submitted to the next legislature, pro posing severnl additional restrictions wnicn are very much needed? "To The Oregonian must be attrib uted the credit largely for the passage of the present banking law In this state, for without its influence the act probably would have been defeated by the private bankers and those directly interested. If the banking institutions were to be made so safe that a fail ure would rarely if ever occur, a strin gency of money, such as we are now experiencing, would be unknown." FOUND DEAD IN MONTANA Team Turns Up Without Driver : Search Reveals His Body. BUTTB. Mont.. Nov. 24.-A special from Deer L-odge, Mont., to the Miner says: Patrick Boyle, 66 years old, a partner of John Hempstead in the sheep business, was found dead yesterday near his home at Racetrack, the hotly being found by one of his herders. Mr. Boyle had left his home with a team to take supplies to the sheep camp, and the wagon and team arriving without a driver, an in vestigation followed. Whether Mr. Boyle died as the result of injuries in a run away or of natural causes will be deter mined by the Coroner EXHIBIT OF SCEXIC PHOTOS. Klser's new store. 248 Alder street Present Financial Upheaval May Mark Ushering In of Another Great Era of Nation's History. Will Make Investment Safer. "A Thanksgiving Message" ww de livered by Rev. Luther R. Dyott, pastor of the First Congregational Church, yes terday morning. Dr. Dyott took for his text Ps. cxvlii:19-23, and said in part: Nations. like individuals, have their birth, growth, maturity, their mission and their death. Nations, like Individuals, must obey the laws of life, that they may have their growth, reach their maturity and fulfil their mission. Our American Nation, like all others. Is subject to these laws. It Is characteristic of nations to be ego tistical. All the conspicuous nations In his tory have, had a certain amount of egotism as to their relation to other nations, and their mission in life. There Is a sense in which a Just conception of the life of a nation is not egotism, certainly not an un pardonable egotism. The awakening to self consciousness marks a crisis In the life of a nation, that la attended by a prevalent un rest. All great eras have been ushered In by unrest. Our American Nation has awakened to its self-consciousness, and there Is a sense in which the world at large has come Into a realization of this same self consclousneas. hence the era of unrest. A realisation of our self-consciousness brings to light our Imperfections as well as our better qualities. The imperfections are conspicuous to the pessimist, and the better qualities to the optimist. The same con ception should comprehend both. The hand of God la seen in the birth of our Nation, both as to the time when it came into existence, and In the way It was carried forward. This country was dis covered and founded just at the time when the new life of religious freedom had its birth In the Old World, and needed a new environment. In the character of the men who had to do with the early shaping of our National life, as seen in the spirit of 1774. the hand of God Is again seen. God di rected the outcome of the Civil War, which was begun, not for 'the purpose of freeing the slaves, but as a means of preserving the Union. The emancipation of the slaves came to be an issue later in the strife. The relation of America to Cuba was an other Providential happening, which result ed In the cementing together of the North and the South. Then It was that the new era of prosperity dawned upon the South land, so that the Southern States are now accumulating wealth seven times as fast as Great Britain. In 'our present condition there Is a sense in which the American life is essentially one. as instanced by the present financial crisis, which could not have been confined to one section of the country. We have become conscious of the fact that In our land Is not to be found simply sectional dependence, but National interdependence. Great good will come out of the crisis through which we are now passing, for It is certain to lead up to a better understanding of the business interests, and to lead up to a solving of financial questions, which could not other wise have been brought about. Just as It Is safer to travel on a railroad after a terrible wreck, It may be safer for men to Invest after the financial crisis Is past than It was before. Already the influence of our straitened financial condition has begun to spread, and Immigrants are carrying and sending the news back to the Old "World that it would be best for their countrymen not to pour Into this country in such large numbers. The Immigrant who comes here not simply for the purpose of accumulating wealth, but for the purpose of bettering himself, la a great good to the community in which he settles, but the riff-raff of the Ofd World, who are not capable of being assimilated, will, as one result of the financial condi tion, be deterred from coming to our shores, atul this will, In a measure, be a solution of our great National problem. And for the future let us look for libertv. equality, fraternity and co-operation. If w possess these attributes they will eventually lnrue themselves into the life of other na tions. Therefore, there Is need of savins In the words of the text. "Open to me the gates of righteousness, that I may enter in." we should aim to he right, first with God, and then with our fellow-men. If we do this It will enable us to fulfil our mission in the future. 7 - WILL DISCUSS ANNEXATION Mount Scott District Wants Police and Fire Protection. Among the questions that will be con sidered tonight at the meeting of the new Mount 3cott Improvement Association MUSIC CO Pioneer Phonograph Dealers Edison Gems - - $12.50 Edison Standard $25.00 Edison Home - - $35.00 Edison Triumph $55.00 All Fully Equipped With New Edison Equipment. Gem $1 Down $1 Week Others $1 Weekly Payments We have a large stock of all the December Records A full carload of (440) Edison Machines received a few days ago Buy An Edison Buy the Best. $1 Takes a Gem to your home. Graves Music Co 328 Wash., Near Sixth will be that of annexation. This meeting will be held in the Latirelwood Hall, at g o'clock, and every citizen and property owner is urged to be present and take part. This club represents all the settle ments between Anabel and Lents along the Mount Scott Railway, and all rest dents are equally Interested in the mat ter of annexation. It is understood that if the question is to be voted on at the next June election, there Is much work to be done in the way of petitions for circulation for signatures and drawing maps of the territory to be annexed to Portland. Also it will be necessary to show approximately the population of the territory. The petitions and data must be presented to the Portland Coun cil, which may or may not allow a vote to he taken on the question. The water supply also, which Is connected with the question of annexation, and fire pro tection, will come up for consideration. This big district has practically every thing found in the city, except it has no police regulation, fire protection and no adequate water supply. The population of the territory is estimated at from 10.000 to 12,000. that depending on the ex tent of territory that might be Included. The line will be drawn to take In all of Woodstock and the territory eastward to the Grays Crossing on the County Road. Lents and the Immediate sur roundings are eaid to be opposed to being Included in the annexation movement, and seems to favor forming a little cor poration of its own. 8o the boundary line will not be east of the County Road. RISER HAS MOVED. Scenic Photos. 248 Alder street e ! sfc mtam I i Today at Wo C. -. You'll Find The Handsomest and Cosiest Talking- L Machine Trial Rooms in the City l 93fe MPT w ninriwmT?!? 1 EDISON RECORDS! ( i 1 At All Times You'll Also Find The Best of Everything in the Talking Machine Line j EDISON, COLUMBIA, VICTOR 1 I Machines, Records, Cabinets, Etc. I -sss -. The Most Liberal Terms I - AiTHEHOUSE OF 1 rtt H Let us assist you in making the selection of your new Thanksgiving Records and Most Satisfactory Service IGHEST QUALITY J pinnoreliability XH $ 353 Washington Cor. Park IsQ EDI S ON PHONOGRAPH gawjllllllllllPl .uuuuuiuniuunmivmvmunuiuuKkUiBi KMHiii. P I HE secret of a happy home is entertain- JL ment. Home should be the most enter taining spot on earth for the family, and it can be for the very small amount of money which an investment in the Edison Phonograph would mean. Mr. Edison's Phonograph supplies the entire entertainment. It will sing, render any kind of instrumental music or talk. It is a marvelous reproducer of every kind of sound and especially of the sort of sounds which, com bined, produce music. If you haven't seen the new Edison model with the big horn, by all means go to the nearest Edison store and see, and more especially hear, it. It's a wonder in its way. Descriptive booklet on request. December Records Out Today WHILE it has been hard to make a Record of iust the right consistency to be durable enough to stand lots of wear and at the same time delicate enough to ! r r i m i i i give rne most perrect rendition or souna, yet mr, rxuson nas produced by his secret processes the most perfect Record for Phonographic use that has yet been made. Go over the list of December Records, check off those you would like to hear and than go to the nearest Edison store and hear them. This is the way to get all the pleasure out of your Edison Phonograph. 3698 Walt from Borneo and Juliet . . . Edison Concert Band MBS I'll Ee Waiting, Dearie, When Ton Come Back Home Reed Miner 3700 In Monkey Land Collins and Harlan 8701 The Merry Widow Waits . . . Edison Symphony Orchestra 9703 Some Day When Dreams Com Tme . . . Irving Gillette 9708 Ring Ont the Bella for Christmas . . Kdlson Concert Band 9704 Flanagan's Trouble With His Tailor .... Steve Porter 9706 Honey Boy Medley Xylophone Albert Benxler 9706 Wouldn't Ton Like to Hare Me for a Sweetheart Ada Jones 9707 Three Rubes Seelug New York . . Edison Vaudeville Co. 9708 I Get Dippy When I Do That Two-Step Dance Arthur Collins 9709 Pretty Black-Eyed Susan Edison Military Bud Go to your dealer or write today and get these three booklets : Complete Catalogue, Supplement al Catalogue and the Phokogeam. They tell about all the Records, old and new. 9710 Won't Ton Waltx "Home, fiweet Home," With Me for Old Time's Sake ? ... Byron O. Harlat 9711 Rescns the Perishing Anthony sad Harrisoa 9712 Mariaalna , , Jan. Brock man 9711 Florida Rag Banjo Veas L. Oaaman 9714 Make a Lot of Worse Billy Murray 6716 Old Dog Sport Lao Spencer and Gilbert Girard 971 Two Bine Byes Relnald Werrenrath 9717 Lore's Confession Edison Symphony Orchestra 9718 When the Sheep are in the Fold. Jennie Dear Manuel Romaln 9719 So, What's the User Bob Roberts 9790 Broncho Bob His Little Cheyenne Ada Jones A Len Spencer 9911 Old Faithful March Edison Military Band BUSINESS MEN who dictate their letters to the Edison Business Phonograph get through quicker and handle their correspondence better. WE DESIRE GOOD, LIVE DEALERS to sell Edison Phonograph? in every town where we are not now wcU represented. Dealers should write at once to National Phonograph Co. 75 Lakeside Avenue, Orange, N. J. The Joys of an EDISON PHONOGRAPH I It is the greatest amuser of modern time. I There are so many ways it may be added to the entertainment of every family it is hard to describe them. (J Gome to our large parlors and com pare them with other machines. You Can Have an Edison Phonograph From Us for ONE DOLLAR Down and One Dollar a Week VISITORS ARE ALWAYS WELCOME OPEN EVERY EVENING UNTIL 9 P. M. Bring the Children to Our Free Phonograph Concert Every Tuesday Evening and Hear the New Records Woodard, Clarke 8f Co. ! i