'9 APPEAL MADE FOR IRISH LANGUAGE prosecution of Armen Schmoll. of ITS West Seventy-second, street, who was driving 40 miles an hour up Broadway when the motor policeman ran him down at Two hundred and forty-third street after a chase of IS blocks. Schmoll acknowledged that Hag gerty spoke truly. "Well, there's a place for kissing a girl and there's a place for driving an automobile," said Magistrate Corrlgan with magisterial severity. "I realize that now, your honor." said Schmoll. looking very uncomfortable. The young man then paid a 125 fine and hurried away to the Yorkvlile Po lice Court, to which he also had been summoned to explain his speeding. That summons was handed to him in Fifth avenue earlier In the evening. The young man's mother received the news that her son had been fined with unconcern. "He's a good boy," said Mrs. Schmoll. LLOYD-GEORGE LAND PLAN IS ATTACKED Lord Ashbourne, Addressing Gaelic League in Dublin, Criticises Anglo-Saxon. Papers Call Ideas Advanced in Swindon Speech Revolutionary. ENGLISH CALLED INSULAR "OLD HORROR" IS-REVIVED TITE MORNING OREGOXIAN. TUESDAY. DECE3IBER t, 1913. j .,. , 1 1 -rrm p I 1 1 I rS-'.'f fpeaker Declares Day Is Coming When Representatives of Press Will Have to Know Ancient Tongue to Continue Useful. DUBLIX. Dec 8. (Special.) Lord Ashbourne made an appeal tor the atudy of the Irish language the other day when he opened the Winter ses sion of the Gaelic League, more the National dress, anil spoke for a time In Caellc He armed that It was better to teach Irish children at school their National language than IntermeeVate French or German. It would give ttiem self-re spect and pride for their eountry. He belonged to a family of Ulster Scots. rut after 300 years tt was about time that people like himself should give In and stand with the Irish people. What ever else his ancestors came to Ireland for, ic was not to be made English men. The moHt fundamental thing people could do was to be true to their language. The representatives of cul ture might argue that It meant Isola tion, but his lordship said that he could show it was the Englishman who was Isolating himself. "He is the most prejudiced, insular, riarrow-minded and Impossible person the world has ever seen, he added. "Anyone who has gone to the Con tinent knows what an utterly Incapable fool the representative of John Bull Is when you meet him. He looks for his own language, his own civilization, customs and habits wherever he goes, nid he complains when he does not get mem. Radish Dries;. Is Assertloa. An English atmosphere, his lordvhlp asserted, was essential to an English man abroad before he managed to live. He learned nothing, and saw nothing, and came back as he went an Insular Englishman. The Irish wanted to be a progressive people and among the cul tured nations of the world. The best way to do that was to be Irish instead of speaking a language which rejoiced In its Insularity, and which was on the wane, because Its sounds were dying, both vowels and consonants. A woman once told him that English should be spoken with the Hps. When a language began to be spoken in that way, tt meant that It was preparing to die or to emigrate. "If we Irish want.' be added, "not only to keep In touch with the great world outside, but also to be capable of pronouncing con tinental languages, we must avoid speaking the English language." The French language was largely connected in its origin with the Gaelic lunfruages. and there was not a sound In French which was not in Irish. Vocabulary Is Dlacasaed. Another question was whether the Irish language was to be spoken In Ire land with an Irish vocabulary or with an English vocabulary. He had been for years past wandering about the country wondering if it would be possl. ble to address an average meeting of citizens In a hall of a town in Irish without using any English. He knew that it could be done In the country Tarts of Connemara or Donegal or Kerry, and he had done It recently him self In the streets of Galway, but couhl an audience be found In a big town capable of understanding Irish? The thins happened the other day, not In Galway, or Cork, or Limerick, but In the capital of the black North In Bel last. Nest morning the speech he de livered there, without using a word of English, appeared In the daily papers. The number of people speaking Irish was increasing, and his lordship said that It would gradually be necessary for the representatives of newspapers to have a knowledge of the language- CHOP SUEY PLOT NIPPED Japanese Waiter? Discharged When heme Is Discovered. CHICAGO. Dec S. A new "yellow peril." which threatened to drive the Chinese out of the chop suey business, was discovered last week, and as a result SO Japanese waiters employed In Chinese restaurants were summarily discharged. This new "Japanese plot" was discov ered by Chin Foln. manager of a syndi cate of Chinese restaurants. Negotia tions were under way for the renting f a building in the loop In which thu Japanese were to conduct a restaurant if Oriental splendor. The Japanese bad the waiters and the money to equip such a place, but they had no chef. It was the-attempt to hire a Chinese coo'.: that "tipped off tho plot to Chin Fotn. Orders were sent to all the Chinese res taurants In the city to discharge Japan ese waiters, and It Is said the "yellow peril" has been strangled. "The Japanese waiters have been try ing to steal the Chinese recipes for making chop suey and other dishes." said Chin Foln. "They were going to start restaurants In opposition to the Chinese. We beard of It and put all the Japanese waiters on the street. There will be no chop suey war." LEITER'S YACHT AT NICE Officers Anxious to Watch Play of Man Who "Broke" Monte Carlo. NICE. Dec 8. The steam yacht Ni agara, owned by Howard Gould, but tinder charter to Joseph loiter, of "Washington, i for a trip around the world, has entered Vlllefranche harbor, and anchored alongside the hospital ship Solace. Aboard the Niagara are Mr. and Mrs Letter and the latter's sister. Miss Wil liams. All were asked to call aboard the Wyoming and the other battleships while they are here. Mr. Letter will go to the Casino at Monte Carlo, where he made a reputation as the man who broke the bank 15 years ago. Mr. Letter and his party will be here tor a week, then go to Malta. Italy, and through the Suez Canal to the Pacific Tho battleship officers are much Inter ested In the proposed trip to Monte Carlo and say that If he goes they want to watch bts play. DRIVER BUSY JISSING GIRL Anto Owner Says Ho Didn't Care How rt He Went. NEW YORK. Dec. . "Tour honor, when I stopped him he said he didn't rare how fast be was going, because he was busy kissing a girl." So testified Patrolman James Hag gerty before Magistrate Corriaan In tae ilorrltania Police Court In the WK1,I..K()WV PORTLAND RESIUE.VT, WHO DIED FRIDAY, i . ( Charles F. Saager. The funeral of Charles F. Sanger, who died Friday from pneumonia, was held yesterday at the family residence, 926 East Taylor street at 1:30 o'clock, and 'at the Elks' Lodge, of which Mr. Sanger was a prominent member, at 3:30. The body was taken East for burial by his brother, Edmund P. Sanger, who came from Mount Vernon, X. V., last week. Mr. Sanger was born In Evona. N. J., September 30. 1869. For three years he worked with a men's furnishing goods house In New York; then he went to Chi cago for three years. He came here IS years ago, and for the last nine years had been In charge of the hat department In Buffum & Pendleton's store on Morrison street. For ten years he bad been a member of the lo cal Lodge of Elks. He was an ardent sportsman, and It was while out on a fishing trip No vember 9 that he caught the cold that developed Into pneumonia and caused his death. Mr. Sanger was married IS years ago In New York City. "Armen Is a good boy. But I always told him not to go so quick." At the office of Schmoll File, hide dealers, 30 Spruce street, where Armen works for his father. It was said that the young man was out. The steering gear was out of order and he bumped into a tree," said a fel low clerk, giving a new angle to the Incident. "Neither of the occupants of the car was hurt." Mr. Schmoll is a wealthy hide dealer. The car belongs to Armen. BOILING TAR KILLS BABY Woman Lifting Pot From Stove Drops It Near Foster Child. NEW YORK. Dec. C. William Moody, who lives on the top floor of a tenement at 793 Broadway, Bayonne. placed a pot f tar on top of the kitch en stove to heat. His mother, Mrs. Mary Moody, 40 years of age, noticed that the tar was about to boll over and lifted the pot from the stove. Some of the tar splashed on her hands and she dropped the pot. Seated close to the stove wss Ethel Connors, aged IS months, whom the Moodys had adopted. Hot tar fell on the baby and burned her to death. Mrs. Moody's clothes caught fire and her son's hands were burned severely when he attempted to extinguish the flames. The smoke choked the ball ways and Mrs. Moody was carried down a ladder by the firemen and taken to the city hospital, where the physicians said shs could not recover. BLIGHT KILLS JERSEY OAKS Dlf.cs e Spreads From Chestnut Trees and So Ilcnicdy Found. ' NEWTON. X. J- Dee. . The dlsesse which nearly has caused the extinc tion of the chestnut tree In this sec tion has struck tho oak tree and. ac cording to old woodsmen, thero will be neither red nor black oak trees here about after four years unless some remedy Is found. It is said that the blight baa not ex tended to the white oak, but there Is nothing to Indicate that these trees will not be affected. This will mean the loss of thousands of dollars, as the white oak, predominates in Sussex County. The woodsmen say the disease Is In the bark. snd. although they have tried every means to fight it, they have failed. BOY AS SOLDIER KILLED "I'm a Mexican," Kajs One; "Then I'll Shoot," Says the Other. LAPORTE. Ind.. Dec's. While play ing "soldier," Home Foster, age 17, and Earl Goodacre, who was 15 years old, living near Wolcott. where the latter's father is a clergyman, fell to talking about the Mexican trouble. Goodacre asked Foster If the guns used by the Mexicans were like the Springfield rifle he was carrying. Foster assured him tbey were Goodacre replied: "If Mexlcana use them I'm a Mexi can," Foster in answer said: "If you're a Mexican I'll shoot you." Then they paced off about ten feet, aimed and pulled the triggers. Foster's gun proved to be loaded, the charge en tering Goodacre's body and killing him Instantly. Foster said he did not know the gun was loaded. Sanday la the White Hease Christian Herald. Sundays are nearer days of rest In the White House offices than they have been there for many years. "We come nearer having our Sundays at borne under this administration than any I have ever known." said one of the old est of the White House employes re cently. That Is true, because we have a President of the United States who believes in the old commandment, "Re member the Sabbath day." A It.: -r, I . .' ;i "Policy Would Rejoice Hearts of So cialists," Is Comment "Store Promises," Asserts Dally Mall in Editorial. LONDON. Dec 8. Lloyd-George's land reform speech at Swindon has set the Unionist newspapers writing about the Chancellor of the Exchequer In terms which recall the flavor of four years ago. The new muzzle which he proposes to put on the land monopo lists his land ministry, with Its land commissioners fills them afresh with the old horror. The Daily Telegraph "shudders to think" what the new authority will do: the Yorkshire Post can recall only one parallel to It "the famous revolution ary tribunal set up In Paris to bring on the Reign of Terror": the Manches ter Courier finds the star chamber a more helpful analogy; the Morning Post discerns "a policy which may re joice the hearts of Socialists", and the Daily Graphic thinks that It cannot fall to All "all but the most rabid of Socialists" with the gravest appre hension." The Times gravely chides the Chancellor with distracting public at tention from that much more living and fruitful topte, the feud between Protestants and Catholics In Ulster. The Dally Mall says that Lloyd George's speech may best be summar ized as "more promises" on a scale which eclipses all his past achieve ments in that direction. The govern ment Is to Inaugurate a new golden age for agriculture by the device of es tablishing a Land Ministry at an an nual cost of 3100,000. The new Insti tution is to raise- wages, to lower rents, to buy derelict land and cover It with crops of "rare and refreshing fruit." Lloyd -George's programme cannot take effect until after the next rcn eral election. RAILWAYS TD BE PROBED RELATION OF ROADS TO STATE TO BR LEARNED MY ENGLAND. Aatloaallsatloa of Systems believed Oaly Feasible Solntloa of Problem Reeeatly Developed. LONDON. Dec 8. (Special.) The government has appointed a Royal Commission to inquire Into the rela tionship between the railway com panies and the state, with the Earl of Loreburn as chairman. One of the leaders of the labor party says that those members of the government who take a particular Interest in labor prob lems have been greatly concerned with the railway situation ever since the strike of 1907. Experience showed that the conciliation boards established In that year to decide disputes respecting wages and hours were a complete fail ure: and In 1911 the widespread feel ing of disaffection among all classes of railway men culminated In what was the most serious strike which this country has yet known. When this strike had at length been decided the government Instituted spe cial Inquiries Into all the circumstances connected with the dispute,' the argu ments for both masters and men be ing carefully considered, and Its at tention was directed to certain special points. It may be confidently asserted thst the government has now decided. In principle, that a scheme of nationalisa tion Is the most feaslblo plan that can be put forward to meet the difficul ties. Wages and working conditions being excluded from Its scope, the com mission now appointed will have as Its chief work the consideration of the purely financial aspect of the question of nationalization. But a general election at some not very remote date is a possibility. Min isters are bent on creating an atmos phere favorable to themselves, should they be driven to that desperate re sort. The railway commission natur ally will take some years In maklnir Its report, and If its composition sug gests that It is not likely to favor any wild projects or to r-hear the railway shareholder too closely. It can always be paraded as a liberal asset. The real Issue before the govern ment and the nation Is not tho na tionalization of the railways nr Lloyd George's great plan for creating a new bureaucracy to play the part of Provi dence towards agriculture. The real problem Is the problem of Ulster. All other questions are of second-rate im portance until the Irish problem Is solved. Another subject thst Is likely to be Wine at 75c Gal. J: If you judged this wine by the price, you'd never guess right on the quality. It's our famous "standard" quality well aged, deli cious flavor, and regularly $1 the gal lon. q Phone "The Big Store" for a gallon in sanitary glass container PHONES Main 589 A-1117 Spring Valley WINE COMPANY "Tho Big Store" on the Corner Second and Yamhill w azr r ,av w w . . . . m w m w w m m m aiB .- . stssai-v x. - -v sa. w a rtm a . V-1 ..:.- If'.' Vi-'ttA ' -": ' - t.v g largest selling high quality Whiskey.' Try why! YMfMC Ifi'-I , r-t T-0A& MBMMiiiMaMMMMKnBaaaSsMaasataBiasBa considered In the course of the railway Investigation was lightly touched up on by Lloyd George In his speech on the land question. "More especially he said. In demanding for the culti vator Improved and cheaper transport facilities for the brlnjrlna- of produce to market, "there must be an end put to the present system by which certain railway companies give undoubted preference to forclun produce." The reference Is wide enoutch to Include this question of preferential rates. 2 WOULD WED LUCKY NURSE Proposals Come to Miss Fusel, Heir ess. In Watmotigh AVlll. PHILADELPHIA. Dec. 6. There are at least two men who are anxious to marry Mile 7.alll Fspet. the nurse 1 1 Imported Champagnes Italian wmm Holiday Excursion Fares For Christmas and New Year's NORTHERN PACIFIC RAILWAY To Any Point on Any Line in Washington, Idaho. Oregon And to Vancouver, B. C. Tickets on Sale Dec ember 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 Return Limit January 5, 191-1 TICKETS Information 255 Morrison Street Phones : Main 244, A 1244 A. D. Charlton, A. G. Ask About WINTER EXCURSIONS TO FLORIDA Manly men, of best judgment in athletics and the clubs, prefer the purity, mellowness and "class" of world famous Kentucky aged bottled - in - bond W. H. McBrayer's CEDAR BROOK Whiskey. During 66 years, three generations, it has been the mm ROTHCHILD BROS., DISTRIBUTORS who Is set down for $100,000 In the contested will of John . Watmough, of 2114 Walnut street, her former em ployer. There may be more, of course, but at least two have formally pro posed. "Yes. I have had two proposals in two days." she admitted. "No, I won't say where they come from, lint I have no Intention of considering them at all. Itesiles the proposals of marriage I have also received appeals for help. I suppose everybody does when it is learned they have come ir.to money unexpectedly." neoJaala of a Maaaate. London Tellcan. In Wall Street they're telling this story of on African mining magnate who has managed to make himself ex cee.llncly unpopular. Last week on his way to lunch. his watch and chain were snntched by a pickpocket, who was CHiieht before lie emild get away are now giving way 10 me Swiss Colony s Golden State Extra Dry QHAMPACNE Produced at Asti. California ST AM. CAFES AND K4M1I.T WINK AND l.lyl OK STOKES. TRAINS Best of servica to Northern Pa cific points.with connections for points on other lines. P. A., Portland, Oregon v St - - --ihirniriiiiiaarrii--isTJTiii'iS ifisnir nirMjuM very for. The great man, however, re fused to jiive him In charge. "I bejran In u small way myself." was his ex planation. Pointer la naMlneiui. Louisvillo Courier-Journal. "All statuary should be draped BRETTON A new White Sstsa Striped Madras thaa the popular Betlelry, Unmatched (or beauty and comfort. defy'Iver GoJJars tt sixes ever express good taite and ppfopruteaes. They interpret the preference of the bat dmscd mea of two continent!. Perfect fitting easy to put on sod take off. Hare Lioocord Unbreakable Buttonholes in DO other GEO. P. IDE & CO, Makats. TROY, ft T. Creator of Smart Stjrlas in Collars and Shirts "Fifty years ago, Whiskey Ox . .;:D w w J 1 e at " r 1 VOU are i?ot in winning form for a game of billiards unless you're in a cheerful, confident mood. It's wonder ful how a little drink of fine, old will give one the nerve and steadiness neces sary to get the proper English on the ball. Golden Wedding is a pure, mellow, sun- (71 ripened wniskey, agea in tne wood un der the ever-watchful eye of the govern ment, and distilled according to a special formula. It produces no bad after-effects, but is nerve-sooth-insj and is good for an over-worked or run-down system, because it is "Made Dijerenty." M MCnoiTIM wmm "Maybe. Lljt it's a poor time of year to start a campaign for more clothing." Charitable persons of New York city are eudt'avorinic to supply pure candy t the children of the alums In place of th poor material which has heretofore been In their reach. Collar kigW 2 for 25c when GaUcn Wedding was young." JUL T jS - Doesn't Somi I ' 1 I STAMP Win lusici Full Quart 1 0