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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 12, 1909)
THE OREGON SUNDAY. JOURNAL, PORTLAND. SUNDAY MORNING. DECEMBER 12, IMP. IRISH '-NATIONALISTS UNITE FOR ELECTION Ireland Faces Battle of Ballots That Is Mo Occur Neit ; Month Immigration From Emerald Isle on ' j , -v - ' : ; Increase as Figures Show. ' ; RAINCOATS ' PRINCESS VICTORIA LOUISE v ' and OlERGOATS BT Thomas Emmatt . iPukii.hm' Phm Laaed Wire. I ' Dublin. Deo, 11. IraUnd Is rady tot tha battla of tha ballot. . Slit knows how much depends on the general alec tlon which la to b bold nest month. and It la doubtful If alnca tha day of Parnell'a power any general election has seen the Irish Nationalists ao thor oughly united and In such first claaa fighting; trim aa they will be In tha one now Using fougnt out.- jivan ina omu yelners, or at least a great many of tha rank and file of tola ultra patrlotlo or- ganltatlon have ooma to tha conciuaion that In thla crlala In Irian MP nation a an blckerlnga muat ba laid aside, ao that -tha veto power of tba houaa of lords, which alone atanda In tha way of home jrule. may ba broken. Tha Dublin Freeman's report of tha . recent general meeting of Binn rein at ' Athlona says." Among tha large pile of ; correspondence read was a letter in forming tha branch that tha year begaa with a debit balance of 200 pounds, and that 1000 pounds wss required to carry out- tha work given tha council by con- gress." and.,"the secretary regretted that out of IIS branches only (1 branches paid tha affiliation fee." V At tha same meeting tha chairman, M X Lennou, announced his resignation, saying: . '- .' "We, as Irishmen, should not ba bick ering.; If tha IrlBh party think they are right, and tha majority or tno country think they are right we should no be dickering. As Sinn F elners we should fight tha common enemy, -and not -our own countrymen. ' "I know parliamentarians in wis . town, and they are batter Nationalists than I am. It la a matter lortne country- whether the Irish party should wlth- draw from tha bousa or cgmmons. "There Is no use In saying tha parlia mentary movement did not do good." " : This is most gratifying to the parlia mentary leaders. " ' areas Test for Ireland. Joseph Devlin, M. P..' In speaking of the election'says: "Ireland is about to be put to a- severe test. We arc to bava the money bags of the landlords and the law lords, and all the might and Influ ence of the Tories and the aristocrats of England and of Ireland arrayed against John Redmond and the Irish party, who have only the loyalty and generosity of a nation of poor men to depend upon. The fight Is, bound to entail large ex penditure by" the Irish party, and It Is the duty of the country to see that It is forthcoming without delay." Sir Herbert Tree tells the following story: " "I was playing Richard In Dublin, and the next-day-1-was Invited to lunch with a famous judge, who was a great Shakespearean scholar. "The talk turned on the play of tna previous night, Richard II,' and a lady exclaimed: .. " "Oh, Mr.' Tree, why did you appear in such a disheveled, state and look so woebegone when you arrived on 'the cdaat of Walesr-.V- " 'Ah,' said my host, with a remark able display of tact, 'you see, Richard had just dome back from governing Ire land.' "This sally was received with much amusement by the assembled guests, the only one who seemed not to appreciate It being a high official from the chief sec retary's lodger" V . Tha little village of Ennlscrone, Coun ty 8 II go, haa been theacene of a double tragedy, which allocked all Ireland.' Mi chael Uallagher, a policeman aevretely married Mary Knox, a beautiful- young girl of Coldonkesner Crosamallna, Ha Induoed his young wife to go to th sea ahore with Mm and threw her Into tba sea. lie was hunted by the ponoe. ana when he waa run to earth cut his throat with a raior, . Jealousy , waa tha causa of tha crime. , I - Xmig-rsttoa Jnoreaeea. Official returns show that 27(9 emi grants left Ireland during October, an Increaaa of 401 over the same month a year ago. 'Of this number zzot want to the United States. The departures for tha 10 months of this year are much In excess vf tha total emigration last' year, 26.160.. as . against 2J.J8. Only In one month this year did tha flgurea fall be low those of last yearIn February, when ft decrease of B0 .was recorded. The counties of Leltrim and Sllgo have united In taking steps, to erect a suitable memorial to the late Patrick A. McUugn, M. P. ' Though he was a man of strong Nationalist views, Mr.. Mc Hugll waa highly respected by those who( differed from him, In politics, t - The county council c.t Kenagh, County Tlpperary, yesterday granted an appli cation by James O'Brien, solicitor, for leave to enter the old gaol' premises for the purpose of exhuming the remains of William and Daniel MoCormlck. who were banged In 18SS forthe murder of John Bills, a steward. Mr. O'Brien said it was well known that these men were Innocent of the crime, and their relatives wished to have them retnterred In Loughmore churchyard. He would apply to the lord lieutenant or home secretary for sanction to exhume the remains, . -- ' The Farmers' Gazette of Dublin' says: "When viewing the Irish harvest of 1909 as a whole the farmer has good reason to rejoice. With barns well filled for the winter be can look forward with hope and confidence that well directed effort, assisted by favorable weather, may enable him to do even better work In f uture,years." : : The death In the Francis convent, Ddumshambo, of Mrs. O'Hagan. known in religion as6ister Mary Frances, a daughter of Lo'd O'Hagan, wht was the first Catholic since tl.o revolution to be entrusted with the gnat seal of Ireland, and the widow of Justice O'Hagarl, who, although a namesake, was not related to her before marriage, will render It of Interest to record that one of the daugh ters of the late Lord Russell of Kil- lowen, who was the. first Catholic lord chief justice of England, Is a nun, and a daughter -of ' ,tha late, lord Justice Mathew also embraced the religious life. Two of the daughters of the late Lord Morris and Klllanin, the first Catholic chief justice of Ireland since tha resolu tion, are Carmelite nuns, and two of the j sisters of Lord O Brlen of Kllfcnora, the present lord chief justice of Ireland are nuns. PERSIAN WOMEN WILL SOON BE RELEASED FROM VEIL AND BONDS - 1 11V . ' . ' ' . .'ill ' k . . J s ' . . I 4 till Ail -1 t " -Ill I : f i. i.' vf MU I Hi . i, ; ; ; ; . gaaM6saWaBaaaaaaasMsjWMMsaaaaaaamaBBasjsja WlIltBlT W ' ! r -i l It hardly seems necessary for us to tell you about them they are so much BETTER than those offered at so called REDUCED SALES We have only NEW STYLES and insist that they are the equal of any $20 or $25 overcoats in town. WHEN YOU SEE IT IN OUR AD IT'S SO PrlnceeB Victoria Louise, the only daughter of the kaiser, who up to a few days ago waB considered a little girl. . She wore her hair down her back and her dress came to her shoe tops. Then came the cere mony.of her "confirmation, after which her dress, waa lengthened and hye- hair put, pp. Third and Oak . First and Yamhill First and Morrison Domestic Life Still Deplor able, Says Missionary Kow in Portland. ; "The women of Persia are gradually awakening to the new order of things, ' as did their Turkish, sisters," said Mrs. Charles A. Douglas, a returned mission ary, "and it will not be long till with the aid of the new. freedom the con version of the whole nation will be fact" Mrs. Douglas, who Is visiting her' brother, William Ball is, 356 North rup street, returned last May from Te , heran, Persia, where she has been as a missionary for seven years, on a 15 months' leave of absence. . , In describing the Persian women, she aald that they could te likened to notn Ing but a flock of crows, ' since they never appear In public except In groups of 16. or SO and Invariably wear tha long black shroud and veil that com .pose their national costume. "This," says Mrs, Douglas, "will be one of tha first things to be done away with under tne new - regime." - : , The domestlo life of the Persian wo men is still deplorable. They are held as little better than slaves and 'a Per sian household where there la more than one wife is a center of jealousy and hate. . . Persian women say that those of tha European nations live in heaven In com parison with themselves; ' Mrs. Douglas says that it Is just this condition that the missionaries are laboring to relieve. When tha Presbyterian missionaries who are tba only ones In that district, first went into' northern Persia, 2i year ago-ther were persecuted and It has not been until lata years that much good haa been accomplished. Within the last half doien years, however, the confidence of tha Persians baa been gained completely and now to large extent the - missions .are supported by small pieces Is " to bite them in your mouth and spit them "into the tea, your own tea. The pemmican-follows suit. and the concoction Is just great. "Then, If you have done a good job. there may be another quart for each man. You wouldn't change places with a millionaire as you stretch out on the bed platform and doze. . Borup tells of the bath he and Mae. Mlllan took In 82 north latitude, saying: "The Eskimos, who had never seen anything but an animal swim before. thought we had all gone crazy; and I guess every one else on board thought so, too. The water was so cold that we couldn't feel It; and when we climbed upon the ice and' snow on the other side of our swimming pool we couldn't feel Itthere was no feel In our feet" VILLAGERS CLASH IN WILD BATTLE (Publisher!' Press Leased Wire.) , Lisbon, Dec. 11. Rivalry between the inhabitants of the two Portuguese vil lages, Alqueldas and Pedrogam, has ended in a pitched battle, resulting in many casualties. The Inhabitants of the rival villages met at a fair held at Adoireine, and a regular faction fight ensued, many being Injured on both : sides. , The people of Pedrogam were ! defeated and driven out of the town In which the fair was held. In the hope of retrieving their defeat, the Pedro gam villagers lay la ambush In a for est which lined the road to the village of Alqueldas an4 awaited the return of their opponents. The latter - fell into the trap prepared 'for them, and a bat tie ensued. In which knives, pistols, and cudgels were used. Troops were die patched to the scene of the conflict and found on the battlefield that four per sons had been killed and S7 wounded, 14 being seriously injured. ern Pacific. These engines weigh 100 tons and are In fact two locomotives in one. A peculiar fact is that some of the railroads between the eastern works and the western destination refused to haul them over their tracks, fearing both for the tracks and the bridges. Despite this fact, the Southern Pacific ordered 20 locomotives of this kind and weight, knowing that they were not especially hard on track. Each of the monsters cost 130,000. Mrs.-Charles A. Douglas. the gifts of converts themselves. Mrs. Douglas Says that 'much aw has been accomplished In. the. past. It wlU ba nothing,, to what can ba dona In tha future, now ; that . tha ' new order has commenced. '. '- - 33 HUGE FREIGHT ENGINES FOR S. P. Chicago, Dec. 11. Probably . the most remarkable locomotive order In tha his tory of railroads Is being delivered to the Southern Pacific. It consists of IS freight engines of tha Mallet compound type. Twenty-one of these are. of the same slse ss two which now are at work on tha mountain division of tha South- DAUGHTER'S FIRST HUSBAND HER HEIR Oalesburg, 111., Dec. 11. Because she left her first husband and married an other man, Mrs. 2dith Norton was dis inherited by her mother. Almost all of the estate, worth lflO.O.OO, was left to the first husband. The woman who cut off her daughter was Mrs. Sarah A. Tlnley. About a year ago her daughter married George H. Clark of Belolt. Subsequently the pair separated, and the mother, taking tba side of Clark, refused to have anything to do with her daughter. There was a divorce, and the former Mrs. Clark married a man named Nor ton. When Mrs. Tlnley was taken ill she sent for Clark and put him In charge of her affairs. Convinced that death was near, she summoned a lawyer and made a will cutting off her daughter with I 00. The remainder of the estate was bequeathed to Clark. Mrs. Norton- Is infuriated over the act of her mother, and declares she will try i to break the wiu. THE GREAT GERMAN LIEDER SINGER accompanied by Ccenraad V. Bos PIANIST Masonic Temple Wednesday, Dec. 15th Chickcring Piano U$ed Exclusively HORSE, ENRAGED BY BEATING, KILLS 3IAN Canton, Pa., Dec. 11. In revenge, for a whipping, a horse belonging to Frank Churchill, of this place, kicked him to death. Two horses were unhitched and allowed to rua loose. When Churchill went to capture them they ran away. After they were caught Churchill gave I loam a w nipping; aa m warning lor Del ter conduct In the. future. When ha went behind on ot them to hook tba trace a the animal In rage kicked him in the chest pver the heart He was dead when his companions found Rim. 1'ELLS OF HIS TRIP . vTO ARCTIC REGIONS ' "New Haven, Conn, Dec 11. George Berup; Tala 1907. who went to tha arc tic region a on tba last trip with Com mander Peary, talis his Tale friends In the Alumni Weekly, the story of his experiences with tha Eskimo, build- The King oil Diaries Ditry ing Ice huts with the thermometer 59 be low sero and making tea therein, giving l-cent cigars t the Eskimos as prises for every troublesome Insect found on tha elothas f the f al explorer and his friend MacMllIan, and of a plunge bath be and. Mae took at their winter quar ters. IB IBS Mt ACT FINE ID ALL BLADDER DISTRESS VANISHES.: f ' f 1. ( SfeKA I ' . J ''V f i at -. . LAI SO Lit and Time-Sayer 1910 TV aatf iarf la WrM Up MrW it t m. a mt nmuum toe ymm. Nt. 1iim, hnm TWI. T SttM- rnaowai 0 rmtmry ar t y-ar; Tim a-wt W a-nli. i uhati4MtM Prw,M m4 Cum mt C. S laiM. mm4 d4M OUH Wm I.OOO. ril THE. BOKCr BJ4 WORRT l i rtni rM nm f- r. J C Ha opens with a reference to team I A few doses regulate out-of- order Kidneys and end Bacliache. play up near the North Pole aa follows "The whole keynote of Commander Peary's expedition was teara play. Team play all the time, from saving the Roe veit from getting smashed. up and tha fine team play of supporting parties on tha polar aa to getting tha camp taade quickly and snaking tea. Seems sort of funny to speak of team play snaking tea. but that la dead straight" 11a tbea describe tha btrildlag ef a snow hat when the day' a maralt Is elid ed, and of waking tea wr.Ua the ftnlah lng taofhea are helng put la tba bonae made of anew blocks. Coattnaiag, ha ays: . "Some ena haa already choxp4 tha caa of cym4ned milk In two; tha s&Kk la rroi-n stiff only hatchets id ap ply. Sotsa one rts nrxt ta tha tte- etilt ra, n4 h man rta Ma el t ih rati If you take aaveral drea af Papa's Diuretic, all backache and dlajraa from out-of-order klditaya or . bladder traa- hle will vanlah. and you will feel fina. Lama back.- painful stitches, rheuroa- tlam, aerrow haadacha, dlsxlneaa. Irri tability, aleepleaanewa, . Inflamed or swollen TtUda, worn wut atrfe feeling and ether symptoms of raffish, Inao Ure kldneya diaappear. distributes its healing, clean Ing and ' vitalising Influence diractly upon tba organs and glands affected, and com-1 platea the cure before you realise It i Tha moment yen suspect any kidney ! or urinary disorder or feel rheumatism pains, beg la taking thla harmlaaa med- a ether remedy at any price, saade anywhere elaa la the world, which will effect ao thorough and prompt a eura ' as a rrty-cent treatment of Papa a Diu retic, which any druggist can supply. Tour physician, pharmacist hanker or aay mercantile agency will tell yea that rape, ThoiBpeon aV Pape. of Cin cinnati, Is a large and renwnsible taed- k tna concent thoroagblr worthy of Ludivig Wullner Of whom the San Francisco Chronicle of De cember 2, 1909, said in par.t: "Not in years has an artist so completely won the heart of his hearers as has Dr. kudwig Wullner. San Francisco seems unable to get enough of his incomparable art, which with every; recital grows even more and more impressive, al though it seems that with each hearing Wull ner. has reached the greatest heights and great est depths, and that further domination of his hearers' emotions is hardly possible." Musicians of the prominence of Ludwig Wullner and Mr. Bos appreciate the supreme qualities and recognize the fact, in selecting the dickering Piano, that they have chosen the best possible medium with which they may display their art There is a mellowness and sweet ness about the Chlckering tone which suggests the violin; quality of tone has never been sac rificed for quantity of tone, and there is always that pure and -tnie musical timbre associated with the Chickering Piano which at once captivates all listeners. The Chickcring piano repre sents more closely the human voice than any other instrument. Chickcring supremacy was not gained and is not maintained by purchased influence. Chickering tone, peculiarly its own, has never been equaled or approached, though hun dreds of attempts at imitating it are on record. CHICKERING PIANOS ARE SOLD IN THE WEST EXCLUSIVELY BY Tneoe)trIlabl. ' amartinc frextvrnt urination (especially at klfht) and aU ' yeur cwafldanc bladder snhwry ewda. . ' Only euraUva results c eon a from " -1 irf WitarahJe si wtr1J ) Utmt Hm-i DtiretK aa a few airT m - - . --j-r . '- .- ". ' 1 1 . t " t ! i fi? r m m. 1 1 n-miiny hart am lr. B trt-Tncm k - tim ga at out to the dianrflrd kti-; ki4:( . b.4r and rtnary argaa tf"t y ta t reak ifm cp lists eej a, bladder aad .ur.aary ;tlaoa aafietd mo lv WULLNER SEATS NOW ON SALE HERE pWsagr-alraJl5ty XPPy WULLNER SEATS NOW ON SALE HEKE 553 WASHINGTON ST AT PARK I