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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 30, 1922)
MONDAY, JANUARY 30, 1922 THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON PAGE FIVE Irish Peace Treaty Signed In Mixture of Hilarity And Gloom iMIiMMMll i . 1 fer 11 drill i eo." saw Mr. LJoya George. "He has no clothes for the journey," said someone. "He can have my overcoat," says the Prime Minister. "And my toothbrush! " roars! an IrlBh voice somewhere. So, otherwise without change of garments, Mr. Shakespeare speeds off In the Prime Minister's fur-tipped overcoat to brave a nonstop run along crowded rails to Holyhead and a rolling passage over the Irish Channel Then somebody " said what ought to have occurred to them all: "How strange that a man named Shakespeare should act aS Intermediary between our recon ciled nations." It'g a queer system that provides marines to guard the mail cars from robbers and leaves passengers to take a chance at the ticket office. Tan 30. The inBlde ! ColIlns' Mr- Collins pointed London, Jan. j back t th p , Win,, lV,- nownlng Street mier Lloyd red h of Mr Shakespe the Me' "lcml inaeiatigable secretary of No. 10 bttM Irish peace i Wy who ha miovei negotlatlong al, ,,ne4 and now "- mgnt. "rtonal secretary was uu "Shakespeare, you must Belfast' wun iu IrlM Lloyd George's overcoat, given for the first time, tith th "train over, the signing J place amidst the greatest "The'account, as given by the peninK News, follows: voltement at Downing jtfMt throughout the crisis was jlenM 'tn" 18 lno "ulu It left officials l'mP and aPa" llrtlc afterward, as if a white st fire had burned them out. But they were cheery and full i nothing but the great cam uign and victory. Tat Prime Minister would not (Ire In. He pasBea irom group ii group anu w '"""i - nlng, urging, ueieuuiu. no med to have had no luncheon , dinner, only a snack of tea, ending up talking as he ate ud drank. ' " Hr. Churchill, too, never iusi lart. He lowerea nis ouu-ieau mi jrove home brilliant point ijer brilliant point unchange- lili fortitude. But, of course, the climax of He drama was the last act, when, liter the Sinn Fein leaders had t back their answer, they re- lirned and communed till 2: SO ilth our Ministers. The acene of the signing was nemorable indeed for. its strange, itoiost unnatural high spirits. There was a hectic Miariiy Dorn weary nerves and Jaded noughts, and everyone chattered u4 laughed. Best of all was Mr. uouins, me mtoubtable man of action and judical negotiator, whose jokes nd ever-ready humor sent the mm Minister Into peals of laughter. He was appealed to about da lills, and answered so drolly that He room Bhook with amusement lime and again. But a certain shrewd observer ills me that the time which glad tad his heart most was when peace had been signed and former ka were at long last wholly Mends. The problem was to get the lews and terms In time to Ulster, ud lo! the clock spoke of 2 a. i. and past! - What was to be done to get the nessenger in time "to-morrow"? "No, to-day," said Mr. Collins, ind everyone reared. The Sinn Feiner and English len put their heads together for mmrnon action for the first time igalnet the common enemy Time md devised means for the instant transmission of a courier to Bel tat. The ordinary train to Holyhead tikes, I believe, six and one-half 'ours or more, so a special one irlmed to do it in five hours was irdered on the telephone. Next a destroyer was summon 1 through the Admiralty to be readiness to waft Mercury trass the briny seas. But who shall go. The prime Ulnlster pointed roguishly to Mr. Heavy Cold? Chest All Clogged Up? DOmr let It get a start, Dr. King's New Discovery will get right down to work, relieving the tight feeling; In the chest, quieting the racking txmgh, gently stimulating the bowels, thui eliminating the cold poisons. 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