Sinn Fein and France To the Editor of the Hppner Herald. j Dear Sir: Iq view of the fact that the lo-j cally received newspapers fre quently publish statements in re gard to the Sinn Fein party in Ireland that are misleading. I take the liberty of enclosing an article by Jean Ma'iye, one of the best known writers of France, which article I trust you will in sert in your valuable dispenser of news in Morrow county. Thanking you in advance for the courtesy, I remain, dear sir, Sincerely yours, (Rev.) P. J. O'Rouhkf.. "In the first half of the nine teenth century the debris of time had covered many of the ancient landmarks of the Holy City, and Verbal tradition hud acquired the unreliability with which long ages often endow it. So after a short stay in Jerusalem it was possible for Chinese Gordon he who la ter added imperishable glory to England as the hero of Khar toum to propose with some semblance of reason a reversa of many of the current beliefs concerning the identity of vari ous holy places. Yet the doubt about landmarks, and even the complete disappearance of im portant sites, did not detract from the essential sancity i f the Holy City; Jerusalem still re mained the city beloved of God . thecradle of our creed, the st rong hold of nut faith. In Pke man. ner. lime had changed the nut- ward aspect of France The irrnwth nf uniti-i iuliMii, wl like rt funtfus spreads nver uur modern industrial civilization, had covered the ess nihil Cath olicism id' France; anil Latin and other cultures with winch as a continental nation we come in I'lit't n't, b'ld formed a Veneer over I he Cei'iclsiii that Is III rs setpial racial at.i i :bute of France. Excavator i fi .JhiumiIiiii uiicov- l Mi. i ' ' in .11. d i .iks ii I'd s'ei Ii. d l,e ii'CiiiMe ill uur liili in'.tl oiHiements. .Similarly, the upheval of war once more brought, to light in Franco the spirit which made men proudly point to her as the Jille attire t aimce del' Eglise, and revealed to a mar veling world the courage, the courage, the chivalry and tin; genius for self sacrifice that is France, a cbaplet of virtues dis tinctive of our Celtic origin "The revelation of our Celtic nature did not astonish me 1 have always believed that Franco is a Celtic nation, licfoi-e war broke out I hail only one aim in life, the revival of the lluriiianl Celtic national .sninl nf Fiance. Tofltinyself for the acliievinenl j of this purpose it was necessary that I should st rdy Cell icism in j a count ry which had not heen i Contaminate I by the alien nil-! land many souvenirs ot the close friendship whbh for centuries has linked the Irish and the French. As a Frenchman I had been taught gratefully to remem ber the debt that the arms of France owe to the valor of the Irish; the memory of Fontenoy and of the Irish brigade is en. shrined in the heart or every Frenchman. Similar memories are cherished today in Irish hearts. I chanced to spend a few weeks in an Irish-speaking district of Connemara. The peas antrj there told me that I was the First Frenchman who had been in these parts since the days f the '98 Rebellion. Old white. haired peasants, who bad heard of these days at their mothers knee, streamed out to welcome- me with a cead mille failte, and escorted me amidst a forest of waving hats to a spot where a tine, tall, young fellow stood, singing in Gaelic, "The French are Coming on the Sea" for the sake of the Shan Van Vocht. "These friendly relations be tween France and Ireland long antedate the Rebellion of 1798. It is from France that St. Pat rick went to Ireland and it is from the land of the saints and the poets that ot. Colum came to France. . For centuries Irish missionaries, poets and teachers gave freely to Frince the bene tits of their unrivaled culture, and traces of their famous schools still remain to remind France of these bygone days of Irish great, ness. "In Ireland I soon became ab sorbed in t he Irish national move ment, especially in the unprece- denied language and literary re vival that was rapidly placing Ireland among the most notable of i he cultured nations of the earth. I learned to Know the Irish writers, poets and thinkers in ii like Yeats, Douglas Hyde, A 10 ,1'adraic Colum, P ll.Pearse, men of whom any nation would be justly proud, I worked with t lit-in . 1 pin.) i d ah hue in. i shared I hell' le pes X llll 1 lell I hell' SOI rows The.v welcomed me to the Sinn Fein movement because I wus a Frenchman, and because of their clear vision I was a unit of a na tion tnat held ideals of national ism identical with their own. liiey were making a supreme and a successful effort to change by their mystic power the poor old j aded woman into the young and beautiful Kathleen ni Uooli hau. They fought agaiust the migration that wusdruining them of their life blood; against tuber miosis which was the conse. q ience of their economic degra c.uion; and against the drunken ness iii which the weak of heart sought to forget their state I'hey supported Irish industries mil they encouraged co-opera. went in Ireland I found that my French nationality was a pass port to their favor. And the Sinn Feiners were always eager to know France better and to be better known in France. "Returning to France I worked to make the Irish reviavl known in France; I founded a small newspaper devoted to the inter ests of Celticism; I established the Gaelic League of France; and I planned for young French stu dents to go to Ireland; and for Iri9h Gaels to come to France. "Then the war broke out; and from the first day of the mobili zation I have had perforce, no other Interest than to aid in the defeat of Germany. I therefore lost touch with Ireland. But in the trenches I found the school of Celticism. There we daily learn that the racial attributes of the German are alien, and de structive, to the racial attributes of the Celt; and our gallant sol diers constantly reveal by their deeds that the Celticism of their ancestors is the fundamental force in their souls. They are indeed the inheritors of the chiv alry of the knights of old, the knights of the Holy Grail, the knights of the Fiana of Erin. They right not for themselves, not even for their own, but for France and for liberty, that plain peoples everywhere may live and be free. This then is our compelling reason, l conceive it to be also the essential purpose of the Sinn Feiners whom I have been privi ledged to know. At the end of the war, should I survive, I feel that as a Frenchman I can then best, serve my country by re turning to Ireland and by labor ing there to strengthen the friendship that does exist, that has always existed, and that, happily, ever shall exist between the Irish aud the French. That friendship contains much that is of good augury for the future of Ireland, and for the future of France. The nationalism which the Sinn Feiners were preaching in Ireland when I was among them is the nationalism that France is now fighting to defend. I therefore consider that every true Celt is an enemy of Ger many; and hence that evjry Sinn Feiner who is true to his essen tial principles is necessarily a friend of France in her present struggle." Marce! Gets His Barn Mended Red Cross Helps This 15 Year Old French Boy and His Family. tures that had alTecled F. a 1 I """ 'K peasantry. iu therefore went lo.lieland here ",,r rt,S- "trove to make Celticism bus s h i v ii ,ts u.,ees, ; In"'"" young, healthy, prosper viiuiou .... i ..i ,i . i' ii. iousand free. Where is the true ....... j , ...... ... , , V ,1, , gfiliim leigns iii its purest form ' I wetll lo 1 relaiid and sm nl there a most happy and protiuhlc year, fttudying the Gaelic lincuaee, learning Irish Ii sii.D . an I gilu. ing insight into the nat ion ii 1 1 ails of the Irish people "I Was delinlitt d to tin, I in 1 re. Frenchman who would not hon or these patriots, who would not applaud such a national effort? "The Sinn Feiners were not pro German, otherwise as a Frenchman leould not have found myseil iii tntnnotiy with them. On the coiiirary, us I have al reaily mentioned, wherever I Nursery Stock? See Harry Cummings I am re-stocking our Nurseries with the very best varieties of all the different trees and plants desirable for cultivation. I am bettor equipped to supply your needs In any thing you may want than any time before. In addition to our own, I have the stock of three thousand acres of the finest nursery goods grown anywhere, all healthy, vigorous, true to name and all grown in Oregon. You can get the Milton Stock from me more advantageously than elsewhere. I am the only fellow that has genuine nursery grown Cork Elm. Cummings Nurseries, Hepp. ner, OregonJ 42-tf Marcel Is a man. Fie Is Just fifteen years old, but yet be ts a man. 1 say he Is a man because In the last four years' time has burned Into his child heart marks that sliould wait for stern er maturity. He Is a mao because he has the responsibility of a woman. He has no father. The Germans saw to that Marcel has bad to stand by and see his small brothers and baby sister ask In vain for food while he fought off the pressing call from his growing boy's stomach. He has had to see tears from his mother's eyes drop on the plowed ground as she worked the soil his father would have tilled had he not gone away out of the peaceful ness of the Marne valley Into the Iron hall of the Alsne and on Into the here after. The boy, who was now a man, work ed hard, yes, too hard. With his hair less bands and his boy's strength he fought almost alone the unequal fight against want with what little help bis frail mother could give. Mother Can Keep Children. One of the 70 or 80 local societies In France, handicapped by lack of funds because deluged by calls for help, tried to relelve the family by tat Ing away the children. But to the tor ture twisted brain of the woman thle seemed like losing all she had. And then when everything seemed lost and despair came they beard the news: "No, It could not be true. They would help them with food and clothing? They would till the soil! Mend the barns and stay near by to see that things went well?" Yes, and the children could stay, said the Red Cross, as they had said to hundreds of others. That was two years ago. Today this family ts self supporting and has some to spare for the more needy ones, who still are being helped. Little Jean Is taller. He looks well fed and he If well fed. The baby la so roily poly that the dimples have come again. They are tn good spirits on their feet once more. And Ma reel He has finished the course that the Red Cross gave blm In an agricultural school. It is he who has been running the farm so well. Be did It all. At least they let blm think so, for heaven knows he has seen the bottom of the bitter cup. And 1 know that the Red Cross will want me to say he did It, for that Is the way they work quietly, earnestly, efficiently, without stint, without waste, without boast. FOR SALE Poland China Boar, 7 months old: weight about 1T0. 49if R. W. Snyder. THE LITTLE OLD LADY OF PANSY SQUARE I ' . v; i I M'i4. a ml ) kalft aau th 4lifc SMI. Whether lie's Fighting on Sea or Land Send him a pouch of Real GRAVELY Chewing i'lug If he doesn't chew yet, he'll slice it up and mix it with his pipe tobacco to give it flavor and improve nit smoke. You will send your friend more tobacco comfort and satisfaction in one pouch of Real Gravelv Plug than in halt a dozen plugt of ordinary tobacco. Civ an? maa efcew of Real Crawly Plat, anal ha will till you that the kind to Md. Sand ika baiit Ordinary plu( It fait economy. It coU laae Pr wk la chaw RaaJ Gravely, bacaiue a amall ckew vt it lattt a lonf wtuU, K.E.MD tot a reirD it rm it. a. aravicc a rut or fcBAtiiv PUn all ar-tund bar aarry It In 10. pouch. A 3a. tlamp will put it Inla hi Wanda a an Trail ing Camp or Saaport of Ik U. S. A. Evee) "over Infra" a 3c tlamp will take it ta bun. Your daalar will upriU envelope and five aMtciel direction bow In addraaa It r. B. CRAVllY TOBACCO CO, P.nOI. Va. Timidly she entered the Red Cross Bureau aud stood Just within the door way. Her poor, dimmed old eyes spoke to eloquently: "I'm friendly, ladles, but a little afraid." Several of us rose, but Mrs. Crew ford reached her first and asked ber to come In and sit down. "Oh, thank you so much," quavered the old lady as she sat down. "Too see, my boy my grandson bas gone and" with Spartan fortitude she re strained the tears that glistened In her eyes "gone with his regiment. Now I'm all alone In my little cottage lo Tansy Square. And. oh, ladles, do an ot you know the dreary lonellneas when there la no on who come bom at nlghtr YV almost hogged the dear old lady, so forlorn, yet so brave. We drew op our chairs closer, and she told as ber story. The little old lady owned vine embowered cottage In Pansy Square, There she kept bouse for ber grand' son, who worked In downtown office. When America took up cudgels for & mocracy the lad. In patriotic fervor. was among the flrat to enlist. "Ah, how I loved him and oeed4 hlml" whispered the old lady broken ly. "But my dear country needed hint more. So I told blm to go. Hut what will you do. granny? he asked. I told him I bad enough, and en he went. Krave. brave heart I My hue- band was soldier, and I bav hi IH'imlon. Hut It Is amalL After pay in the taiea oo my cottage there llttl luff an.f nnvt II la anna I'm aI4 I but I'm willing. All I ask la rhanr to earn my bread till till be returns." Through the Home Service worker of her community the Hut old lady of I'anay Square has been provide with simple task, such as making pre. arrves and delicious cake and Jellle, a labor of love for ber and an oof su ing source of revenue. Some day. pleas Ood. ber aoldle tny will come back to the little old U'ty of I'anay gquar. and he will And hi as he left her barri coo-fonabui aud slf reliant. . rxo co, twin, vs. i m aW C'oa m4 CJ I II to mM NmI LrM. MaWaf i