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Kentucky Irish American: n. Saturday, November 11, 1899.
Kentucky Irish American: n. Saturday, November 11, 1899. Kentucky Irish American. 300dpi TIFF G4 page images William M. Higgins, Louisville, KY 1899 kec1899111101 These pages may be freely searched and displayed. Permission must be received for subsequent distribution in print or electronically. Kentucky Irish American: n. Saturday, November 11, 1899. Kentucky Irish American. William M. Higgins, Louisville, KY 1899 $IMLS This electronic text file was created by Optical Character Recognitio n (OCR). No corrections have been made to the OCR-ed text and no editing has be en done to the content of the original document. Encoding has been done through an automated process using the recommendations for Level 1 of the TEI in Librar ies Guidelines. Digital page images are linked to the text file. r NUllEDElSWMWWfPn R f 347 W JlIFttUtlON St- 1d4TMraa 4FrlMUM HMK hem 8 to j SMI toys N ti VOLUME IIINO i9 u LOUISVILLE SATURDAY NOVEMBER 11 1899 PRICE FIVE CENTS D IRISH ORATORYl lJeAuUrnt Tribute to the Klo qnei ce of Some of Ire lands Sous Bdmuiul Burke Sheridan lien L ry Grattnn Philpot Ourran and Their Speeches Daniel OConncII the First Orator of Europe Whose Eloquence Overcame AH JHWOUES OF GLORY AND PATHOS The Irish are born orators and Ireland stands proudly foremost among all the countries of the earth as being the mother of orators whose names will live as long as the race itself These men were cradled in adversity grew to manhood under oppreslon and their whole lives were along cry against injustice and per secution Their voices were attuned to defiant themes and under these circum tostances their eloquence found vent an eloquence which to this day appeals to human sympathies and finds an echo in the human heirt Take the name of every Irish orator and you will find that u all their eloquence had but one object their country and her welfareand one might say was so much incense so many burnt offerings laid upon the altar of their country And who were Irelands greatest orators I naturally first mention EDMUND BURKE He was a greater thinker thau either Fox or Chathman though inferior to them in declamatory skill He ranks not merely with the eloquent speakers of the world but with the Bacons and the Shakespeares In the variety and extent of his powers as an orator a statesman and a debater he surpassed every other man of ancient or modern times Ills speeches and pamphlets are saturated with thoughtj they swarm with ideas Probably no orator ever lived on whose lips language was more plastic and duc tile His speeches abound with the most wild and brilliant eloquence argumenta tine emotional and descriptive in fact j there is barmy any speciesof oratorical iweealsw rzl elfod heapedj up profusion in them With an imperial fancy that laid all nature under tribute he gave utterance to his magni ficent conceptions unfortunately in a sort of lofty shrill cry with awkward manner and gestures which tended much to empty the benches and disperse the mem bers of the House who read next day with admiration and delight what they refused to hear the nigHt before One of the finest specimens of his elo quence is the famous passage in his speech upon the Nabob of Arcots debts in which he describes the descent of IIyder Ali upon the Carnatie To read this is never to forget itliThe black n cloud into which Hyder AH com pounded all the materials of fury havoc and desolation which hung fora while on the declivities of the mountains the storm of universal fire that blasted the land the prisoners enveloped in a whirlwind of cavalry the people in beg stretched out itsgary a nation that hands for food the impious vow of Hyder All and his yet more ferocious ion so completely carried out that when the British army traversed the Carnatic for hundreds of miles in all directions r II through the whole line of their march did net sec one man not one child not one fourfooted beast of any description whatever universal silence reigned over the whole region The beat proof of passagethe fact hackneyed aalt ii no peraon of sensibility can read It without a tingling of the blood In every vein It Is said that during the trial of Warren Hastings in Westminister Hall when Hurke with- In Imagination almost 01 oriental M the Kft IMS depleted described In words that will live as long as the KngUsh las image JIM entitles IInflicted upon the natives by DebI ling one of Hastings agettts acoMvulslve shudder ran through the wbok assembly Indignation and r Vega MM Ike 1eahs of his hearer aeae at the loilks awoowedtaHd HaMlns Mmclf though he had JprotFatcdl his IftwecKce war ovcrwhelnwl I with too morae Mtonliliwent Slid terror In con dwllntf Wi pecctoi which Justed four- 4dwyssasd It possibly tine greatest one tw4Jv JMr Burke tined wUU a- rsoreskajMk iuI sug And mweesto DMR wiy other Io be fotwl In Mta w4c0n t fjr II WM as 1tfflfI ate ae fiMg Ifs tfh MJ1 of a c+ o tkst MAd mm yw AM rack wII its tItfc4 Mr lsi 4 ifotwW Irrtk 1 s kas4 fill lsos4s Mt- 4tw M kfY at swUirc- U H id Hit Mt A jot 1Rn rlt- lM9N11sdMr S W fcwUf If MM + patv44- diJ1M rtvt I hadsalttiilt Mi tpN ihllt A r M I rt ifrlMrtajKIXMi 0 Palts t4 Mid e U l fc J4Mffiajttt JW Itfnt i tiia titYlll ftA- A tar agar Mewl lead uisa j Ir eirlwnr LatrWZ a ti use dit- srslidl III artailMda Sail Wiu1 rsuti+ 5 filth tw 1Qt rtmII agkrA YaW tNs thr t till al KENTUCKY IRiuAMERICAN ren Hastings He was assigned the charge relating to the Begums and on this charge he delivered two speeches one in the House of Commons tile other soon after in Westminster Hall Of the first of these eagle flights of genius which occupied five hours and a half no record has been preserved It is enough to say that it was by universal concession one oi the most dazzling and powerful efforts of oratory in all modern times No parallel can be cited during the entire Christan ra comparable to the effect produced in the House of Commons by this famous harangue upon the fourth charge against Hastings A signal proof of its power was that the House deemed it necessary to adjourn without taking a vote in order to give the astonished mem bers time to collect their reason and recover from the dazzling enchantment and excitement they had undergone We have the testimony of many who were present that he seemed to hold the House in the hollow of his hand He sent thrill after thrill of sentiment and emotion vibrating and pulsating to the sensibili ties of his hearers as if their very heart strings were held in the grasp of his trembling fingers and his audience followed him as the mighty ocean tide follows the pathway of the moon In the very front rank of the many brilliant orators whom Ireland has pro duced stands HENRY GRATTAN No British orator says Mr Leek except Chatham had an equal power of firing an educated audience with intense enthusiam or of animating and inspir ing a nation His element was grand eur there was life in his very touch Brilliant impassioned ardor preeminently distinguished the oratory of Grattan and impressed the reader of his speeches even more perhaps than his profound knowledge his consummate art beautiful imagery and his exquisite diction The blaze rapidity and penetration of his oratory struck all who heard him He poured out his arguments like a shower of arrows but they were arrows tipped with fire He was superb in crushing infective in terse luminous statement in severe argument and biting sarcasm What an amount of feeling is conveyed in that sentence in which he speaks of his efforts to establish freedom of the Irish Parliament I watched by its cradle I followed its hearse What can be finer than the close of his great speech in 1780 on moving a declaration of Irish rights I have no ambition unless it be to break your chain and to contem plate your glory I will never be antis- fled soIlongasthc mC tc9 tager iu- Iiel i fi lierl cbahi- lclanking to his rags He maY De naked r he shall not be in irons and I do see the time is at hand the spirit has gone forth the declaration of right is planted j and though great men should fall off yet the cause shall live j and though the public speaker should die yet the im mortal fire shall outlast the humble organ who conveys it and the breath of liberty like the word fa prophet will not die with him but survive him The speech from which this peroration is taken is perhaps the finest effort of Grattans genius Nothing equal to it had ever been heard in Ireland Other speeches on this same subject may have matched it iu argument but in startling energy and uplendor of style and diction it sur passed then all In his speech on the downfall of Bona parte he denounces tie tyranny of Napo leon as an experiment to universalize throughout Europe the dominion of the sword to relax all moral and religious influences to set heaven and earth adrift from one another and make God Almighty a tolerated alien in his own creationOne his most electric speeches was delivered when he was feeble from age and disease In it occurs this memorable passage Yet I do not give up my country I see her in a swoon but she is not dead Though in her tomb she lies helpless and motionless still there is on her lips the spirit of life and on her cheek a glow of beauty Among the popular orators ot Europe it would notbe possible to name another who ruled the stormy passions of the mob with so absolute a away ta was exercised by that giant and athlete of the tribunal DANIHI 0CONNKtU lie was first a great lawyer and ua rivaled IH his tact brcwdiiCM presence of mind stud urdentanding of bwlnesa ensue Ilia mlttd was strong and fiery rather this polished and delicate He had owe of the omit vcnotnouily sarcastic loiigucfl ever put into the heal of tuttn He could overwhelm an antagonist with denunciation riddle him with Invective Sid rout him alive with file fire of tar mm In lilt altercation with Dltratll OComicH declared ho was one who Iiff Mi jtHloteY could Ib6 traced would be lORa iu to Ikf lineal1 deccHtlaiit and true hcir at law of his Impenitent tthief who tGfHIIIJ for kU crime upon the croat Hew of ti whose MnetloM s+ssser effcwM MM Uti lie k4 a mile like ttksl sliver Data wport a uoMs J Ms- Ral4Iliots wild kwd4 Mm often two- rshwead QCNtssti the W fWWr o- fKM Xwy fikwl el UIIkwp nil a- IkasM4 Mftu lay rrqrl w kit kKKJk urnj h rttJlsiuos Jot tw till a stertsr had J IW W t 4c4 wee lhs Moat lMf HItt dtsdM 0414 f idist sw rioter fiat r Iw tHtH0Aa ii 1+ 1M4 r m aslwstIhw t JUt wrsf+i M UiWf pdnfcttfc fat MI raid lMibt b it field Mr fssaduyliressrad nudiarM- w aMiwo site MAUrhlaigsl a1 hsdwi sf- tltt lr hens j I SIll ail LC NOTED PERSONALS Some Irishmen Who liavb Become Prominent In Our rent Events I Richard Oroker the Honored iI But Much Abused New York Politician An IrlshSpnnlnrd the Last in tlioTrcnclies nt Capture of Manila CAPTAIN BYRNES dOTHAHS CHIEF RICUARD CHOKERS success as a leader of men is due to his Napoleonic reserve and his fidelity to his friends He is the most deceptive political leader living To the man who approaches him for the first time he looks what is called an easy thing Ills voice is soft his eyes guile less his manner subdued and diffident and he has a way of asking for anothers opinion in a selfdeprecatory tone Many men have been broken in pieces on the boss outward mask before ever gaining so much as an inkling of the real man and he who boasts that he knows Richard Croaker intimately is using his hat ns a telephone It is safe to say that there is no man In the Tammany organization today who would venture a liberty with the boss DemocratJc in manner though he be there is still an impalpable wall of reserve about him that is never pierced by any man not even those who are his confidents as to organization affairs This reserve is not assumed for effect ii- it is the nature of the man He possesses to a marked degree the dignity that results from perfect physical and mental poise He is not a cultured man but be takes this life and himself as seriouslyas any theologian He rarely loses his temper but when he does it is a good thing to retreat as speedily as possible There is only one person in the world who ever dared lord it over Croker and that is Mrs Croker The wags in Tammany sayunder their breaththat the J aof a Democrati fJb Occurred lo- eWhen y their fine new house uptown Mrs Croker hailed the change as an earnest of II fu ture that would be troubled with no more political hangers ou like those who used to infest the down town house There the boys used to wait in the front hall of the boss aud they frequently squirted tobacco juice ott the hall mat when they thought nobody was looking One morning when the boss was stand ing under his own vine and fig tree chat ting with his friends Mrs Croker suddenly swept into the hall and said I want all of you men to get out of thus hall and never enter it again She opened the door and swept them ill into the street Mr Croker included The Tammany chieftain made no resist ance but trotted away with his friends offering no comment CAPT ARTURO ONKlii George Ar thur Smith special correspondent of the Minneapolis Tribune in the Philippines writes as follows One of the mementoes of my visit to Manila that I prize most highly is an opeuface gunoteel watch of Spanish manufacture subscribed for by the repre sentative Spanish merchants and pre sented by Capt Arturo ONeill Marquis del Norte and Vizonde de ONeill of the Spanish army Of this latter gentleman it is said he was the last man in the Span ish trenches He is of Irish ancestry but a patriotic Spaniard lIe has been a great traveler and while in New York City was introduced to and became quite intimately acquainted with General Arthur MacArthur who commanded the Second Division of the Pint Brigade during the advance on Manila General McArthur found the Captain in the trenches anti after shaking hands remarked Irelands sons are everywhere and hue I find the last Spaniard in tine trenches is an Irithuian It will be observed that tke Captain ONeill referred to is a Spaniard of Irish extraction and not a native of Ireland though he is called an II Irishman by General MacAithur Nowadays a miss hearing an Irish name IIs called an Irish man no mIStier where ho la born The forefathers of Captain ONells emigrated to Spain over 200 years ago THOMAS Ir SVUNKS No other Chief of Police IIn Hew York ever attained the kclgHt of autocracy enjoyed by 1lyrswe who sever lust ON his tes ors q tHttul a CotHwlMfoHf rwtoed n meeting1 ef t1c ConmUdo+ wi UNJeM the ftwit bawd hail rriad to la tat asaks Oil a wrt+lH oc atoN tyriwe bad tk WW a HIHt wt WM a avWftt et ewe III- 1M smtwfogsws f to dwty is Jhe ureiit 111ciir Ifcw CWtIwf Wtat tke CIHttIlII1fw W Agars Msdiag I- Mittt dwyWIf lac MM spmadelAt to- MI ife tsM tpsM a VfCMMrtty liptae d4a 4 ii w Ml way io lttra4il t eo1 iwt1w ANeMtir p UssisNWht pu Ii pri Msk W koIs- this pera I wsl else C1oL4 eterpl- yTbaiaarwyiayrsa IJq tttta1M9llyvat yffou leave thHrpost again it will b jKThere on the part of any CoinmiMtbncrI with Superintendent e Dynes MAYOR THOHAS TAGGRRT Personal friends including tk gold and silver Democrats have Mosid a movement in Indianapolis to Make Mr Taggert Chairman of the r5ijinocraticI National Committee suetl lYework is to be pushed vigorously till it is accomplished They Taggert was Chairman of the c wniittcc in Indiana in 1800 and again i f1892 and in both years the party won bstantial victories over what seemed alt irst great odds Mr Harrison being Prey4nt at the time and the State having beS carried for him in 1888 jgp It is claimed by iti supporters that he is recognized throug jit tine State as con servative and that k s elevation to the National Cbairmantwould be a long step in the direction party unity In the coming campaign WHWAM CoNYNGkIM GREENE the British agent at Pretoria is an Irishman His mother is a sisjerjof the late Lord Plunket His paternal grandfather Ba ron Green was afstinguisbed Irish Judge and his maternalgrandfather the third Lord Plunket wss a son of the Irish Lord Chancellor andJ Queens Counsel He is an elder brcfeer of Mr Harry Plunket Greene the wellknown singer JOLLITY W ftPREVAIL KiWlttsHibernian in Readi ness forjTJkeir Second AnrmafBall An interesting meeting of Company A Hibernian Xnig il has held last Satur day evening witjJJCapt Joe Breen in the chair for tine purpowfof completing the arrangements fOrJ t1 eifi secondannual ball which takes place at New Leider kranz Hall on HetiMyi night November 20 The reports jtnitted by the differ ent committees werejyery gratifying and all indications powwti ltothls being the most enjoyable affaiceyer held under the auspices of this raporganization Lieut Jerry Ilalikhgh Joe Taylor John Dolan Con OLeary James Curran andI Con Hnlllhan will Mist Capt Breen in the reception of the rSewls of the com pan whileThotme ail and Martin Sheehan will direetl tie dancers The music will be f r toy Scallys full lion i 3 ll afeeJ1f i 1 Utornlri u uw realized FINEI IRISH PRIEST The late Canon Graham of Hammer smith College wasone of the finest sped mens of an Irish priest to be found in Great Britain and his work in the cause of Catholic education has had and will have a great and permanent influence It is significant of the happier and more conciliatory tone of politics to find in tine officialreport of the London School Board meeting the following tribute by Lord Reay the Chairman to the memory of Capon Graham Lord Reay was referring to the voluntary schools and he went on to say Voluntary schools can not disso ciate themselves from the progress in education which the country is sure to demand They have lately sustained a severe loss in the person of the late Canon Graham who was an expert in educational matters and whose modesty was only equaled by his extreme devotion to arduous duties The same was true ofI the Canon in regard to everything ap pertaining to Ireland her cause and herI people KNIGHTS OP COLUMBUS Sixtynine new members were initiated into the Louisville Council No 390 Knights of Columbus last SundayIThe initiation including as it did the three degrees attracted a number of foreign Knights to participate in the ceremonies The work of the order was done In the Scottish Rite Cathedral the first and second degrees being conferred in the morning and the third at night In the afternoon a banquet wai given at the Louisville Iot l awl a luncheon after the nights ceremonies TUB SISTERS 1AZAH- On last Monday another Urge crowd of ladies and gentlemen from all parts of the city gathered at St Marys hail to fully decide the mawwr in which the bazar at Music Hall to to be conducted and to finish the formation of all com mittees The reports of the different committees were real sad found to be most satisfactory If the save amount of zeal to execute the plan exists dar INc the time of the tracer that has beets skews while preMwiwr for it It Is safe to say that this bowr wUJ hi MtHxcelM I1s the way ef a social awl Mtawciai success It ie sow tke lip ef UM Bisters for wh sc beiteM It hs M g giyHi and the rllHCMtt that UK Mtll- uil ci ties city will ksdly aMw fl apnelatlo frr Iket work t the OlrttA mui wm aHcwi fwrt ass4 do wM is LSI Mt power to seta tWIt Mtna fi kbg r hy e liberal yitfmtayr The ibais j femi seat Tss y en jeeut Odaliiif nei n 4 M I Wpm a aamUmT VMI MMMflMMmMl ftt life AtllMM- MHf eesaiMMfur a soles eMlrayMHoa d Uw iwyk hsUi ftt et UM IIaMa Pas cf- IIUu imsli Matter p ailiuMjl 1tna was sws wwaerassa Mdsiart ifm for yaMie IMF W eml w isw fae4 ksdt- e Mat I rTHE ONEILLS Genealogy and Sketches of Ono of Irelands Famous Families Kings Soldiers Orators Bar risters and Prominent in All Spheres of Fife Now Scattered to All Lands They Still Rise to Honor and Power NAME CHANGED IN MANY COUNTRIES ONeill of the Fews County Armagh descended from Henry Oge ONeillof the legitimate TirOwen branch Fiacha Srabhteine brother of Eochaidh Dubhlen was ancestor of the ONiall niall gin neill Irish a cham pionliterally the son of the son of the champion anglicised ONeill Neill Nihil Nchill and according to some Neville There are four distinct families of the HyNiall or ONeill in Ireland namely 1 The ONeill Princess of Tyrone 2 ONeill of the County Clare j 3 ONeill in the barony of Shillelagh in the Coun ty Wicklow which is sometimes called Farron ONeale ONeill of the U Eoghaiu Finn tribe in Northern Deisi in the present County Tipperary Fiacha Srabhteiue above mentioned was King of Connaiight andthe 120th Ulonarth or ArdRlgh of Erin A D 285 and founder of the 10 great ONeill of Ulster He is common ancestor of all the many ramifications of this ancient and powerful sept in Ulster Connaught Leinster and Munster There are also very many and important septs or clans in each of these four provinces who can trace direct lineage from tf not exact kinship with the ONeill of TirOwen It would be an immense labor to enum crate in our allotted space the many and most historic scions of this illustrious house who have indelibly left the imprint of their fame on the history of Ireland A fewojjhe very celebrated characters must suffice xEochp oyvo HJiel1 mAD rjWItI 2 ttJ1t1tt ctr t1rtEiI a sonswere Brian y andi Niali Mor Brian founded tine great families of OConor McDermott etc of Connaught Ills brother Niall Mor was founder of the Hy Niall septs of Ulster Meath and Con naught Niall Mar or Niall NaoiGbial lach of the Nine Hostages was 120th ArdRigh or Monarch of Erin He was a most redoubtable warrior and dur ing one of the incursions against tine Roman legions in Gaul carried back among other captives the youth Su cat who was destined to be Irelands Apostle the venerable Saint Patrick Niall Mor having conquered and made subservient to his rule the country of Alba gave to it the name of II Scotia Minor modernized Scotland Other Scions of this illustrious house were Eoghan son of Niall Mor and from whom the territory of Tir Eoghan orII Tirowen takes its name From him directly descended the families of OCahan or OKane ODaly of Meath Ulster and Connaught OCrean etc His brother Conall Crimthann was ances tor of OMelaghlin of Meath Another brother Conall Gulban was ancestor of ODonnell OBoyle ODoherty OGalla gher etc Fiacha the ancestor of Mac Geoghagan OMolloy etc Main ances tor of Fox Magawley ODugan etc Caibre ancester of OFlanagan Fergus ancestor of McFergus or Ferguson OHa gan etc Moriarrtach na Mldhe or the mighty power of Meath was the first to assume tine surname and title of the Great ONeillHugh Dubh ONeill brother of Neal Ruadh was ancestor of the ONeills princes of Clanaboy whose possessions were located in Counties of Antrim and Down Conn Bacchach was the first of his same to renounce the ancient title of the ONeill Prince of Triowen and became by favor of Henry VJIIII Earl of Tyrone hula itligitimate son Mat thew being created Baron of Dungannon Hiseldest and legitimate eon Shane an Diomuisie Joint the proud or haughty was so incensed by his fathers apostacy that he rose in rebellion against him and his brother the Baron whom he slew in battle Shane assumed the title of II the ONeill and was duly inaugurated King of Ulster His military spirit won from Queen Elizabeth a dIM recognition of hlIi title and respect for him authority as supreme ruler frost Drogkeda to the MIM a long line of dtetlngiiisbed rase from Ht4k tke IrM Hannibal to the famotw Owes Roe to Henry rriwce of Ulster lit the time of WUHam HI of Orange orrIthe use extends title henry ONeill clasped Me sari to S then modefnlseil1 riaym topreeerrf a poetlos of hie asaiaal pa4rimo y VNHH Mm deacemi the family of False attd lays In tbs United Mates TW Oetllc ha4 unite fW seat at Ptt ami Nm inaugurated a- Yrievwf at TttUafhof It plane Wersa Onlge wed f WMD ry psvl at Peeot eyrMtht wfawe a huge seal nt large tour called JL achnU or H VUun of the kjlairilM served them MacoraeMtiM chairs The OHm was UDH itnte4 by Uw UHega fOadvg aj frtOea etyyw r ae4 4 oe MOB seed l hence the sandal in the armorial bearings I of the OHagan This custom was sisal lar to those by which the Byzantine Em perors were inducted to office which ceremony is described by GlbbouTine Gael a COMMON NAMES IN IRELAND Surnames in Ireland as considered in a recent appendix to the last census report of the Registrar General Tine Murphys head the poll with 02000 be ing most plentiful in Wexford and Car low the next most frequent names are Kelly 55000 Kildare Sullivan 43000 Cork and Kerry Walsh 41700 Smith 37000 OBrien 33400 Byrne 33000 principally in Dublin and Wicklow Ryan 32000 Connor 31200 ONell 29100 and Reilly 29000 The Smiths outnumbering many of the old Celtic names in Ireland is suggestive a CHIMES RUN BY AIR POWER Work under the contract made nearly two years ago by the trustees of St Pat ricks Cathedral New York City with Hertford C Champ for the installation of compressed air apparatus for operating the big Cathedral chimes has progressed so far that several private tests of the ape paratus now in place have been made The plant is not yet completed and will not be for some time but the designer is confident of his ultimate success along the lines upon which he is now working His devices are entirely origi nal and it is understood that no other chimeringing apparatus operated by compressed air has ever been used success fully The air power is applied at the striker from a reservoir in which it is stored at eighty pounds pressure The system is operated by electrical connections from a keyboard which will not have to be lo cated near the bells themselves DUTCH IN CAPE COLONY The latest figures give Cape Colony a total population of 1527224 Of that aggregate 1150237 are blacks Kaffirs Bechuanas Basutos Fingoes Hottentots and Malays while 370987 are socalled European or whites The white population is divided into 28007 born in England 0040 in Scot land and 4184 in Ireland while 0540 are set down as Germans the remaining 332050 being Afrikenders or people of Dutch descent But perhaps the fairest test of the sym pathy with the Boers in Cape Colony is the complexion of the Cape Parliament Tkenbod lnhOsen n teethe ISOtwhen CedF Rhodes was the ch eefissuei AfriI members lately joined a plea to Queen Victoria to exert her utmost ink fluence to prevent war The Prime Minister of the colony Mr Schreiner is well known to be a leader among the Cape Dutch and he already has essayed to declare the colony neutral in this war meaning that Great Britain inust not ex pect any active aid from it MAGEIN COUNCIL To Have a New HomeEntor tainment By St Cecilia Club=Personals Mackin Council is preparing to move into their new Club Honse The deal will likely be closed this week by which they become owners of the Evans property situated on Twentysix street between Slevin and Alford For the last six years this council has been situated at 2597 West Main street where they have spent many pleasant evenings with their friends Mackin Council is composedof some of the most energetic young men in the city The property purchased has a fronatge of 115 feet by 185 deep with a two and onehalf story brick house of eleven large rooms It has a beautiful lawn on either side of the house The Cecllian Dramatic Club is at present rehearsing the drama to be presented at the Bijou Theater Wednesday evening November 29 for the benefit of the Mackin Council home fund This com pany has the reputation of being one of the best amateur dramatic clubs in the city They have on several occasions given performances for charitable pur poses and have met with great success They bid fair to outdo all former efforts on this occasion Brother Tom Peak who has been con fined to his bed for some time with typhoid fever is somewhat improved and it is the hope of his many friends that hn will be out soon Mackin Council entertained its friends at euchre on last Friday night There was a large nntnber present and everyone had a very pleasant time The ladles prize was won by Miss Rose McCUnVrty the gents prize by Mr A J Stltasel President Xerberg of Mackin Council JIM gone to Hunlsvilie Ala on business to be gone two or three weeks Brother Jams Duffy who has been on- Us tick list for the past two mouths is impming loather Hasting same lieu born taken off the tick JUt Brother 11 Hammll who has been suffering with M wker in Ms hand for some time iia somewhat bnprovod- rreeUetit Vrwff hae best reeetvtag UM ea gr tttti M of his many friends IIIUs girl n o Mr cud Mrs Joh tehneli art receir log ttcoflxratulatiace of their frinade s1aeanul of UM evVIdat a qty little wo gk M ttirtr beset ii- l1 f LACE MTAII LAUlMV We toaaaBa save Wtew Oar werk ta laitaserlag lace attains at 2c a pair gives sa tire Mtlstactkrc Werk caMW fer sad delivered Flrstctass serice MAD BABY 625 Sec oath St Telepfcaae 26311 NOW AND THEN fr Many Stories of the Old Fight Ing Days Recalled in the Independent Why the Redcoats Wore 9ut witted at the Trial of Rev Tom Doyle How Missionary Fathers Game to Witness a Suppressed lIectlugI OPEN HANDED HOSPITALITY TO ALL The proclamation of the Dromahair meeting recalls many stories of the old fighting days when a V R document pasted on the village pump or on a police barrack shutter didnt attract as much attention as a hen on a hall door on a wet day Crowds of reminiscences surge up Yet there is one recollection which elbows Doylesturdiestwipe he gave some ofus later onwas being tried in Arthurstown that delight ful little nook on the Wexford side of Waterford harbor Redcoats lined the sea wall police swarmed the two streets i of the village mounted men scoured the county around Strict orders were issued that under no consideration were demon strations of any kind to be permitted As for outandout meeting why it would be repressed with bloodshed Well the trial of the men who dared to encourage the Foleys Fort defenders and such others was going on Silence hung palllike over the place Then without as much as by your leave two lighters or barges come along towed by a puffing panting little canal tug that with unparalled audacity anchored in the bend of the barber right opposite the courthouse loudspoken brass band was in one barge the other was crammed with sympathizers and refreshments The banks resounded with the clamor of ODonnell Aboo and Capt Slacks now Sir Owenwent frantic Every dint in the rocks was searched for a boat No boatThenmoiinteajiie fVH non and Ballyback to seize ananycraft there and make an attack on the band and the refreshments from two points of the broad and rapid river No craft And the band played Were off to Philadel phia in the Morning Telegraphic com munications with Dunmore on the op posite side of the harbor were opened and the coast guards were begged to make a descent on the daring demon strators But the tug at anchor swung with the tide and the band played Hun roo Doolanl Capt Slackes only chance now was artilleryand he had none In the evening a thoroughgoing sup JohnSwinbourneput that he was a returned Fenian so the respect he was shown nearly turned his head As a matter of fact he was only an English baronet At night an other suppressed or forbidden meeting was held and then a curious thing hap tellinghisfighting ancestors in their veins when a panic seized the crowd and in ten minutes the moon looked down on a field wherein was not a single soul A few of bonnybriarthe barrel of a Swiss musical box apparentComingof armed men Their long black over coats swayed in the wind one could see the glint and gleam of the steel as they mounted the crest of the road bright in the moonlight Nearer and nearer they came And then we found that they were three of the Passion 1st Order who were holding a mission in Ransgrange and the sheen was the glistening of their big silver crosses that hung on their breasts They had concluded their services they wanted to see a genuine suppressed meeting Should they tie dk vappointed No So back the men anti women who had fled were gathered and the good fathers heard more treason that night in twenty minutes than their ears have drunk in ever since The description of this Arthurstown trial the massed soldiers the hundreds of police the scouring of nooks and craw nies to find a fishing cot to hurry off to the daring tug and its two lighters list cavalry patrols and all the rest mad up a sensational column in the Loader Star that afternoon The lines reed like this patches front the seat of war and the eJinmax was perfected when T P OCott nora tpecial telegram wound up with Cavalry patrol are scouring tbc b roay the telegraph wires are cut Now tile meaaage west over a severed IbuQsever been explained nor has say loretallAtiott of Marconis theory been Mated at by any scientist There wae wore good hnuwirM these meetings than we Will see again Ui Trek rn lend f 0isi the Creamery boUdinge after the netting The viands were splendidly cooked but chain fast short so enpty butter firkin were Dressed labs service Thesr itbcuJquttUaaatooltare w unstable an U COMTIMOWB ON THIBU LAOS ff W7v osivVOvvV fc r 1 Jr13 PuO tIiU a AM CAN jKNT6KY IRISH flMEMN V I1MIIININffII- tt Devoted to the Moral and Social Advancement of all Irish Americana of vrIZZIA1U M HIGGINS Publisher SUBSCRIPTION PRICE ONB DOLLAR PER YEAR SINGLE COPY sc that Entered at the Louisville Postofflcc as SccondCInsn Matter I SlrceISno has LOUISVILLE KY SATURDAY NOVEMBER IX t899 the I fDied inSyracuse N Y Mon in day November 6 Mrs Hugh Hig gins mother of William M Hig giusof the Kentucky Irish Ameri can She was born in County I Leitrim Ireland and catre to this countrYin the early 40s was a devout Catholic charitable and respected l by all She is survived byII I her husband Hugh Higgins anditI four children William M Higgins of Louisville Rev John J Higgins of St Marys church Binghamton iin N Y Mrs John Marlin of Roch ino ester and Mrs Edward Lynch of in 4Syracuse Mr William M Higgins and wife left for Syracuse llust 1 Monday to attend the funeral Misfortunes never come singly an old and true saying which isI in the case of Mr WillianI E4kis Higgins publisher of the Ken Irish American during the few months His eldest sonI drowned in the Philippines himselff i injured in a street car accident and1 t now his mothers death certainly 1 entitle him to the fullest sympathy With all these afflictions and the burdens they entailed upon him Higgins timidity has deterred1 r4him from pressing the subscriber others indebted to the paper but has struggled the harder to 1 r meet the expenses of giving the IrishAmericans an organ and im proving it with every issue Know 1 ing tlis taking advantage of his absence and expecting a rebuke 1 i pestt I returnI ve sug tballparties r J indebted to the paper that they pay up soon as possibleI IRELAND OVERTAXED t Owing to the war excitement and the desire to suppress the facts the real cause of protestsof Davitt Redl mond and OBrien against the Boer War appropriations and their withdrawal from Parliament were nott given in the dispatches For cen turies Ireland has been burdened by an everincreasing tax to the British Government while nothing has been appropriated for public works in Ireland In this the Government hasviolated pledges which were renewed to her representatives during and following the last Parliamentary session Ireland was promised reduced Government taxes and Government appropriations for r public works besides the payment Ii longdeferred claims Messrs Davitt OBrien and 1in mond objected and protested against the war appropriations of millions which means no appropriations Ireland and increased instead of duced taxes They demanded surance from Government that its pledges to Ireland would be ful lilted They were only ridiculed fleapUncedVand ruled out of order awd when cloture was adopted lWlencing d teihey made a final plQtestand withdrew The ma jority of the Irish members retired declining to participate in the Pfl c ceedings Though the British fis pfilehes attributet the course of tflese gentlemen to inherent enmiwi to jjjjglaud and condemn them as Waiters the facts bear them outj kS 1 lhVHPtthrough Parliament fully slim According to the statistics of the Childero Commission the claims of 4 tffie Irish members are fully estab rlifthed that Ireland Jw been un justlyj taxed by an ifocreasing tax in the fsce 6f reduced population and products and that the Governmenti has failed to expend for Ireland any part of the cost of public works or opay any of the pledged sums for roperty taken salt used As to I population production and taxation less Ireland this report shows that though the population has decreased from 10000000 to 4500000 and the production from 72000000 in1by 1855 to 4ooooooo in 1898 the tiese Government taxes have increased l from 000000 in 1797 to 9OOO 000 in 1898 But it is on the per andII of this icx is revealed The tax averaged to every man woman and child in Ireland In 1792 4s by 1837 12S lId in 1839 13s 4dw 1849 133 5d ini 1859 i 6s 3d 1869 iI 7s 3d in 1879 i 7scl 8d in 1889 i1 125 6d in 1897 Iditi 15s And despite this burdensome and increasing tax wrung from the Irish people the sums due Ireland have not been paid end not one penny expended for public work in Ireland Is it any wonder that the Irish members refused to sanction war expenditures and prospective increase of taxes and in their in1 1 dignation uttered words that sound like treason Newspaper editors like some other people allow their partisan zeal to get away with them and publish libels on men whose offense is usually difference of polii tics Even the staid Monitor of San Francisco is made defendant in a libel suit for endeavoring to attribute i the appointment of Gen Funston to Brigadier General in the regular army to political influence o make iteffective cbargr1 f Fuuston withlooting and robbing Catholic churches and slandering priests and nuns in the Philippines rind seeking to substantiate the charges claims to quote from Fun stons reports to the war depart menteThe charges are denied by ff- l Funston Catholic chaplains and I officials and by the war department 1Gen Funston whose volunteer 1 term has expired on his arrival at 1 San Francisco to be mustered out at once sued the Monitor for libell Funston has earned fame and promotion by his bravery in Cuba and the Philippines and his appointment by the President was a deserved t acknowledgment of his i services To attribute it to politics and then slander the receipient andI the Government is prompted by partisanism solely There are really no grounds on which to base such charges Funston is a gentleman and brave soldier and the President making appointments in the war has named men regardless of pall tics The public and even poU- r ticians may not know this but thee editor of a paper ought to know its at least he ought to learn the facts before he makes charges affecting character Then Catholic and Irish interests might be better served if some Catholic and Irish editors would devote their attention to them and eschew at least the dirty w ioslander and villification in politics Tea rs that to the poli ticians and their hirelings English correspondents ark ttt ing out reports of sympatyraJ loyalty to the Queen that Iuijiy Mis lead the credulous but are really fakes An American namedHiram Maxim is reported to have tendered the War Office the services of 200 f American gentlemen who will furnish their own horses and equip ments toorfight the Boers This Maxim though born in tbe united Stat years ago foreswore hit country to iwrear allegiance to Great Britain and the biJo American gentlemen are probably of the same strips From St Johns New C r Brunswick a telegram states that 4I branch of the Ancient airof Hii l j bernians adopted r pressing loyalty and solutionsexi iservices to the Boers The name of the President this alleged A O H branch is Ferguson Not much Irish about I ors name I at THE ELECTION Tuesday closed the hottest cam paign in Kentuckys history and Ky matter what the result the State been benefited thereby Taylor a and Goebel both claim the election former by 5000 the latter by and than 1000 The most com plete returns verify Taylors claims The reports of the antiGoebel paM pers are published in the usual way precincts wards towns coun and districts specified as official or estimated the vote of the respective candidates are given the totals added up and the final resultt she shown It is not so in the GoebelI by papers There is an air of mystery about their reports they are lumped wards counties and districts undesignated precincts miss ing and on this is based GoebelsS the lumped reports often disagreeing with dispatches published the same papers Tlie Courier be Journal has never published report by precincts of the result in this city Covington Lexington or Newport or indeed from any county in the State On the morning after the election it claimed Goebels election by 7000 witha over 80 precincts missing ii of which were in Louisville but witha1 out designating the missing pre cincts fifallyon Friday morning it claims Goebels election by less S than 1000 with 35 precincts miss lug 5 of which are in Louisville None of these missing precincts J yare named On this basis Taylors plurality in this county is 600 lessII and in the State 5000 less than given in the full returns published in other papers The CourierJour J nal received full returns just as the other newspapers did and has withheld 1 them front the public This j ict7iarweiit kaewQ iri newspaper- doh i if i V X 4A tf riot= bythefpub1i1 i Iu this age of rapid transit telephones and I telegraph no city daily paper to receive within a few hours full reports from every precinct in cities and towns and nearly full reports from all but the mountain counties of the State and by Friday they had received practically correct reports from these but the CourierJournal l states Friday morning that there are still thirtyfive precincts miss ing five of which are in Louisville in Fayette county nine Republican precincts are omitted and the county claimed for Goebel by 300 in Kenton county the Goebel election officers except in a few pre cruets counted the votes alone no reports of the vote are given but the county is claimed for Goebel by 2400 in Campbell county the same tactics were followed and county claimed for Goebel by lessl than 100 On these manifestly incomplete reports are based the Goebel claim of less than 1000 pluralityWe give the result as it appears from the different reports as we go to press Friday morning previous to the canvass of the vote by the County Election Boards throughout the State Everywhere is excitement and meetings have been held to arrange for prosecut andIinsist on affair count of the vote Arrests have been made and more will be of parties charged with violating the lawl and disobeying court mandamus in this city Cov ington and Newport and by United States Marshals of parties charged with preventing negroes from vot ing While all hope for a peaceful set tlement of the result no one doubts thas if any attempt is made to tam per with the returns there wilt be trouble in this city and other parts of the State The peoplehave been aroused Cy never before and while partisans insist ttwit Tailorbelt as the case may be mqst be declared elected the vast majority only insist on a fair count and declare eir dtterminiukm o bare i i SOCIETY I i Thomas McNlght w among the visitd at West Baden Springs this weekIe T J Gill of this city spent the week West Baden sprt gsItl0Miss Nell Sexton has returned home in after spending several days with Misses Marie and Lucile Smyth near Bardstown Misses Marie and Lucile Smythe gave e dance last Monday evening at their country home near Bardstowu Ky i iehonor of Mis Nell Sexton of Louisville Miss Clara HolMonof Valley Station Mrs D A Shanahan left last week for fig Chattanooga to spend several weeks with White She will receive with the latter at a reception to be given Tuesday J Miss Anna Kelley a member of tin Ladies Auxilary of the Ancient Order ofr as of Hibernians has been confined to lie home on Twelfth street for the last sev eral weeks with a serious illness Her of many friends will be glad to know that is somewhat improved andit is hoped that before long society will be honored her bright face and winning smile The members of Aquinas Union who are to take part in their entertainment which is tobe givenjatMacauley Theate Thanksgiving eve are rehearsing faithfully 1ing to make the performance a successI Dr and Mrs W H Wathen will enter tarn early in December with a dance tio given at their home at Fourth am Belgravia in honor of the debut of their daughters Misses Mary and eing WathenCThe engagement of Mr James Langan and Miss Katie Jansen has been annouuced the marriage to take place I the latter part of this month Both of the contracting parties are well known are receiving many congratulations The marriage of Miss Emma V Bode Mr Henry J Rademaker will takeI place at 4 oclock Wednesday November 21 at St Louis Bertrand church- Thu maid of honor will be Miss Maym Rademaker and the best man will tie Mr Henry C Boden The ushers will be Messrs Alfred Rose Joseph Zahner Herman Waltring Joseph Goss William Kirk and Herman Sweeter After the ceremony there will be a reception at the home of the bride Mrs Frank Doherty accompanied bIY her daughter Miss Katie will leave for their home at Hamilton Ohio today Mrs Thomas Forrest of Haughville suburb to Indianapolis will also retun home today lilra Doherty and Mrs arrest have been here attending th funeral of Mrs John Doherty of Jailer sonyHle The1 dfeftaVfHre of Miss Katie wl+ lioiaalillIi1 fs several years willf1lv gjeatly deplored b her many friends I 1 dMr James McNatuara and Miss Margaret May Casey both of Bowling Green Ky will bemarried at St Joseph Church in that city oh Wednesday afternoon November 15 the Rev T J Hayes officiating Miss Casey is one of Greens prettiest young ladies and is i at decided favorite in the society of tha city Mr McNamara is the senio member of the firm of McNaman lnndDurch stove and tinware and a succevsful and popular young business man it The seating of a Governor by reversing the vote by technical methods has succeeded in sonar States but we do not believe it will be tolerated in Kentucky no matter in whose interest it iis attempted r In the meantime keep cool The next few days will bring the matter to an issue beWe have received a letter concerning a member of the First Kentucky the Legion who died it service and whose remains were brought here and buried Com plaint is made at the failure of the Government to pay those expenses back pay and allowances due to the family who are poor and depended on the deceasedsoldier for support From the fact that the Government CJv has been pronijjt and generous it such cases it would seen that this claim has riot been properly made out ornot presented to the right1 department Wee suggest that the Congressman front this district be consulted and asked to assist in se curing the claim as he will go tc Washington stortly to attend the session of Congress All such claims when arranged and pre seated M retired by law have been or wiUQbc paid as well as a pension grantedtthe dependent family j1 in true aam I The withdr jw to Dayitt Red mood and 0Biieb from Parliament to avoid expulrfdnythe resort to the cloture tottionraildn force through ie necewary stets of Parliament to piwld and carry out the British poUey lit the Transvaal while it ahowijjwit the war advo atea toolsYfj c tit01 tai o in rt i lt aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaasaaaa CHAFF a I I Itmay not be generally known that the figs which we see so plentifulII the fruit stores and market places are brought here in large quantities from Greece Smyrna and Algeria I II There are large growing industries hereI California but the figs have never been brought to the same perfection as those we import from the countries named The fig blossoms are known iu botany as pistillate and staminate The 1 flowers of the former will not form per fruit without the pollen of the stami with that of the pistil 1latei 1 growers to help perfect the fruit of figII trees many insects do the same today inour fields and orchards as have these little blastophago been doing sine the beginning of time Aristotle gave ari excellent description of them as long agoi 340 B C It now has fallen to the lott Prof Howard chief entomologist of the Department of Agriculture to immortalize himself by Importing half a millioni these wonderful insects for the fig industry in Fresno Cal whittler he has taken them with the expectation of increasing the fig crop enormously A week ago last Monday came the firsI announcement that wireless telegraphy r was in successful operation in the UnitesI States Navy This is the practical work out of a plan started six months ago by the United States Government Signo r Guglielmo Marconi the young Italian who invented wireless telegraphy and has successfully installed it in the Italian amid English Navies was engaged to do the same thing for the American Navy Hav fitted up the two war ships Massa chusetts and New York with the necessa ry apparatus he gave a satisfactory proof of his invention on Monday October SO It has been found that the higher th wires can be extended the further a me9 at sage can be sent for the same reason th the higher a lighthouse is built ate further its beams will extend over navies In other words the electric swaves which carry messages through the air without wires travel on nearly straigl- lines t For this reason the top mast- of I the New York and Massachu I setts were heightened by an extra 11spar so that their tops were 160 CeetII above the water This height has beet I found to enable ships to exchange mesII sages when forty or fifty apart The theory of carryingsg wires up to mastheads and highI points on shore for wireless telegraphy is described as follows by the New York World The message which is ticked out on an instrument below is conveyed up ward by the wire to the little brass bait at the topIt is then shot off by th electric vibrations which like invisibl- sparks are quivering between that pai and some receiving station with a corre sponding apparatus many miles away a The energy which is thus transmitt- tilrou h miles of space is furnished by a simple battery similar to those seen iti any telegraph office This peculiar kind of as subtle as thought is communicated by what is called Hertz ian Their tneqium is the IntangibletJ- ote the same medium that brinth IYsunf rays to the earth J- It A few evenings ago a young lady w readinga chapter on ventriloquism home Pressing her upper teeth against the lower she successfully made a hiss ing sound similar as the chapter stat to the noise made by a sodawater foun Igtain She forgot that the house dog a lingaty I animal up overthrowing the table andlamp setting fire to the rug rsand draperies around the mantelpiece In a few minutes the interior of the room was in a blaze An alarm of fire was turned in the engines arriving in time to deluge the room with water and thereby save the house She says she never will1 ractlce ventriloquism at home but followthe advice of a friend and to the woods ANNIIJ N VIN CUNNINGHAM BENEFIT EUCHRE The St Michael Choir Society wil give a euchre at Schaefers Hall Han cock and Broadway Thursday evening 1 November 10 Cards will be played from 8 to 11 oclock and after that there wil be dancing Several handsome prize will be given away FUNERAL OF MRS DOUGHERTY The funeral of Mrs Bridget Doughert- of Jeffersonville took place morniug from St Augustin church Dougherty was the mother of J Bant Frank Dougherty two of Jeffersonvilli leading business men dicates that the opposition was earnest and stronger than has been conceded Then the immediat proroguing of Parliament after th passage off the war measures intimates that the Government wa anxious to avert any further publi- discussion of its policy The tone of the press now that disaster has fallen on the troops in Africa iis not such as emanate from an proving people and the ministry having forced by stringent rules Parliamentary sanction must face a growing popular disapproval There were elections in twelve States Tuesday and the American u papers haying more interest in them seemed to have chucked thel Boer war dispatches into the waste basket The latest news howeverr shows the Boers still advancing in to Cape Colony and the English- retreatin ror hemmed id and bean bombrddat I uiysmith limber ley and tfafekiog Gen Boiler and thousands of troops have arrived but have not changed the a Httttkw1 e A iii How Are Your Teeth I IIfthey need attention there is no better place to fixed than at t- heLouisville Dental ParlorsI I 544 FOURTH ST Right Next to Avenue Theater Their prices are the lowest work the best andii I all guaranteed They will treat you rightIREMEMBER TIlE PLACE Louisville Dental Parlors c 4 rOU1TII ST P = I + s w D tIIIlt i 1 1 1 lr fE f rUoI ranW Smiths Sons atFunerali Directors itn Embalmers IIMISS KATE SMITH Lady Assistant and Embalmer Carriages Furnished for All Occasions on Short Notice S E COR EIGHTH AND JEITITEKSON STS TELEPHONE 810 III IIDIIIIIIDII IIIII1 lldftRtt IIUD1 ts tit 1 t att t tf IlllI DESIGNERS AND ITALIAN MARBLE AMERICAN AND SCOTCH GRANITE I I1dOnUluentso atArtistic Work Only Solicited Workshops and Studios Carrara Italy WAREROOMS 322 to 328 WEST GREEN STREETS IIDftftI IIIDIIftI IIItB i tll EIe- aaaaaaaa0aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaairaaaaaaa t IPARADISEIa I r ROOMeri ii- ke U 5 Good Liquors a Specialty Fifteen Ball Pool 5 a a ii M J HICKEY PROPRIETOR S eresTelephone 384 248 West Jefferson Street ltart aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaraaaaaaaaaaaaaeJOIX1 r rWALTERS Clay=Street Brewery I 814aCLAY STREET Telephone 2092 LOUISVILLE KY HENRY C LAUER9 STABLEcU n m H I i 423430 East Jefferson St 1eotrilo ICIorse 01lppJnu 15O Per IIecul and Vehicles to hire at all hours at reasonable rates apHorsesTELEPHONE 1140 2 I33EMBLEM CONTEST Who Is the Most Popular Hibernian Two handsome Emblems of the Ancient Order of Hibernians will be awarded by the Kentucky Irish American to the members receiving the highest num ballotsge r SRecord the Caadida1on the West Use Divitioa oa the Second a o r r 1 t ffH Uil l AitkfvV i ivji a o tl J t KEN U KY xii A1RI ANln GRAND BAZAR To be given for the benefit of the Sisters of the Good Shepherd Eighth St MUSIC HALLCOMMENCING r r Tuesday Nov 14 And continuing eleven days Admission lOc Season Tickets 25c Business Mens Dinner from 12 to 2 Oclock No soliciting during these hours f THE EMPORIUM 423 W JEFFERSON ST Just Below Fourth Call and look over our line of Christmas Presents Euchre Prizes Imported China Dinner Sets from 698 to 40 Silver Halves and Forks as low as 298 HIGGINS de DtGrtAW FRflNK FEHR BREWING 60INCORPORATED BREWERS flND I3OTTLLRSIO- UIsvIII4E ICY DANIEL DOUGHERTY THOMAS Nun Dougherty Keenon- UNDERTAKERSoMoo L 1229 West Market Street Bet Twelfth and Thirteenthn T PHOiTtl4 g 7 All Calls Promptly Attended to Day or Night Oar Jinges Furnished for Ail Occasions J JOHN P KELLY SONr DEALERS IN Groceries VegetablesFresh Product Seventeenth and Bank Struts Specialattention given to family orders and goods de livered to all parts of th city M1 MURPHYDEALER IN GROCERIES PRODUCE tMEATS I Wlnet Liquors Peed Htr tad Grain 2t K Cor Seventeenth and Portland d- ervMDLawIer FIRST CLASS GROCERY AND SALOON- N W Cor NiMteeitk art Duacaa Fine Lunch and Music Saturday Night I I I flDTElb RIEHEblEU CAFE AND RESTAURANT M J SWEENY Prop 221 THIRD AVE Private Dining Rooms Open Day and Night Best of Wines and Cigars TELEPHONE ees BROWN LEGHORNS Average 200 eggs a year Eggs for CockerelseCHAS DI JACQUES 2422 St Xavier JOHN D COONEY MANUFACTURER OF M LAWLERS ONARC HIi A SUPERIOR tS OEJNOC CTLGAJEt 1207 Wilt Main Street Louisville BIG FOUR ROUTE T- OIndianapolis Peoria CHICAGOAND INDIANA and MICHIGAN BEST TERMINALS UNION DEPOT Corner Seventh St aud River CITY TICKET OFFICE No j U8FOtIqhAveJG B s General Agent ouUville Ky MgrWARREN J INCINWATI- OCENTRAL UBOROHIOK OFFICERS President 7amea McGill Vice Prealdeut WStarm Correaporiding Zoo K Young54I ndItreetr J Recording SecretaryTJ HenMiay1 KinandafSecretary iCbSrfia Peen i actionSergeantChaimwn hoard of DinCtot Wtter M Young t LABOR WORLD Notes and Gossip of the WeekI From All Parts of the Country 1 I Chauanootaj1havel t States was that of the formed i l 1800 inlI The American Federation of Labor ha increased its membership over 50000 this year The first recorded strike in the United States is that of the journeymen bakers of New York in 1741 The trade union deposits in the Post office Savings Bank of England amounted to 2600000 last year The granite cutters allover the country will come out in a demand for an eighthour day on January 1 Strikes among the molders are on at Milwaukee St Paul Memphis Louis ville Hamilton Lorain and Pittsburg The street car men at San Antonio Texas won their strike in six days Got an increase of wages and yearly agree ment The oldest union in Great Britain is the United Society of Brushmakers founded in 1778 and still flourishing with 1612 membersThe Union of Steam Engineers announce that on May 1 1000 their scale of eight hours and f3 per day goes into effect Trade unions of Montgomery Ala re fused to participate in an industrial parade because the managers barred the negro unions About 1500 colored oyster shuckers were locked out at No olkVa because they refused to sign an agreement to leave the union The average weekly wages of the men employed in the cotton mills of Maine are 708 of the women 560 and of the children 273 The brakemen on the Big Pour leave received an increase in wages The company has increased their pay from 190 to 195 on each 100 miles The Bricklayers and Masons Inter national Union has issued charters to eight new unions in New Jersey Penn sylvania Maine Ohio Indiana Texas and Alabama All the suburban cars entering Detroit are operated by Union men inside the city limits and now the men operating three of the suburban roads have organ bed as they see the enefits to be de rived A C Cattermull General Organizer and member of the Executive Board of Carpenters arrived in the city from Chicago Wednesday evening During his stay here Mr Cattermull will endeavor with the aid of Local Organizer Dietzto form unions in Neiq Albany and e1f l i4 t 1 4 Pressfeeders aad JIeperacnOni No 29 will give their first annual dance at Odd Fellows Hall Monday evening November 13 The committee in charge consists of Charles Smith Clarence West ley Mike Fallen and R Bunker Music will be furnished by Gus Seiberts orches tra A pleasant time is promised all those who attend The Cleveland strike has developed three automobile companies one of which will have some of their conveyances in operation within thirty days The stock of the companies is selling very rapidly many laborers investing from 10 to 100 each The men who are on strike are taking an active part in the work and viewing it from a business standpoint believe the time is not far distant when they will operate automobiles instead of trolley cars I have been turning over strike mat ters and the more I think the more I ant- on the side of Labor Labor andskill are capital as much as gold and sliver Labor and skill can produce without gold andsilver Gold and silver are depend ant upon ItiLor and skill bUlllabor and skill are independent in limine The union of the two capitals demand partici profitsCardinali Manning The monthly report of the Dublin Labour Department of the Board of Trade which has just been issued states that the general employment during the monthof September continued steady and good The percentage of unemployed members returned by trade unions was periodsincelug returns with an Aggregate member ship of 502812 12129 or 24 per cent tIwere reported unemployed at the endI of September ns compared with 23 per cent in June July and Angust and withI 26 per cent In the 117 unions with a membership of 407075 from which returns I were received for September 1898 I A decision of paramount importance to organized labor in New York was handed down by the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court third department during I its recent session in Saratoga The effect of the decision is that labor organizations may conduct strikes in an orderly law abiding manner and may use argumental measures to dissuade men from taking their places The deciaion is rendered In favor of Irotimolders Union No 2tlie Building Trades Union and other branches of labor organizations located in Troy in t iiawi Meicber The decision reverses an seder of Justice Cheater diJ Albany N Y granted January 14 lat witich continued J preliminary injunction reatraininf the J atriker from injuring or interfering with the business of William 8cbltii her I Jr matt William N Sldcner trop1 faun darn of Wnteryliet By fork threat or 1 lintimidation during the pendency of auII brought by the latter againat thd etitppeUasstaNenr job work to Win once jj rj 1 Since Uitl eer ofjohn Mitchell s President of the United Mine Workers o Auterica in JanUarJ last the increase has been almost phenomenal nearly 4000- new members having been installed iin ggressivele1derpushing into new fields and establishing herelOjlI every State between the Alleghanies and orI1 evesbeen known in the history of the labo movement John Mitchell is the youngest i onlyinVice President ofV the American Federa youthhisf j jcapacitiesinuseful one He possesses the unbounded confidence of thcnien in all parts of the country The members of the Dublin Typo graphical Society employed in job offices jhave already taken steps to enforce jthe resolution adoptedLb the executive ffavoring fifty hours to constitute a weeks work So tar as can be ascer t particularlye demand of the men Some of the former have however signified their intention- of agreeing to a fiftytwo hours week instead of fiftyfour as at present The Iprinters will no doubt accept any rea sonable offer sooner than disturb that 1harmony which at present exists between master and man in this particular trade The practice of employing children of tender years to work long hours at manual labor is one which deserves the condemnation of all those who take an in terest in the wellbeing of the poor of our cities From time to time cases have been brought under the notice of the public where little children have been engaged working for considerably over twelve hours a day in many places in our greatcommercial centers The poor little waifs became of the poverty of their parents have to put up with great in jjustice and as far as remuneration goes they are completely at the mercy of miserly and grasping employers Apart qUetlon away children from school at an early age thereby depriving them of that education which in after years may gain for them good positions At the Independent jLabor Party conference in Dublin the following resolution on the subject was submitted That this conference while still firmly desiring total abolition of child labor welcomes the attempt to raise the age of halftimers and also trust that child labor out of school hours will be prohibited especially the selling of jpapers matches etc in the streets Several speakers pointed out the injustice of employing child labor It was not only injurious to the health and future prospects of the unfortunate children damSo prolougedd11iscussiontook r it was judicious tp Iravc in the words especially the selling of papers nnd matches etc and eventually it was decided to omit these words for obvious rea sonsDOERS ANNEXING TERRITORY The Transvaal Government has issued a proclamation declaring the district north of the Vaal river including Bechu analand to be Boer territory the Orange Free State has taken similar ac tion in regard to Griqualand West and the territory between the Vaal and Orange rivers The part annexed by the Orange Free State includes the great dia mond center Kimberley The territory annexed by the Transvaal and Orange Free State is vast in ex tent and rich in possibilities for future development The Boers have taken military possession of all the part of this territory in habited by white people except the town of Mafeking and a section of Northern Rhodesia sometimes called British Cen tral Africa wjiich is defended by a force neghborhoodofOf this great area the Transvaal annexes by far the largest part Bechuana land which President Kruger claims has an area of 218000 square miles and a blacksNorthernappearstohas an area of 810000 square miles and a population of about 7000000 of whom few are whites The territory is bounded on the east by the Portuguese and Ger man possessions oft the north by the byGermanThe territory that ik annexed to the Orange Free State includes an ar aof 25000 square nlileJa1tia population of mnorityarecenter Kimberley there Cecil Rhodes is garrisonThealso in this district The wealth of Kimberley is a treraead uapdze in itself ANOTffEIlIltiSClfALLENOe TThere is a atrNg probability that the next challenger for tUe Americas ClipII PHe 1 too and witnessed tbsrces between thejj Shamrock and ColiwiWa The Jameson boat would very protmMY be built eons a Watson deign auditft isi said would most certainly be built ia Belfast extord t Mayor Pirrie the M of the firm of HarUnd JBc Wolff beiog quite anxious to iandertakCth work j Tba kame cvette of flu boatthai not Jb a dUcuaaed and whilel Bomeof the ujMtoal friends of both I 4 honuNLlpionwerefn I the mc t favored nanfurM Hibernia Wedding wda Ml Invitations neatly printed wooromatj sIRISH ORATORY 6CONTINUED FROM FIRST PAGfc rhetoric with a negligent but colossal grandeur with the chisel not of Canova but ofa MichaelAngelo Melting his hearers at one moment by his pnthos he convulsed them at the next by his humor taaetor J3 ISlc sagsvr p3sspdtatn tn revealing the workings of the mind through the windows of the face his whole countenance spoke and he looked lipsrwas really modern of Ogmius that god of words whom the Gauls worshiped for out of his mouth flowed chains to hold his listeners cap tive The great agitator as OConnellwas called was born a king among men his very faults and errors had princely air lIe championed the cause of humanity without regard to clime color or condi tion Wherever was heard the cry of oppression tliere was also heard the trumpet voice of OConnell rousing the sympathies of mankind rebuking the tyrant and uplifting the victim He proudly said in one of his speeches quot ing Grattans beautiful sentence Grat tan sat by the cradle of his country and followed her hearse it was left for me to sound the resurrection trumpet and to show that she was not dead but sleep ingtJOHN PHItPOT CURRAN born about the middle of the eighteenth century was opproaching the zenith of his power at the time the great revolution was convulsing France He Was an ora tor in every sense of the word though he does not rank with Burke or Sheridan His wit was so keenedged and his humor so rich and inexhaustible that he is remembered for them even more than for the pathos with which he melted his countrymen and the lava of invective which he poured outupon the authors of their wrongs Is there to be found a figure of speech more startling than that of Currans when he declaims against the spies brought by England to assist in convictions from the various prisous where they had been confined Those catacombs of living death where the wretch that is buried a man lies till his heart has time to fester and dissolve and then he is dug up an informer The 1 stream of Currans thought flowed red hot and molten from a mind glowing with the fire of passionate feeling The peroration of his great speech on univer sal emancipation beautifully conceived A slave can not breathe in England the first moment he touches the sacred soil of Britain the altar of slavery on which he had been offered up sinks into dust his soul walks abroad in her own beauty and majesty his body swells beyond the measure of his chains that burst from around him and hestands redeemed regenerated and disenthralled by the irresistible genius of universal emancipation II I cun only briefly mention RICHARD LAIOR SIIKU n 9rator i 9idSfple was Connell so often = cistedw ith 0 and yet so utterly unlike him in every re- a pect He always spoke with an air of passion and abandonment which nothing apparently but the enthusiasm of the moment could inspire yet in reality he elaborated the great passages of his speeches with the utmost nicety and finish He was a patriot in every sense of the word and Irelands woes he made his own He held his fingers upon his countrys pulse and knew full well the meaning of every throb qf her anguished heartI cannot more than name Robert Em mett the patriot the orator and martyr to his cause whose eloquent and pathetic though futile speech in his own behalf will live forever like a wreath of im mortelles about his memory Time and the occasion both cry halt 1 can not here and now mention the nu merous names which stand out in illum inated letters upon the pages of Irish his tory past and present as her defenders whose eloquent tongues pleading in her behalf have caught the ear of humanity and compelled the admiration of man kindFront address of J Carroll Payne NOW AND THEN CONTINUED FROM FIRST PAGE water and do not excel Mr OHeas reply to Ireland a Nation was punctuated right through with sensational fullstopsmeaning thereby sudden and mysterious disappearances of banqueters into butter kegs Then there would be loud and suggestive speculations from the gentleman partially in the keg and committals to a future state as an obtru sive nail made its presence felt But no one minded the laugh went round and everybody seemed lighthearted- At every oue of these county meetings there was lashlns1 and leavins1 for all them that collie the long way For a town like New Ross or Tipperary a dozen houses were open to you and the boards groaned under the weight of good honest food tender as the dish of larks tongues that Iucullu3 used to have for lunch There was no Will you have a snack to keep you going uutll you get home Not likely There was openhanded hospi tality all along the line We may differ as we do now and we may be brokeR into opposite camps and distrust and suspicion may have taken the place of the oldtime regard but all who remember the campaigns of those days think only of the better side of our national character the trust and kindness of the people and perhaps sigh that they may never again see in their day the old spirit that seems dead and buried M A X THE OLD KENTUCKY MINSTRELS The Old Kentucky MinatrtU which ia composed of local talent will a perform once for tta benefit of The Kentucky Childresd Rouse Society at Macauleya Theater Saturday evening November J8 Lyne Herndon the will known local couiediau will hold forth as osi of e- end mn in the performance Q THE KENTUCKY IIRISH c AMERICANHas upon its Third Volume The promises made to its readers and friends in the first issue have been faithfully observed and its eircuTtlation has enjoyed a steady growth This should be increased in the future until it is read in the home of every IrishAmerican in Kentucky and adjoining States The Ken tucky Irish American for the coming year willmake features of Irish News z Church News rs5 Society NewslaHome News Labor evV- SSporting r News It is a FirstClass Weekly Journal which is printedand mailed on Fridays so that its city readers may take advantage of the announcements it contains and be directed t where to make their Saturday purchases This will result in great benefit to our ipE4rdVtdtiserS shou1rrp er tlib iaigt 1r that it has the Official Indorsement of the CENTRAL LABOR UNION And the Representatives of the Trades Unions of LouisvilleT Th6 Subscription Pr166 r IS ONLY 1Ito Invariably in advance and for this small sum we promise to continue to issue one of the brighest cleanest newsiest Irish American newspapers in the United States We will endeavor to furnish our readers a fearless liberal and honest publicationone that may be relied upon for its every word SUBSCRIBE NOW X e z r Advertisers r Will serve their interests best by sending in their copy as early in the week as possible vThey will find that advertisements placed in this paper will be rodttctiveof the testt f res41as it now has a very large circulation IJ I i among the best class of our citizens n Address all Correspondence and Business Comumn cations to thee KENTUCKY IRISH AMFAIGANIT 0 i1ep a v3 s p- ii a IFTUc HA RiOAN 4 13HH SOCIETYDlRECTOR r A O nD- IVISION e 1 Meets on the Second and Fourth Tuesday I Evenings of Each Month President Thomas Keenan Vice PresidentTim J Sullivan Recording SecretaryThomas J Dolan Financial SecretaryPeter Cusick 132 twentieth street 0 Treasurer John HulToy DIVISION 2 Meets on the Second and Fourth Thu o Each Mont- hPresientWilliam T Meehan Vice PresidentThomas Camfield t Recording SecretaryJohn Mooney Financial SecretaryJohn T Keaney 1335 Rogers street TreasurerOwen Keiren DIVISION 3 Meets on the First and Third Wednesday Evenings af Each Month 1PresidentPatrick T Sullivan Vice PresidentPhil Cavanaugb Recording Secretary JohnCavanaugh Financial SecretaryNoJ Sheridan i 2018 Lytle street- TreasurerGeorge J Butler- DIVISION 4 Meets on the Second and Fouth Wednesday Evenings of Each Month 1MPresidentJohn II Hennessy Vice PresidentThomas Lynch Recording SecretaryJohn J Grogan Financial SecretaryGeorge Flahiff 420 East Gray street TreasurerHarry Brady DIVISION 6 Meets on the First and Third Tuesda Evenings of Each Month President Frank G Cunningham Vice PresidentD J Tierney Recording Secretary L J Mackey Financial SecretaryJ J Curran 016 Thirteenth stree- tTreasurerM J McCarthy It TTI JJINATHEN T i mICE CREAM FACTORY l Rs wt CRftMfRY RND B Kmf t 629 Eighth St odd Highland and Baxter Avenues Vanilla and Lemon per gal 65 Fruits and Chocolates per gal76Co- ffee and Banana per gal 7Bc t Almond and Macaroon per gar 100 Bisque and Tuttifnitti 100 to 125 Bricks and Euchre 100 Sherbets and Ices 05c Sweet Cream 60c All kinds of Fine Cakes made and or namented to order Candy PullingI served on short notice PI8n RIUD MilK AND CRRM A specialty r It is the purest and tfestT ThonesI 2144 and 2588 IfirSpecial rates to hotels dealers and large orders Walsh the Tailor 232 FOURTH AYE iComplete LineZZ Fall Suitingsp 59S9S9S9S9S96SS9S9 C J CALLAHAN f MAKER OP PING Boots and Shoes 1708 Seventh Street Wk Bwraeteel aMI Repaldng Neatly DHe MY SPECIALTY IS FINE WHISKY s D JIM MOORES PLACE 1521 Portland Ave TEMPLE THEATER W H MEFFERT MANAGER MEFFERT STOCK COMPANY iM rnINTHE CRICIETM- atinee m at at 815 Popular Pricesl0ct16cg25c 35c and 50c No higher n BUCKINGHAM I LmericeIWEfK NOVSUNDAY MATINEB 12 ratla kakrResky WtdaH1f ktardt- TUVEDOT CLUB BORLESROERS- A J LAUGH PROM START TQ FINISH llIaat waga prettiest dances latest Everythiagg= Owe Show a JOHN HKKBVS NEW JIIf1ft c The friend of popular Dare lUilly will be glad to hear that be bee been m ployed as dispenaerbyjohn hickey atl his New South saloon Svrtntii tad Oakstreets Pave la a huitHnjfrfletnber of Division A Ancient Order of Hiber nian and has a great many friends who J will be glad to hear of his new situation as it certatnl will prove both beneficial J fu himself auu to Mi Hickey r P IRELAND Record of the Most Important of the Recent Events Culled From Exchanges The death is announced of Mrs Cathe rine Ellis of County Wicklow The in terment was in Dopard cemetery ftls said that Mr Horace Plunkett lii P will be appointed Vice President of the new Irish Agricultural Board reGeorge Duffy aged sevcnty seven years died suddenly at Balbriggan His funeral took place on the afternoon of October 20 at Stamullen Patrick Murphy late of Foxrock County Dublin aged sixtyfour years died October 17 His remains were buried in Glasnevin cemetery Deep regret was occasioned by the death of John Dowling at Ballylca due to his advanced age His funeral took place at Crookstowu October 10 Fifteen of the trades represented by the Labor party have pronounced in favor of Alderman Dowds candidacy for Lord Mayor of Dublin while only one opposes himGreat sympathy is felt for Dr Gunning in the loss of his beloved wife who died after her confinement at Banada Her funeral took place with high mass at Tourlestrane October 18 The remains of Patrick OLoughlin aged eighty years who died at Black CountyIGalway r the family bur ial ground on October 19 At the Oldcastle petty sessions a woman named Rose Mumford a lodginghouse keeper was sentenced to fourteen days imprisonment for seriously assaulting a lodger named James Somerville The Chief Secretary recently ordered the withdrawal of the extra police from the County Clare There was general satisfaction expressed at the County Council upon receipt of the news At the Athlone petty sessions a man named James Reilly was summoned at the instance of the Athlone Rural District Council for keeping unsanitary premises He was fined and ordered to pay costs The Irish exhibits at this years London dairy show illustrates in a remarkable placeinon these exhibits were very encouraging A blind man whose name is unknown- c was found lying on the load between- c Randalstown and Antrim He was removed to the infirmary where he died The Coroner did not consider an inquest necessary Patrick Tierney only son of Fajiny and the late John Tierney died at the family residence in Gort County Galway sorecircle of friends Galway sustained a severe loss by the death of Thomas J Lyndon who for years was a hIi yrespectedI merchant of cityter high SSatth Cathedral of St Nicholas the interment took place at Rahoon Dr Coffey has been elected Assistant Medical Superintendent at the Limerick district asylum The appointment is a popular one Dr Coffey is brother to James Coffey solicitor and Coroner for North Tipperary- Dr Thomas A Mooney Secretary of the Local Government Board of Ireland has retired from office owing to contin ued illhealth He had been a great many eminentlyfitted At the weekly meeting of the Temple expressing demning the action of the British Government was carried six voting in favor of the motion and four against The Tuam October fair thronged the town the hotels being hardly able to cope with the crowds of customers The cattle display was the largest in twenty years and the streets and fair green were congested It lasted four days closing October 22 Close upon a dozen parents were sum moned before the Athlone Magistrates for not compelling their children to attend school In the majority of the cases tlieI parents who had refused to comply with the order of the Inspector were fined the penalty prescribed by the act On Tuesday Sister Bcnigaus attached to the Bower Convent Athlone died after a brief illness The deceased nun who was comparatively young in years was highly respected by her sisters in the convent and the pupils under educational training in the establishment The people of Athenry are at the preset ent practically without any drinking water They are compelled to go a dis lance of one mile for water the well in the town from which in the past they got their supply being closed up by ordertt of the Local Government Board On Thursday evening October 19 the Davis commemoration lecture was given under the auspices of the Celtic Literary Society at the Workmens Club Dublin Songs and recitations illustrative of the lecture and taken from the works of Davis were introduced at intervals The young man named Brian Broe of charxechavingan quarry owned by John Brien was acquitted at Kilcullen petty sessions It is possible that a legal action will be insti preferredtheA return has just been published of thelnumber of migratory kberan baryeet l men who have crowed from Ireland to 1 ttek work at the Unfliak awl Scotch harvest tub rear In 1889 the number of migrant we 14887 in 18W it was 19918 thisyearftic88i18a There Laa thus been an increase of 46 par cent in five years and of over 90 per cent in the decade of these migrants who comeill most exclusively from Connajjght Only ninetynine of the 28639 came from the ThreefourthsJcounty Contwngbt Mayo e THEATRICALS Fanchon the Cricket will be pre sented at the Temple next week with Miss Jessaline Rodgers as Fanchon This play is from the French by George Sand and was Miss Maggie Mitchells greatest success The story is simple and a romance dealing with that ever old story yet ever newlove The romance of two houses one rich the other poor Faacbon jot humble might excites the admiration of the welltodo Landry Bar bestud whose father has personal reasons for refusing their marriage His twin brother is also in love with her but in the end gracefully yields the field and lends his aid in bringing the two factions together The play will be presented in its entirety The music will also be found a feature Entire new scenery will be provided Thefire fly scene should find particular favor It will be staged in the usual careful manner The Tuxedo Club will open an engage ment of one week at the Buckingham commencing with Sunday matinee This organization is entirely free from any suggestive word or action and the people composing the company occupy a high position in the Vaudeville World The opening burlesque entitled A Tony Time at Tuxedo offers abundant oppor tunities for the display of the musical talent of the company Many special and novel features are introduced during the action of the burlesque such as the Golf Girls the Letter Carrier Girls and other interesting novelties Miss Nellie Elmer as The Sporty Widow is very interesting A chorus of twenty handsome young ladies elegantly costumed add greatly to the action of the burlesque The olio comprises many well known and popular artists of the vaudeville stage Society people will now have an op portunity of feasting their eyes on the finest collection of needlework ever seen Mr the the the the has fail JESSALIN Miss Jessaliu succeeds Miss Mitchell leading for Meffert Stock inherits her love for the stage both were was stage for and later companies at the Grand Theater born She has the childhood and has the of drama Topsy to Lady Macbeth has been leading companies St Denver Paul J WHITES BAZAR Father White of Clifton opened his big and drawing of prizes last Mon day night under the most favorable The night was an one and of his friends from all over the went urrto lend aid in making the enterprise a The Church of St Prances of Rome though beautiful jn its surroundings is somewhat handi eaped a debt small but large for a young and comparatively congregation The however are workers and they are straining every nerve to bazar a The committee in charge got out a most unique book of ticketsin fact the most remarkable ever seen containing twentyseven prizes and no prize worth less than 5 They sell the night which adds the greatest interest to the many other very interesting features ot the bazar night the follow ing prizes were drawn and won Prize No2 5won by Mr John Judd Payne street No I ItO won by KrtP J Bieoel of Bowling Green No 3 1055 won by Mrs Ellen M cKpl1taaalgbth xtreet Tuesday pthe No 7aull of by Even All the other prizes are equally valuable and Interest the is in daily boothi are bundaonu nd deli mocked and a to tkft bear i I in our clty1his ijri Ibe handiwork of I the Sisters Ladles iJwiritig to purchase articles should attend in the after I noon andcone before the articles have i been disposed The different boothss will be presided over by pretty young ladies while Win D Harris hall manager promises to have the assistance- of finest body of young gentlemen i city The bazar opens the Music Hall Tuesday evening November 14at 8 oclock sharp A good will be iii in J attendance each evening i u goWIMO THe WINDI It is seldom a play writers brain ha evolved idea a play along lines so as is Sowing Wind Never depictedthanpresented No play has ever been written that teaches a better lesson It bee truthfully said that it is a sennon Those who witness its presentation will not to see it again and they us well as those who did not see it before have a treat in store for them next whe it is presented at the Avenue It be described It must be seen all its purity and beauty to be appreciated MISS RODGERS Rodgers who as wonlan the Company as of her parents professionals Her father manager R E J Miles had stock Opera House and Robinsons in Cincinnati where Miss Rodgers was been on stage since played range the from She the woman in stock in Chicago Louis Minneapolis St ImperiallheaterStFATHER bazar circumstances ideal many city their success with in itself small Cliftonites make their success here granddrawing Monday night FJabertYOflereoe in bare creating The VWt these of in in band of clean week cannot in is well worth the while It is needless to say thatFather White will see many of his friends between now and the 10th when the bazar will close AN OLD FA iIIONED GIRL- i She can peN d UM boil1potatoes make a doesntkaowIa Latin noun rosij Greek And so well she casks a chicken tkatI your appetite would quicken but she can not tell modera froHi antique She knows howtoseta table and make order out of babelW she doesnt know Euripides from Kurt Once at snaking pk I caught her Jovel an expert M4Mt have taught her eloquencefromShe has a kineenviction one ought only read fictle iM 4 rite doesnt care for science G1WiIAnd thef way siee pakea her bonnets sure is worth a iondi aonneUrilwt alit doetnt yearn fac culture note J whit She cast snake twraps and O MM till a fellow feat fMOMMM that theres- not another maiden half ao wet Shea imminai inchoate completely I where be tomso patty but train lBrowotof not a Tine CM ale t repeat n KenII i Kentlelovibl t the is quite wOHJUjfeo Mxnit I rTwwn o l ItlMrtrc IfurrUd Xso ra I JWioXI I HIBERNIANS What They Have Been Doing the Past WeekGeneral- News Notes Division 4 of West Duluth held a large ly attended and interested meeting last week A delegaliou of Division 1 of Dtt lutlr paid a friendly visit and enlivened the proceedings with speeches andre marks on the aims objects and benefits of the order To cap the climax the members of the Ladies Auxiliary entered the hall after adjournment and took pos session of it They were suppliedwith coffee cakes and sandwiches and after a short social session refreshments were servedand all spent a most enjoyable eveningDivision 8 of Wayne county Mich heartily indorses the sentiments so man fully and fearlessly expressed by Division 1 of Montreal They congratulate them on their fearless stand and earnestly pray that the God of battles may protect the arms ot the hardy patriots who have so fearlessly leaped forth to stem the prog ress of British opposition and unholy greed and also strongly appeal to Irish men to make the British army remark able for Its dearth of Irish fighting ma andsespecially during this struggle The Ladies Auxiliary of Minneapolis held an unusually successful meeting Thursday says the Irish Standard Thirty new members were initiated by the Presi bringsnthe insurance membership of the division up to 200 The occasion was doubly interesting as it marked the fifth anniver sary of the divisions organization The thenpast and its prospects for the future was the subject of an address by the County President Mrs M H Cummings An excellent musical and literary programme given by members of the division was a pleasant feature of the evening The ladles served luncheon- At the regular meeting of the Ladies Auxiliary of Duluth last week there was a good attendance and a number of new applications were received After the regular business had been transacted the hallwas thrown open and a social meet ing held A feature of the evening was the presentation to the President Mrs D P McDonald of a beautiful silver tea tray by the members as a token of the esteem in which she is held Mrs J H Sullivan County President of the organic zation made the presentation speech and Mrs McDonald responded in a few words thanking all the members for their kind remembrance and hoping that she would in the future prove worthy of their confidence Light efresbments were then served There were a number of mem bers present from the West Duluth Ladles AuxiliaryThat coming meeting of the An cient Order of Hibernians in Boston next year will be the greatest gathering of purelT Irish Catholics thstthecitybas ever witnessed is now an assured factIFrom nil over the country State Slatterly of Massachusetts has received hundreds ot letters asking forinformation and conveying the news that the senders of those letters and thousands of mem hers in their respective localities will be on hand In addition to the letters re ceived a special correspondent sent out by the Hibernian the official organ of the order in Massachusetts has brought word back from the provinces that the members there are ready to embark at any time Canada is alive to the importance of the gathering and from To ronto Montreal and other large cities word comes that a larger gathering of the order never left Canada than that which will leave for Boston a few days before the great parade of the order that will be held convention week Suffolk county which will have to stand a great part of the burden of entertaining the delegates is leaving nothing undone that would tend to make the gathering a suc cess and the State officers headed by lIon E J Slattery State President who is also one of the national directors are making strenuous efforts to have the national parade held on Memorial day In the line of march on the day of the parade Division 1 of Boston will have first place This division is the oldest in the State and it is claimed that it is time oldest division in the country The second annual ball of Company A Hibernian Knights at Lirderkranz Hal November 20 will be a grand success It earnest work can make it so The rnetn bers are hustling in goodnatured rivalry to outdo each other At a recent meet lug Joe Taylor said be would mortgage the coal company Janice Curran declared lie would sell the Louisville Hotel and Jerry Halllban coolly remarked he would bust the Continental Tobacco Company JC necessary to conic out first in the largest returns So there pan be no doubt of a large attendance and as Scaljy furnishes the music there can be nothing lacking for a good time HB REALLY 1 MAtT9 WN A Chicago man who lied just returned from a Weatern trip tells time Chicago News this new jackrabbit story As everybody knows a jack rpbhiM J a lightning runner or as Mark Twaja once Mittogoes ft fast that al you see It a crack IB the irJ It seewa that a certain fat rpaa yell kuowNin Idaho was put JWIiF1 fcwntjnjf with a party who hind been Jokiujf I Mll H to what kc would to tf a bear took tflff fejw aiMl he always FlaiWWJ that lie ouldHt Fan aNyway ORJhlj say fae wu poklug alowf IH pttyaimce OH jt wijd IQfihiNKtrail lncenlleayatdeulyFpp Jtq a meal bar Time hunter Jw tkp regr hoard a shot JII4 a yell glad m t Mm4 lu it the let luau caiue lajttfPfTt MW J tbli trail Kabul lf ftlui It A MJwfi making Lope leap in host af Wju He was so seared the JWMC hunters MX thati he IIeweI W be afraid the jack would binder fciiu iu UU tdighl- for Ilp1I Wf v rise fiHL trfr I 0 SECOND ANNUAL BALL t TO BB GIVEN BY Mr r 1 HIBERNIANm m KNIGHTSI NEW LIEDERKRANZ HALL CORNER SIXTH AND WALNUT STREETS ltIONDAY NIQFIT9 NOV SO r y UNION MADE NOT IN A TRUST 1 CHEW POTHEENTOBACCO SOMETHING NEW SOMETHING GOOD Manufactured by LOUISVILLE TOBACCO WORKS andflavoring SENN ACKERMANM BREWING CO XNCORPORATEDI MAINSTREET BREWERY LAGER BEER PORTERITS PURE LOUISVILLE KY WILLIAMM DULANEYSl Y EXCHANGE l L Seventh and St Catherine WNESLIQUORS AND CIGARS Frank Fehrs Beer always on tap Special attention paid to orders for family use plot Imneh Day and flight JOHN F OJ3RTELs BUTCHERTOWN BREWERY CREAM COMMON BEER 14001404 Story Avenue Telephone 891 LOUISVILLE KY KLEIDERER Tl1e Tailor 354 Fourth Avenue Near Jefferson Sum and overcoats 25 and up HUH just received liltf New Fall and Winter Importations k jjKeifrnqNr prtir it THI PHemr 4 t171If11lft e1illfrIle a JAftf4 ip I l Seven experienced teacjiera each one papcieUt tthiI llMP Of Iyaw rf lintuoie1 l li 1 l f i r JJ J nmJJJ ITAUAN f SWISS COLONY WtHE COif JU 7 W ljt1 Jj HMOI NIJputtff- WJJALJ 2N ROfJJ t Rti1 PrlJrMWJi9- oltlJiM 1 i+ l1ll AP BI +T1dt i9Al 1+1 kIliYGJJiji 01 Jllal 1JIDd a0 sYnJUUH yA r tI lr- VI tUIIMI w njl r 11 UilfIj fl I e I 1b4 A 1J eu 111 W JIMI IIM 1uJ 1 ea ttar rt t- m lc ti11 c- U