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NATIONAL ARCHIVES OF IRELAND

Archives are subject to copyright and should not be copied or reproduced without the written permission of the Director of the National Archives 9 _ __:____:...----===-- • (1858.) Wt.5333-66.4000.12j14.A. T.&Co.,Ltd. (6559. ) Wt.3103-96.20,000.8 J15 . 3 Telegrams: "DAMP, DUBLIN." Telephone No. 22. · DUBLIN METROPOLITAN· POLICE ~

lDetectt\?e lDepartmentt .

C r c 7th. October . Dublin, --=--::..~-, -::---+' -~-:-::------::-"" _ # ~;...... __

' .. i' + 'I- MOVEMENTS OF DUBLI N EXT~[ISTS . SubJ·ect,------,. ------

I beg to repor t that on the 6th·· Inst. ,

the undermentioned extremists were observed , ~

moving ' about and associating with each other /

as foll·ows :-

vith Thomas J . Clarke, 75, P~nell . St.,

George Nichola - Galway - from 1 p. m. to

1. 30 p. m. James Murray and Art.hur Griff-

· ith for a quarter of an hour between 9 & 10

P• m. F. J . 'McCabe for twenty minute~ from

9 •. 30 p. m. Wm . O' Leary Curtis for ten min- utes from 10 p. m. I I . • I •

D. Lynch left Kingsbridge by 9. 15 a. m. t rai n, en ·route to Cork .

Geo . Nichols returned to Galway by 5 p.m. train. R. I . C. in both cases informed. .. C. Collins,

Archives are subject to copyright and should not be copied or reproduced The Chief Commissioner. · without the written permission of the Director of the National Archives - Cf:::;O ( 3 D I '2. I \Ob Cl..)

C. Collins arrived at Kingsbri~e from

·Limericlt at 7 • 10 p. m.

. . j P. Hughes, who arrived at Ami ens St • .,

from Dundalk, ·at-··7·· 30 ·P· ·in., returned ·· to

Dundalk by 8. 20 p. m. train. R. I •. C.

I

.. · - .• - -·--· ·-- ., -· •• • - .. - ··- - - -- ... - - - ·· -··-... #,...... informed.

·John-McDermott, J. 0' Co.nnor, ~ Pierce

Beasley, Edmund Kent, P. H. Pear~e · , ~ ~· - J,

O'Rahilly, John Milroy, c. Colbert; H. Mell·

. . ows and P • .llyan, together in Volunteer Office

2, Dawson St., from 7-p. m. to 10 p. m.

. ' ' Attached are Copies of this w~ek's ·issue

of Nationality and ~he Irish Volunteer,neither

of which, with the exception,of a few ·paragraphs J 1 appears tp contain anything deserving special xx

attention. T l r· Superintendent.

..,- T

+ " •

... jr.

Archives are subject to copyright and should not be copied or reproduced without the written permission of the Director of the National Archives Vol. 1. No. 17. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1915. One Penny . •

Notes. l'Conomit ·:tl not to emplo) brickbyers. <'ar :11ld this gerwr sity of hi~ P ·din d him ·tf IH'I1tl' r!->, p.tinters :md . o forth nay, not to ·at that h • wrote :

A 1 •lightful . equd tn th · pul lic·:ltillll I>) the . > nnwh m ·at :1: u. ual. k·st th · supply for "Hy thL'.l.' nPan. I got all the 1 nd l \\~lltkd 1-: ~ 1111 fnT 1 England :-.hould run short- mav be I ·tler without any trouble, go1crall. · rccrivi11 tit 111.(1. i h Gov ·rn nwnt a list r i lJul ion b,. • :q>prt'<'i:tt ·d II\· :-;tuth·in"· th /Jics. inp,s of /!los,· who an· rt·prc nt cl to tiP Ca tl pol in· in I n.: land of a p:ttlll'hlt·t • - h following official tdnH nishing t h · I ri h to he '<'onomica I - tn Eng! i.· b ( ;o\· ·rnrn nt r ·turn of the cost of F.ngland as ..rt•ady to nntrd ·r und ·r twh ... a,·· ! av ! san·: (h ·r~..:aft ·r th · English ta.­ "Law .tnd Ju~ti< · ·· in England :1nd thi . Cll'< umst anc ·s. ('ottntrv :- Thi:-. Englishman him~·lt ~. · ntitl·d to I~ ~ . th•pr m.y han· th· mrn· to lift) i: tlw • lwltl a nn1 unc m ·nt of th · appointm ·nt of a ~lr. E . '(;L .. 'D. hlt·sst.'l I by tlw m ·n: I ri..,h he <. u ~ · wlll..:n he H)llt.., as CoUIH) Court Jwl~{·. :\Jr. Hvn·s (Population Jfl.ooo.ooo.) t'\'i<'kd th ·m from tht.·ir farm ... h · yt't 1~rmitt Ad i. in him!':i ·lf of no impr)l't:ltll' · an it ·m in th<· c :-.t. their cattll' to r ·main whil · they \\t.:r(· I<. >king ('arh •li , Pia(' bunter:-;' Hr : t~:-, Hand -it is th, Supreme Court £3!.7 ,88() for . orne patch of <:at th t·l ewh ·n· to "xi:-.t L11 t hat a \'a<~arw\· in tht· . woll •n ranks of th · ( 'ount\· Cnurt:-. 4~)f ,o 50 t1 poll . • ( 'nunty Coun Jud~e.., in tbi. Yictimised country But not all of the :ttH h'tlt proprietor did l1oul he tillt'd up :tl tht· pres ·nt tim· that i: tht' Colonel get rid of. Spm· (.t tht:m h · ,f int •..,t. IREI.. \"U. prudt·ntly allowl'd to renuin tn :-ttppl · him

~ \ l'uunt) ('ollll ]LIIlg · in lr ·l:tnd i apn.on (Population 4,25o,ooo.) "ith cht:ap labour. a ,point d to r (' ·i\l' :t minimum !-alan· of Su pn·nw Court. "So111e of the :-.mallcr ten.mr...... be wrote. ('nun t y ( 'c >ll rt · oun·rs, and au d/ ntcd. I pay Sd. but most of 111) work i put out h •b lig d to work a lo11g as thr 'i.' month.· in tht• fa day. : -. tr but th. t i. tilt• limit. \o 'ounty 'ourt Th' ta.· impos ·don the Engli:-.h for th · up­ tlw pitTt'. l an:rage ; 5 men .md so worn ·n k '<'P of th ·ir suprem' and Count,. ( 'ourts i:-; 1 l:t il ,. ; th • form ·r ar · 'Ill(>! '' t.' i in draininu J wl~t.: in Ireland i app11int ·d on th · gn und. . . ~- tmdl'r li\· head. Tlw tax impost•d lll :tkin, roads, knod~ing cl• 1\\' t\ ' W ··I ,u d c I 1 g 1 w "I ·cl g · and 1K ' l'. on a l ·ham 'lt·r. 'lH 'tWe per • • • 'Jiw . ppointm nb dr' mac[· from a li:t of on tlw I ri ... h is fifte 'n-p ·net' per h ·ad. It is a Cltht r gt·neral tmprowmenb; th · l, tt ·r in h.trri ters of tht· .., ·c·ond and third rank who tax impos ·d on the J ri:-.h to pay tht. eo:-;t of \\'t>l'< ling, carr) ing turf. ,lllc picking tones. l>rihi11g the Trish Har to · ·11 the Irish p ·ople. Tht ~ .m· und •r the managcm ·nt ' f ,t Scotch h.t <. • rv •d the Eng I i:.h (;m· ·rnmt nt in I rt"land ; in public r in pri,·at · way. . The mun!Jt·r of It is a Utx, not for th · nee •ssary maintcnalH't' steward, and an· \t'f"\ amcna.hk, hut r quin· . t· nnwh looking aftt•r. as t!Jcy art' i11d;ued tl• b • pelt) judg ~ Tt'tJuircd for count\ ln1. in('ss, of law courts, lut fur th(' maint(·nan1 of • p ro,·ir d they worked an a\'t:rage of p w<·eks hun this countn weak ancl <•t •c au Kitdwm:r had to tlnlying Irish peasant. and townsnwn to and t·mployt·d th<·m on the l.md tb ·y Olll'" ha I , 1 Judgeship in tht• H i;.,!hcr <'ourts, Iin· and tln•am of a 'ounty 'ourt Judgeship as th · England for u:-.e in h 'f war. ~l r. R ·dmond's tilled for thcmseh· ·. a: day labourcn;-giving them a 'hristian opportunity < f arning th ·ir prizt of their d< ility and th ir n:acliness to follow ·rs will r •ad with some inter':--t the !>read in the sweat of th ir l row- at Tlue 1.,1 n( r th · ink~ t:- of tlPir <.ountry. \Vi th following I ·tter from Lord K.itchencr's fatht·r, puhlislwd ill th · London "Time··· in t 852, Farthing~ an hour th · r:tse,\1 ... w"re "inclin d 1 • 1 t' two dol-ell of th, ~c in th ·ir hands, manv explaining how lw exploited the Irish in his l< II(' lazy." and had to b 1< k d after. Ah ~ 1 c m.. of R ·mo\ .d •l • M.tgi:-;trates, nunwrous time. The ·lder K itchcner came to I n~land thes(.' l.tzr Irish ~ I I ., i ing Barri ·t ·r~hi p ·. and ~ourt appoint­ . tllt'lll., hundn:d. of !.1\\')t'l in lrcl.tnd. rf• kq>t "seeking II ·,dth,'' ancl "'""· he wrote to the K it<'hciwr wound up his it tt<..·r to the Lond n " Tinll's " exhorting his ( untrym n with 11 ' vilitv t th · Engli. h Powt·r. \VhY lri. h " Time.: . .'' :-truck h) th · :uh antagt· of purchas­ hy I'· rl'nt of . Tation.di. t prinr ipl ·s, and with ing under the En<"umbercd Estatt·:-. Af"l)ll 'rt\' "lx·autifulh· :ituatt•d out in th •msc Iws an,.. oontinued Col. Three Farthing. the H( ur. H d tilt·) in "'·hich an fri. hm.tn':-. !->nul ha. a hard ·r fight K. i tdwnt•r, '' 'Zt.'as to get rid of tIt t' t t'nant s off resp< nded as they might ha\· {kme the I ri h to t•sc.lpe damnation. ·o man who remains that pr>rtion of the laud wlliclt I ddamined to 1 'lue.stion might han been - lved fifty y ar I o '<:t at the Tri ... h llar will ·ver sit on th<.· commt 11t't improving and farminr,.'' Th r · ago by th total c tirpation or degradation )f l,·uch ·n.·n a~ a JH>iict·-magistrat·. If h· was tlw u ·ual hanging gal• m 11 .rintains 1i~ hon .. ty and ·• rns a modc~t and thi. f:wilitated th · expropriation of tlw paratively small number < f the English w=>rl· <·nml ~tcntl.' ht· \'\o·ill I>(' >II • in a hunclr ·d. l ri:h 1wa~. nts· Th · olond " forgan! them" as t.·nterprising as the eld r Kitchener-and . > The cyniri:;;m of the appointm 'Ill of anotlwr th · hanging gale, " paid their rate· and ('harg ·s, :111<1 by it comes to pass that Kitchen~r J unior and Mr. ( ·~ nmty Court Jlllig hy tht· English Cion:rn­ bought their crops valuation.:· J ohn Redmond lay their h ·a Is together to-da~ nwnt t the tim it i. sending around its police He allowed the cattl ~ of th • unfortuna.t to consider how be t to u · · up the mere I ri ·I t', tdl the people, wh• m it mulcts in £1 ,4oo people who d ·din d to emigrat · to remain "on for the profit and glory of ol

Archives are subject to copyright and should not be copied or reproduced without the written permission of the Director of the National Archives 2 NATIONALITY Saturday, October 9th, 1915.

~1r. John Redmond had not th courag · to Def ~ nee of the Realm Act, that 'ennan y and wa · an "outsider." Au ·tro-Hungary, with a put f rward officially a parliam nt:uy candi Au. tro-Hungary did inv nt Militarism during much larger population than e1th r Fran 't or dat for th Harbour Divi ion of Dublin -th th . +3 years that they alone of th Great England, sp nt considerably 1 ·s. than half tht· electors of which wer: waiting the opportunity Pow "IS did not make war upon the littl nations amount annually n .MilitarL m that ·aeh 1Jf of showing what th y thought f Redmon 1 b) - granted that when Rus. ia was Civilising th these power xpend d. snowing und r any candidate h endor5ecl. Finns, tlw Georgian , ·and the Persians · when Va t financial figure c m· ·} but dim re,l.li::; a­ Rut in conjunction with th R ruiting 'om­ England was doing as much for th Egyptians, Lion to many rearl rs. Roughly translating th mitt for Ireland, h pri,·at ly arrang d thal th rabs, the Burmes and the Boer. · wh n annual exp nditur of rh Gr at Powers on the humbug who u urps th title of The Fran was (>rJunlly con rned for the Militarism (before th pre ent war) mto O'Mahony . h )Uld go forward, and be j intly Tonkin se and the Moors, and when [taly was hilling , the proportion would stand thu and privately ~upporte (l by th "Cni nists anrl engag d similarly with the Aby. innjans and th' L~ r \'ery £3 8s. expend c1 hy rman) on • th followers of Mr. Redmond. The " Lrish 1 ripolitnn. -grant d that thi::; was not li l i­ Militari ·m, Ital) exp nded £r 1 rs., Austro­ Tim s,'' the "Daily Expr ss," and th • tarism, and that Germany and Austro­ Hungary exp nded £1 14 . 3d.~ l• ranc "Evening Mail" gallantly backed th roc lition. Hungatfs 43 years of p ·ac was, why then xpended £3 1 . 7cl., ngland ex pen d In lurid leading-articl s they xhort d every h:t us <'onsider how thi~ Militari ·m i · finan d. .£3 '7 ·. 2d., ancl Russia. cxp<-•ncled £5 6s .. or Unionist in Dublin to '" le for "1 h ., l n the mind f vera l people th r 1s a b 'tween them th Allied Great Pow rs <'Xp~nd d 0' f.ahony and pre. en<.· the Engli. h .Empir ·. vague id a that G rmany ha I n spcnrling annually £r4 5 . 9d. In th result th united upport of Dublin enormou . . ums of mon ') on cr nting "a great f revery £5 2 · . 3d. nion1sm and Dublin R 'dmondism s cur o for militan· machine ,. for which she hatl no just e.·pended by the ntral P \\'<.·rs '"·hom th · .th Imp •rial canrlidat 900 votes r~gainst 3,ooo. ne(·e~s1ty. (;ermam· lies in lh centre of Allied Powers ar · now making war upon .. t . - Euro1>e, '' ith a frontier I in ~ bet we n 4 ,ooo and crush Militari m." _),ooo miles l ng to rkfeml, Rus. ian threal<'n­ Out of~ Yer) £-...,o pen t upon 1~v.tl,, ·1· Itan · ·m "Crushing Militarism." ing h · r on on extremity F ranee on the oth r. yearly by the Great P wer f Euro1 ·, fon· Austro H un•rary, her n >ighb ur, ha a long L1tterlY w have heard kss of "German the war, nearly tltree-fourths zuas prnt b.t t/i1• frontier on which she is 'Xpo ·d to attack by .lllies. Atroritics " an 1 of " the War for the Small Ru . ia, Italy, Sen·ia, Poumania, and Mont - ationaliti ::s .. , 'fhe ·e lin are played oul. negro. \~ r. hen it is rem ·mber d that France, on Thi · is now pre-eminently and before all a the lanu . id , has practi ally but one frontier " \ ·ar to <'rush ~1ilitarism "--the financial shoe lo d fend, and thnl England, as an island, has is pinching, ann the a • nomic" argument is no I and frontier to prot ct against M ili.tarist trotted forth. h rdes, il may be admitted t hal, ho\\eV<:'t awful :\filitari:-;m, it appears, is "the cur of and shocking the Ll rt, yel ther > is a b lter Europe.'' lt burdens the poor man with ldi ,. d that Militarism was as old ~lilitari::st T~t ·ation p r h '.l d . (5) England 28 ,J~ 6 ,ooo France is -hown to b, a - the world, and that its cruellest cxemphn; in th' ('hiJf 11ilitMi~ t (6) Ltaly 19,747,685 power, with England a. modern days were the English. \V s "m to uood s('(' nd. whil , AN u \L E.'PE1 DITL"RE OF THE GREJ\1 PowER Germany, lh, denounc ·d hav . c n th tatu · and monuments of a Militari t, is .1 h .1 Cromw 11 and a Hasting in the heart of th 0!\ - AYlES. third. ( I ) England £c.J8 833 000 The rrro!-is annual British Empir , and to have found th mem ry xpenditur · per h, d of th~ · of thc:e merciless Mil i tari ._ts enshrined :1-t the (2) Ru::.sia z6.zsr,84o popu I a tion of th Alli s :n1d t h e It r.t I ()) ncrmrtll\' --I ,397,607 h ad of the roll of English Saints. 'Vc l)n" ers m Militaris111 f ore th · war vas (4) France 23,406,307 Allie!-! beli " d the French ~ apolcon, th Ru. sian £~ 0 () (5) I tal) J1,188,o85 Central Pow · r::. _ uwarrm', , nd the English Wellington had 1 1 (6) . ustro - Hungar~ som thing to do with itwenting modern Mili 3 °94-0S I . Th. A.verage Militari!:lt lax p<:r h(· ~~d <·~~ lh BEFORE 1HE WAR. tarism, and we ha\' . s en in our own brief lif' mhabitant of tlw ...~llied l>o_ wrs . l trntry.wd. a ~lilitarism with which neither Germany n r TOL\L A.·~· AL .\hLIL\RIST ExPE DJTURI·~ OF th.' inhabitants of th entral 1\l"' . n r was, It THE GREAT POWERS. Au ·tro-Hungary was connected d t ying, Wl 11 thus been · l' bef th '' or · var (1) Bu ~ia looting and ~ubj 'cting the Tonkinesc, lh ~ £•o5,955, 8s • verage llit·d lilitarist Ta · 1 :! Bedouins th · Burmese, the anadian half­ (z) England 77,179,000 A \Tl·agc G rman and Au. tn (3) France br ed., the E ryptian , the Boers, the Finns, n ,55.:!.69s Hungarian Militarist Tax 0 and the P not to peak of m re bla ks (4) G rmany 67 ·925,594 Her 17 l ·rsians we may leav the t'ant of " ru h1n - th ·se p opl s having om thing lh non­ (S) Au. tro-H ungar~ )4, 346.7 8 5 1lilitari:m.'' \ot G, (6) ftaly rman) nnr .\u ... t ro- Gt·rman Militari t ' anted for nothing. and 30,936,J70 H ungary but Fnu] d l' - ' o an , 'ram· .md Rus. ia .1r 11 On the ha i of gr ~ annual ~xpenditure on la king th' power to prev nt Christian and th great Mi~itarist untri :; >f EuroiJ - Tn Civilised:· ~!ilitari m shedding their bl d to 1ilitarism, it thu i shown that Rus ia was

Archives are subject to copyright and should not be copied or reproduced without the written permission of the Director of the National Archives I f

Saturday, October 9th, 19 r 5· NATIONALITY.

PILLAR PICTURE HOUSE. Where the best and cleanest MARY STREET I ICTURE HOUSE. •• PHIBSBORO'.-The House at Blauqu1ere Bridce. pictures are first sho-wn: •• THE VOLTA, MARY STREET.

··xpt·nd('d. Russia pent more on her fleet, Fath r 0' rown y Ethna arhury, .Micha '1 V\Tbat a glorious pageant is call d up l ·fore although she had no gr<'at Lrnd to protect with Rreathnach, S n0r Bulfin,- to nam\.' only a our mincl's eye by that great hosting of the • it. than Germany did. England spent nearly few of the mor prominent Gaels who han· G a 'l rejoicing over our victory ? tP.n millions a year more on Militari~m than passt·d away " in the flow r of their youlh and I• anny Parnell's poem, " After Death,.. i. G('rmany clid. and for e\·ery sovereign Au. tro­ the l>lo. 'oming of their genius.·· And th r are e. quisitely beautiful, hut one turn.- from th Hungar), with its population of fifty millions. oth rs who were 1~ss prominent in public life poign:mt pathos of the picture she paint:-, of expt'nded on Mi11tari. m. England, with a iesser than tho e just named, but who wer , like them, one bur 'ling from the bondage of the l()mL tn popularion, spent o,·er two guin as. France, richly dow r<:'cl in mind and .-ou1, and who·· ha i I the fre dom of h •r country, and tlwn rroiwr rrraY ll1tll(.' with a population twenty-five millions less than very heart-beat pulsed " for the glory of Go1l ~ ~ l.ra k COntented to the 0 "now Gennan), spent three and a-half million ancl the honour of [r ·]ami... Day in ancl day 'yes hav seen her glory." One turns with

son:reigns each y ar more on Militarism than out they " served th ir country nnd loved their relief to this other pi ·ture of H How the m·w~ Germany did ; anrl Italy, a poor and emi­ kind;'' they work d qui tly. unoLtrusiYely, came to H :wen," for it j · betl r to think of hankrupt country, fore ·<1 its pcopl to pay a without reward or recognition, pm,·inf; l1y their radiant being. in realms of light and gladn<::-~. 20 pC'r C'.ent. heaYier Militarist tax than very !ires that ~ationality and Gal'lirisrn wer<:> than earth-lxmnd spirits in pain and lxmdage. prosp rous Austro-Hungary imposerl on the living for s. They learned [rish after school­ Tread re··ntly in th Claidlteaml!, a fin papt:r . \ u-...rro-Hungarians. day. were over, at th cost of infinite pains in Irish by Padraic O'Donnalh1in, in whid1 ht·

Tht:· problem nf "rrushing Militarism 'I is, it and labour. learned it so thoroughly as to he spoke inspiri11gly of his beli f that the d ad app ·ars, to be .-olved hy th Powers that have mi taken by nativ . peakers for nativ<' who di ·cl for Ireland and the dead who liH:d for \·ears expenrled the ubstance of th ir speakers ; they fo. ter d Irish manufacture ; for [rdand still ·han.' in our longings and • • people on mt.:nacing armies anrl . waggering they mad th ir homes c ntrt'S of Gaellci m ; !-itn\·mgs. Th ommunion of saints is a l'om­ narie.·, d •stroying th t'wo Great Powers whi h they refus d to emigrate. choosing poverty at forting the: ry for thost wh0 serve a <:au.t: for nn·r ..JO years ·ngaged in no war and 1 vied horne in pref rene<' to prosperity abroad ; they ser\'ed by a long 1inc of hero soul'. thi· lightest :\filitarist tnx(.'S in Europe. helped every movement for the uplifting of The innntc nobility of Irelantl' · ('l\u~· 1.

• I }'oor •-\ nan1a . the land, giving their tlm :lnd talent. grntis shcnrn by the quality of those who in each and ungrudgingly; they pray ·d c\·ery day for g ·ncration have cho ·en to ·erye her. " \i\Tha.t the freedom of Ir ]and. Many an unrhronid{'d gallant gl'lltlemen th y were who walked the • Sursurn Corda. h 'IO of this typ ha lived and died unknown w:' y of sorh>W for Eif ' . ak '." Those won I. Hv MAIRE DE BUITLEIR, BEAN THOMAL to fanw. Hnt sur ly a pin has been kept for ·were writ tt>n long ago by th Editor of T lle FI ~UALLAIN. tbem in the " unforgetting heart of rrelancl." [ nited lrisltman, and they have lived in Ill) , III. Tt rests with us to uphold the' tradition, to memory for years. A few days ago I SU\\ \t,,t all are called upon gi\'' such h roi · ke p alight the torch on e held a ln ft by those another worker in the cause (A. ~ewman) service, th' upr ·me- pr f of lm·e- " Tr 'iltcr plcndid her

anr I \\ .(....,"-· · .uuln it doe, not- -w hav no right when:: and always, but that He p rm1t · the of t h' m n at pre· nt jn prison for Irdamf. to shut oursclvt·. off, and to allow our per.onal blessed to knO'w what is de irabl f r th m to sake to th · judge who senten<'t'cl him ; and I grief to interfc.re with our - ational duly, any know, allowing them to draw on th · infinit · thought it one of the fin st sayings of the many more than we haw a right to become sC'lfishly fund of Hi. knowl clge. "ln Thy light the) and notable words spoken in the dock a hsorhed in a pe r:o;onal joy. Somcone [ know. shall se' light.'' says th Psalmist. This by our long line of X ational heroes. '' AH th · whoSt· whole lif · had been shattered in piece~ seems ·u< h a rea. onable cloctrim· that many unbribed intellect of Ireland was aga]n:;t th h) a (·ru. hing hlmr, fdt for long that it w, s sub cribe to it who do not belong to the Church Union... \\'mtc bluntly Le('ky, the Gnionist historian; and the saying is as true of th {1uit · impo siblt' to go back again to "York in whos theologians propound it. The. two the . • ati nal ranks, to do alon · work which alternative theories rep 1 one; nam 'ly, the lr<'land of to-day a. it was of ~h lr ·land of had been once sha:r: ·d by another. But there theory that thos · wbo hav . reach d life {'\'er­ t8o1. an.linal 2\ewman ·aid once he had a came •l time wh n thi. L ationalist r alised th · lasting are aware of an 1 ar con rned with preferenct:> for being on th ide of the ang Is. 1uty ~njoined on eYeryone who lo\'es I r 'lanrl, every trivial little happening of this tempor;11 Anyone who throw,· in his lot with Ireland a th > dutv.. of sen·ing her in lwr present Jcsp rat<.· life, and th · theory that they arc ne ·ssari I y :\at ion might say the ·arne. He joins a godly need. deaf nnd always h dies of our anguished company. His comrades will l:e bran:· .. " B ·fore the goal is rearhed many will han~ cri s fot sola ·e and su ·cour. [f w · helie\T .1nccn:, honourable, and often gifted mt.'n and falkn and all will have suffered.'' So wrote that the blessed are allow<:>d to know what is women. Arthur Griffith many y ar. ago in T ftc of real import to th m, and if w also b ·lien.• With the blood of martvr:;.. in our veins. and that tbev retain their human affections and such an incentiv to fresh .rH]eavour as is l 11 itcd Jri 1nnan. I remember ing ·tartled • and almost terrified at th tim~ l>y that s mbn:: interests, we mu ·t hold that those who lm· ·d supplied by our strC'nuous self-sacrificing prophecy. It haunt d m for days, though r and serv d Ireland would be a ware of and con­ f llow workers, can w flag or fail? tried to push th~ thought from me that the e 'rned in :u h an e\·ent as tht• fr ~ •dom of " Happy are you aft r all, oh youth of ranks of our gallant hand of omrades would lr land. We cannot imagine them to he Ireland~ fortunat if you diu but know it, for l>l' thinned before th.. Promis 'd Land was imliff rent. if vcr a generation had in hope something worth living for, and in ·acrifice omethin~ rea Ch (1 , But ' alas.~ befor' long I saw th ~ Thcr is a poem called "How the hen 'S prophecy fulfill •d, and7 as Padraic Mac came to Heav n... r forget th . author' name. worth dying for, that bl ssed lot i your ·. '' Piarais xpresses it, many a d legate had l en Lt cle. cribes th joy and triumph among the That wa ~ addressed to the Young Ireland ""TS, :--urnmoned to " th · Ard Fh is of God.n h roes of the Gael gathered tlwre when the out jt applies more forcibly to our gen ration. Think of th · terribl" ca.suality lL t among n ws is brought to H a.ven that at length for we have opportunities which they nercr (Jtlr :-.;ation:-tl combatant.. Wllliam Roon y, rrcland is fr from the c· ·ntre to the ca. enjoy d. (To be contiuued.)

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Englander'· creed as Lhc chi\'aln· of . · "rbin no.r hrihe i. b) Enorl.ancl. It goc: it: own wa). NATIONALITY. and th nobility of B ·1 ~rium -- that is, for the thmks of 1t. \\'11 mten:sts, and firrht · for ih Saturday, Oct. 9, 1915. duration of the present war. Hut, lik · th, own land. This highly immoral ~onduct ha. <; rman Atrocities the fans will bear inn·sti :cgr·_tfully compell('d th· Allie: who ar firTht­ All literary communications for "Nationality" should gation. lt is not a facl, For instance, lh<1l mg- for Lhe Small Xationalitics not for th~·m ­ be addressed to the Editor. Ru:sia lil>eratc(l .Bul.,aria, nor is it a faCL that seln~~ l<~ de<'lare it nnathcma. ;allant littl · All business communications to the Manager, Ruluari, w .~ gratitucl' to England. Russia .B lglllm 1s to he reia 12 D'OLIER STREI!.T, DUBLIN. for y ·ars thw, rl d ancl prey 'nletar from tlte ma" oj natural territory, ansire( 1 ('On~ummation \·r- ~upporter. in thi country with unri,·all ·d England, Gallant Englam.l, and Guaranlu·ing many • , ustria Turke). and Bulgaria' ihel f pportuniti "S for m ntal gymnastics. A few England stood by placidly whil the Trenty of h:n:' to be on·n·ome by th · un:-. lfi h I w ·rs <.L1y a r, som ~ of the citizens of Duhl in w •re 7e-witn ·s · ·;-; w lkl "ian priests being march ·d Lon(lon wa. Yiolated and watch 'd unmm ·d w?l.'~ ;:re f1ghting f(>r Chri~tianit} for what . c m d the cl ath-thro . of Bulgaria as a 1\'tllsntton, for the SanctitY of Tr ..,t·. . l through Dublin . tr '·ts, like C'riminals, round{ (1 f h · T •• 1c::.. ••tn< up to r:"'turn to B lgium to cuga1re, not in power t he reckon ·d with in European affairs. or t r • mall \:ation:lliti not t) m"ntion tht. gr<'at gocl Cant. pri 'sts' but in soldier·· work. X~ither G ~r­ lt is no doubt wry annoying that Bulgaria should not be impre~sed hy Engl;md's pn.·sent many, Au tria nor Turk ·y• forces cleru,·n1e11n. to tak • up arms. France and Belgium, the hattle-cri s of Small \'ationaliti ·s and the latter with tb · ail f the English Government, Sanctity >f Tn:ali ·s, hut unl 's. lo sugg ·st that do. G rmany, Austria an(l Turkey arc the England should fish up Mr. Pi ·n· · M:thom· ESPIONAGE IN IRELAND. bottom of •nemies of Chri ·tianity ~ranee Belgium ancl friJm the DuiJiin Harbour, and fll~l • England its de£ nclers. lt is so dear one you him back to Sofia to pr ·ach to th · Heathen, Last W{' k we published .~ lr. Vin r C n· · 11 1 arn how to ·tand altcmalely on your h<'ad. w · ran make 110 sugge-;tion to aid our afflicted (lat n•pr s ·ntatin.' of the \ S"<)(,.L't ur. n adnd and th<' 1\e\r York S .. . I> . ) Again. th r' .uc some who east doubt on . . · • un 111 ans Ru.' sia and England "·ho partitioned Persia The cl' 'P ingratitud' of th · Hulgarians to st,tt 'ment of th. manner in wbi h h ., th · Russians who I iberatccl th ·m so much 1 betw ·n th m a couple of years ago. and who treated hy th' En•rlish 1111'] 1't·tr\· n.l '': ~ shonr 1~ <'hampions of th' ,'mall '\"ati nalities. Yet forgott:n to . (~0 :o. Bulgaria lay for soo en C(' t h;1 t ens u "d. nothing i: d arer to the indi~t-n1bber mind than ·ears lll poltt1ca l subjection lo Turh•y an41 The " Pembon · , .. '' lt-siasticnl subjection to (;r<.. '(:Te. cSf her that Ewrland is in thi:-. war on behalf of the ..J Vemhri (ireek worker! to destro) hl'r 'Y ;l.Captaln Chapman, Was scar(h• h,... national soul. The n:surgen<'<.' of Bulgaria .'mall _·ati< nalitil· · of • erbia and Helgium :1 ·~ '<'tl\:e·. had my pap ·rs takt·n fr 'm m ·. ~lll;~ the form f Of \\Thich sh UTOk off dipl nl:ltiC began in 1760. In 1830 it took a deli nit · .tlso tht keys of my hwrrn. ore whi<'h had 11 intcrrour. e with in 1903 on th<.· ground that it form, aiming at the n·,·iyal of Lhe Bulgarian to X t twhatcl T · l~lt-.' b • ' • g • on nali n as a Bulgarian sp ·aking ind .. pendent 1 ...... ·. rou < no1 fmcl out w1th what wa: goYerned l1y a~:assins, and the latter of \\ .1~. ( h,~Ig d, hut from question~ a k d ll\ slate freed from th' political dominion of th · whi('h ~he d nounc ·d to the world in 1 909 as a ~~ ,<;t:talfn (l~.:~prman: "Do ~ou.know frc]and )·.. nation whos atrcwities in thl' Congo placed iL Turk and the m 'an 'r oppr·ssion of lh<' Gre ·k. ' V <.'X orr r ' 0'' th · ' ' . . . r . o~l l'l ll 1s on ~01111: inf rrn:lt ion The Russo Turkish War of 1 Bn gY the Jl I)('(.' 'll '1 t L' [~ 1' • Bulgaria, p I into beill" ' .) oun '"t. n ·n ., tel ing, and Englan(l i. naturally th ir fri "ncl, scmi-ind 'n nt, cam' \\'l'rt'l I am actuallY n:]lhcin~~· tl' l'. 1. ··t ·· ·h l . ' h .· •rene'l 1;eing her elf a. Brave [noff 'nsi,· ·, Humane, with two million: of the :Uulgnrian p · pl · l ·h 111.ls c.. 1, \\ o 1:1s hl't'll t f (' . , <"tll' U. I 0 t 111' fOI!t outside: Russia's pri ~, f r not hindering and hiv, lrous P w r.• ~Vobles t oblige. . :aptam b~J>nlan LOld m L r )utd go·•. hme Bulgana \\':1.' that Bulgaria. should IJec'om ·, in Bulgaria is als a , mall _Tat ionality, and '.11 (On;l_)any Wlth a. Fren(·h gentleman, in \\hn:-. wa · until a. few •nclence. Th~1l I said that 1 r fus ·d to loff m··rtum · 1 hy a on th, "Viet .· .., \' ' o ·~LotH.' 011·L l Ioloff paid for his patrioli ·m with his anrl rin · · " ~ pi ' tak ·n at Boulogn " "re n \\ retain d . "A country which tum. it back upon its 1~ erdmand a ruler whom Ru · ·ia failed to Dillon th n told m I was fre, t .g UJ1>t. 1:1· 'aviour:.'' i!1tim_idate, and who r ·gained f r Bulgaria. its but ( must . · 0 a. lOrt, JHOmJs" not to writ<: or tel r • ] The hid ·ous nim' of th · 'mall Nationality f~1ll md p IH.l no', th' dignity and statu: of a lo ::uwon cgt.t p 1 0 1 1 of Bu1gari.t i: that. unlik some of the pr . nt km rdom, and had regained for il all its former k ' · ~ . ~we t)' town \Yithout 1 ·tting him 110\\' illJcl rn·lng my ae ·t rerogni: • ld sovcretgn stat , with a t rrilory a fomlh larger ot:1 .r ,thmg·, L s~nt :t 11 t · to aptain Dillon England. Th m raJ d praYity of Bulgaria than lr ·land and a population half a million ~o . a) I wa g mg to town by the: 4 .)O lhat mu t n w 1 m · :.1::- fix d a part of the pro- .lft m >n and my arhlrt>ss woulcl 1 tbe S 1\'" rrt· rrreat r. It i n ither to be row cl b, Russin , 1ub. .... ' "t-

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NATIONALITY. · atut day, October 9th, 19 1 5·

'I 1 l'· p r that h.1d be ·n t.l ken rom me 1' ·rhap you w ·rc lak ·n fc r om· oth ·r That tlw l"r ·twh authoriti ·: :houlc..l f rbic.l pcr::;un. Perhap · you ha\'c l.x: ·n comK' ·t d '' ith me to gu through Frant-c i~, to my mjnd, tl • t F 1 11 · tt 11 • h arl m "lll \\hi l · I • 11 n.· t u rncd to . orne pap ·r fri 'tH.lly t 'ermany. n1o l ::.urprising incident in this r ·markabl 111 • . 1 lf ~uch is not th · ·ase 1 would adYi::.~ y u affair. For th quai < r h::-a) ha. kn(H\n m · 1 " 1n to th · ( 'luu .11HJ ~ 1 ·pt th 'rl' that ntg 1t. t ,}J;tpp·n·J th.lt th· 'lub de:-. d for cl·an­ to writ· to ne of th · member:; of th For ign \\''11 aml for man) y ar·. Pr :s h ·r •. You know more than one of th ·m f cur-· I r•erYc Lo m)~·lf th· right to in t' on . un l,l\ at midni"ht ·u I ('ould not. l · ·p 0 a.sur·dly, and 1 am sure h· r tlPy L'Uttld tin1l mak • public th' outrageous manner in which I th r a f,1in ~but ·anw un IPr, "h r• I han: oul what i!-i th · truth on this matt r. b~l\' • l 'en trat ·d. 111 1 n \ f) p.tti 1 tly \\ aitin•( till' rdut n of Pard< n my d"ar Collin~ rny inability tu Y mr obedient ~crYant, ll1\ }urrota•Y . ~ •rv · you in thi,· cas·. am out f th · world; YicToR CoLLI:-.·. -~k~~~\\hil· .lp .tin Dilloll ha:-. sllll 111' Oil r th. l ,q ·r~ t.tkt·n from m at B~ulo"lW~ ~tnt_! ha~ th · liltl · influ ·nc · I ha

. 'h. k•·h. m. Su '):. wa cluh forward ''~~' ) <.. 'Jll ··tltl •,tY• ur to t'. pvt l ' , . • ' 'J'I . and 1l\' the Fr •nch authoritit•s <1l Houlogne. It Specc·h to the (~re•·i,tn F~n;1hbs.'' whi 'h \\';ts ._ r "f. •tnd Jtl'rrr,tl,!l'. liS, 1 , ur p.t ><.. ~ • bl? • · • wa · o;11Y wh '11 it came to th 1-.'npJi!ilt :tutbori­ impound~·d l,y the English authorities in t r turn c : , kt· om littlt~ time owtng to ties th ·t~<.' to honour it that it w:1. ht ld of no lliJttlognl' (form ·rly Franc •). h ,. ,-~ r m. ~ t.l crnrn the I• nnda tn the htt' tr.ll frenct .. ,·:tlue, and I w.b arr·.tt-d. riti h . uth riti f wa: thus inclllf'l'd to inl'llr \' 'l'\' t'tlllSi trul~ c.·pt nse relying on the signatur · ;d· an Engli:-.h l'po' thl'ir doups sat do\\'n, S. S. J)H,LO : ('. pt. . ~Jinist ·r of th Crown; T was separat<.·<..l from A range! o' th · common fouk .\tt. th n .• 'tatr. c my lu•'g~g ~, tr ·a ted ignominious! y. subjvct to In lxmmchs n' . tood roun'. L q. h •:l\·y ·xp ·ns ·s in hott'l hill.· ~nr 1 replacing my A].\x hang'd up, wbas' Large wa shugbt wanlrol){', my holiday ruin ·d. :tnd my inYalicl In ~ '\' ·n fald o' hiJ ·; ~ Th" Parad' l•olk• ton', ~ daughter tlt'IHin·d of my Yisit antl of tht• . n' hein' houden'd up wi' wraith, 1 1 "" 10th AuiTU t. Y ~· • < no\\ <..: t'! full of nw pn po~t t1 '1~1t, unci t•rny Idler h;l." .\!:1 ng th<' coast ; an' ra.·in" out Your truly, • he ·n opu;ecl hy th ·. British censor. . His gardie~, lotty Captain Dillon, D.S.O., Th ·ir hark. to hum an· scowder • . • )( r ·c i ,·j n).., 1he }d l<.' r 1 11 Att. G · wra1 . taff, Folke:ton ·, that it is th fie took to spe 'd o' tit, b T:Hlsl' ., }) ,)r In 11 • f 1 rr> ·v·ti

f:-. of h1: fnvndl) f ·elmg:-. \Vi' th • wind o' ur wamc. 1 , n1 • n~ thm~. , - of < ht.lining from ha . n m an. h' 1 f;)r ~·ranc•, l~oulcl u· forbiddu1 to ·i.sit t.~1:1t Than for to t•onw in hanny-grip. h r • nc 1 . · f thi:- kinrl. \\ \( 1 rt r mformauon o c ountn·. Hut T muld not karn anythmg : t si a driery tim ·. ....,~·-·-r qu. f r1 'li<'

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_6______N__ A _ T_I_O_N__A _ L__ IT___ Y_. ______s_~a _t _ur_d_a~y~, _O__ ctober 9th, 1915.

At threeps I am nae ae perqUJre. Bat 'la~ ! his bleed wa fey. Whare'!-. dOIJUenl Cu:ssE ~ now. ~or auld-farren a he, Wi' sickn , · now h 's f rt .r-lik Wi' a· his wily crack ? But at banes-braking, 1t's well k 'nt Or lik a water-wraith, [ then a thou and hips did ave He has na' maughts like me. An' hirplin after th wil' birds, : ..An· m \tckle danger thol' d ; ' For as far as I him exr 11, an .carce get meat an' claith, (.,m th y d been brunt, de'il ant> had :ott t\ In toulzies fierce an' strong, An' now the e darts that weerded w re Th land whar: he was foal'd. As far in chaft-ta'k he exceed To tak the town of , But 'gin the truth I now dur. t tell. Me wi' his sleeked tongu . To get meat for hi gabb, h man I think the honour's mair My proticks an' my daughty d ds, Against the birds employ. To them than fat it is tom 0 Greeks ! I n ed na' t 11, Yet he's alive, altho' to gang Tho' they come to my skair ; For there's nane here bat ken, them well? Wi' him he wa, fu' laith j At lea t th honour "qual is : Lat him tell his himsell : 1f Palamed had be n sa wise, Syne fal n cd, a thi din; Which aye were done at glomin time He had been fr frae skaith. For AJAX th m h di na ek, Or dead hour o' the night, For he' 1 been livin' till thi day, Sae sair as they dee him. An' de'il ane kens except him. 11 j An' sleep in a hale kin, Then lat ULYSSES now compan: For nae man saw ·tf.le ight. An' gotten fair play for his lif , Rhresus and maughtl s~ Dolon, The taik inde d is unro gr at, An' stan'd he had na been. An· 's son, and Pallas phiu I will confes alway, Because h prov'd he was na wud, That i' the night wa stol n · Bat, name ULYSSES to it ane , He ·was sae fu' o' fraud, or de'il belicket has he deen, ' Fan it was fair-fuir days · The worth quite dwines away. He slack'rl na till h' gat th lif' . h ) Great as it is, I need na' voust ; 0' this peer , acl·eles lad. or w1t out gaucy , . I'm seer I hae nae neef For to the Gr dan h did swear, Wha wi his 'Uicle always. To get fat cou'd he ettl'd at. He had ae ffreat nvy, Rath r na. gi' him his propitw By sic a mensless thi f. That gou'd in goupens he had g t, For deed. that f kles ar Yet routh o' hon ur he bas got, The army to betray. Divide them anct lat Diomed' Ev'n tho' h get the glaik, An' wi' mischief he wa a gnib Com in for the be t . har: , But fat u e will they b to him • Fan he' sa crouse th t h wou' d try To get his ill int nt, To he brave AJ x' ma.ik. H howk'd th, gou'rl which lw himsel1 Wl1a jn hudge rntidge wi' wi{ . , But gin my wightness doubted were, Had y rderl in his tent. Without a gully in hi: hand, T wat my gentle bl · 1l, Thus wi' uncanny pranks h fights, The smeerless face l>eguilcs? Th gowden bel met will sac o-lanc~ A· being son to Telamon, n' sae h (lin heguil ~, 0 . k ., k . . ' Right sick rly d s pi ad: An' twin'd u: ). our knc ' fe:L m n A n d blm· wt s-yna brmn Wha, under daught y H r\ule. , By death and by 'xil . That a' hi wimpl , lh y:ll find out • Gr at Troy'. walls down hurl'd, A1tho' mair galJby he may be, Fan i' the mark he sheens. An' in a tight Thessnlian hark Than \'" estor wise and true, Bat hi· weak h ad nac rarrach ha: To Colcbo.' harhour swirl'cl. et few will sar. it was nae faul That h lmet for to lJear, An' ./Eacus my gut h r was, That h' did him furhow. 1 Tor has he mergh inti 1 hi: ban : . Wha now in h 11 sits jidg , Fan his n r glyde was sa' mischiev'd, To wield Achille.' spear; Whar a fun-stane does i yphu, H 'd n ither ca· nor clriv , ~T or his bra' targ ·, on which i~ · · n Down t th yerd sair gnidge. Th lyart lad. wi' years sair clwang'd, The y rd, the :-;in, ancl lift, Great Jove him. elf owns .IEa\u The traitor thief did leave. Can well a.gr e wi' his eair cleuk, To be his uin d ar hoy, Th s ar' nat· thr eps o' min ; right w 11 That ·leikit was for th ·ft. An' . yn . without a' cloubt I am r n. Diomed the wighl, Fat gars you th n, mischiev us tyk t Wha wi' . nell words him . air did snib, For this propin to prig, Th n L chi 1 to hi· ov• · Rut thu. in r unting d my ' tion . An hann'd hi~ mwardly flight. That your sma' banes wou 'd lang I sair . J n d na mak sic din, The God~ tho' look m mortal m n, Th y are- sae un o big? For it's vc;-11 k n t A\hi1les was Wi' eyn baith ju. t ncl gl g; And if th Grt't'ks sud be sa(' blind. 1 s gie you sic a o-ift, · 1 fy fath r's brither s :in. • h , wha Sc t r wou'd na h lpt Th , Trojan lad:-; right soon won'tl dight A n . as we ' r:' \Ou. 111.. , th re ' nat' soouth. For h lp hims '11 does beg ! To be in ony :widd r ; Then as h<' clid th auld man ]eave. You Hk a futtl' heft. And as you ay y . peed of o' ftt T only seek 'Yhat is my du , Am n' sa fi rce a mcnzi Perform ilk doucrhtv de (l r m an fat wa my brither's. Th · law he mad • lat him l paid b • • Fan lagg 'rt wi' Lhi~ lxmksom, .rraith Rut why a thi f. 1ike Si. yphu. , Rack just in his ain cuinzi . y 0 • That's nidrler'd sae in h 11. Yet fan h cry d. 0 neip<·rs help! _ou will tyne haaf your sp rl. ml h r:' tak fittinnim('nt, I ran to tak' his part, Be Ides .Y ur targ , 1n hattl ~ k · n. Bat httl clanger tholes. [s mair na I can t 11. He look'd sat· baa,.. , as 'giu a. dwam Sall th n th . e arms he d jny'd Had just o' ·r~ast his hcarl. 'Vhile min wi' m ny a thudd is ci wt'd. To m , wha in thi. hntilzie For they ha 1 gi d him sik a fl g, And thirl'd sair wi' hol, Was th first man who flrew hi durk He look'n a. h 'd be n doit d. Hat now. fat n · d's for a' t'his din? am flaught-br d to th t ub:i . For ilka' limb a11' lith o' him Lat deeds o' words tak plac·. An' sail thL .le th come farr r hen 'Gainst an· anitbcr kn it d. And lat your ·toutn s: now he try'd. Wha was ·ae dev'll. h surly, Sync wi' my targ I CO\' r'cl him, Just h re before your fac . · H<' :care: wou'd gae a fit frae hame, Fan on the y rd hC' lies . Lat th(' arms of Achill". brn,·e, An' o' us a' wa. hurly. An· sav'd hi .. m erless :aul ; L think Among your faes be laid, An' frae th w ir he did bac-k hap, 'Ti~ 1iltl · t my praise. And the. first chi l that hring~ them I at k. An' turn'cl to u. his fud : Rat 'gin wi' Ratie ye "·ill hourd, T,:tt hun l:x' wi' them lad. An' gar'd the hale-ware o' u. trow ome hack, la(l, to yon pia ; )r ...... ~-- -- That h wa. gane dean wurl : Lat Trojans an' your wonted f ars Vnti11 the in ' Naupliu::.. Stand glowrin' i' your fare: Irish Week. my ~fair us I e. s na him. ell. Syn slouch hehincl doughty targ: , A n app:at f~r a window displa) of lri,:,h~ His jou\kry-pau kry finding out. That yon rruh·s, Amo' th' \,rt "ian harks ; Duhlin Gae] ..

Archives are subject to copyright and should not be copied or reproduced without the written permission of the Director of the National Archives aturda)', ctober 9th, 1915. ATIO ALI'fY. 7 ------~------ch, G elie League. This is a matter p rpl ing and t- Atroci...... ing to tbe Imposter Hi torian · pa it I G ~E E 10 . BY JOHN MITCHEL. over very lightl . t the ct of that h f fin w ather hich pr vail d CH P ER III. as mbly r e t be held in membr nre a urin the g at r part of pt mber m · to • ha ine it bly iv n way t m re nable RELlGIOU LIBERT IN IREL D. littl . On of it arli t n t n " an dition · hint to a Ii<' aguers that t The only period- and it wa~ a 'ery short ct for securing iberty of nd t tart the int r ion ha rri ed. 11 respecting such act or clau, ct of '-JI--..lic ague bodi of Dublin ar fully period-in whiob Liberty of on ctence was t thi · t oi t Gn ha. and oi t r gnized in Ireland by xpr . law from the Parliament which a in i t nt ith the making arrangem nt for a g t tim of Henry VII I. unti I th r ign f Qu n same." I need not he d 11 upon the other mmencing 1 t ¥ mber and ictoria th bright mom nt of respit -­ measures passed by that e cell nt Parliament­ a.rious ran throughout the city have only i d to r the prim ril import nt work wa that in which the Parliament of ing an ct declaring the Parliament of ngland f angua T aching immediat ly. . Jam ·II. at in Dublin. nd thi wa· the incapable of binding Ireland · an ct repe ling n itinnigh 8 rth Fred nck only Par~iament that v r r pr sented the Irish th unju t a igati L n t for t back rd in thi work. It ne attainder f rebel th t i f person red in b a ilidh on atur- nation even unto thi da. . For th P rlia- and t nt proved most ment elected aft r " Emancipati n,' upon the had borne arm again t their lng joy bl . larg nwn r of ba i of wholes le di franchi em nt rt inly James ; an ct for r moving 11 incapacities r and t ir friends, a w as 11 did not represent reland · and neit r ba any and disabilities of the nativ of this kingdom, re present. an from raobh na g uig g uigi an one of the Parliament from that tim to th c. For the present it i nough to att nd il w al in att ndan . present moment. That famous s mbly wa to th ct for Liberty of on n nd to of t e ning the composed im!ifferently f atholi nd ho the n li h Hi t ri n ith f. w 11-ehosen remarks, Protestant but atholic in th g at that:- ht audi no the n tional import­ tud f Iri h nd of it w in majority. om e lu iv Pll t tant ooroughs, " e hereby decree that it i th 1 f t · s f aily lif . whose Corporat authoritie did not admit a land of Ireland that neither no , nor e held Catholic to li e within their bound did not, again, hall an) man be pr uted f r his nd indeed, nd any m mber . he was no religion." representati e from D rry nor from ol rain . hi look plain nough · und f ir ut Bandon · nt t o gentl n n of the str ightfo rd · but the Briti h i t rian has acCarthy clan; Dublin, City and ounty found ut t seer t nd m lign int nti : he and the Univ: rsity w re ~ pr ented th a in hi book- nd it i the onl noti he ill be held on nd y f~ 6 p.m. unt} by imon Luttr ll and Patrick ar tak f the t for Libert f cien : ill be field · the ity by Sir ichael reagh, Lord u In harmony ith th languag hi had on ayor, and by T ~ n D rmot ld rman; Jam had ingeniously used to advance oman­ Coli g by ir John . lead and i ha l i m behind principles which were abjured in ogblan; the Borough f B lfast b arcu very Catholic country of urope, la nh ar albot and ani I 0 iII · I') by Row fering with li rt. of oonscience er declared Branch oft land Wh' e an owland n r: d.' unty by t o of th a the hat an ul . whol , find in th r 11 f that f mou s ingemouslanguage, la g ...... Parliament nuin liament hould be uni bed for his ligion, but lso rm t i lrel d er a li ral to impr thi unnin artifice of upon olunt rs adm' tur nd of hi rliament in Irel nd. here ma. pportunity Iri h famili ; a li t on good per ho uld i h th of ining to ad · itzgerald ill) 's rien could h 1 am d thi Insh h and ug nt , ylm rs u ta and rch- 1 ua f n 1 r qu rt r · bold5. he borough of i klow wa r pr - who t nted b an 'B r d an ci n betore SWtelllde: proper membe n tituency. in at , u hit nd .1...1'-lug n li rt to rei gan (proper! u pl in de ling obliged a r befo t ~ ign hi th arli f d ill . r h d . 1 n om- mun but in t f L I .J., be id t rai ord - i hop C •" lr. unt (I but th a an nd t dmit an uch li COilSC1ien ri ing in fa t acccmnt e a.rd on committ d t I RICE "'d. (Publi hed E ry Tue day). th nclu ion of Pre1ltche

Archives are subject to copyright and should not be copied or reproduced without the written permission of the Director of the National Archives 8 NATIONALl·rv. Saturday, ()ctober 9th, 191 S·

Conf c; _ i n without J, ·ing fined, ,,·hippt>d. int ·re:-.t. But, after all, what was Lhi ' in­ FLEMING'S HOTEL, pillori d. or lransporl ·d ~ Bul rwitlwr h · nor si

punish. or disfrarwhis any Protestant for Ill'/ '' KI 1G J ME .• SP.l<~E 11 TO BOTH IlO S~S OF will lind all Ho't Co. tt Otstur · of d fenc ' , mad ' sending their COLLARS, SHIRTS, etc., to fernal cunning of it. That Jesuit who tutor ·d m · re:oh· to >Ill · to y m, and to n·nttJre 111) THE NATIONAL LAUNDRY, the Iring. [ (br ·say. thmwht himself .t (1<:ep life "ith .you, in the dd<'nC'e of your. lihert\.' 60 ~outh. William Street, DUBLIIt :ch ·m •r: but no R mish devices ('an esrap · the and nl) right ; and to my great ~atisfaction I s ·archinO' probe of Frcmde. fn his last \"ew b;w · not only f< mHl you ready ancl willing to Your Otd Suits CLEANED and PRESSED in Two Days CARRIAGE PAW ONE WAV. York l·r·tur:· he sa)S of Kin·· Jame~: ser\'t' m ·, but that your tourage has equalled • " H · as m ·dilating the restoration of' your z·al. I ltm.x ah ,ays bcen·for liberty of No. 4 of the Cumann na mBan Serie~ of Pamphlets is now on Sale. Pop..:ry in England, ami h · took up with conscieuct' ancl gain t itl\'albng an~ man's It deals with the Romantic History of· tol ratic n that h might jntroducc atholi ·s, prop ·rt} ; haYing still in my mimi the saying one of und r c'< \ ·r of il. into high offic ·s of state, of holy writ, c D > a· )OU would he dorw by ; and bribe th Prot·. tant Kom on form ish to for tha l is the law and !l1 proph ts. ' Ireland's Most Heroic Son upport him.:' (To be contiuued.) '. nd S( h' a

Dublin College of Modern Irish, Two necessary things for every Irish Volunteer. 20 KILDARE STREET. • WHAT TO FIBHT FOR. Practical Patriotism ! IRISH CLASSES HOW TO F18HT FOR IT. For Beginner and AdvanceJ Student. . 1 HE WORKERS' REPUBLIC, price ld. weekly, SP.I!:CIAL CJ.AS')KS IM LJTgRATURK. edited by James Connolly, and published at Liberty IRISH OUTFITTING HEADQUARTERS Hall, Dublin, teaches the sectmd. Session Opens SEPTEMBER 23rd, 1915. -FOR- THE RECONQUEST OF IRELAND, price 6d., by IRISH HCl ' lER\'. IRI 11 BRACES. Fee f'or Teachers - 5 /·· the same anthor, teaches the first. Fee f'or Non-Teachers, 10/-. Wboleeale rates for quantities. ORDER EARLY IRISH FLA 'NEL SHIR1S. IRISH IIATS A:-iD CAPS. 'vllabut! from THE RE ISTRAR, 20 1\ILO,Ul.E ST., D 'BLIN. HOMESPUN i'VJAMA SUITS. IRISH BOOTI, ETC., ETC. The Cumann na mBan Publication Com­ IRISH POPLIX NECKWEAR. PRICE LISTS FRE . COURT LAUNDRY mittee have now four pamphlets on their list. 68a Harcourt Street, DUBLIN. They are:- (Proprietor-H. E. WATSON). Telephone 1 4 No. 1-"THE SPANISH WAR.". T. O'LOUQHLI J HIQH..OLASS FAMILY WORK. By T. \VOLFE TONK. Winnera of' Silver Medal for Ji\1.ncy Ironing No. 2-'' WHY IRELAND IS POOR." Parliament Street, Dublin. Work, and DIPLOMA for Shirts and Collars at By ARTHUR GRIFFITH. bnchester Laundry Exhibition, 191 3· The only CALL OR WRITE TO , , Iri h Laundry succc ful at Manchester. No. 3-" DEAN SWIFT ON THE SITUATION." VANS COLL.OT P'ROM BRAY TO BALBRIGGAN. J J. WALSH Po tage Paid one way on Orders of 2/G and over. No. 4-" O' ROSSA." (c~!k), 26 BLESSINGTON ST. } By TERENCE :rvl'SWI!:ENY. DON'T FORGET 19 BERKELEY ST. DUtiLIN, , These are excellent publications for propagandist For Tobacco, Confectionery, News. work. You should order a few dozen and send them to LITTLE SHOP your friends at home and abroad. News Par<:el-" Nationality," park," "Republic, • FOP BIG VALUE IN "Volunteer," anrl "Hibernian," post free, 6d. \Veekly. PRICE ONE PENNY EACH. CHANDLERY, TOBACCOS, CIGARETTES, &c. Full range of Iri h Honks, Pamphlets and Badg s. IRISH QOOD8 A SPECIALITY. OFFICES - 12 D'OLIER STREET, DUBLIN. WEXFORD STREET, DUBLIN. HAVE YOU READ ''DEAN WIFT :: We are offering Marvellous Value in IRISH-MADE GOODS. EVERY on the Situation? '' buyer gets a BARGAIN because we sell IRISH GOODS ONLY If not, you should do so at once.

Splendid Variety of Articles and Materials to Select from. Order it from your Newsagent, or from the Publishing Office- 12 D'Oiier St.. DUBLIN. GLEESON & CO., PRICg ONE PENNY. Curnann na mBan Series of Pamphlets, No. 3· Draper Ta lor and Outft.'tters, Printed for the Proprietors at the Northgate Printing ' ' Works, Belfast, and published at the "INationality" O'Connell Street, DUBLIN. ffice, 12 D'Olier Street, Dublin.

Archives are subject to copyright and should not be copied or reproduced without the written permission of the Director of the National Archives THE

EDITED BY EOIN MAC NEILL.

Vol. 2. No. 44 (New Serl ). SATURDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1915. PRICE ONE PENNY.

into a.n "Imperial gat way, "-people J>arty and the constitutional Home Rule who ha.ve not the n e to see, or 1 e policy are now held in England, and a NOTES hon ty to ay, that Ir land ince the In a ut· of th pro pe ·t of that policy nion ha always b n gov rn d a an in th b nc of an ltnperial cri is. W l1np rial outpost, h avily guard d fron­ are told, the Dublin el ctor have been The igen of printing have made ti r fortress, and that ev ry p nny p nt told hy Th 0' Mahony, that England 1s it nee ary to int crupt the hi to y of for military and naval purpo s in Irelaud 1nore and 1nor favourabl to orne Rule. th Oro rna 1 n Conspiracy, the Dublin i a pa1·t of tl1e o t of ri h govern­ Why then do England permit Cabinet Ca tle Conspiracy that took its name and ment. Mini t r to rep at 'vith impunity th~ it victim from Cros maglen. R aders . * * * nioni t menac of viol nee and blood­ will t k note how th a tle pr par d Every day that pa s is bringing mor bed of all tim~s, at the pre ent critical the ground by a ucce ion of suggestive clear! to light th in en ate folly of im in h Imperial fortune ? paragraph in the ohedi nt Pr 'J.1hey English tatesm n in th ir attitud to- • • • may al o ha v remark d th t imilar 'ard Ireland. 'rhey may tt mpt by h mp ri li t sta ~ of paragraph having r f r n e to and bye to throw tb blan1 on r. R d­ or ou ht h kno the Iri h olunt r , G rman propaganda Inond, r. Dillon, and r. 0' onnor. mond and f r. T. 1). 0 onnor could not. d rman old ha recently h en Th t ·n not do. When Ir. R dmond worl mi cle i Ir d. oing the round of th ob di nt- aud 1n d on the poin of winning som - r q uir d r. R dmond to do b a 1 1 p p r . The gov rnm nt thing for Ir land by con titutional wa of th hand to :ff t co plete of Irel d continuity nd the old m thod , they round d on him mo t re onciliation b tw n Ir land and Eng­ method nev r row tale. They only shamefully and unfairly, and r nd r d land- p aling at th m time to th t gro li htly more arti tic and laborate. him, or made him believe th y had ren­ v ry pro pect hich ini t r in the Go­ • • • d r d him and hi cau powerl by v rnm n t are allow d to publicly thre ten The :ff ct of ta ation on national pro- In an of an anti- on titutional con- nd r pudiat . I do not d ny that, if p rity i a ubject that h r ceiv d piracy. They unnot plead th upport ngli h mi government to be with- omp tiv ly little att ntion n from or th acqui c nc that th y h ob­ drawn from r land and if r land re conotni t . o t of the writ r on tain d under thi kind of fraud and to b afegua d d again t an fre h Pitt conomi h v belong d w reat indus- dur ss. It is now becoming vident that and Ca tl r agh on pira to iolat the trial countri , and most of th ir writings Engli h ta men of both parti s hav tr ty, then reland in the pa ing year hav b en ritt n during in1 wh n sue· ed q in adding to the history of might becom friendly to a friendly and the countri ha e been ra pitHy incr a - Engli h tat man hip in Ir land one' w 11-di po d England. Tho s Davi in their urplus wealth and hav con e­ mor chapter that i in perf ct equ nc entertain d that hop seventy ars ago, quently been able w bear large incr a with th (·hapt r that have on b fore, knowing w 11 that e Iri h ar not a of t tion. Th effe t of tru tion on a and that th y h ve not reckles ly but vindictive and intractable p ople. But countr lik Ireland h not int r sted allou ly rampl d upon th ir oppor- it w nothing hort of political in anity th ono i t of England, ranee, G r­ tunity. They have treat d th Iri h to imagine hat thi state of thing could man , or the nited tat . ation and th lect d r pr sentativ of have b n a complished in a turn of the • * * Ir l d ith cont mpt and ignomy, and hand and on the tr ngth of an offer Before the ne ta es come forward. to this moment on of th Mini t r and which thos in po rare f e to repudiate Ireland wa the mo t e pensively and chief advi er of th overnm nt is per­ and hav r pudiated. Th prancing pro­ tefully o erned ountry in the world. mitted without prot st to r new his con uh and Imperiali t spouter and Thi ha b n hown by many writers thr at of violen e, ba ed on English up­ '' D f nd r of he Realm'' ho ha'Ve and politi ian , but ev n the full t nt port, a ain the fulfilment of the Hom be n 1 t loo upon Ir l nd inc the war of i h not h n hown. Th y ha v Rul poli y of r. R dmond and the late b gan hav not helped to ~ake the im­ on id red Ir land as a count y under Lib ral a bin t. h ·n Sir ~ d ;\'ard po ible po ible. ivil o ernment, and have directed at­ Car· on, Cabinet Hni ter and ttorn ·­ • • • tention to the enormou co t of civil go- General for England, can afely r affirm, Mr. Redmond, in his own position, v rnm n t. The ci il government of Ire- a he publicly and emphatically re­ claimed and ace pted for support of his 1 nd i largely a cloak ov r the real re- affirmed the other day, the U nioni t anti­ attitude hat was no more than the pru­ im , which i purely militari t. When con tit tiona! policy, and when he can dent reluctance of the ri h people to there i talk of what the G 1·mans might do this at the mo t critical tage of the allow th ir political affair to drift into do, e find c rtain people quick nough grav st Imperial cri i , e have at once a chao and confu ion. They have not to ecogni that Ireland could be turned m a ure of the r ard in which th Iri h been con iliated and on over by the

,

Archives are subject to copyright and should not be copied or reproduced without the written permission of the Director of the National Archives THE IRISH VOLUNTEER Saturday, October 9th, 1915. recent arts of English sta .tes~anship. For my part, if it were right for the • On the contrary, they have acquired new Irish Volunteer movement to mix itself grounds for in dig nation and distrust. up with political elections, and if I were Irish ValunteeP Two Parliamentary elections have taken to have any part in elections, my first Convention place rece ~ntly in the Irish capital. In care, in the present situation, would be one of these, one-third of the voters went to bring the meaning of the new and to the poll without enthusiasm for Mr. futur taxation home to the minds of The second Irish Volunteer Conven· Redmond's candidate. That was several every elector, Unionist as well as N a­ months ago. Since then, the situation tionalist. The gravity o£ the ta ation tion will be held In the Abbe~ Theatre, has continued to d velop. The second question for Ireland is receiving careful Dublin, on Sunday, 31st October, at 11 Dublin ele tion came o:ff last week. inattention from the Nationalist and a.m. All Corps desiring representation There were three candidates. Each of Unionist daily papers and from nearly all should see ~ that their ami iatio fees are them sought to be elected as a member of the politicians on both sides. Either fully paid up, and that the Ceneral Sec• the Irish Party. wo o£ them, Alder~ they are deliberately shirking the ques­ retary has received detailed reports on man Byrne and Alderman Farrell, had, tion or they are reckless of the conse· their stre·ngth, training, etc. Any affi­ however, taken a. prominent part in op­ quences or they are too ignorant to ap­ posing the Government's policy of repres­ preciate them. 'l,here will be a day of liated Corps Is at liberty to send forward sion towards the Irish Volunteers. The reckoning. motions which It Is desired to submit to third candidate, The O'Mahony, was once * * * the Con1vention, but only motions which a highly-esteemed member of Parnell's This man and that man in Ireland may are received by the Ceneral Secretary by be a.ble to bear more taxation without party. For some months pa t, he ha the 18th October will be In time to appear a()'ain become. prominent as a thorough going to the wall, but whereas taxation on1the · age~nda. The names of the repre­ adherent of Mr. Redmond and of the may be only ating into the surplus do trine that the war i Ireland's suprem wealth of EnO'land, it is drainino· the life­ se~ntatlves of the various Corps should int r st to which all her other interest blood of Ir land. Ireland a a common­ also be notified to Headquarters by the mu t be subordinated. Besid s thus wealth has no mar()'in to supply th se 18th October. making his programme absolutely at one enormou taxes. She has not sufficient The Secretaries of all Corps are partl· margin, under the present system of go­ • with Mr. Redmond's, The O'Mahony was cularly requested to attend to their affilia· abl command the support of the Dub­ vernm nt, for the development of her to tions and reports without delay, as It is lin Unionist Press, in which very Union­ own re ources. To increase Irish taxa~ most lmportan ~t that the Convet'ltlon ist voter in the constituency was exhorted tion means driving more and more Irish to vote for him. His poll thus repre­ people out of the country, it means less should be thoroughly represe·ntatlve of sented both Unionism and the ext nt of employm nt, less enterprise, more dis­ the I rlsh Volunteer movement. T ationalism that has be n fully, v n if coura.O'ement--in short, an aggravation only for the time, won over by Mr: As­ of all the economic evils that the Union quith's rooent statesmanship. Only a has inflicted on Ir land. At the end of Drumcollogher Recruiting minority of the electors went to the poll. the wa.r there will be unprecedentedly Campalgtl. The result is significant= Byrne, 2,298; low prices for Irish produce, and a la.rger The O'Mahony, 913; Farrell, 677. charge for the relief o£ the poor than ever before in our time. It will be a heavy * * * A very successful Iri h Volunteer re­ This is th fourth in National­ pri to pay for driving th real meaning cruiting meeting was held in the Irish jst con tituen ies since the Liberals of "Ireland a Province" into the heads Volunteer Hall, Drumcollogher, on Sun­ joined the anti-constitutional combina- . o£ our Provincialists o£ various parties. day night, eptember 26th. Th meet­ tion against Mr. Redmond. In one of Eo IN :MAc NEILL ing was representative of prominent the four Mr. Redmond's candidate was people both of the town and parish who defeated. In the s cond Mr. Redmond's for various I'easons, could not join' the' candidate was lect d, but polled only a Irish Volunteers, but pledged their sup­ tl ird of the voters. In the third and Correspondence Colurr~n- port by joining the Irish Volunteers' fourth it was found prudent to avoid pro­ Auxiliary. claiming the support of the Irish Party An tAthajr Tomas Bhall, C.C., ad­ or its lead rs for any of th candidates It is intended to devot this column to dre sed the meeting and explained the b fore the voting. The meaninO' of all answ ring uch military questions as our aims and obje ts of the Irish Volunte r tbi should b plain enough to Mr. Bir­ r aders may car . to put to us. If the and the gr at ne d t the pre ent day for' rell. The Irish ele tor ate is not going questions a.re sent in b fore ~ riday we an Irish Military Organisation to protect to facilitate the backsliders by breaking shall do our best to have the answer in the rights and liberti s of the people of the Irish Party into fragments. Even the following number of the paper. Ireland. He also dwelt on the N a Fianna the King's County electors, who rejected Questions must be written clearly and Eireann and Oumann na mBan, and Mr. Redmond's candidate, insist upon briefly on notepaper or foolscap, and exhorted the fathers to bring or send having their chosen representative ac­ signed with initials or short pseudonym. along their sons to the weekly drill held cepted by the Irish Party. But the In addition the writer's real name and in the hall very Thursday ni()'ht, and the electors have made it plain in every elec­ address mu t b n los d, but not for young ladi n of the pari h to om , al ng tion that they take no satisfaction in the publication. Question must be ad­ t pe ial la s to be held in th hall on plight to which the Irish Party has been dressed ~ i1·st id and Ambulance work. After redueed by the Liberal and Unionist "Correspondence Column, the meeting about twenty young men combination. The leading feature of the came forward and signed th enrolment recent Dublin election was the disgust-­ IRISH Voi,uNTEER Office, forms. ubsequ ntly a sp cial me ting to put it gently-of the elecrorate with 2 Daw on , treet." was fi ed for Thursday night to oro· ni e the policy of u ing the Imperial crisis n It may be cessary to note that thi tt branch of th Cumann na mBan. Th and the Defence of the Realm Act as column is not a drill book, and que tions hall then cho d with that fine old political factors for party purposes in whose answers can be found in the drill marching song, " oro re do bh atha a Ireland. book will be disregarded. bhaile.''

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all gia.n e o£ the p ople of Ir la d to the 'l'h Iri h Party and Pres h ve voiced The Irish Volunteers on the d tiny, t o£ a k' g or a thron , but tv th oppo ition to Con cription, and a. Field of Aughrim t h indep nden e of their ancient nation, ni ted Irish League Br nch ha d .. cl red to the indivi ibility of their heritag , and th Iri h people will '' r i t Con cription to the p 'ide f pla e of th ir ou try's t th utmost tr n1ity. ' 'fhc annual c w re in c 1np t Ballina 1 e, and honour and freedom a hove a d b yond all onv ntion of the a lie L ague ha b in 0' only four mil from the f 1nous le r on id ration £ th rio,ht of a pl dO' d that organi a ion ag in t Con- a d hi tori fi ld, w de id d to vi it and rul r or the ph m r l plend ur of a ripti n, and th lri1h Volunt •r at .... a1nin it. 'J.1he a pta in form d u u , throne. th ir fir t onv 1 ti la t ctob r d fi­ inf utry and c · li t oil foot, and out we TERE CE J. MAcS·wiNEY. nit ly t t d their intention to fight Co - w nt throuO'h th tow in the fin tyle scription. · that i b ·oming haTa t ri tic o£ the I£ ev r a p ople were of one opinion in Iri h olunte r on n1arch. Th di tance Ireland United against oppo ition to any proposal thi i a a e b t y n u and th villag o£ UO'hrim in point. Th abject failure of the Re- w· ·oon trav r, ed; and mounting· the Conscription O'i tra.tion Act in Ir land and the odu hill, we had at our f t th m morable of the Iri h farm labourers from England battl -g-round which now for a mom nt ra.th r than r gist r, ar furth r pro hold u all in il nt but lo att ntion. 41 ork tr t, Dublin, The mos'i Mr. A quith a k d of Ireland One pot ov r hadow all others in in­ 28th September, 19 5. i th "£r e gift £ a fr e peopl . ' I t r t,-this spot · her , wh re t. Ruth 'Ihe camparative silence maintain d of th freely- pr ed opinion of the oun­ ell in th hour of vi ·tory, and di aster lat on the question of Conscription by h·y to b ignor d at th pr nt time, overtook th ri h :ration, econd only to the Engli h Pr mig'ht l ad one to be­ 'P ially by a Gov rnme t whi h d - liev that the Con criptioni t had taken t h a t of i ·al . ·lar i tn· king war in d f n · of 'rh f lin with wlli ·h w looked advauta ,. of th introduction of th Ina U a tional' ti ? around u w r f mined d I' gr t and Budg t to r tir from an impos ible posi­ It Ill' y be a k d i Ireland to hav \ a hov ,- at 1 a 't so it wa with 1ne,- h tion. 'l'hi i not the c· e. At this very separat ' de£ n •e law from the I' t of th r •nT ·t ouly faint, o mu<'h wa it no mome·nt the matte is being decided in I"' nit d riuo·dom. Ul' 1' •ply i ' th· t •tdJnteJ'o·ed in that de •p c nfid nee w l all secret. 'l'h London "'l'ime ' in it IT lund ha alway · had a parat d f n e felt for th fu ur ; for th tronge t ·eel- i u' of h 24th in t., stated that th law. Th t w for the . t bli hn1 nt of jllg' animating- 1 now wa a tr n · n ·upp rt 1' of nati nal rvice were deli- Y olunte rs and, later on, of ~ lTitorial , d , p ·ul ta tion too de p in de d to alto- b 1ately r frai ing from rai ing the que - · wa never xtended to Ireland. Even' the n· •th 'l' und r taud and with it hop tiou iu publi · a it wa at pr sent being r ent Regi tration t wa appli d o uot vi ionary ~ · · pt a. the proph t giv • consider d by the Cabinet. The · nti- lr lund in a different manner from Eno·­ vi -iou, clear and d finit a th un, and 'on -riptioni ts in En ·land, w il decla ·­ land. rel nd wi h in thi ma ter all-Ina t rin a th lig-ht £ eav n. inO' th y would n v r submit to Lord . m u t b re p ct d. R u ia ha re pt ·t cl =\VI y · t1 r >'I' 'aint? " i o n 1 tho • of I! inland and ha not put in force no for th he, t, aft ·r all r' said I, half ·lev • ·ly manoeuv d i11to tating· th y , h r con Tiption law in that counhy. JUU ino· to mY ·(·l . "Whv ?" aid an would submit to Con c1·iption only if the ur ca e i that no on1pul ion 1nu t a:toni h d ·onnncl ·ho ovcrl ard m ; Ca inet and Lord Kitchen r decid d it b uppli d to I1eland. It r t with th anti again qui('] - 1~· in hi surpri , n t was n essa ·y. '1 he o bviou policy of Iri h p opl to e that no u h obuo ~iou waiting for the an ·w r, ((why?" De- the Uon criptioni t' had be n, the1·efoie, m a ur i put in fore . It is im1naterial .. u, with the urance that an endur- to low down the Pre s agitation and whether the pr posal is des -ribed a in victory wa now at ha d, I could even work at the Cabin t secretly. (( nat' 1ona l serviCe, . '' '' compul sory train- . e the compe~sating feature in that d - It would considerably help the Cabinet ing," " militia. ballot," "quo to," Ol' plain feat, happily shrouded in the past. I£ in its decision i£ the Irish people availed conscription. Whatever its description Ireland had never recovered from the of every opportunity to make it clear that and whether applied to the whole people disa ter, the disaster would indeed have they will not have conscription. Our or merely beginning with certain classes b n unqualified; but with our manhood view is that only a free,Irish Parliament or ections, it mu t have our unquali:fisd in arm and our redemption at hand, this is competent to settle this question for opposition. That the Irish people have thought came home to m th, t a victory Ireland. Ireland has lost too heavily the power to pr v nt it i admitt d even then might have established a decadent within the past century in population to by the London "Times," which r cently Jine on our Il'i h throne. Let the orth, allow the small balance remaining to be stated:- or rath r a part of the T orth, shout a jt forced to the slaughter-fields of the Con­ will for William, Ireland will raise no tinent. Why should an attempt be "If the whole of N atio ali t Ire­ rivul hout o£ James. Ireland, indeed, made to levy a blood-tribute on th Irish land were organi ed in oppo ition to cun only say bitter things of the degen~ p ople when there are thr e-quart rs of a military service, It WCHJid obviously rat who ran awa.y from the Boyne, leav­ million men of enlisting age in London not be worth while carrying out the ing his unb aten army to follow and alone? ationalists of all sections, no campaign to en.force lt." cur e him. matter what views they hold on the ques­ That at 1 a t wa my thought a we tion of Voluntary nli tm nt, are united ati nali t Ireland mu t, therefore, tood. on th hill overlooking the battle­ in th ir oppo ition to Con cription. The organi e, and organise at once, in opposi­ gr und, and dwelt on the incid nts o£ Dublin anti-Con cription Committee has tion to Con oription. It i our int ntion that fight that went o near to being a h ld a large public meeting in opposition to giv the citiz ns of Dublin an oppor­

1na hin rr victory for Ireland. nd as j s to Conscription. A confer nee recently tunity hortly to r -affirm th ir declara­ our way ·hen chall nged in a half­ held in the City all, Dublin, at which tjons on th subj ct. We should b glad thought, I wa now a ured it was for the Nationalists of all sections wer r pre­ to make the protest an All-Ireland one. best. For now we are aLout to establi h s n ted, declared :-H We will not have a tionali of all shade of opinion th ri hts of Ir land on no unstabl basis, Conscription/' and this resolution has who feel on this subject as re do are ancl in he lin of no false tradifon, but been adopted by such prominent public a k d to communicate with us at above ol ly by the integrity of Irish minds ana bodi a the Dublin, Limerick, and Kil-· add1 s. i he valour of Irish arms, through the kenny Corporationsj atid many others. THE A rx-Co scRifTtoN CoMMITTEE.

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4 THE IRISH VOLUNTEER

GAlBL ! Rem mb r an t>utn "'eat:san. Uo !>iot.c.r t.&n-cr.&rc.c. fri ·l1 Ir land r wh n :you fltl s~n .&1t1eam .(.\ nueal'n.<.\'0 dl' ruu n.A citte tel r nil Cll nnC.<.\f..(.\11) ftn. wa.ut w or ~ c:ondhand :S<'n .c.on Cdfi4\1f' 6'n :sCorh.<.\tl'le Etl6ta. Typ writ rs, . Duplic:ato~·H, "'o Fl'iot 'Oe.6.E;-tud1'tt1f5i .<.\l' stu4\tfe.6cc 't ll('il., 'tenc1l Ink, lhh­ n.c. ho1b11e 1 n-.&n:;eanna1fi e~sramla 1 :sConn­ cosnu1Ste.6n. n-6 :sunn 1! hons, Carhon , Papers, tc. Any make of ~r ·pewri te · c.c.et1t> Cottcdtf;e, Ce.c.t<.\t'Lac, Ctlle 'Oat'~, b'tetut~ n"'c l'.<.\tn :s.&fia'O tetr "'" metu H paired. .(\t" Cl1.c.t, n.c. :S Atlttm e, a:sul' ..(.\n Can..atn. .<.\'0Ubdt11t:: an Com.<.\tl'Le Sn6td .6.tl creacc­ THE FOLEY TYPEWRITER TRADING CO., • tilatn fO 1 'OCuOit) tld nsunn4\i .<.\:SUf b'f'et'OI11 Reis Chambers, DUBLIN. 'el phone 117Y. UunpOf1C tl.(.\ remne, 1 .(\t CL1at, 29 m. f65-, 1915. ror so 11<.\tt>. 1r re.c.l'l' uutnn nett .<.\1f'eac 1 n-am. nr t>e...\nf-4\'6 re cu1r -4\n uo11ar uo ['riL\.1 'L.\'liO ~.] u una'O t:.<.\1' et r n~ ro:St-6. 'C.& .61 r m .65 ""l'h 1el1t.ral E. <' ·utiv of the Iri h 5.6e'Oe.c.t<.\1!> dno1r.. 1r matt -oo f.6.0tl'U1S­ GIVEN AWAY FREE Yolunt r · 1u t at H cac1quart rs on W ·d- ea'Oal' 14\'0. ni te15f1'0 f1d'O U..it.& 'O.d ' 11<'. clay eY 'lli11g, 2Dth SPpt 1nh r, ~I . tl'O 01!1 1d'O, .Of,Ur '061f'Cfedf\ fUll. fUt b.6tn­ GET ONE WHILE • . Rcau l\la ·D Imott in i.h chai1·. fe.At' uior> '0.6. n-atm'Oeom la'O. 'C'-'tmiu 4\l' THE OFFER . LASTS. Repm t d )ali1 g · wi h Urg·ani a.tion, fA.\'0 d11 dOn a15ne 1nd t-4\01n fl n. ni m6l' t:>e1t atl'e.6c. biot> .<.\ sunn.A 1 brot"'c .05 -THE- 'l'raiuiug, Ar1ning, and li inan ·c w r • ub­ miiiP for llllcl r order from lh<• pt op r autlwritie ,' 111 GRAFTON ST. 39 MARY ST. the MUi •}, pi11g of i1wi1 rifl •s, au.! th: t paracli11g- more l'r'qu ·nil.,. with arn1· than 85 TALBOT ST. 46 HARRINGTON ST. it i. · th) rlut,y of a"\ olnut '1' in fiunl r 'Ol'i wu~ thP <·a.< ~on1e month. a()'o, mns noi to lo t' his lifP rnther ih:1t1 snffer hiu1 ·elf be allo\n•cl io inclu<· • any ·m· 1 ·~su ss ju to h diRarm 'd. ih' ·tudocly of oul' riflPs. Haih r th :All 1i orary <·mnmuniC'ation. for ih · 1 H<.•pun1::w~c t>. Ceauaom a_o 29~'0 Uo t1tnne.6'0 "' L.&n uea5-o1btte u. Uom­ than u.ff r him. lf to b di ann d. o t.& 'Oe'o mi ro, a:sur Se.&n mac '01.6'f1m.o'Oa n.ot5, .c.n 26<.\'0 LJ. ue'n rhi ro uo ca1tea'O . more ne d be ·aid on the ubj ct at th 1oa tatao1ttt.eac of't"'. Uo r>i m6f'-rtu61Sed'O .c.s fto.nnatl) cj sC1nn­ IDOlllCllt. 'Qo t.e1se4\'0 cuf'ram cud114\f:Sl)~La a~ rejld1S 1 n1mr C6f\tat'O; compL.ACcd. .4.\nn 6 A ~ u. DAY' WoRK. 0f1'0Ut5te, 01teati'ma, .6ttm.&t.a, .611151'0 a:sur lo~ :sC.6ttm.A1n, 6 ~61t 'O~tn:s 1 n, o Ror ri11c un1n, 6 nfe.6f\OA, 6 E6tt.A1'0, .C.:SUf Cf'i COm· Volunt r bu y in < hno t •v ry county 1 'OaCo11) na 11.0.11m~l.6, uo f\1ooea'O t:a:S- pt~~ca o 1n1r C6t'td.1'0 rem ; c11i c~au :so in Ireland. At Enni earthy th • We~ ford atf\C uo'n :E;-&1)<.\'0 at;. na f~1one te1t ..(.\ lion, d!)Uf d nfUf'ril6t1 df1mt~. 1Jo llrigad • '·a r vi w d • nd addr s d hy 'OO coo:sr>.J.tt. rt.&n, a:sur auut>dtf'C an Cotil­ t.dn.<.\11' P.6.'0ft.<.\1C m.(.\c Pl~l\dlf teo 's.& mot4\'0 Connnanrh nt P. II. I> ar At 13ray a ..(.\1f'le .65Uf 1.<.\'0 at' .<.\On 4\tsne 4\n ni'O asur 's~ nsl'iorat>. C11u1nn1usau 'Oo n11 very uc R ful rally, pr 1noted by lo al .d'OU!>f\a'Oaf\ ce.dna, .1. SO :SC..(.\ltflU SdC mb11i Cu.6L~nn an t.a ceduna, 'Oo t.an.d11' U-6 work r a ·ting in ujunction with the ost.&c ..(.\ cu1-o .6l'm 'Oo cor.dmc .(.\sur so R<'ta1tle .c. sur c~o1r1:S n.Ac e letr an rLu.ds, Dire 't r of R W<.t addr s d by nrutL re 'Oe uuat.s.c.r "'l' O:sL.&c a ne..(.\ta "Oo .65t1r uo cu111e.<1"6 comptdcc .At' bun. '0.&1t, c·uiting, ommaudaut The and oth r , catt.t.earilamc, m.&'r 5-&t>.c:O ~ rut c~1Ltre~r com <1111le 'OO !>i 1 Sf\.&1'0-061te Uu1n Ueal· 'Rahilly what pro­ re a suno-6. :Sdn, uo tttt.Al.t. PI.Af'ar beart-61 4\nn 6'n and r ult din th formuti n f tu:s ..(.\n Ce.<.\on C.c.ta tJ.d'Ot1atc m.6c lJ1.6'f1.C.tf :sComatttle Sn6t.6, .osur t61n1s ce.6cC.61f1l Ini to b a good Company. t Dun­ cuoocar at' ttua1se..(.\u reav (> sCtnnr~.c.t­ .c.nn 6 'Otto1C~a'O .&t-6, 6 .&t l-'tf'"Ot.o, 6 ~un dalk a conf rene of V lunt r fron1 atE; '0. 'Oorhn.6tS ; tu:s an lear-Ceann C.6t.c. lett', 6 Stt.&tnr1~ Oetlt1(1, O'n mbOt.dl' burne, Drogh da, ArdPe-, Dunle r, rangcbc} .. Se.&n mac :Stobum cunncar .011 co1ti1tton6t. a:sur O'n cStt.&1'0-04\1te f~tn. .¢.ettl'Oe.6ct: lPw nolH] hoy niHl Dundall~ a t nd d te..(.\1\ l'>t'i Cu t.<.\on ; a:sur tu:s an le.<.\r­ 'Oo ni .65 an :sCe-4\tf'¢.ti1.6'0 Cat 1 mb4\1le .dtd by \ i<'e-Con1ma1Hl·n1t B }a 1 y on h half Ce..(.\nn C.dt.d P1.<.\11.C.f b~.<.\fldi cunnt:.<.\f al' Ct1.At, 'Oo Lan.<.\t11 eo1n m.6c ne1t.t. t.e1r 4\n of H adquartPr to k cff \ctiv t p for 'OA1l. mu1nnc1l'e tusf>At'O 1 Stt.dt'O·l:>A1t.e bpob~t. '5.& nsf'fOf-6"6. F.&s.dnn .c.n m61'0 the org·ani ation of the movement on a.

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T E IRISH VOLUr4TEER 5 Saturday, October 9th, 1915.

ouud ba i thr ughout County Louth. I t blin, Jrofessor Eoin Mar ill ad- A MILITARY CAUSERIE dr d an Ae ·idhea · held und ·l' the au pi ·e of the ~ ourth llattalion. We k­ THINKINC MILITARILY. eud op ratio ' and route n1arch • ar' · - · cratic way, ,arc incl~ned to re~~nt the 1 1 p Tt d from variou quart r , orth and rl he adverb ha a finnicl y sound, and salut . '1 ha i be ·a.u .e w misunde!·­ it ,·auld ta.ke an Engli hman's tonO'ue t sta.nd it, i1nao·ining ~ to be a sign o£ outh. pronounce th sue •e ion o£ neutral iuferiori y on the part o£ the private. 1IIE WB.-FORD R .\LT,Y. VO"'IY ] without getting ti d up. . But, \. u maHer o£ ·a ·t it i a. igu of The Wexford Ihig-acl lJal·aded in • u- after a arefu] diag'J o i of Ireland s pre- equality. Offi. .. and privat . r co nise . ·or thy in larger nun1b r than on a.uy .ent coulition, w lmvc plac d it . there ea ·h oth r a 1nemh r of one sm·vice and th private alut th offi r, and' the pr •viou 0 ca ion iu ·e what is incor- as the main ingr dient of ou · p1·c rip­ r ·tly know as the split. A. Co,y. of th iion. What 'v Volunt r should long junior offi · r ·sah1t hi enior, a rooog­ ~ nui, cor thy 13a ttnlion, a stalwar nd ago have nuHlc ITcland clo was to think ni iug hi leaue1: (not l1is rna ter). It's w '11-arniCcl body of n1 ~11, had th lon()'est 1nili a1·.ily. Ireland had b co1ne or b a kind of vote of ·onfid n{' . mu t r-roll; the two other local Com- 1nacle a nation of civ.i.~:ian,, and wa, at · * * * o Y, wl1at h ppens when a olunte r pani al• ma 1 a good ho v. The :Ferns the point of death from iuaniti n when 1neets his offi · T Occasionally · the · n picu u for its 1nartness ihe Volunteer ca1n into existen e. The P C o . was ·o Volunt er salui s, but o;nly occa ion.ally. and the completene of its arming. spark of militaJ'ism wa J indled, bur t U ually th .two nod to ach other. 11iere Gor y had a small, but earnest, contin- into a bright flame of jingoism, ap­ is generally the on idea behind g nt. Th W ·ford Battalion ent the parently con umed all the available fuel, pir~torial the Yolunt r' . h ad ·~ "i · houldn't. give W xford r_r own and the Rathangan Cor - a1 d died dowu into a dull red O'low. pani ; and h ew lo , Battalion wa ThaJJk heaven it didn't go out, for th away my £ 11 w-consllirator to th G~man l'onucl the co ·u r." Or perhaps.. th l'e is · pres nted hy the New Ito and Dally- u ::.d or it i Leginuin o· to he felt on . 1 the democratic r pl.lg·na.nce ju t men­ num. G uu ine training i going mt more aud the l)re ent po itiou s en1s to 1 tioned. hop haY said enouO.h throughout the Hrigacl" ~ r a, and overy be this: that u 1nall and nthu. ia tie w ,11 I man has a w apou. \tn

I .

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Ht tRI$H VOLUNTEER Saturday, October 9th, 1915.

. deliberateness of which he wa capable . With the WexfoPd They must never giv up their a1·ms. Lectuttes for Section Brigade Their arms were the guarantee of their CommandePs citizenship and the symbol of th ir man­ ho d. uu s '. huo·e u sembly of the gen l'al publ' had also gathered. A consid rable ('l'owd occu­ pied the ere t of the hill, whence a fine SECTION OF COMPANY A, 4th BATTALION-WINNERS OF COMPETITION AT view of the ·whole movement was obtain­ ST. ENDA'S A ERI DH EACHT. able. Commandant Pearse said that he con­ gratulated the men before him on bear­ that they must follow a gent ine a,nd suit. away with the idea that you can resign ing the most honourable name that could able course of training. The essentials your command. You can't. You are in our day be borne by a body of Irish­ of Volunteer efficiency were discipline, only an N.C.O., and can't do anything so men,-the name of Irish Volunteers. The ma.rksmanship, and good scouting. fashionable as resign-that's for officet·s. . Irish Volunteers organised, trained, and Failure in any of these might prove a Later on when you become an officer you armed to secure and safeguard the rights fatal failure. can resign if you feel inclined. and liberties ·common to all the people· of The place of every W ex£ordman who But although you're not an officer, the Ireland. That meant not some o£ the was not either purchased or· intimidated officers would be in a pretty poor way with­ l'ights of Ireland, but all the rights; and was with the Irish Volunteers. The out you and the others in your rank. In it meant not the rights of a section of Volunteers were surely the men in the fact it's the Section Commanders who are Ireland, but the rights of all Ireland. In danger gap. Was it not Wexford's supposed to keep the Volunteers together. other words, . it meant Irish freedom. tradition to be in the Bearna Bhoaghail? A lot of them are by no means bad, but Who would say that freedom was not After the addres the Brigade marched all of them could be a bit better. Each their tight? They were not a new poli­ back to Enniscorthy, paraded the prin­ one of you has sixteen men und r hi tical party, . and did not follow a new cipal streets, and dismiss d in the Market chaxge; he hn a.b olute power over them standard raised by a new generation. Square, having saluted the '98 Monu­ and should do all he can to justify the' They followed the standard under which ment. amount of responsibility entrusted to all the generations of Ireland had gone Wexford is sound. him. into battle. They sought no more than You should first of all get your men to their fathers had sought; and they would 11ave confi?e~ce in you. On way to accept no less. AN CUMANN COSANTA manage th1s 1s to get quite familiar with The men before him were for the most lnaurea Irish Volunteers their circumstances-to know what ar pnrt armed. He understood that those . against Vlctlmlsatlon by their callings in civil life, where the; who aid not parade with arms had arms their Employers. • • Write for particulars to the Secretary, work, where they live, their r cord in the at home. There was one thing he would I.V. Headquarters./ ~ Dawson Street, Volunteers, any pecial bran h for which say to them with all the earnestness and Duobn-. _ they seem fitted in your opinion, and also

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Saturda.y, October 9th, 1915. THE IRISH VOLUNTEER 7 any special branch they profess a liking VOLUNTEERS Miss E. lVIacllugh for themselves. You should know to a u 63 ,, certainty where you can "put your Get Your New Overcoat from Talbot Street, DUBLIN. hand" on any one of them when you Lucania, Pierce, Swift, Rudge, B.S.A. New want him, and make· them all realise that L.DOYLE Bicycles. Cash. Easy Payments. you'll not hesitate to requisition them Repairs. Accessories. Second-hand Bicycles 2 TALBOT ST., DUBLIN from 15/-. Prams and Gramophones Repaired. when need ~rises. . ' Then you should make yourself fully acquainted with the equipment of your SPLENDID SELECTION OF CO:NBCR.IPTION I know absolutely nothing about it, but I men. re they all armed ? If not; see RELIABLE IRISH MATERIALS A DO know that I can give best value in that such of them as are not get the best Ireland in Razors. Try my -Special 2 j6 REASONABLE PRICES. Razor. Money returned if not satisfied. arms they can at the first possible mo­ , · Old ~azors Ground and Set, 4d. ment. See also that they have enough ~--M'QUILLAN, 35-36 CAPEL ST. ammunition for their immediate needs. Qifles. Guns. Qepairs. If there is anything else in the matter of equipment or anything like tha.t which All kinds .22 Ammunition. the·y are anxious about, it is your duty to All Boards, Targets. WAK[>If»E BANDS. make things easy for them. You can Cleaning Rods, Pull Throughs, Oils, and all Rifle Sundries. exact obedience from them-true enough; VOLUNTE~RS we. ask your support when startmg Bagp1pe or other Bands. , but can you feel as if you deserved that CATALOGUES ON APPLICATION. We are actual makers in Ireland, and obedience so long as you're not doing , can give you better and cheaper In­ struments than those who are merely ev rything you can to help them out? L. KEEOAN, grle ~:keP Importers. Indeed, the more ready you are to give Best Uilean Bagpipes always in stock. 3 INN'S QUAY, DUBLIN. Chanter, Bag, and Bellows, 751. net. them a helping ha.nrl, the easier you'll Telephone 2574. find it to make them obey you. Wholesale Agent for all publications by Carl Hardebeck. Write- for lists. I£ you are thorou hly familiar with the circumstances and characters of your The Outdoor Watch sixteen men-and sixteen men isn't the On the playing field, by the riverside, D .. McCULLOUGH hei! of a number-you can be of untold out walking, hunting, riding, or MUSICAL WAREHOUSE, value to your capta.in. It's much easier driving, the ideal time-piece, because it for you to know your sixteen than for is so asy to see, and .so readily adapt­ 8 HOWARD STREET, BELFAST. able, is the Wristlet Watch. There are him to know his hundred. Suppose he many worthless Wristlet Watches. Get wants a dependable man for some particu­ a reliable one. .We ha.ve them in gold, lar piece of work, whether in the field or silver, and oxydised cases, from 18/6. otherwise, he will most likely ask you -L~ whether you know a suitable man. Th n r- won't it be handy if you can say off­ hand: "Take so-and-so, he'll know what to do," than to run round trying to get WATERPROOF COVERS, SACKS, someone to volunteer? Then, again, if you know your men For Sale or Hire on Best Tei"ms. you'll be able to work them up; help this TENT COVERINC, etc. IRISH GOODS A SPEQIALITY, one to make better scoring at the target; COLEMAN'S, let the other one attend some special 25, 28, 27 CHANCERY STREE r Wexford St., :Qublin. lecture he wants in something he's keen (Back of Four Courts), DUBLIN. • on-only ma.ke sure he's not just going to .. meet his girl. By helping your fellows DUBLIN COLLEGE OF MODERN Lucania... Cycles alonO' this way you'll raise the standard IRISH ·an round. 20 KILDAltE S1,REET. ARE MADE IN IRELAND. See that your men are smart and sol- Best Terms (Cash only) from . dierly· it's to be presumed you are your- IRISH ClasseS. Uorhn~tt U4\. bu~catta, self or' you'd never ha.ve got your stnpes.. Session Opens Sltptember 23rd. 1 mu15 nu ~:o~'O. Have they their haversacks and water­ bottles hung right? Are their uniforms Fee for Teachers • • ~I· ' . and stuff tidy and clea.n ? In short, is Fee for Non~-Teachers • • 10/· your section the smartest in the com­ KEEP OUT THE FOREIGNER. pany. I£ not, why isn't it? If you do Syllabus from Registrar, 20 Kildare Street"'. Everything manufactured from Home Grown Material· at • • make it the smartest, the man who had Your chance· to secure one of my famous the smartest before that won't get jealous Cycles, all prices reduced. Repairs to Cycles, -he'll only try and get ahead of you Motors, Small Cars, eto., at D. T. O'Sullivan's Cycle and Motor Cycle Garage, Cook Street, fAlLON'S.. Equipment factorg aO'ain. Don't let him. Cork. ·s Ma,ry Street, DUBLIN.

Grey Green Irish Uniforms having buttons with 1914 Irish Harp, t•;e. 1782 The Voluntee:r Boots. Officers' Brown Belts, 11/8; Imitation Sam Brown Belts, 5/8. Pistol Holsters (new), 2/3 each. Specially designed for marching, and manufac­ Sergeant's Stripes, td. and ,d. each. TO tured in my own factory by Irish Trade Union Five Pocket Leather Bandoliers, •;11. Belts and Harp Buckles, 1/8, 1/10, 3/3. 13/6 MEASURE Labour. Post Orders promptly attended to. Puttees, t/3, 2/11, and 3/8. Haversacks, 1/., 1 ;e, and 1/·· Caps, t;-, 3/·, and 3/8. JOHN MALONE, NORTH ·KING STREET, DUBLIN Frogs, 11 d. Ri:fte Slings, 1 /8.

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• ' - - .. ~ .. ,. - THE IRISH VO UNTEER aturday, October 9th, 1915. •

. ' . . . Irelan and the ar . . . . Read that you may know. customer that lmsineRs 1. proceeding Life of n ossa a~ usual, that all ord rs for . . . D n wift on· the Situation. · Dani 1 O'Connell and Sinn F in ( 'Conn ll', PIANOS, PIPES, :: :: Alternative). MUSIC, and TUNINGS Daniel O'Connell and ~ inn in (How Ireland shall have the same car ful and prompt i Plunder d). att ntion a. formerly. Ascendancv vVhil You "\Vait. (N wman.) What Emmet feans in 19Hl. ( ewman.) Manufactured by Shall Ireland b · Divid d? · · D. McCULLOUGH Why Ireland is Poor. 8 HOWARD STREET, Row th ar Came. TWI BROS., S.C.R., Dublin Th Spanish War. (Wolfe Tone.) BELFAS I 'Vhen · the Government Puhli he, clition. Telephone 3831. · - (Griffith-.) ~ Irish Volunteers should support Persia, Finland, and th Rmudan Alliance. CITY C UB CICARET ES 1 10 for 3d. neech from the Doclr. ( ke:ffingt011.) TRY THEM. JAMES LENNON Belghlm nnd the ~ crap or P::~per. Ulster's Leading Nationalist Booksellet Seer t Hi. tory of th Irish ' ohmt rs. P. Convvay & Co. and Newsagent. (O'Rahill:.) TOBACCO I I T8, Castle Street and Chape1l Lane, · PRICE ONE PENNY. By Post, 1id. 31 Exchequer St e t and 10a Aungier Do?.en TJots PosT FRE'E. St eet. BELFAST. 48 COPI S SENT POST FREE FOR 3/•. ~ . tahlish d 1 94. Everyone hould read ''The Jail Journal,'' "New Ireland," '' pe che from the Dock," "VIVE VIVIANI"I-Famons h'aflf't clenl­ 1/- each; by post, j2. ing· "·itJ1 th .recPnt Tri. h d<'pnt?~tion to All a tiona l Puhli ations tacked. ~ranee, also "'T'he Felon-sett<'l'," "Thf' J:OHN ALY'S Pra~· r Book. < nd Obj ~t, of Devotion at lowest Gl'eat Del11sion." "B lgian StA ]{pool ," .. pnC' s. and "E.·it Home Rule." BAKERIES, . .. VISITORS TO BELFAST SHOULD INSPECT 1 ;- per 100 copies. 26 'WILLIAM STREET OUR STOCK. War Hum·our and Other · Atrocities! AND Post Free, 6d. SARSFIELD STREET, & SON LIME ICK. W. CHASE 17 Uppe.r Ormon Quay, DUBLIN. Toba()onnist, Stationer ' Fancy Goods, Chandler All Classes of Feeding Stuffs Stocked. AND TREASON ' It is tr(\ason fo~· JrishmC'n to General Hardware lmv the Fot·eirn Arti('le and Stores, ======· CAELS-Wh rc · to g' i your News, ---,-~- · n glP!'t Ti·i. h · It clu tri .. · 115 Parnell t. Sta ionery, Cigarettes, n r. l i ane · : LOUCHLIN'S-IRI H ·oUTFITTI C DUBLI~ · is hettf'r than the Foreign Rhit'tf':., Hosiery, Goods, etc., etc. Glov ~. nr c s, ats, Caps, Root!'~. etc., f't('. LL IR . . Fair ric s. • IRISH OUTFiTTING ·HEA QUARTER~. ao atn DO YOU FEEL WEAK, DEPRESSED, or ~ 19 PariJament Street, DUBLIN. ~ 35 LOWER DORSET STREET. RUN DOWN? AHILL'S AROMATIC QU l~TNE A D ffiO TO J will tone you up, t ad~· •our nerves, improv your appetite, 1ol-E cot tl~ muril.6.n Ring nrich your blood. For summer lassitudE=, for TELEPHONE 222. Neuralgia, try a bottle 1 . alHl 2s. i postag 4d. t n.,n~ 6 ·sct;l~n~·c Irish College i\Iad only hy ARTHUR J. AHJLL The 1915 ational Chemj t, 2A Lower Dar t Street, Dublin. If you ·want to 1 arn Iri. h- ' If you want to g t a thorongli ·-grip of-the JO • If you want Dry Feet and Perfect Fit ... Langung ii1 the short st po . . ihl time- - TltY- If you 'want a happy,' hec lth~ holiday S~ulptor LA E BOOTMAKER RING is YoUP Place. . . '~----~~~== 115 Emmet Road, lnch~core, . 'r~A } HEH~ _ VJi~BY SPI1jCIAJJ ~G STKttl, C K. 22 Stoneyb tter and 23 Bishop Street. Ring .J.s"'..tlie _bo t _plac attentio1i i ~ is given to for Teacher . Its conversation. Beginn rs ) REPAIRS Neatly Executed at MODERATE Teaching m thods are . lrav !' a. special tuto · CHARGES . renowned. always witl1 th m. MONUMENTS, HEADSTONES, E c. O.M !\IODATION-:-· . ..., J. J. WALSH, T.C. I • ·" Everything tha~ is n t I ~ish tnust be (OF ORR), Foreign1." l egs to intimat to his num rou Volunteer friend. that h has op n d a magnificent Toba ·co, ho olate, weet , and News GLEESON &.co. IRI~~r~oos Emporium in Dublin at the corner of Blessing­ Irish Volun ~teer Tailors and Drapers, ton and B rkel y treets. Irish goods a We are an exclusively: ''\.JRISJ:I FIRM" speciality. . .employing only'.IRJ H L:ABOl:JR. 11. UPPER Q'CONNELL ST., DUBLI • ~ All garmentR made to order iu our own· work­ VOLUNTEERS! Send your Shirts, Collars, &c. shop . EXTENSIVE STOCK' to 1? lect from, bought tor CASH from-bet IR1SH MANUFAC· CO T 4AUND Y, TO THE TURERS. 5Sa HARCOURT STREET, DUBLIN. NATIONAL LAUNDRY, ( P roprletor, H. c. watson). ·· -· - SUITS, 4.2s .to 84s .. Telephon , 184 . 60 South W iII iam Street, DUB L I N. High-class Family Work. ~ u ITs • ·n U. · n~on.1: . OLEA ED and ~~~::;~~~u~~-· C sH ··· TA.Il~~RI~G CO. \Y1t{iwrs of Silv i· : M dal for Fane. Ironing PRE SED IN rrwo DAY . (John ligan, .Manag r), · . ''ark, and Diploma foi· • hirts and Collar. t t . hmch Ht r Laul!drv E. hihition, 1913. 4' CAPEL STRE E;r, .llUBL.N:y - ~ .- 1rish Mad Shirts, Caps, Poplin Ties, Post :patd one way ,~ on orders of 2/6. , and .-·s·o :~.Upper. · George's Street; Kingstown. I • For Collars and Shirts only .. Collars, Hosiery, etc. ' ! I' ~ . ' • ' r \~ t ,. '- .. ~ THE BEST VALUE FOR CASH IN LIMERICK.

.' ' •' USE, . . p-&'OR<\15 f> h-.o.ttrht1tt&1n, ...... I • .: ,• • Draper, 10 WILLIAM STREET, LIMERICK. "Gree Cross s. '' Printed for tllo Propri tor at Mahon's Printing 7 " orks Duhli11, and publi h d at the Volunteer MADE IN IRELAND. H adquarters, 2 Dawson -.=tr et, Dublin.

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