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SATURDAY, MAY 2, 1908.
ian Movement. After his release he he had stIven three encores, so desettled in New York, and edited the lighted were they with his beautiful "Celtic Weekly" from 1872 to 1874, singing. Ile did,"not however, exert He died in New York on January his voice to its glorious upper regis31st, 1889, aged 12, leaving a wid- ter, and this was a ow, Mary Cooney (a native of Clon- to many who have andisappointment idea of his inel, and a Poetess), and one child wonderful range, his vocalism It was a notable coincidence that the was, nevertheless a but rare artistde treat 'night selected for the ball exactly and went to' prove once synchronised with the fiftieth anniver- Mr. .11CCormack Ireland again that in sary of the founding of the Fenian gifted singer, of whom theposseases 'a nation has Brotherhood. goad reason to be proud. Some thir. ty tholile from Clonmel and abort Magistrate for fill)(eawy seventy 'from Carrick travelled down
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to attend the concert.-"Nationalist."
*
444+14440,44444÷P14P44444+1-1-14144444+44.
Irish News to March 28. TIPPERARY.
\
KILKENNY,
To keland on St.
The
Ntricirs say. EBY
(outest,
ohh F. liAVIN, Philadelphia , and formerly of Tullaniaine.) Air :` -St.
Ivo-lode
learn that on the recommenda- DONEGAL, tion of his lordship the Most Noble the 'Marquis of Ormotele, the Laird Dna of Italkot Chancellor has appointed John Teehan Power., Esq., of Springmount House, Windeap, to the Commission of the Peace for the Co. KilIcenny. Mr. Power will be a most useful ac- RIMIT REV. MONSIGNolt DEN MOURNED. quisition to the Bench. f We
LIMERICK. The Memory of rinseridi
?tints.
much revere:I by all creeds and classes. lie was ordained in 1853, and became parish priest of Glenties afterfem. years. Tie was afterwards parish
THE BISHOP OF oSSORYS PROTEST.
Patrick's Day."
The death took plate on Monday afternoon of the 'Right Rev. Monsignor M'Faaden. P.P., ,Vicar-Gendral of inesal and Dean of Raphoe. Deceased was one of the oldest chegymen in the Diocese of RaPhih, and was
LETTER FROM THE BISHOP. Mass Speakine at the o'clock twelve priest w' Owiselore and Drmeholm. Ireland, loved Ireland, thy cause in St. t atria's Church, on St. Patand in 1882 was enpointel to' Doneis undying, Day. rick's his the Lordship Bishop, eel town wh re Limerick, Friday. Despite of oppression and tyranny's teihistered ever the Most Rev. lit'. Brownrige, ITsince. frown, His 1,ss will he deeply deto th ivrred which fight ohampionship plored A from his letter lordship Bislong the the years of Thro' weary thy throughout his own parish. was arranged to take place that hop bondage and siehinge was read at the where he ministered with the utmost of Limerick Thou never heist despaired of fair evening between Tommy Burns and meeting of the' Corporation last night zeal for th spirittial a..11 temporal Jem Bock!. His Lordship said before in acknowledgement of resolutions of welfare of his flock. freedom's crown, pulpit left the he to h, wished pro- sympathy pass .d en the deaths of the For the spirit uneuelld, a test against that fight. He thought lats. Father Casey' and Father Lee. Of thy children upheldThy hole ever beaming with glor- it was one of the greatest scandals His LordshiP wrote :-"I shall have and one of the greatest desecratione these resolutions. with others. pre:ous raythat had ever leen offereil to their served in the archives of the Diocese Au Exile's tole for priest Not the vile dungeon gloom, National Apostle. Ile merely viewed as a levied of th esteem in which Nor the scaffold's red doom, Could quench the proud spirit thet it in that light.. Ile was shocked be - these typical Irish privets were held end power of expression that in any by their fellow -citizens of the union. A very touching brightly is burning incident is stated public theatre within the four shores which time seems only to strengthen. in connection with the testimonial On thy valleysand hills, of Ireland, that brutal such a between scene climes far away, the peo p le am their clergy. lately ',resented to ('anon fanning. would be enacted that night hy two Where thy taillet rhitalren with . The letter was ohlsest to he insert- CPe Ballygarrett. A young Courmen-presumably C.hristians and lath- ed on the mine tes. hearts are yearning town 'Harbour fish:slain mimed ' Pat Kenny 1,ft his native To strike for thy freedom on Pat- ((lie's. One was certainly a Catholic. S0111. lie did not know whit the tither was. r?r. rich's Day. veers ago to seek his fortune in a SCOMMON. What. asaed his I .iirdship, ins IO,u' fereien land. After many wanderings Thy exiles tosday with endeering lireland coming. to ? This is an hie altlt d down in far-off Vancouver. It is portation. an importation emit-thin, froin Mit RIO V is 1 or k allicars this young fisherman it America is importetion from t. the ntlEil school in Riverchspel when spirit f I' }:usher'. and it is th,s: importations of the earth, canon Fannin4 was curate there, anti Court Judge. O'er the wild dreary waves of the into this country thet the people of the canon prepared him for ConfirmaIreland have to dread. Referring to desolate ocean tion and First Communion. The fishTo the dear olden scenes in the land the lull fights in Spain,' his Lordship erman never forgot the priest. By said the people of Englahl held down of their birth. sonic way or other he heard 'that his their heeds in saw horror when they ills Honor "County Court 'Judge parishioners were about to present By the he'd native hearth, the accounts of them, and in In gladness and mirth, tbs. Wa'- ely opened the Quartet' Sessions the canon with a testemonial, and he They sit once again, or in pensive- English newspaper,: ,thicated men urge at Roscommon There being no (him- immediately sent from his' far-o(1 cd to hoe them put down In all final business. his Honor was handed home a ehesue for ten dollars (C2.1 ness stray civilised countries, but if he were the usual lair of white. gloves. By the gray abbey wall, In towards the testimonial. Such deriver, an alternative. he would much regard to civil business, the Sessions votedn es deserves to he made known. And dear memories recall, Tender and loving, of friends who are perfer 'eine pee nt at a boll lieht- are the smallest the lot_sal profession it. chows the deep, abiding faith vanished, although he shield not like to le have experi ncd ter years. those roe exiles carry away 'with present at fight Or kneel o'er the graves where it-than a hetwe them. and 'the great love they hive human twines, Look, said his Lorethey're sleeping for aye for their priests. Lene may 'this Dr long fur the hour when dark shili, at the hypocriiy of the thing. poor fisherman live and prowler. lie They coul.r1 see a mote in their broshivery is banished is surely a 'credit to Courtown Her h From the green hills of Ireland on ther's eye. but they couldn't see a Dislingisked Four. As an humble beam in their own. Patrick's Day. bishop remote from the metropolis Tho' bitter thy woes and thy sor- with the faith' of St. Patrick within the Society of Jesus suffers a g'r'eat on Ike rows, dear are.ane, him. he protested solemnly from that d Tlio' the black eleom of slavery thv pulpit in the parish of St. Patrick's loss in the death of Father James skies has 'overspread, aghlest what was going to le en- Murphy, which took place, after a Eagnale Still unfailing as the green of thy acted that nieht. and he should be prolonged Mmes. on Sunday 'morn fields, holy Ireland. 'meetly listressvd and disappointed if Inge at' the Novitiate, St. Stanislaus The radiance of virtue aroujel theC he heard there were many there from College, Tullamore, where for the past is shed. Kilkenny. He hoped nine of those three years he has, for the second ('anon hidsadden, the famous DoneThro' thine 'ages of wrongs, 'present put money nn the fight a- time, filled the important and respon- gal P.P., who' stood ey his people in Thy poets' sweet songs gainst which he protested. ITe colite sible position of Rector andHasn't the eviction times thus speaks of the Had tired the brave breasts of t by do no more than protest against it. of Novices. Father Murphy, who is lansuaire and industrial movement in sins for the fray. He su"posed that in the lone history Irother of Canon Murphy, 11.I'.. of his address i:efore the members of the Now thine orators. srand, 1(il Trelasti for the pest fifteen bur- Arran Quay, Dublin, and of Colonel United Irish League, Central Branch, Are hard thro' the land 'bred years sine. St. Patrieh preached W Peen! Murphy, 11.5.0., was born Dublin. Every person calling himself at Clonmel in the year 1832. In golden-tongue speech for thee evet th' Gosnel hre. there was tvtver an Irishman ought to know some * 6 pleading, eel's,' enaeled sees as was solo- to Irish. It was not to he expected that But thy freedom's brave path's he be enact, d that night. thos of advanced years who had no:, WATERFORD. the warrior's way. kernel Irish in their youth could learn And the' valant shall tread it to Irish, and inane of them were learn3risli triumph unpleading, ing it. Speaking English, ('anon Mac Till Freedom crowns Ireland on PatFadden said that Dublin clessrvel Tilt tocke. rick's Day. , great credit for all that it was doing The alcove poem was written in in promoting the revival of the Irish ('lonmel Jail in March., 1881, and inA packed audimcc assembled in the language : at th same time. it scribed to Mr.' Wm. Grogan, a fellow Theatre Royal, Waterford, on Monday was a curious thing that if he' went prisoner, who is Otte!" with the poe' A viand ball was given under the night, to hear Mr. John F. McCor- into a store or a strop in Dublin. tic talent. like his erand uncle, Darhy auspices of the Kilkenny Men's As- mack, 'Ireland's great tenor, who scor- and tested for anything in Irish, th.' !Ryan, of 'flambe, the author of "The sociation on St. Patrick's Night in ed such a remartee le success at Co- shopman 'shook his head-he did not Peeler and the Goat." the Murray Hill Lyceum, New York, vent Gardon 'last season. The concert know. A very have section of OP with the laudable object of providing was oreanisiel by Rev. 'Sather Fitz- citizens' took an interest in the profunds towards the erection of ' a gerald, in aid of Parochial improve- motion of the laneuahe On its Inn monument to the great Irish poet. mentS. An excellent programme was its it deserved resPe-t, and to be The John Locke. All who attended the arranged. but all interest was contr. kept alive end revived. Ard whn hall were presented with charming ,sl in Mr. McCormack who, on ap- they &dented the same methods in Close upon £1.000 has been sub- souvenir -programmes containing sonic pearinc. was' accorded' a spLendiid ova- 'reviving the high Ian !liege that the scrieed fir the water of the late of T oc'le's best Poems, including tion. He sang sonic sacred songs Fn dish Goverament had adopted ' in Pat Tierney. First Whip of the Tip- "Dawn en the Ir'sh Coast," "The with consummate grace and sweetness, killing it. they would soon have Teenevry Hen eds, who was ace dently Calm Avonree.- and others. Locke and was erected with thunders of ap- land all Irish (hear. hear). Th. Nanrowned while hontine last month was torn near Callan. County Kil- plause. In the first instance he was tional School system had the A hi- sh ir o' the money was sub- keeny, in 1816, and was imorisoned twigs recalled, and in the second part Irish lanetiaee awl the Nat hem! in 1867 for scribed' by English sportsmen. participation in the Fen- the audience were not satisfied until School system would revive it if it !
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