5?5 '""fpfyy;., Hnu t, iih,,,,,,, ii N N 1 i' & 4 1r pie, when they went to America, divided them elvea among the various parties, yet when, if I find" good peoplo In the party opposed to me, "in stead of discouraging me, it encourages because , it gives us much to fight for in getting them out of the other party into our own (laughter). For if we had all the good people in our party, '"" and all the bad people in the ' other party, it might be bad for our country. Mr. O'Connor haa Tnntinnd nnr nnnntrv nrwl its position in the world. I am glad that the popple of Ireland feel as they do towards America, and I may say to you that in an absence of now a littlo more than ten months, it has done my heart good to find a friendly feeling towards the United States in all the countries I have been in. Nowhere did I find people expressing anything but interest in the United States, and I want to say this to you that it has strengthened me in 4 the conviction that the ambition of my nation should be not to make people fear it, but to make peoplo love it (appjause). If there be any who tako pride in the fact that peoplo outside of their land bow in fear before their flag, I take pride in the fact that wo have a flag which makes them turn their eyes towards Heaven and thank God there is such a flag (applause). I have been in attendance on the session of the Inter-parliamentary Union; I have been inter ested in its work, and I have taken great satis faction in the evident progress of the peace senti ment throughout the world. I am not an old man, though much older than when I labored under the disadvantage of being a boy orator (laughter). I am still a young man, so young that I hope that in the course of nature I may live to see the, time when nations, instead of training people to kill each other, will recognize that justice, and justice only, can furnish an enduring foundation for a nation, and wlli be willing that every ques tion in dispute shall be presented for investiga tion and deliberation, with the idea of settling all questions by reason and not force (loud ap plause). I have such faith in this sense of justice- that I believe in the course of time every question will be settled right. If I did not have faith in jthat sense of iustice I could not advocate aiiy refoVm, for it is 'only to the sense of justice that God placed in the human' he'att that we can appeal (applause), and it is because I believe "that that sense of justice is to be found everywhere I have hope that Ireland's appeal for justice will be a successful appeal, and in the triumph of justice you will be brought nearer and nearer to gether, not only with those who live in other parts of these islands, but with the people who live in all parts of the world. I bqlieVo what a great French writer said, and what Tolstoy repeat ed, that the world is to enter upon an era in which love and good will will tako the place of avarice and greed and violence (applause). When that time comes and we begin to examine and see to whom the credit belongs, I believe you will find that credit must be divided, and that some credit must bo given to the people of America, who have been pleading for justice, that some credit must be given to the great leaders of Ireland who have been pleading for justice, and that some crcdltyes, some credit must be given to the great English and great Scotch statesmen who nave been pleading for justice (applause). I am not here to make you a speech. I am simply hero to acknowledge the courtsey that you have shown to Mrs. Bryan and myself, and I thank Bryvfnefd'w r' 'Conn haying included to. 5f,nnoin, hiB worda ot welcome (applause), for she has been my companion in all my labors and has not only shared all my joys with nTand hv ?olSSlled ?T t his rohbTd a?ldmy spoken of her should be spoken bv an ,70rd8 tlomen i viee wltu 30nJ0 reVtoncTto "ddresa you, becauso after tho two apeeches to which have listened any words are superfluous and ? that my colleagues of the Irish party and ImS lng America within the last few years 1 r have had the honor of being ehahmof twiffift The Comnioner. parliamentary party in the house of commons I have gone as Ireland's ambassador to America four or five times, and I have found fervent sym pathy and assistance from all classes of the Amer ican people (applause). It is true, as Mr. Bryan has told you, that the majority of our -countrymen in America belong to the great political party of which ho is the honored chief, but it is true also that sympathy with our country is not con fined to that party, (applause). I have to say for myself that when I have gone to America as the representative of Ireland I have been re ceived with equal generosity and sympathy by the chiefs of the democratic party and those of the republican party, and from no man have I received greater sympathy and ldndness than from that great man who, at the head of a different party from Mr. Bryan, presides over the destinies of America today (loud applause). The strength of the Irish cause in America lies in the fact that that cause is not linked to any political party, but that it appeals to the broad sympathy of hu manity and justice which guides all political par ties in tho United States (applause). As in the past, so it will be in the future, I have never in America met a single Individual American who was. tho enemy of Irish aspirations (hear, hear), ave never ln America come across any man of pubhc opinion, any newspaper of any political creed that was tho enmy of Irish aspirations, and I am perfectly convinced that when the moment comes when our aspirations shall triumph, and when Irish prosperity and Irish liberty will exist on Irish soil in its full measure as completely as they have been enjoyed by individual Irishmen wherever they have gone throughout the world, that there will be no quarter of the civilized globe where that result will be received with greater acclamation and universal rejoicing than in 'that great land (applause). Aye, .that great land which has' been-to us something more than a friend and a sympathizer, that great land which in the words of one of her own poets: -: .. - "Whose tree latch string was never yet drawn in Against the meanest child, of Adam's kin" . (cheers); that great land which has been our refuge and bur hope, that great land to which we have looked in our sorrows and our triumphs; that-great land which wp honor today by honoYihg Mr. .Bian ; (applause). America is in the minds and hearts of Irishmen at home all the time. There is not a day the sun sets in the western ocean that our people don't bless the name of America (applause). We look upon her as- our friend -in the. west; we look upon, her us our great source, of. strength in our contest for justice to day .(applause);; and all of us Irishmen in this room are proud to have the opportunity of doing honor to this great American, citizen who is amongst us (applause). Speaking in the name of all my colleagues, the freely-elected representa tives of flye-sixths of the Irish peoplo at home, I tender to Mr. Bryan, and through him to the American people, the expression of our deep grati tude and of our love and veneration (loud ap plause). ,..,... Mr. and Mrs. Bryan left shortly afterwards for the continent.. .- . - ' Wsi. Jfc. VS AV I N G TH E YEARS" Norbert Weiner,at eleven years a freshman in Tufts college, is called the youngest college student in America. He is the son of Prof. Weiner, of Harvard, a Russian, and of an American-born mother. When he was eight years old he was reading Darwin, Huxley and Haeckel. Referring to this Incident, the New York World says: "Precocity id common in the childhood of eminent men. Alexander Hamilton at twelve was left in charge of a colonial counting-house and at nineteen was a revolutionary leader. John Stuart Mill read Greek at four. A remarkable case of early development was that of the son of John Evelyn, the diarist, who did not live to fulfill his 'promise. At two and a half years this child 'pronounced English, Latin and French exactly and qould perfectly read in those three languages.' Before he died, at five, he 'got by heart almost the entire vocabulary of Latin and French primitives and words and had a strong, passion for Greek The early develop ment pf musical talent Is a common phenomenon among eminent cemposers. It is hot difficult to prepare for college at eleven a precPcious child. There are thousands of children who with private teaching could accomplish the feat. As children are commonly trained the forward ones are re tarded by the average intelligence1 of larre classes They lose little by the experience if the leS from their light tasks Is devoted .to exercist nd good reaping; .yyi .VOLUME .6, NUMBER, .- 0 generally graduate from our colleges at too ad vanced an age." - ' It seems to be the opinion of many that itia important to save some years in the college training of a man, and so these would begin to ?". ftbe!ad,atAa YGTy early ase But is tnere " not, in truth, plenty of margin at the other end?1 Those who advocate pushing the lad into life at' an early age, seem not disposed to raise a pro test against the tendency to push the man into the grave when he should be in the very midst of active useful life. We need not worry about saving the years" while the lad is in his teens. There is a better field for tho activities of in- . teliigent and humane thinkers In the vicinity of that system now being rapidly built up in thia country a system which seeks to place the age of thirty-five or forty as a limit to a man's power and usefulness, Let us have a little less of the anSm SK? doctrine fostered, by the trust system and a little more of the fine sentiment put into verse by Longfellow when he .wrote: SnV0?, la,teJ Ah! nothinS is too late Till the tired heart shall cease to palpitate. Cato learned Greek at eighty; Sophocles , ' X. nil GVa?a 0ediPu and Simonides ,. Bene off the prize of verse from his compeers When each had numbered more than fourscore" And Theophrastus at fourscore and ten ' ' Had .but begun his 'Characters of Men.' Chaucer, at Woodstock with the nightingales, At. sixty wrote the 'Canterbury Tales.' ' Goethe, at Weimer, toiling to the last, ? d 'Fausf when eighty years were past, Tn.L 5hm We Slt idly d0WQ an y Th ?JS??a CTe; ifc is no loneer day? Cut o JJJath,ni?t y?' come; we are not iuito nL? m labor by the failIne "eat; ; Something remains for us to do or dare . Even the oldest trees some fruit may' bear, v For age is opportunity no less , Than youth itself, though in another -dress; And as the .evening twilight fades away The sky is filled with stars, invisible by day. JEFFERSON AND LINCOLN . The Milwauk.ee Sentinel, a republicanl.'or'gan ' that may always be depended upon to support4 republican candidates and republican policies no matter how bad, makes the following reference to Mr. Bryan's repeated quotations from the writings of Thomas Jefferson. "Mr- Bryan somehow identifies the demo crat c party with 'the people,' or with democracy S,n rl ?road,eiLor PhilosPMc sense. Then how about the affinity for tha't party of the old plan S5'Mrtaye?ldJnff arlstcratic south, and of tho solid south' today where social equality is ab- SponiIr Fr hIS I(leal1f a real statesman of the people Mr Bryan should have turned, not to tho greatest democrat, the 'well born' Jefforson, but to the peatest republican, a man cradled in tho SLf a wandering settler, bred in toil andl poverty, self-educated, self-made, a marvel of his- rinZ'da aT1 WhTSf like America only has pro ducedAbraham Lincoln." twTe tSmm0n feels ently safe In saying u Li T? iGSS thm six years of existencS it has quoted more from the speeches and writ- SSfffni braham m.coln tnan the Milwaukee Sentinel has in the last twenty years. During the last ten years Mr. Bryan, in his public speeches and In his editorial writings has referred to and quoted more from Abraham' Lin fengtli of 11enMllwaukee Sentinel has in the samp ' T?G circ1ulation of The Commoner is. easily1 SEhJ ??eto ar?eii han that of 'the Milwaukee SS1, But desp te this disparity in circulation nronnCaHmmnmakeq Stltiel the fPllOWing proposition: For every inch, column measure? ment, that the Sentinel will dovptp Pto repriS 5S? tantl0ns from Abraiam- "ncoln furnished by The Commoner, The Commoner will' devote an inch to reprinting quotations from Abraham Lincoln furnished by the Milwaukee" Sentinel the quotations submitted by either party to be prop-' erly authenticated by reference to standard' works on Lincoln, and limited to not more than, twenty four inches, column measurement, in any one" week. Roth The Commoner and theSentinel are'' to give equal prominence on their editorial pages to the quotations submitted. If the Milwaukee Sentinel wants to circulate among the people the views of Abraham Lincoln on questions that aro as. pertinent today as they were when -Abraham Lincoln was alive, the oppW tunity is at hand. " i ,! w yM-f, ilMiihiiltSwiffajbita J -J