.v. English Dealt Fairly at Seventh installment of is presented today to reader f The Omaha Sunday Bee. Love of country, instilled while still a boy, was the outstanding characteristic of. the younjr Irish leader who, through an American newspaper correspondent, has bared facts in regard to Krin'u struggle for freedom never be fore revealed. Final chapters of the narrative were given the correspondent shortly before Collins' assassination. How the Master week uprising, instead of being an ignominious failure, became a spur to Irish loyalty be cause England treated the disturbance seriously has been explained in previous installments. IJeeause of England's action, perpetrators of the uprising went to martyrs' death?, declared Prof. Koin MacNeill, to whom Collins sent the writer of his story to get this part of the tale "first hand." iiy )ivin; i Alitor. (..pinalit, III.'!, r lurk linrnraii. ---- CHAPTr.K XIV- Continued. ' I until ipati d what eubreiUoiitly turnid out to to- tin- firt, liritiiiii must represent tn im Unit tin' north it would never acitiP In more, while representing thrin tlmt In aui li II settlement they would be preserv ing that w hirl) I hey professed t llllVS lit lllMII't, till- Sl-fltlllll'lltlll t It! w ith the niitlnri to which thi y Were supposed tu hi' litt;lthil, "In those preliminary iinferenccs , ft few iif us hold Hint imy settle ment which i I In. Include thi! possibility nf mi united liilunil which wn nut tu-. I l-m r.I on tint living truth, THAT EVKKV HUSH MAN H FIUMT AN IKIHIIMAN WITH ItKillTS TDK KA.MK AS THOME OF KVEKVnTIIEIMItlMII MAN wuuM li unacceptable to iih. "It Was lint hii li 1 1 H h (hit partition net Itself thilt muttered It was mi even mure formidable legacy tlmt England would leave us, PAKTI TloN OF VIEW. Tlmt Ih there, imil It Iiiih to In- dealt with. It is fur us, to whom union Ik mi article, nf unr national faith, bubal wilhjt. Coercion Is , Frowned Upon "For Urn most purl 1 1 Vulera Ht llrst seemed to bo In accord with Iim views voiced by (irlfflih and inc. An little by little Childer wormed Ills wny Into our councils, however, I)o Valera' attitude grail milly rhamrod. "From beginning to end, Mm It iiinl Urugha were unqualifiedly hostilo to tliu whole Mea of enter lri!T Into negotiations with England. Vet for a long time we hud nil been agreed on the fundamental wisdom of no coercion for Ulster. Likewise we were one In our conviction tlmt a divided Ireland could never bo a free Ireland. "It was and, more' the pity, it sllll in this serious Internal prob lem which led biiiiiu of us to argue for the attainment of the final Htepsi of freedom by evolution rather than by force. If we could obtain sub Hiantlal freedom by consenting to association with the British empire it would at leaHt givo uh time to tench tho northeast to revolvo In tin! Irish ublt ami to get out of t ti t orbit of (treat Britain, "We held that in acquiescing In a pence which would admittedly In volve some postponement of the f iiltllhnent. of our national senti inent by agreeing to Home nsHocia liou of our Irish tin I ion with the British natioiiH we would be going a long way towanlM men iim the sentiment of the northeast In it h supposed ntlarlinicnt to England. "Against these counsels the un compromising republicans raised lip the objection that by consenting to bargain with England before she recognized the republic we should lii letting the republic down. But lie Valera himself pointed to the fact that thin was not an issue to he argued then. "Mr. Lloyd ticorgc had already made it clear that no such recogni tion -would be granted. Further more, it was pointed nut that were the Irish republic a recognized fact we should have to use our resources to coerce northeast t'lstcr into sub Illusion. None of the conferees was prepared to sponsor such a course of action. Peace Offer Already Made "We hail long since concluded Hint coercion even if II succeeded could never have the lasting ef fect Willi li i on vermilion on our side, and acqiiicrnc on theirs, would produce. 'Our post! ton at this time, as ii ppoarvtl to inc. was one ,,f greater i 1 Iliitll than ev er In-fore in the h - un y of Ireland under English idt. From the Ensli-h viewpoint, p i. w.th ItvUnd In I become a :i... !() In the lUltlsh t-ihlnet 'i a.tv Mr. 1 o, George tn July t hi. I nnd pii- offi-r to Ik V , '. m That crtrr b id not 1-eni ae ;i it-Se to h Irli-h pe.'1-le. lit fi-rr nff l it Mr flmr. h!'V t I ,-i !, Hi ?,-: r.- r of the iot- V: 11', till ',d ' . , pi Kl ! PUl f Of- i. 11 1. tl 'l 0 '' of psfiv tvinn,ll !.!-. o le hv fie ii .it.t; 'i i' '- ii - i it4'n fr t' 1' t Id iii 1,.,. LH!t. '-l "1 -f t-lh h t , io iti't -s Pi i .- .1 an I. it all r't. li a i.siiosU i Her." " adwu el' M '!.. , r..teois'o i- ri it"H e- . , i.i int i-' ; .m ith , t-ll!4. .. l lt -l I It I I 11 l- .,ea M It II I t if il I .I '- --' a I .,H I t. , nt.ua Ii -,. Ut-l-'l' ' ' ' ' " ' a-- e ' 1 a ar- t 4 : .. f i-. tc.tfuihl f'i "" r !. ' ' ' ' , f I -r i I-- i a . a ( .... ' ' , ,, . 1.4 t II ir .1 .1 f , i , ' "" . V. 1 i ' - '" I 0 u : - ' I " I - .i- vl- i. ..- - - l I ' 4 Iwaai I f W aaA "Michael Collins' Own Story,' slrenitlh. Itul I foiicht the stupid notion Hint we were strong rmiiuili 10 rely on force alone," In f uit her ilii.i ussliig the Invita tion from Llo)d fjeorge to negotiate 11 treaty wilh Kngland, .Michael I'd Una said to me; A'o Real Change of Heart Seen "L'ngland wanted peai o with Ire land, true; but If Ireland made Im possible demands we could be shown lo be Irreconcllables and then L'ng. land would again huvu a free band for whatever further measures of force might be necessary 'to restore law and order' In a country that would not accept the responsibility of doing so for Itself. "I was under no delusion that the oiY r Indicated any real ohnnRe of heart on the part of Kngland towards Ireland. "In this ro.-'peol I was entirely at one whir tho uncompromising republicans. Hut I held that then, as always, England' dilllciiliy was Ireland's opportunity and we shoiifd be fools to fall to seize II merely bei nuse behind the offer was no sincerity of good will. "It. seemed to nm to make no difference tlmt an n wakening con science had nothing tu do with the Knglish offer. It Is true that there were stirrings of nonsi lence felt by a minority of Englishmen the mi nority that had opposed England's intervention In the European war. "They warn tho peaceful group, averse to bloodshed on principle. They were opposed to the killing we had to do In self defense iuite as much as they wero opposed to the aggressive killing of our people by the, rltlsh agents sent to Ireland for that purpose. "I urged that we waste no time in considering this phase of the (dilu tion. 1'acifists the world over are almost without any political power and have very lit lie popular sup port. The point was that peace had become necessary to England. "It was not because, she had re- pent eil in the very middle of her black mid Inn terror. Jt wus not because she could not. subject us! It. was because she had not succeed ed In vMibitiKaling . us before the world's conscience awakened and made itself felt. "We had ample evidence of this. There was, for instance, tlio frank admission of Lord liirkenhead in the Uritish house of lords early in August : teach High t Water Mark " "I'lie progress of the coercive nl lenipts made by-Jie government has proved in a high degree disappoint ing.' "From every side came proofs that world sympathy was with us passive' sympathy for the most part. f we had done no more and we had done much more this winning of world sympathy was itself a great aRset In the proposed negotiations with Kngland. "What it was never possible to make (he more extreme of our con ferees appreciate was that we hail not heulen and never could hope In beat the llritith military forces. We had thus far prevented llieni from contraventing our achievement. nd in July, lll'l, we had reached the hiuh water mark of what we could do in the way of economic and military residue. "I suppose there are Irishmen who will go to their graves still cherishing the notion that continu ation of the struggle would have i nded In an overw helming victory for Irish arms. It Is a pity, but it is a fact. To such men figures mean nothing. They will not see. "Hut even some of these uncom promising republicans had their nu iiienis of sanity. Some of them at least are on record (is recognizing our in. ih Ply to beat the Ilntlsh out of Ireland .-e what Mr. JVarton liM.1 to kiv In The H-pubhe of Ire land In Ha issue of February J I. " ' . . . It hid b-coma plain that tt plivsicxliy inipuasibl t -ciira lrUiu1 Idesl of a complete ! loUt-t repubhe, oihri ttwiit ! drmiiiC the ni ei h, -Imnn!v u (.!nf ril'i-ll f ' cot if !!l- oiiilrv1 . Abandon II ope of liepubtic : t I Mi, lu,. .-.! I l il pl.t io irnei.iis I las Irr,,' I iU -J al a s-stion i f a,l F. isinu ,vs.,( MvHf I is Ur A tf ' t,.r..e , 1 le, I u ti nrit,, I V l" n ltnm o it I I tl It- I irttvftt tf t il rsa r - . I 4 I ! -,l um i, 4- la i, , I i .. i- r ln I in . i i i' t h'lai . I- ' I t ! I. f I' t 1 i I,- ' - I llo' I I ! . , ,i ii i. iMii u att I .' i i .l I twti at ia r ;..- t euf pivsC'wa , a' t-t Ib s If a K t 4 rot 4 lit :--sl . as )- .i-l t. it. I - f i' - fc . i . . I- i ia i-tn . m I . - a s iv ' i . I ,e, . . I ..,,s ...f t . i . t - I s - - , ' ! I ' ' ' .1, i 4 - , , - . I I . . .... .- !-.-, l - .- Erskine Childera asinine scheme to get Kngland to consent to a "hands off" policy toward Ireland, depor tations of Sinn Feiners, Poland's devotion for Do Valera and tho Sinn Fein convention in October, 1917, also have been detailed. "Lloyd Ceorge was not to blame, except nominally, for the Knglish policy during the period of 1917-21." This perhaps is one of the most startling statements made by Collins, who asserted that the liritish prime minister's attention was absorbed in the world war during that period and left other matters to those under him. The smashing of the British spy system, the great est secret service in the world, through hunting down of Irish traitors, robbing of mails and tapping of telephone lines, has been described in detail. In reply to charges against the Irish of unwarranted slayings, Collins de clares the "murders' they committed were legitimate acts would not yet acquiesce In any kind of Isolation from Hrltnln. Jtefore we unilerlook the treaty negotia tions we. rtall.i'd these facts among oursclvi s. "find we nut realized I hem hail we not accepted them as facts there would have been no neto(la Hons, I't there lie no doubt about Unit. "It Is true that before we accept ed the Invitation sent by Mr. Lloyd ti'eorgo Wo endeavored to get on un fettered basis for tho conference. And lifter negotiations had' been begun as 1 shall presently point out we continued to try. "liocument No. 2 was un Instance of this endeavor, lint we did not succeed. Again and again we assert ed our claim that the plenipoten tiaries could enter such a conference only as the spokesmen of an Inde pendent sovereign slate. "It was a claim lirltaln tacitly li ' 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 - I In inviting us to negotiate at. all, but I lie fact remains that we dually went to London without recognition of our nation as an In 'dependent sovereign state. "We went ami In going we nil milled Unit there was a possibility of Hie Irish people reconciling 'Irish national aspirations' with 'associa tion of Ireland with the group of imlloiis known as the British com monwealth.' Irt us not fool our selves about thiil! Collins Asserts Attitude Unfair ''Those who cannot, or who will not look these facts in the face lila me Us now and more than blame us. They find fault with us be cause in agreeing to some kind of association of our nation with thu liritish nations we were not itble, by the touch of a magic wand, to get rid of all language of empire, That is not a fair attitude. "We like that language no more, perhaps lesM, than do those who wish to make us responsible for Its preservation, It is Hritaln's affair, not ours, that she cares to preserva the prevarications of obsolete feud alism. "The British empire is what It Is. It Is what It Is with all lis trap pings, its symbols of monarchy, Us feudal phraseology, Its obsolete oaths of allegiance Its king a fig urehead, having no Individual power aa a king maintaining the un healthy atmosphere of mediaeval subservience translated Into moddrs snobbery. "Hut these are things that are not to be dissipated by the waving of a magic wtmdl "Moreover, the result of our do Mieralions speaks for itself we en tered into negotiations with that empireand its language Is the language we had to speak. "It is not any verbiage about sovereignty which can assure our power to shape our destinies. Tho important thing is to grasp every thing which is of benefit to us to manage things for ourselves to make such a constitution as suits ourselves to make our government and restore our national life in the lines which suit our national char acter and our national requirement best. "It. Is now only fratricidal strife which can prevent us from making the Gaelic Ireland which is our goal." Pleaded to Be Left at Home CllAI'TEIl XV. My going to London as one or the plenipotentiaries was in spite of my conviction that any other Irishman would serve the, cause of Irish freedom better than Iat least so far as the treaty negotia tions were concerned. ' For three hours one night after the decision had been made to send 4 ih lepilion to IauiiIou I pleaded with Ie Yulri-ti to leave me at home and b t some other man t ike my plate as a nrgntuilor. TUit tt wa no ue. My arguments naenied lo fill on iKif ear. I had no choii I h.id lo go " Thl ai.itemeiit t'olllea nude t m loans' months f!r be bad I' l l ion I tie instil ' my of tli treaty e gt (I ifi n - nut In view cf allilie t ii-eunei tio-ea I w.ts pvihac-a ere . f Ibe most '-iiiidii'tf tblnaa r . v. r . 1,1 roe He 1 1 mitioe-l: i f i .wiim w alt ke.i i hit !).' -iff the tv'ttiinie tf IK niffi'tln I. -OS H ei-liKI !rlt l.te I.I bltnij l oit all libit L.Ui.l wxniiht and .k--l V. lo hlle, Afv.1 tl, rrftttt ku thai tmiii or ta eppi-lirl'iio t .ill ! t !! ivwarl roii I n. i n m Hii a Arthur flitt I I' it h iU .-o t . rvt'oft-d In jg-i, h ti tl , lni li, t. l- ,1 l-t i .1 v- ' , r . f y n v I 1 t 1 1! ' e 1 C ' - I I tf It . HHt.lt I . i-Mj-l -) It 'M I.-. ' t-l ih lnS p a i- . I if b- to " . t .. ,i I aa, i"uW i n i fc i. l fci art It I it. i,i4 t f o lii .i, ,..! i a-,,; a fc. a -' it I i.i MU i v.m ia I . .! it l I . a i ho n at H'l 41 I i I m I i t, V- ft tt. if fc Is -f i ii a Im aol lkl li4 In lo- HrM l k)llll '! Illtl- (It lot t M il.i,l t4. tk ll'li- -I I l h4 MM m 1 t e rkt ftt. it. , . , is, i m!4 Mm 1 4 Mai -t M MMU4 t TUB SUNDAY Y OMAHA. OCTOM.I. Throngs rvss The pliotograidi shows a general view of the funeral of .Michael Collins the rorlegn unit part of the Immense throng Hint swarmed the streets to pay the Irish free slate army. their secret service organization anil for their failure to terrorize Hie Irish people with Hie black and I ans. "lirugha has spoken of this Eng lish legend as a having been alto gether of newspaper manufacture. What dlfefrenco does that make'.' Tha important fact was that In England, as In Ireland, the Mic hael Collins legend existed. It pictured me a mysterious, active menace elusive, unknown, unaccoiintalile. "And In this respect I was the only living Iiiehman of whom this could be said. If and as long as the legend continued to exert Its in fiuence on English minds the ac cruing ailvunlage to our cause would continue. lirlng me Into the spotlight of a London conference and iiilckly would be discovered the common clay of which I nm made! The glamour of the legendary figure would be gone forever. Childers Held Too Radical "Whether De Valera underc-sll-mated the advantage of keeping mo in the background, whether he be lieved my presence in, the delegation would be of greater value Oft AVllETHEi: Ft ill MOTIVES BEST NOT INQl'IKED INTO. HE WISH ED TO INCLUDE ME A MONO Till': HCArEUOATH WHO MI ST INEVITABLY FAIL TO WIN COM PIETE SUCCESH Is of little im portance. "Thu only fact that may appeal to the careful reader as significant is that TIE FORK THE NEOOTIA TIONS It EUAN NO DOL'HT OF DK VALERA'H K 1 N C E Tl I T V HAD PLACE IN MY MIND! "As I have before stated, I ob jected to the prescnee of Childers in the secretariat because, as 1 have already pointed out, I considered him at least altogether too radical and Impractical, and, at worst, an enemy of Ireland. "Hut just ns I failed In my plea to be kept off the delegation, so Pe Valera would not listen to Childers' exclusion. His argument was that aside from whatever truth there might be In my view that the men ace I constituted wna of advantage to us, Ireland needed her ablest ad- ocates at the conference table, and he Insisted I belonged In that rate gory. "As for Childers and hera I am convinced be was quite sincere he, sold he consiiiereii nun me mosi pru- bant constitutional authority Ira- land had ever had and Ills presence in the delegation an essential of success, - "So my wishes were thwarted. Instead of I" Ing kept tn the bark ground against all eventiritities lo he offered In a rtiais as a finl sacrifice with whiih to win out ttay lei fteednm I had to :ilk Into Whitehall and deal, f.ica I.i f,n, with tha bends if the Uritish m 1 ire ' l Hie er moment I shak ing hands wilh Mr. Mold l-eorge on Ibe m ration of our Mitl inert in ( I here was sllll In rll. iiie Hie Huh. hn i stile reward of lii.imu p.uiintt .t hit rapture, dead or aie' huh Miiirnll I li inindi 4 the llrlll-h ptiote niinUIrr of Ibis lie oliinino Ule ol aaUii. but llnl did H"l t4tirM mild I had distotriid Hist li knew to os lo l.liuh' F.nglUh Agentt Deal Candidly r!'( tO l.VI. I I!. I , , .... . . i-it e iMttf-iti ,r 1. I . -. i f , fl. I ii. tllirl .. M ,. ii k S Iv I ! I, .l le,iti, fv it, i v ! , ti :',,4 t w-f. ISIO ..-! 11 t 1 In: if ! Mi t ' . . llie l- titl i e V I hit t.f f.i I i f . ii"! vt m I i a t I. t - i H r t v- ' I M I 1 iMn I lev v i ll'S iri'l il--. i II . ! i a 1 ' 1 - ' it II . Uifl .' IK . I 1-4 k 4M !. (,t.iUI-i Treaty of self-defense forced upon The arrest and harsh treatment of Francis Sheehy Skeffington, Irish writer who was opposed to the use of military methods to achieve the republic; his execution with two other writers by the black and tans; the dis heartening attempt to fix responsibility on the perpetra ors of the alleged "murders" all this has been told by the Willow Sketrington. Mrs. Skeffington later escaped from Ireland In disguise and toured America to arouse sympathy for the Irish cause. The gun-running exploit at 1'owth, although fea tured by tragedy when Uritish troops shot down two worn en, a man and a boy after the soldiers were stoned at Bachelor's Walk, was successful. Hut the Irish attempt to import arms from Germany for the Faster week uprising ended in disaster. The ship was ready to leave a German port for Ire- View Collins Collins Denies Duress Charge "It would be poor return fur the treatment accorded us In Loudon to overstep the bounds of strict ethics by divulging anything of the nego tiations which In any way could prove offensive lo tho English par ticipants. I have no Intention of doing so. "Hut with that said there ate certain points which I may shet light upon without committing that unpardonable offense. And to be. gin with there Is one matter that I can deal with without any breach of confidence, or without any depart ure from e(iuel. "It. has been charged that we signed the treaty under duress, II has been s.ild we signed the trealy under a threat of Immediate and terrible war. That Is not true, H was Hart on who first made this i-hnrge, and by bis own statement, proved himself a man who could be successfully threatened! "Hut Itiirfnn challenged to quote the exact words used by any of the English plenipidenllarics in fram ing the alleged threat admitted that it had never been voiced In words! "Nevertheless, Barton, having signed the treaty, opposed It and gave as his Justlllcntlon his hav ing acted under a threat which was never made! It In time this kind of thing received the attention it merits. "Surely I have mnde It plain enough that Tiritish armed force could wipe tho Irish nation out of existence. Is It necessary to labor a self evident fact? No one but a madman would question it. And Sister of Casement . . r rp in Amenca ror lour ' lvX XShj-Z' t 'W OfV-L' ',e3Hsy' '' 1 -''Ae3St.H Vi Mklilk rt''' :i L 1 "WiW'j, - V 2 Tl Mi's. iine Ni-Hiiian, sitter of Sil linger I KM'iiient and trh-nd of Mlth.iel I iillins, has airltrri ill on nt . for lour .1, Itv tl si ii,- H. t: tie l" was ii 0 lb lit- I 'I i.it ii -I .it tlielta b iv it' w its l-eu ,i l"tw-!-ll l.iiw .iod a'i'l lit I ilid tl,.- tltlninl if dnlfs plrs 1 I I V I. Sit llt'Ct I 4 I hill I. .Ill t ..i .Oil- Li ill II bolll'l biW iw ilmi l!.e Fl s'.nli l'!i' -f lli'i ilel -. , ,t, 1 1 v.,11 .li' !.&.! 1 1, it . . . i ti , a of lh tlJ't. toe ,-..!:.. i i.i ,- ,t l! f I .il . and te fc i,ii,f 41.4--. ear tfnlnl of Ho Iv-lt i Ih.-. lintel 1 41 I'lfif -it I.,. i 1. 1 . i- It i. ... -I, ,i. ,1, I . I l i f .'it! 1 I,, . I ..l.lr I ' I II i 1 . I l-.-kt .1. I .-. - Cm I t' v I., ... ,! t I, I It li.', It t l ' ''I I' I 1.1 14 .1, i, . I 1 tn-. II -ii-, I 4 o-' r 11 a !,, 1 .It i I Ik,. 4-t Iv i--.- M IHal 'I I ! 1 t I , '1 I ! '.t . "t I l I tl.lk.l i! fi.. .it Vl ( .-I !' .4 lit i ,4 I li.tM 1. 4. f I ll.l v 77 .M'l Ifc ft 4 Parley them by Uritish oppression. Cortege :: in Dublin, with Hie funeral escort, Inst respects lo Hie slain leader (if that individual iiieiobeia of our delegation Were directly threatened has found lodgment In the minds of men not conversant wilh the fun damental rules of conduct of nego tiations between two soverlgn states, "of frankness there was plenty. I'lam speaking was to our liking. And there was Hide of subtlety and drawing of line distinctions. Mean time, however, the weeks dragged along, nnd we could see small chance of arriving t any possible agreement. "Time after time duly reported in the world press we ndjournci, the conference, and went back to our colleagues In Dublin with noth ing that was encouraging, to report. "It was during the first of these return visits that De Valera brought forward the Hist rough draft of what later came to be the 'Mysteri ous Document No. 2.' Its right to the tit In lay in the fact that it was not of Do Valera's omposil inn. Cuesses Author of Document "J'lit forward by him us his al ternafwe lo the proposed treaty, It was, In fact, tho work of Ersklne Childera. I had little difllciilty In guessing the id'-nllly of the author as soon as 1 read II. Domltilonlsm tinged every line of thltt production. No Irishman who understood the tradition and the history of Ireland would have I nought or writ ten of his count iy's aspirations In the terms used Ml this document. "I'nder tho terms of this docu ment Ireland, by our own free offer, was to bo represented at the Imperial conference. Thus our status would have been taken from a constitu tional resolution passed at an Im perial conference. 'It was quite clear that the out look of the author nt the document was noiiiiueii enure was hounded entirely by the horinn '"'inre. itm ie Valera was insistent that we carry Hie alternative proposal back to London and there submit it as our irreducuble minimum! "We ilid so. The English dele gates turned it down flatly. "We brought it back to Dublin, and it was revised and a mended- "' ' i0"lc ' '"ning street. Again it was turned down. Aml r"",n""1 '" Va- 'era with til" twice rejected dot II- ment. H'!t a third time revisions and aioeniluii tils wete maili. and a third timo we presented ourselves In London with tin- Childers coin- proni.se. "Win ii Mr. Lloul Un re b t us Understand Hint timber repetition of this kind could mean only the fiii.fi breaking up of I hf entil'i-i i ni'e. we shelved din iiiih nt ,o L'-- siietd it for once and all. as we thought. Lot that wi an error. "Meantime 1 had come to hue what I bi lien d and In l.evt f -w.it a i lea r U'lderttvtnihng of the bnie farts nf the silii'iHi.ii And when tliH oppot t uriil - uroi-e 1 ju, id I! 'lillle t levar to Ho- itidlsll t pl t-elll:l in.'S Di li on i iiel w i differim l i i , i Hi . I of tl Hut of lli- hrlee l i t' d pn o ,il -t i 1 1 , I H ii 1 1 1 I il I it tl, ! In r t "U Oil 1 W ' tl t I t .I'll ,' - II, -I i , - .p..!, t.(.il.tn -. ill f. i !iik- ail di t a i,'i. of in. i i'ii i ii.i i v 'l lo ,!i. e -I ill I!,' 1 I Ii el III'H ' i ' ..it llie l-l il ; - It . I. t- ! III .11 ill lb- I.t'!l 1 1-- .,1 I 1 ti t''.. ,'!' fl t Hit I't'illlliill HI Iti" 'Lfi'i if cor Ivr-iir.' i . , ' . . it t.i. in. e. f..on- I t. a ,Vl llluioll in Mhttthnll 1 1 1 1 ' ,i ii i, ,. Si -il , a t ,. It, r 1 4 I-lit. I ' a . I. 1 t i i r i i.. i . f faf 1 I 4 1 IU I- ,--. I .' I I ... 4- I I few . .. 4- i . . t anil. Tho tlate or ine uiirieirtK nan m-rn nvi mr uimu nw tiny. Hut uni'xpt'i'tfil (iiMicultim noiTHsitntorl potpon-nu-iit of the rebrllion to the following wct-k. Dcnpert firortfi to notify Sir IJojrt'r ('a.sfmrnt f the change in time failed ami the nhiji nailed away. Surrounded by lirituh patrol boafs in Tralee bay, tho rnptain had to snittl thft nhip which went down with 20,000 rifles- and 1,000,000 round of ammunition. ('HMemerit, runhinfr to Ireland in a nubmarine to pre vent hi comrade from attempting what he thouRht won. the impoMMible, paitl for the trip with bin life. Included in lout Sunday' installment were ttworn HtatementM from neveral Irish persoiiH of aliened miHtreat nient by I'.ritiith troopn. The installment cIohch with an account of the Uritixh propoHal for peace and the Irish leaders' determination to seek the maximum limit of freedom. ISut lii Whitehall at least we knew where we stood." ArnphfyliiK his statement to me that Winn the Irish plenipotenti aries In the peace liei'i.ti.illotn with KitKhiinl arrived III Whitehall they found tin tillielvi N den II tin w ith plae (leal men who dealt In fact only and not In "line Idealism" or "im practical di raining," Michael Col lins went on: "As I have said, I hesitated) to do ariyfhlfiK that ran be construed ns a breach of ellipiet but to make my point quite clear I must risk the rhaixe by cIIiiik two Inflames of this iloWiul"dit fnuikm-fs which chanicteri.i'd the Knidlsh aliitesriieu with whom He il'alt, England Objects to Submarines "It happened ilurinK the confer erne between .Mr. Churchill and Ixnd Itciilty and Childera and my self in the colonial olllce to which I Iiavo already referred. "'n my emhariHsnnent over dill ders' failure to produce anythliiK ap proachliiK a reasonable Idea to bach up his statement that he could prove that Ireland was of no con cern to lirltaln I searched rny mind for something to say that would at least make my eolleaifiie'a Imprac ticability less KlarlOK. "It will be renumbered that Chil ders had Insisted I hut I'lymouth whs ;t belter base for submarine chasers than any Irish port: While I on! lieatty was point in to tha map and thus flatly disproving the. truth of this assertion, I had an Idea. 'TolnllnK to the French coast, I auKKested that Havre, for Insbince, would have made an excellent base for tho liritish forces enifaited In hunling submarines. " 'Quite so,' replied aiviX Beatty. Then he smiled and lidded, 'Hut we can't take a French port!' "If that constitutes duresa, I'll admit that We were under duress. But to my way of thlnklnir It la plain talk, rlKht talk, and the kind of talk I prefer my opponent to use, "The other Instance of this will Inicness on the port of the KnBllsh men with whom we were dealing to sny what, they mean wna furneshed by Mr. Lloyd ileorKe. I think he will have no objection to my quot ing lilm. As I have already stifled, I know he can laiikii, "It was In the midst nf our con sideration of the defense clauses In the British proposals. Mr. Lloyd fleorpe made it quits clear to 111 that the Uritish people could not, or would not, for the sake of their own safely, allow sny Irish government to build submarines. "Knirlnnd did nut mind If we built a drendmiuKht or two, a bat tleship or two although theso con cessions do not appear In the slprned treaty. Tn fijrhtlnR for vital conces sions we were not weakening our position by claiming anything so obviously useless as the right tn build and man a few capital ships. "It must be apparent to every one that, to do such a ridiculous thing would be to play England's game. 1 De Valera Sees No Objections "We could Indulge our vanity if we were foolish ennui; Ii In waste public funds in such a manner by having an infant tuny that could never mean in I liinir at all to the liritish sea power but we could not have one submarine! Subma rines are cheap In build and require few men to npenile them! Subma rines are a real menace lo Kiiglauil! "I fought 11 1 v best to try to argue the point. After all, I said to the liritish prime minister, Ireland could never hope to wage aggressive war Hcaiost England. Itostrleting our. offensive armament secinei! lo mo on a par with lourling a l. -ei l ii I . " 'Sol. linn inns,' repplied Mr t.lovd iori;e, 'are the flvlng column of lie sens He hulked h! Me elralght as be said this, nnd nlowly a twinkle f,l Ine loll, his eves. Then he tokt' ev'aio. 'And I am mite,' b Sid lie re Is no neid for ine lo tell vtm Mr fullm, how iniiili d.inmte can I..- n, Ma lt d bv 111 inn columns' We iiate bad I H rlt'ln e Willi otf lit. a'l.' i t.tiiitii'4 on land" 'll.i'M- Wt Irt . I li M 4 lit , 4t,d tti.'o' II" km wli.il be w is lull, eg iilatol Mule than tb.'ll -he k in- w, I Ji.il t k in w ' ' tlol IS V aii-l , ai d l , li, a li'l tf ill l it .ititiiKi-iui ' h i at4 til II III 111 JO I li il I' loll i f I'll li r V I h4p II Wold I bs in.H lieiiy fj , I'll' il I" v l!,i ie Vllel II 0-1 lillll II polrlllil Vain if lrlh ulni.iiiiitt ap-t Hill I'M' I n did' "I'l miv i-': lt itiiinl So in 4 tli, I !! i,il4li lUlm .'.! Ik-' nt, , , i . ti ; 4,t y ,, c f I. el tn . oi i'ii I.'! ii alio .1' Tl ) . i ii to I I ' ' ti. I I .i f n. I l. 4iJ ' Hi II t I -" .1 1. 1 l: . .tl ' ' II, I' ll II, I , f"4v t 4 4 1. Ill Ii 4 I". I I 4 It 4 I 4l I tl , ll Ui utim Lt" n I'ii !4'l e, I I .t!l, lil tlilvt I ,t if III PI 1. i-tllritt Htl . it'll. 'I f ' . M 'I I '1 irt t. ., I 1.4 .1 ! 1' 14.1 it. It-' ' 14 i h li . . ( i ... " i l)i I, -. t I. . 4 I !: ; ' i ' I . F I II. 11 I i ... I . 4 ' I I I I - ' ' I li' t D-i ,:,d , , .,, It , 4 I, i t I I tl I 4 4 i I 4 I 4 I " - -o. 1 44 11..,, tlt 1.4 l.i!r lift 4 i- . 4 lll'.l I t tl.-4 : 4 I , t 1., I'll W i' ft --4 V lllltil.iltt it til Collins a 1. 1 1 1 r 1 l.4 land, and with an eiecutlv re sponsible to that parliament, '"Ibis la I In, whole basli of tha treaty, and It must be borne clearly In mlml that the treaty (and treaty, be it renumbered, 1 teeii eitialsl, Is tha bedrock fiom whlrh our stnt ua splints, and that any later art of the Ptltish lfclslo lure derives Iti force from th treaty only. "W have the constitutional t tus of Canada, and that status rsv log one of freedom and equality, w are free lo lake advantage of that status. In fact, England has re nounced (ill right to govern Ireland, and tha withdrawal of h'-r forcea Is the proof of this. With the eval uation secured by tha treaty baa come tha end of Jlrlllsli rule In In la ml. "No foreigner will be abla to In tervene between our government and our people. Will Irishmen roil tlniie to intervene between our got eminent and our people? "Tho treaty we brought tionn gave us the freedom we fought to win freedom from British Inter ference and domination, "And it aeemed that tb Jrlah people resident In Imdon eohald ered It a triumph. For at tha af tlon there were thousand of them men, women and children wav ing the tricolor and cheering ua and singing happy folk songs. It wa a heartening sight. "Was It only a forerunner nt our greeting in UubllnT We all won dered." People Seem Apathetic CHAPTER XVI "Our arrival with tha signed treaty in Dublin on a gray, cold Iieoember morning was In a aensa prophetic of what was lo follow through all tho bitter weeks of tha Hall eessiona. Here were no aigna of Jubilation, Thei wni no on at the atatlon to rreet its. And yet the newspaper had acclaimed! the treaty ns a triumph. Even the few people abroad at that early hour aeemed strangely apathetic. Had our four month of hard work meant Just nothing at all to the people whom we had tried to erv? It appeared ho." Collin spoke with an unaccustom ed note of aadnesa in hi vole. Al though at this tltn b did not mak reference to It, I recalled an earlier con fideitca of hi th real ambi tion ha hoped on day to realize. What he wanted above anything else and I can any till because I have hi word for It was to e his country awaken to th meaning of good citizenship and o permit him to lay down th heavy burden of leadership. And when that dav rami! Collins hoped hs might be uhle to set himself up In hiislnes a little business In which h eould never have to be afraid of becoming rich! That waa a very real fear In Col lins' mind perhap th only fear he ever knew. On two different OC ciision it. becatn my duty to ae i uai nt him with opportunities of fered him by American Interest through me. One of tho involved his receiving a sum of money greater than th total of his life' earnings to ha paid lo him for writing a aerie nf in liiles for American publications. He agreed to write Hie articles hut flatly refused to accept payment for I hem! "Would you think of offering our President Harding payment for such a thing?" he asked (oberly. Michael Collins was chairman of the pinvislonal government, and be held that any act unworthy of that otllee must reflect mi the dignity of the Irish nation. Collins Refuses to Make Journey The nthir offer I prer-eiilt-d lo I. on i.illed f ii bis ! nvmg th re , hiioii' ilallt it-s nf fc.ivi-i nineitt lo oihi is Mlid making Journey In lliii I'mled ftiilen, Wlnie a leitui lour loot liei ii tentatively airaiig. il for him. He sh.ii.lt hi bead mil I'h .la ally. Il va out of Ih ques tion, he blooded And when I e lil.itiied lo lit in that In tl months if In tin tog be mul-l do iiior I "i Inland isuse In Anient thin h n ul l t ier i i iii iili bi any ollu r -tut. be W t at. II olio. al I In Ida l' f a-.tl el. n lo i'i .li I . If r II I ii-k. I l.lin tf h. I I si y td li"ii line b in..itt ,e I, if i-ouiil un I v '. 0 a i i ll 41, i, i, ei lei -I... ..It 1,'S h.-,,,l I I, .1 I li ill b WoiiM b in lor I 4t ltl a in. I hod d.. 11-41 '111 f-nb 11'' lit 44 d will) rtui. Iti ' I II r finni In,.! i 4 A o I' ' it il I'H w. ijll run a .iii-r in, n tt.411 I am;-' Ij it Iflutt t I nil lit' tli-ry i: t;.t i hi ' . i i f II it'ii i i ! ! f ."iti tit nt) aiii'itif II. " " I' t " I ' I.1 II 1. I. ' 4 t.1 I' ' 45 ' v't -'ll it '! Bill 1(11 4 , o i i! i I w i -i I' a .i.t hi t mm ( . I nt (I" I'l I . I .1, ,14,1 ."-t ,! II- l.it 4-i it t A .III. I I alrl, t t. , I , ' ,.14. IH M. k-l .l 1l 44 4i I ell,-, 14 ' Uil. itul i,4 if I: 4 flit ..( I !l: ,,.J 1, I .1 . 1,1 f I O lll.ill ',1 II t f ll ,ltl I. ldl ,., I I I "' f I. t. I 1 , 1 . i I I l I ' ,1 t IH ( t 11 , ( I l.M lift k4 Hnll4r . "Vll, I4. I InlliM' tt. i,- miH l4i(4V In t s 4 V