Show MIt MU I t ESS DI ih Interest st l cd j to to th ih 5 ad- ad Id- Id diess of oC T. T P P. P OConnor O'Connor member of nC tho the British parliament advocate ad of or Irish home rule and now no a visitor Inthe Sn In n the United States State delivered oretI before heCor th Periodical Publishers Publishers' association of New Ne' York the of October on evening e 25 5 One Omme feature of or his talk tall was was th that l which Impressed the truth of or lar large e audiences addressed by hy periodicals pem mi newspapers antI and magazines nes Awl Arid he sa says I do 10 not think it is Ic talking cant o oFay osay Fay say that no nn man Is really worth worthy of lr a n. place In our profession who dors dods not miot realize that sl side e h by tide side with Ith the Iho h pecuniary pe- pe results of or his efforts he must look 1001 upon himself to a large laige nt as one olle of the missionaries and on on- of the preachers of the world Far be iJO It from me mo to say anything especially of a derogatory or of oC a competitive kind with r regard to the other agencies which reach leach the ear cam and the heart of or mankind but gentlemen the time best preacher reaches reache aft after r all but a a. limited limited lim lim- congre congregation The preacher who preaches from fromn the pulpit of a newspaper newspaper newspaper news news- paper of a magazine has hl his con congregation congregation congre congre- r gation atlon by hy the tho millions and anel therefore e is able to approach tho tIme car ear and the he heart rt of if the world In a wa way that no other man can And one can not look that proposition proposition tion ion fairly in tho the faco face without realizing realizing realizing reali reali- zing the tho responsibility that goes oes with the ability to address the lie larger audience audi audi- ence How firmly lies the obligation atlon to he be fair fall with the reader time reader the certain certain cor- cor tam tain reader that we know of oC and the possible lb reader rende who may quite out of or the ordinary happen upon tho the things wo we have written ritten We 0 can not in lii this connection avoid a taking opportunity to sa say that the libation Is upon the newspaper mal maker er the magazine writer writer every every one of ot the thc craft in fact to fact to speak we well o of his home or leave lea It How Irow unfair It Is for Cor a a. man to a assail all those from whose activities he gains a livelihood If and at atthe atthe atthe the same samne time continuo continue association with the people assailed It Is a u practice ice tice that h has done much for the harm haim haimof of or Salt Lake and we trust the lesson recently administered has ham Impressed the certainty of oC failure allure the tho Inevitableness Inevitable Inevitable- ness of or punishment on those who violate vio yb- late hate tho ho rule Speaking of or tho the absence of or an any particular church chulch creed In tho the great work worle of ot home rule Mr 11 OConnor O'Connor sa says 8 All the men who voted for tor the Irish parliament in 1800 and spoke c a against Its destruction were Protestants There was not a single Catholic admissible to parliament at tho th time Robert Emmet whose name as ns you OU know Is always alwa's received with a loud burst o of applause In nn any gathering of Irishmen Irishmen Irish Irish- men wherever the they may be Robert nobert Emmet was a Protestant Lord Edward Edward Edward Ed Ed- ward Fitzgerald also one or the heroes of tho the Irish was a Pro Pro- Isaac Isnac Butt a leader loader of oC the Irish In m in my ear early days wa was the son Hon of a a. Protestant clergyman and amid the most powerful l leader we have had since the days of OConnell O'Connell Charles Stewart Parnell was a Protestant an and 1 indeed a Protestant of oC Protestants And ho pays pas a de deserved tribute to the character of his countrymen who havo have come corne to the United States Once the they wore vere poor and had to accept the humblest of or labor tabor at the commonest of or pay pa because they were helpless Tho They had been driven from their nati na- na 1 ti L c i A lye live land hanL hi h by famine antI and a n political devastation was more pitiless even en than hunger And It Is to their credit that they proved their manhood manhood manhood man man- hood and their womanhood b by the Industry and honesty and amid faithfulness 9 with which tJ they met and ancl settled the problems of or existence In the new land Of or them Mr OConnor O'Connor said But Dut emigration ma may b be of f two kinds The Tho emigrant may be sent forth from hl his native land f fully II liy equipped 1 for forthe forthe the tho battle of oC life UCo with his Intellect trained to its highest development with his hands trained to of skill with hl his soul oUI hardened on tho the of or self dependence and of control amid and with his pockets not quito quite empty empt of ot even a a. small amount of ot capital Ve We sent forth our people from the Irish shores from poorly equipped schools The They came usually ruined and bankrupt men who had alaC already dY had one failure and disaster In their lives 11 Many Mammy of them thorn had to walk barefooted barefooted bare bare- footed rooted beside their weeping parents to the emigrant vessel that lint took them from their thell shores and the last Int sl sight ht upon which their eyes dwelt was the sight of the lie home of or their fathers and grandfathers before borore them hem which was either cither being torn down clown by the ct crow crowbar w- w bar of or burnt b. b by the lie brand And AmI they came tame ro to this county therefore many of or th 1 without so much much- capital as e procured for them a nights night's bed bcd or a days day's food rood and they were compelled of oC course accordingly to take tale the first work and the lie cheapest work worl and th the most drudging work that was offered to their hands Well I am glad Iad to be able to say a that the Irish people have passed largely through that thal epoch of their existence In this country an and that In Inthe th the lie second generation of my race raco In Inthis Inthis this country you rou can find the captains of every sphere of activity even In imi your great republic They are arc judges judgeson on the bench the ministers in Washington WashIngton Wash Wash- In ington ton to the ruler of up your country coun COUll- try who Is proud to acknowledge that Irish blood Is Js In his veins the captains of or your OUr great eat Industries Industries many many 01 or of them are arc of or the lie second generation of oC our race In this country As S to the merits o ol his mission weare we weare are not called upon to speak America has nothing to do with the question of or Great Britain's internal affairs IrIshmen Irishmen Irishmen Irish IrIsh- men in the lie United States may have somewhat more morp than han a sentimental Interest in the thc question of home homo rule for tOl Ireland But Dut this nation will hardly hard hard- ly Interfere with tho the concerns of a foreign government any any any more than we would permit Great Britain to I Interfere in interfere In- In n in the lie internal concerns of ot our own |