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Show ! LATEST IRISH NEWS. From The Pilot. : Clare. I Mrs. Mary McCarthy, wife of Pat- 5 ! rick McCarthy, Limerick, died at Que- 1 j , ; : rin. county Clare, on Sept. 1C, to the J J ' intense regret of her numerous friends ; : and relatives, $ . - . ; ; Cork. ' . On Sept. 20 a bust of the late Rev. ; Brother Burke, Avell known in Dublin and in the south as? one of the most zealous of Christian brothers, was uii-' uii-' veiled in front of the Burke memorial school, North Monastery, Cork. The ceremony was performed by the Rt. 1 Rev. Dr. O'Callaghan, bishop of Cork, ' in the presence of an assembly fully representative of the thousands of ' friends and admirers attracted to Brother Burke during his long and , busy life. Down. The Rev. James Murray, C. SS. R., a native of Rallyna.hir.ch, has been ' appointed superior of the ReMeruptor- lsts nf 1K1 Australia Dublin. ; 4 . Father Commee, S. J., provincial, has l ' left Dublin on a visitation to the Aus- 5 ; tralian houses of his order which are ' included in the Irish Jesuit province. , The news of the recent death of Mr. ! Michael -T. Duggan of Dublin, which . . j ad event took place after a very brief illness, was received with deep regret j by many Catholics. ' ' The Reverend Mother Mary Prances Scholastica Margison died at the convent con-vent of the Sisters of Charity, Mt. St. Anne's Milltown, on Sept. 18. At the venerable age of 90 this great and good woman, who for so long as superlor- ! general directed the destinies of the I ; Irish Sisters of Charity, has passed away, full of generous services to God's , poor, and mourned by all who had j known and loved her. Under her fos- , lering care, hospitals, orphanages and j asylums had grown and flourished ex ceedingly. Kind of heart, generous of I - hand, vigorous of brain, she was a worthy successor of Mary Aikenhead, ! the great founder of the Congregation of the Irish Sisters of Charity. Gaiway. Miss de Stacpoole. who has just been marrier to Major McMicking, D. S. O., is the only daughter of the fourth Duke de Stacpoole, and her mother was the only child and heiress of Mr. Edward Francis MacEvoy, of Toberlynan, County Meath. This dukedom is a papal title, having been conferred by Gregory XVI on the present holder's ! grandfather. Miss de Stacpoole is the . f ;. nnly siBter of five brothers, all young- r than herself, and, according to the Graphic, she has inherited much of the ability and charm of her mother. The i Duchess de Stacpoole is a very aecom- i " plished and interesting lady. At Mount Hazel, the beautiful place in County , ; ; Gaiway which she brought her husband on their marriage, she can indulge to ' the fullest extent her passion for gar- ; ; i dening. The present duke's father en- ) i ! tred the priesthood after his wife's - death and was created a bishop. I ; Kilkenny. j A sad boating accident, as a result J of which a young man named John 5 Cashin of Rosbercon lost his life, oc- i curred on the River Barrow, near "Wexford, on Sept. 18. A young lady 1 named Miss Costelloe rescued two oth- er men. who were in an exhausted con- riition, but was unable to reach Cashin 1 in time. I King's. Mrs. English, widow of Patrick English, Eng-lish, a well known and esteemed resi-, resi-, dent of Edenderry, died suddenly of ! , heart disease on Sept. 20. Her hus- I band, who was a well known business I ' man of the town, also died suddenly 1 about four months since. j I Limerick. ' The death of Mrs. Daniel Xoonan. I Cappa. Rathkcale, an old and respected ) resident of West Limerick, took place recently at the residence of her son, Mr. P. Noonan. She had attained an ; advanced age, and was universally popular in the district. - Heath. Margaret McCann, in religion Sister Joseph Xavier, daughter of the late Joseph McCann of Beamond, died on Sept. 12 at the convent of the Sisters of Charity, Upper Gardner street, Dublin. Dub-lin. The Rev. Thomas McCormick. P, P., of Summerhill, died at the Parochiai house on Sept. 20 to the sorrow of his parishioners and a wide circle of friends. Master Gerald Coyne, Castlejordan, has won a scholarship at the Diocesan college, Navan. valued at 20 a year for two years. He was a pupil of Castlejordan Cas-tlejordan Boys' school and was prepared pre-pared by the principal Mr. McAuliffe. Mr. J. C. McCaffrey, clerk of Petty Sessions, passed away at his residence, Headford Place, Kellis, on Sept, 16. Tipperary. A' memorial has been erected in the . irraveyard of Bansha to the memory of Darby Ryan, who wrote the famous pong "The Peeler and the Goat," and other ballads. The inscription is in kj, 1 Irish and English. ! Waterford. iMost Rev. Dr. Dunne, archbishop of Brisbane, Aug., recently celebrated the silver jubilee of his episcopate. Dr. Dunne was born at Llsmore in 1S30. and was orn:erly an aclfve worker in the 1 Dublin educational field. I The Right Rev. Monsignor O'Riordan, I rector of the Irish college. Rome, has been spending a short holiday in Wat- 5 1 ' erford as the guest of the bishop, the Rt. Rev. Dr. Sheehan. He is at present pres-ent on a visit to Dublin. Wexford. The veteran priest of the -iiocese of I Ferns. Rev. P. Kenny, P. P., i3 lying seriously ill at the parochial house, Quia Qu-ia rt. Father Kenny is one of the 7nost advanced nationalists in Ireland, and has been identified with the national movement for half a century- Wicklow. Mr. William Bennett Campion, K. C-, first sergeant-at-law in Ireland, died at Delgany on Sept. 19 at the age of 92 years. He has for three generations been a familiar figure at the Four Courts and in the law library, where he was very popular and highly es-teemd. es-teemd. The engagement of Dr. William T. Power of Now York and Miss Esther Redmond, daughter of Hon. John E. Redmond, Irish leader, has been announced. an-nounced. Dr. Power graduated from i Detroit college, dag's of '9S. and from I : the Detroit College. BALLAD OF YOUTH. We toil and dream a little while, We tastethe sweets along the way We work a" bluff to keep in slyle, . We hark to mirth and music gay. We little heed that age must pay For every joy in folly's net The world is young and life's a play While there is nothing to forget. The paths are sweet that woo, beguile. be-guile. And fair the blooms that nod and sway ' We find no thorns that would defile. While we youth's leaping blood obey, Xo causeway stones our" feet can stay, We know no care, no sorrow, fret 4 The world is young and life's a play While there is nothing to forget. The goal, how near a fleeting mile A little struggle in the fray. But. ah, how different the smile When come the locks of white and gray! But youth is heedless in its day, And for its deeds has ru regret The world is young and life's a play While there is nothing to forget. Milwaukee Sentinel. |