THE SENTIMENTS of our SUBSCRIBERS
Cal — Petaluma, Mrs. B M Costello; J Magrath
P Cronin.
Del — Wilmington, O J Hessian, per P R Mul¬
rooney.
Ga — Savannah, J P O'Brien.
Ill — Chicago, M O'C Roche — Grand Crossing,
P O'Connell, per M J Darcy.
Kan — Saint Mary's, T J Fitzgerald.
Ind — Notre Dame, J J French, o.s.c. per Mar¬
tin J Henehan, Providence, R I
Mass — Boston, Miss B Molloney,
Mich — Montagne, P Moran, Capt. Lisaght, M
Downey, per Mr Downey.
Mo — Lexington, Geo. Wilson.
N J — Trenton, J Deasy.
N Y — Brooklyn. Rev. John Sheridan; T Erley
— Hunter's Point, E W Gilman, per T Erley —
City, Miss B Dwyer; M A Lavin, per T Erley —
Utica, M Hopkins. per P A Ginnelly, New York.
Pa — Phila. J J Lyons, Miss M McLaughlin,
per Mr Lyons.
R I — Providence, Martin J Henehan.
W Va — Wheeling, Mgr. J T Sullivan, M Lally
P Gilligan, P Laffey, J Folly, P McDermott, D
McDonagh; all per A Lally, M Cavanagh, per
Dillon J McCormick.
Ireland. —
Donegal, Driminacross. J Dwyer per Miss B
Dwyer. New York.
Galway — Trean, M Henehan, per Martin J He¬
nehan, Providence R I.
Mayo. Mt. Partry, the Rev. Brothers. per Mr.
Henehan.
Roscommon — Clooncagh, Miss Tessie Gormly
also, per Mr Henehan.
Italy — Irish College, Rome, Rev. H M Dwyer
per Miss B Dwyer, New York.
This is the column where the Irish wheat may
be seen :— the chaff may be found wafting around
the fields at the mercy of every wind that blows.
One good effect the article on Senator Murphy in
a late issue of the Gael had — we sent a copy to
His Honor. Mayor Gilroy and the result is that a
stop has been put to the practice of calling the
wild animals in the Park after Irish names.
The New York Gaelic Society's annual Feis
Ceoil was a great success; fifteen hundred per¬
sons being present.
The Philo-Celts meet at 263 Bowery on every
Thursday and Sunday evening and give gratuit¬
ous instruction in the language to all who call on
them and desire to study it.
Because of the large space devoted to the Dub¬
lin Report, several pieces are held over including
two patriotic poems by Miss Hanbury.
The Gael is feared by the anti-Irish more than
all the so-called Irish papers ever published; not
that we have notably and honorably conducted
journals in the interest of the Irish people to-day.
But one important item is wanting in them. — a di¬
rect proof of what they profess. Wanting this
proof the subject themselves to ridicule — ridicule
of seeking to rebel against a nation that has edu¬
cated and civilized them | The Gae is aggressive
because it stands on proof. It shows who the e¬
ducators have been — not by mere assertion but
by the cold stem facts. Then this salutary effect
of the Gael should induce Irishmen to circulate
it.
Would the Gael's criticism have anything to do
with A T Sullivan's appointment to the postmas¬
tership ? In Mr Cleveland's first term there was
not one such appointment made in Brooklyn. The
Irish race have nothing to fear from asserting them¬
selves; they have everything to lose from cowardly
supineness — the above instance demonstrates it.
Because the Yankee thinks the Irish to timid to
strike back he is never tired of such talk as this. —
Who builds our jails? Who fills then? The New
England Yankee has had committed more crime in
the last thirty years than would fill all the jails in
the world ! In the exuberance of his good nature
Pat takes a glass of whiskey, shouts Harroo, and
is sent to prison; the Yank operates in silence and
takes the life of man in embryo! The census dem¬
onstrate that in 30 years he has thus destroyed over
a million lives! A short time ago a young married
woman of that element, 24 years of age — a church
member and society leader of this city — said in her
ante mortem statement to the coroner that the ope¬
ration from which death then stared her in the face
was her fourth! Hence the reason that New Eng¬
land has become New Ireland! Further comment
is superfluous.
The Gael can now be bought off the news stand
in the following places. —
J F Conroy, 167 Main St. Hartford, Conn.
D P Dunne, Main St. Williamantic, do.
G F Connors, 404 Main St. Bridgeport, Conn.
Mrs Dillon, E Main St. Waterbury, Conn.
Mrs Bergen, S Main St. do. do.
M McEvilly, Wilmington, Del.
Mr Calligan, 23 Park Row, N Y City.
W Hanrahan, 84 Weybasset, st. Providence R I.
J H J Reilly, 413 High st. do.
J N Palmer, P O Building, Tomah, Wis.
M J Geraghty, 432 West 12th st. Chicago, Ill.
J Dullaghan, 253 Wabash Av. do
H Radzinski, 283 N & 2863 Archer Av. do
H Connelly, Cohoes, N Y.
Wm McNab, do.
Frank Simmons, Springfield, Ill.
Mrs Woods, Jacksonville, do.
Mr Gorman, Joliet, do.
C. Schrank, 519 South 6th. St. Joseph Mo.
M H Wiltzius & Co. Milwaukee, Wis.
G T Rowlee, 133 Market St. Paterson N J.
Catholic Publishing Co. St. Louis Mo.
E B Clark, 1609 Curtis St. Denver Colo.
John Murphy & Co. Publisher, Baltimore, Md
O'Faherty' Siamsa an Ġeiṁriḋ, re¬
viewed in the Gaoḋoal, recently is for
sale by Mr P. O'Brien, 46 Cuffe St.
Dublin. The price in cloth is 2s: in
wrapper, 1s 6d.
For the Gaelic Journal send 60 cents to the Rev
Eugene O'Growney, Maynooth co. Kildare, Ireland
T. F. WYNNE,
PAPER-STOCK,
13 & 15 Columbia St.
Brooklyn.
