ULSTER STILL ADAMANT.
HUGE SHIPMENT OF ARMS.
(Received May 29th, 9.45 p.m.)
LONDON, May 29
Mr T. P. O'Connor states that «uo Nationalists are willing to givo Ulster people such strong political power as will mako them masters of their own fa to, and armed against oppression of every form.
Sir Edward Carson, speaking at Mountain Ash, admitted that within five hours 35,000 rifles and 3,000,000 rounds of ammunition wero landed in Ulster, but the Government did not dare to punish them. Tho Homo Rulo Bill might becomo the law of the land, but it would never bo law in Ulster. If the Government imagined that the third reading was the last act in the drama, ho would tell them that it was only tho first act of a gruesomo tragedy.
Tho "Daily Teleraph" says tho Government contemplates fixing Ulster's boundaries by a religions census, instead of utilising tho county boundaries, in tho proposed exclusion of Ulster from tho operations of tho Homo Rule Bill.
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Press, Volume L, Issue 149814, 30 May 1914, Page 11
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165ULSTER STILL ADAMANT. Press, Volume L, Issue 149814, 30 May 1914, Page 11
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