COLONIAL CITIZENSHIP.
DOMINIONS' RIGHT TO DEFINE. Br Telegraph-Press Associatlon-OopyrtgM "Times"—Sydney "Sun" Special Cables. (Roc. November 13, 6.5 p.m.) London, November 12. Professor Morgan, Rhodes lecturer for 1913, in his address said: "What is a British subject?" Ho defended the right of the colonies in thomsclvcs to dotormino what people should be allowed to immigrate. Colonial legislation was operating as a great solver of the term "Citisenship," and it indicated the desirability of a greater integration of tho colonics into groups, ablo to agree through the medium of Imperial conferences on a common foreign policy, and to cuforco it.
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Dominion, Volume 7, Issue 1906, 14 November 1913, Page 7
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98COLONIAL CITIZENSHIP. Dominion, Volume 7, Issue 1906, 14 November 1913, Page 7
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