THE HUBBUB IN IRELAND
RESISTANCE BT.ESRED Bl r THE BISHOPS.
London, April 22. Congregations nt Galway, headed by the police, marched to Eyre Square and took tho oath. Bishop O'Dea said that conscription was likely to work a grave physical menace to tho healthy remnant of the Irish race. He blessed resistance by every means within God's law. The bishops everywhere urge cool respect of tho law and no violence. In Tipperary 10,000 took tho pledge after Mass with uplifted hands. The Archbishop of Cashel, preaching nt Turles, said that before paying Iho blood tax Ireland demanded tho right to impose its own taxation. Lord Dunraven, in a letter, to the newspapers, protests that Ireland 'is selfish beyond expression. If slio persists elio will grievously suffer in loss of seU-re-sucet and forfeit the esteem of all nations.— Aus.-N.Z. Cable Assn.
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Dominion, Volume 11, Issue 184, 24 April 1918, Page 5
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140THE HUBBUB IN IRELAND Dominion, Volume 11, Issue 184, 24 April 1918, Page 5
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