THOUGHTS FOR THE TIMES
litia. ami’s Fi.au In Washington. •• 'The great fact about the lush settlement is that no longer does John Bull occupy in American eyes the position of the oppressor and the fomenter of discord between North and South. Irish-Atuerienns, apart from a very small hotly of extremists, realise today that the British Government has heme most scrupulous in the manner in which it has earned out the terms pf the Anglo-Irish Treaty, and that apart, no nation has over granted so much freedom to a Slate within its bounarios as has been given to the Irish Free Stale. The culminating point has been reached with the appointment of the Free Stale’s representative as Minister Blcnipotenliary to the l nited States. It is difficult to see how nationhood can go niueh further, for with the right tli enter into foreign relations with other Bowers a Dominion within the British Commonwealth has achieved virtually independent status.”- Evelyn Wrench in ” The Spectator.’’
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Hokitika Guardian, 18 October 1924, Page 2
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162THOUGHTS FOR THE TIMES Hokitika Guardian, 18 October 1924, Page 2
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