HOME RULE FOR IRELAND.
THE ULSTER GOODWILL. I By Electric Telegraph—Copyright] JOnttej? Prehh Aphooi»t<on. 1 (Received 9.15 a.m.) London, January 25.
j Mr Redmond, at Waterford, declared that Ulster's goodwill was worth purchasing at a big price. There were :iio Lengths—short of abandonment or his principles—to which he would not go to win that confidence, but he did not see any prospect of the goodwill being purchased at any price at all. The talk of civil war was absurd, as Clstersien would never be attacked: Mr Redmond declared that the contest between two Nationalists at Cork at present amounted to a scandal and a venous blow to the cause.
PRIMROSE LEACUE'S SCHEME.
(Received 9.55 a.m.) London, January 25
The Primrose League's Ulster refugee scheme has evoked a guarantee of £15,000 in the event of civil war to provide hospitality to 10,000 women and children.
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Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXVIII, Issue 22, 26 January 1914, Page 5
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144HOME RULE FOR IRELAND. Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXVIII, Issue 22, 26 January 1914, Page 5
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