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"AN IRISH STEW."

HOME RULE FOR IRELAND.

ÜBt Electric Telegraph—Copyright' {United Press Association.! London, March 13. Mr Austen Chamberlain, speaking at West Birmingham, gave Mr Asquith credit for anxiety to prevent calamities, but said he could not expect Ulster to» disband her organisation , and forsake the whereby .she had alone been able to secure a hearing. If the scheme passed into law, exclusion would be the main issue at future elections. Every dish would be an Irish stew, and scalding hot at that.

THE BILL O.R NOfHINC.

London, March 13.

The Tablet says: “Ireland has no use for a coerced and conquered Ulster/which will become an Irish Alsace. It would be impossible to control events at the end of the sexennium. The Nationalists should make a virtue of a necessity. Mr T. P. O’Connor declares that Ireland will never consent to perpetual exclusion, and, .sooner than lose the Bill, will go into the wilderness for another generation. The idea of temporary exclusion is equivalent to the Bill’s provisions regarding reserved services. The excluded countries must automatically Come under the jurisdiction of the new Parliament after the transition period.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/STEP19140314.2.40

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXVIII, Issue 71, 14 March 1914, Page 6

Word count
Tapeke kupu
188

"AN IRISH STEW." Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXVIII, Issue 71, 14 March 1914, Page 6

"AN IRISH STEW." Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXVIII, Issue 71, 14 March 1914, Page 6

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