"Goa Save Ireland."
THE UiLL PASSED B\ 351 to 274. JUBILATION IN THE COMMONS. HOME RULE BILL GOES TO THE LORDS. By Cab! —Press Associat..i-i- Copyright London, May 25. Iu a t-iowued House, Mr. i.ioyd George was greeted with ironical cheers and eries oi 'Where's Charlc;. .Uastcrman?" A rem wed demonstration took place on the admission of Major Eowden (new member for Aorth. Derbyshire) and Mr. Ganzoni (member for Ipswich). The Speaker sam he ought not to have used the expression he did when questioning Mr. Bonar Law, and regretted the implication that Mr. Bonar Law was responsible for the disorder. He Suggested that Mr. Asquith should give further information rt gaming the unending Bill. Mr. Bonar Law paid a warm tribute to the Speaker's impartiality. As Leader of the Opposition he would always endeavour to support the chair. Mr. Asquith said the Government intended to incorporate in the amending Bill any settlement which was reached before it was introduced; otherwise it would only contain the offer of March 8. Mr. Bonar Law, speaking on the third reading, said Mr. Asquith's statement did not alter the essential factors of the situation. Further discussion was ridiculous, and 'he urged that the division be taken without delay. Mr. Asquith said the Opposition's invjhlignatiori was due to want of imagination. He did not desire a better mandate than the confidence of a majority of tie members of the House of Commons. The Bill was read a tnird time by 351 votes to 274. The O'Brienites abstained from voting. The Nationalists were jubilant, and waved their hats and order papers. The Liberals joined in the cheering. The Opposition scoffed and cried, "Toe the line." . One Liberal and two Nationalists were absent and not paired. Two members attended on crutches. There were renewed Nationalist demonstrations in the lobbies. Further detachments of constabulary fully armed have been drafted into Ulster, and the railways have been ordered to be ready to convey the military i if the police requisition assistance. < The House of Lords read the Home i Ride Bill a first time. The second reading will be on June 22. Mr. Redmond, interviewed, said: "The division marks the death of the inglorious union. Only two eventualities will prevent the Bill going on the Statute 800k —either Parliament must ] dissolve within a month or the House of Commons must go mad and pass a resolution not to present the Bill for r r.oyal assent. Both these are absurd, t A Home Rule Parliament is now indisputable, and, if the amending Bill does * . alter the fundamental principle, not « ~, .„ .. , I „ Hraalißt will reioiee.' every Nai. ~ , . c ' Melbourne. May 26. , Vive hundred po: ,nds ' the S m oi an J anonymous lady, has b^ n «9!*4 to Sir , Edward Carson's Ulster Wad. t
""RING DOWN 1 THE CURTAIN." LAST ACT WILL BE PLAYED AT THE ELECTIONS. ANALYSIS OF THE VOTING. NfJ EXCITEMENT IX IRELAND. La.*®"- . __ Received 20, 10.45 p.m. London, May 26. ,Mr. Bonar Law said he would not mak« any farther appeal to Mr. Asquith. It would be futile and ridiculous to discuss tlie Bill further. Let the curtain l>e rung down on the contemptible farce, thought the end of this act was not the end of the play. The final act would be played in the country, but there it would not be a farce. When the Government was unable to find a seat for a Minister it was evident that the final tribunal was not far distant. The Bill was taken to the House of Loris, accompanied by twenty Nationalists, cheering and waving their hats. The House of Commons was adjourned till June 9 and the House of Lords till •June 15. The count shows that 241 Liberals, 35 s» Labor and 74 Nationalists voted for the Bill, and 172 Unionists, Sir ,1. C. Cory end Mr. Agar-Roburtes (Liberals) against. Captain Pirio (Literal) abstained from voting. Mr. Redmond, interviewed, said the dead union's place would be taken by a new union, founded on mutual respect «nd goodwill, and would be followed by peace and prosperity and Inj.-Ry. There was a prospect of what was Miscalled an amending Bill, but let there be no mistake about that, No am'»trcuW !) C earn. <1 oilier Vy t1«>: o! the Irish party. All rwonuit-'i tbs worth o£ iwjwg a ;?■ at P lk "' ensure that Home Pi;!'' *•<••>,<! opera'e amid universal gW-vIH. lie Impel t'liter would ;< banden le 1 :' ! r "' I .e;:r j l- 1 mauds. A number of v- luv- n tar ' 1 ''j [)i - ---sung' ''Cod Js:;vt* liw.-H : a .'1 i'e_- ■■■ '■ tion" onee again tie: Hi'l pe--,d the Lord-. There im n.> fswl <•••:•.':Mtion ii any part of Ji•-!,!v,'l. Jii" ii'-i.'i u.i quietly received in DuW::i a.vl wiln uu USU.t.I r |tT '< t ill i'e.ii'-t. Considerable exeiiein"!H was -au-t----at Vure til's nioni'e;;- !;;• the rc-ipt <• orders to w:nt an ' lei! to The Cuviaeli. v. order '.re carried out. Trcops ..re ne', confined to barracks. fixtra-police have arrived at London '"ierry, where all is quiet.
MAKING FOR PSAOB.
BUT PREPARING FOR TROtffJIJB. Time* and Sydney Sun Sjjrviajjp. Received 26, 6 o.in. London, May 20. A thousand constables, bsfi'J dc-s,-, patdied to Ulster froni life. Iseidster counties. One hundred and forty left Belfast, armed with rifles and several rounds of ball cartridges. The military are confined to the barracks at Deny. Covenanters are urged to remain in their homes. The Tyrone County Council election takes place to-morrow. The Nationalists are making desperate efforts to win control. A collision of the rival volunteers is feared.
CONGRATULATIONS FROM NJHY ZEALAND. By Te'egraph—Press Association. Wellington, Last Night. On the receipt of the news to-day that the .Home Rule Bill had passed the House of Commons, a meeting of prominent Irishmen was called, and it was decided to despatch cable* of congratulations a? follows: •'Redmond. House of Commons, Lon-don.—-New Zealand Irishm'-n jj,ud bbeir | friends send eongrai illations and umlyjing platitude (./the Jri-'.i party on the, ■p.ciidid vi'dory v.liich makes for pSaac am! unify to the Empire. Convey our feelings to Fn;,'ii.,!i, S.'-oirh and Welsh Martin Kennedy. ihemas C'.th.il.'' .-■:■( ii.mii lie.- lii.h pe,.r,l« in Ns'.vr Ze-a----!a:'„l and limir feiea I,' . „;, ami .vrs'.il'.i-le for the yitat vicl.orc which brines mcce ;,;.l uuiiy to the In '.i M!' Hnell-b. Smi'di and \\-'.A\ Mm
Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TDN19140527.2.30
Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka
Taranaki Daily News, Volume LVII, Issue 7, 27 May 1914, Page 5
Word count
Tapeke kupu
1,042"Goa Save Ireland." Taranaki Daily News, Volume LVII, Issue 7, 27 May 1914, Page 5
Using this item
Te whakamahi i tēnei tūemi
Stuff Ltd is the copyright owner for the Taranaki Daily News. You can reproduce in-copyright material from this newspaper for non-commercial use under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International licence (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0). This newspaper is not available for commercial use without the consent of Stuff Ltd. For advice on reproduction of out-of-copyright material from this newspaper, please refer to the Copyright guide.