ULSTER'S SECOND IN COMMAND.
"THANKS FOR NOTHING."
[Press Association.! ■■• (Received Oct; 2, 10.20 p.m.) LONDON, Oct. 2. iViscfo*nt Northland is second in 'feomitfand >of the Tyrone regiment in the Ulster army. " Sir-Edward Carson,- at Dungannon, said that until the principle was enunciated in consonance with; the Ulster-Covenant a conference was impossible. Mr Redmond had offered to get him a conference if he would adopt the principle of Home Rule, but he (Sir Edward Carson) thanked' him for nothing. If disaster followed it would rend the United Kingdom and Overseas Dominions into two parties, struggling in a fratricidal fight, when they should be showing a united front to the nations. "Mr^F. Smith, at Dungannon, said that they regarded the application of Home Rule to any part of Ireland as a'disaster, but they would prevent by force of arms its application to the homogeneous counties of Ulster.
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Bibliographic details
Marlborough Express, Volume XLVII, Issue 234, 3 October 1913, Page 5
Word Count
145ULSTER'S SECOND IN COMMAND. Marlborough Express, Volume XLVII, Issue 234, 3 October 1913, Page 5
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