PEACE OF IRELAND.
■' -' ■■<■::■ ;.; : m% DEPENDENT ON LAND REFORM J'.:"" . ■ * . "';; \ ■■. MR. AS.QUITH'S PROMISES. : By Telegraph Association.—Copyright (Received September 2, 11.55 p.ra) ; London, September 2, ■ Speaking at Dublin last evening,' •Mr. John Redmond (leader of the. Nationalist party in the House of , Commons) read letters he had ad- ' dressed to Mr. Asquith and Mr. Bir-r. roll (Chief Secretary for Ireland), '■■, stating that if the people once got • into their heads that the defects of J; the Land Act of 1903 were not to be remedied, and that no fresh legisla- ■ tion was to be immediately proposed dealing with congestion and th« breaking up of grass lands, it would be impossible for the Nationalist ' party to hold themselves responsible for the. peace of Ireland. Mr. Asquith had in reply, he "stated, promised to legislate at the end of the session on lines that the ,< Irish party had suggested.
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Bibliographic details
New Zealand Herald, Volume XLV, Issue 13845, 3 September 1908, Page 5
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145PEACE OF IRELAND. New Zealand Herald, Volume XLV, Issue 13845, 3 September 1908, Page 5
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