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DISH OF IRISH STEW.

"SCALDING HOT AT THAT.'' HOME RULE METAPHORS. STORM OVER EXCLUSION. By Telegraph—Press Association—Copyright. LONDON, March 13. The "Tablet" says that Ireland has 110 U3O for a, coerced, conquered Ulster which would become ail IrislL. Alsace. It would ho impossible) to control events at the end of the six years' term. The Nationalists should make a virtue ol necessity. Mr O'Connor declare* that Ireland never would consent to the perpetual exclusion of Ulster. ft sooner would lose the Hill and go info tlio wilderness for another generation. The idea of temporary exclusion was equivalent to the Bill's provisions regarding reserved services. Excluded counties must automatically come under the jurisdiction of the new Parliament after a transition period. Mr Austell Chamberlain, in a speech at "West Birmingham, gave Mr Asquith credit for anxiety to prevent calamities, but said the Prime Minister could not expect Ulster to disband the organisation and forsake the method by which alone it had been ablo to secure a hearing. If the scheme passed into law, exclusion would be tho main issue at future elections. Every dish would bo Irish stew, and scalding hot at that.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TS19140314.2.91

Bibliographic details

Star (Christchurch), Issue 11026, 14 March 1914, Page 8

Word Count
192

DISH OF IRISH STEW. Star (Christchurch), Issue 11026, 14 March 1914, Page 8

DISH OF IRISH STEW. Star (Christchurch), Issue 11026, 14 March 1914, Page 8

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