THE IRISH PROBLEM
NO OUTSIDE REPRESENTATION. ULSTER ORGANISING. TO OPPOSE HOME PULE. (Australian and N.Z. Cable Assn.) Received April 26, 12.5 a.m. LONDON, April 24. In the House of Commons, Air Bonar Law said that no representations had been received from Australia or elsewhere in the Empire regarding conscription in Ireland. Sir Edward Carson is summenltig the Lister Standing Committee with a view to reorganising the machinery to combat Home Rule.
ULSTER'S DISTRACTION REGRETTED. (Australian and N.Z. Cabte Assn.) Received April 26, 11.30 a.m. LONDON. April 25. Sir Edward Carson, in a letter to the Unionist Council, „says that it will l>o necessary to summon the Standing Joint Committee as soon as the Home Rule iiiU is published. The position to be taken must be considered with the greatest possible care. It will also be necessary to reorganise the machinory which has b*>en in abeyance since the war. Sir Edward Carson regrets this distraction of Ulster's attention, but it is unayoidable in view of the Goicrnment's action in raising this burning question in defiance of its pledg-'s for a party truce.
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Waikato Times, Volume 89, Issue 13751, 26 April 1918, Page 5
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181THE IRISH PROBLEM Waikato Times, Volume 89, Issue 13751, 26 April 1918, Page 5
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